Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 301, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 31, 1943 Page: 2 of 6
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....
IN1CLE, SATURDAY, JULY II, 1M3
z
BARBS
lie's Frlend-
■a.
fl
L\
-JI
7
"TmU
II
10 00—Sunday
1 1 rut u
Steaks
Chicken
L\
HEAR
E
"i .. .
Com-
KDNT.
CHURCH
JOE GAMBILL JR.
Th.
D..
there
that only
PHONE 370
E. L. SAWYERS’ CASH GRO. & MKT.
215 W. Oak
New Ixxation, Bigger and Better
fay
p*-
P“
“COURTESY"
is not rationed at the
LA MODE
Grease Guns
ta
Advantage Of
LOOK!
Adams and Lincoln Grease Guns
Now Is The Time
Get Them While You Can!
For the Red
At Your Friendly
>1 ha no personal p<
> 1 .
<
' Delicious Home*
the four-star
WAR SAVING STAMPS!
Made Candy
IJ
I
f ■
F
w
w?
I
*
• ;■.
■
la was a
given up
does Wti
.. k ■ T"
■DOON
•tar Oomepoudem
CONTEMPORARY
THOUGHT
PIGGLY
WIGGLY
“Spend much or little or
just look around”
10:50 A. M.—Parable <>f
the Sower.
International Sunday
School Lestwin
Uh
J*1
(During Jack Stinnett’s vacation, his column
is being conducted by various members of the
Washington staff of the Associated Press Today's
Q—Who is “Tokyo Rose?”
A—A Jap‘female version of Lord
Haw-Haw. Berlin radio propagand-
ist. She broadcasts in English from
Radio Tokyo.
Q—Who discovered the four hu-
han blood tynes?
A—The late Dr Karl Landstein-
er, 1830 Nobel Prize winner, who
died recently in New York.
JUST
AMONG US*
FOLKS
China’s Seeing Eye
■r CHAKUU A. wmi
Aft
Francis M. CraUMk
OBOCBKT AND MARKn
You'll like La Mode’s
friendly, helpful
service.
m—He rm on.
Growth "
■ ■ I
I
L^„
OF.
favor The breaks long have favor-
ed the Axis, but hope has been that
sooner or later they would begin
turning in favor of the Allies.
to prepare your ground
for fall planting. See US
for Quality Garden and
Field Seed. Telephone 62.
8.00 P. M—Zeal Without
Knowledge.
9:00 A. M.
INSURANCE
RALEY BUILDING
is be
Of the
• WASHINGTON
IN WARTIME
By JACK BTINNUTT
OSCAR ELLISON
SUNDAY
At The
Church of Christ
Corner Pear) and Bolivar
Western Auto Associate Store
West Side of Square Denton, Texas
HEMSTITCHING
Buttons, and Buckles Covered. Machine Buttonholes.
Will buy your machine, radio, vacuum cleaner.
TALIAFERRO RADIO SHOP
Telephone 7HO
INSURANCE
i FIRE
LIFE
AUTOMOBILE
ACCIDENT
SURETY BONDS
i
I
9|P jr;-
AakFarTbah
JMOurOfBre
Si
I
Made Fiwh Daily
..UG..- V-4--—---vi----
t , -
30 p
••wL
Er .
!p going to keep alive.
MMWHtfSSL^
» NINETEEN YEARS AGO
,* *-aJ
31
•attttoe to toe
__ _pateb«* smditod
to this pap«f ata •*
. i
|Mta***“'*"-r*
o
B .•v ’n w
■Et •/3 RMteX...' . ,
Er
s
pr"4 Sr’’
I • I
! 8 30 p
Looking
| out of a<
ver- |
1
Q—For what purpose is the herb
coriander generally used?
A—tn the preparation of cakes
and confections.
p.'au—Youag People's meet
p. m.—Worship.
ntrsnt or CHRIST
1. svwiwtw.
and Bolivar Sts.
Counting the
m—Young people’s serv-
of !
Do your trading with Denton
stitutions.
bowl to determine who goes into the Army first—no
matter how long the war lasts. Those first drawings
to determine order of induction by lot were necessary
to get the thing started. Now. men are Inducted into
service by order of birth A man bom on July 31
gets called before a man born Aug. 1, and so on.
The selective service act gives the President power
to prescribe regulations for inducting men in an
them up by birthdays
::
ASSEMBLY OF GOD CHURCH
Corner Mrrtle and West Maple
Rev F E Ford pastor
9 45 a. m.—Cburcb School
11:00 A. m.—sermon.
7 00 p m.—Chrlat’a Ambeaaadcra.
8:80 p m.—Service.
chubch or oon
In Pentecnatal Tabernacle off Mc-
Kinney Street
8:«S a. m.—Bible School
11.00 a. m.—Worship
• io---- --------------*
ship and
i." Emklal
RODEO’ RODEO’
Meet your friends at (he Koi
Saturday night 8:38. Neu altra
| tions.
Peo-
-iple, i
by^ paetor.
JOE'S STEAK HOUSE
"On The Highway”
:h co
the f
lowing from the Bible ’’Thy iner
O Lord, is in the heavens, a
thy faithfulness reached) unto t
clouds” ((Paalma 36 51.
Lv‘ps31,?.. ... •
"A Sense of Urgency ”
SEVENTH DAV ADVENTIST’S
(HUIU II (Saturdays)
Women's Club
W. G Haaaenpflug. elder.
10.00 a. m - Bible School.
11:00 a. m.—Preaching.
The electric shock of a torpedo
fish can disable a man temporarily.
-
uiwwuMjHll
' ' -
IT” ’
Q—Why is Turin, Italy, a legiti-
mate military objective?
A—Great factories there produce
tanks, trucks, and ammunition
I.....-----------
(From Record-Chronicle, July 98. 18M)
« Robert Kendall, aged 84 yearn, citlsen of Pilot
^tait for many years, died at hla home in Austin
Saturday morning and burial was In Pilot Point
—_____
■
Woman's place today seems to be in the home—
of some war plant.
Now is the time when even the poorest voice
can safety break out with "The Htar-Spangied
Banner,” We’re all glad to stand for it.
Qlrto from a.private school in the east volun-
tered to work on farms, culture doesn't come
ahead of agriculture.
A Georgia man swallowed a glass of gasoline
by mistake. The beet antidote we know of is
to keep away from fire.
Uncle |am has offered to buy all beer surplus-
es on hand in Venezuela, says a Caracas paper
And we’ll have abarrel of funl
S’7"'
Crowley is a robust 53 years old He started his
carer in various small businesses including groceries
and lumber, eventually became a banker, in his 30s
his father's death made him heed of a large family
of brothers and sisters, to whom he to devoted. They
maintain hto home in Madison. Wta.. for him. since
be to unmarried.
After active participation in the first Roosevelt
rampaign, he, was rewarded as regional administrator
at at. Paul for the Fann Credit Corporation and
came to Washington as 810.000 a year chairman of
the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. A couple
of years ago he also took on chairmanship of the
Standard Gas and Electric Oorp Since then, he has
Uyed 0° hto utility salary and taken no government
nwnojF,
A year age he took on. too. the task of being alien
property custodian, but may drop this title.
Crowley, who became director of the new Office of ]
Economic Warfare, replacing both 1
Wallace's Board of Economic Warfare and Secretary
of Commerce Jones' foreign-purchasing corporations.
Not taking anything away from Crowley, for whom
the appointment was a tribute to the rare Washing-
ton knack of doing things as quietly as possible, the
jin
1
Another draft lottery might not even be neces-
sary if the selective service act were amended to take
in men from 45 to to years of ago, as the President
has stated he would ask Congress to do. Any such
action would be used for some particular emergency,
such as drafting coal miners out on strike. And in a
ease like that, no lottery would necessarily be re-
quired. It wouldn't be a case of drawing the numbers
cf all men between 46 and to. then taking the first
500,000 and telling them that from here on they'd
mine coal and Mke it. Instead, so broad are the pro-
visions of the law that regulations could be written
exempting everyone but coal miners, who could then
be drafted into the Army to dig coal for the gov-
ernment. i
PS^TOCNB . 1
• 7- - • v ”.
8 '* U ' 1
Wily imkidbqf. .
that ate was g<
oe. gtartiy. m (
Bg- « • 4--.
miring the food stamp plan to srtvs
X tt*tag and the food shortage prob-
te F» Mmo was to ama« the surplus
5 K S
DENTON. TEXAS. JULY 31. 1843
" NO SECTION ESCAPES
X While Houston, Galveston and smaller cities along
the Texas Gulf coasts are digging out from under
the wreckage caused by this week’s tropical hurricane,
- q^ie, timely to recall that no section ot the country
Nr without some frequent weather scourage or otter
gatural catastrophe. The Gulf Coast and part of the
Atlantic Coast have periodic tropical storms. The
Kcific Coast has earthquakes. The Midwest has
Hississipri floods and tornadoes, while the northern
■tat of the country has blizzards.
"ft is strange, but understandable, that the people
k these sections wiU endure the weather phenomena
famlsr to their part of the country, while wondering
Nfcy people ignore the dangers Inherent in other
flfefts of the country A North Texan woh long ago
QM ceased to run for the storm cellar when a black
Qpud approaches will refuse to visit the Texas
eaast during the hurricane season. A South Texan
wlo stakes 100-mlle winds in his stride goes pale in
California when a mild quake rattles the windows
And so it goes.
mwiwMeastaBM
— -v—
K
FT I
H
Is-
1-4
—weBIg!^.^)—i__-g
— ’,r
"' ■ - —— gii I, i ■ . j, i 11 i
One of the greatest dramas of all history is now to be seen in Asia
where a tremendous giant, bloody and blinded, is being led on to inev-
itable victory by a little group of Christ-inspired leaders. This4- great
nation, the vast majority of whose people are non-Chrlstian. has sur-
rendered herself to Christian leadership. China speaks much for the
past achievements of missions in Asia China reveals the inestimable
dividends the missionary dollar of yesterday is, paying in terms of today
and reminds us the missionary dollar given today can mean for to-
morrow. The war is not going to "close the epic of missions" as some
have said—it will only widen it.
column is by Irving Perimeter.)
By IKYING PKKLMETER
WASHINGTON—The man Who won the Henry
Wallace-Jesse Jones feud didn't even muss his silvery — ---------------- ----
hair. His name—and this is news—is Cordell Hull.' *on to believe now that the coup
the venerable secretary of state. i was one favorable to the Axis in- !
All the kudos are going at the moment to another stead of the Allies, as first ap-
white-halred politico—able and quiet-spoken Leo T.; peered
f"?wm/ltov tarHzv Haaz»mewA <4Iv^«4aw HFW OfliCF Of
Vice-President i . Ce,’2&,.nly„lt has dl^urRR
ing that after one of the dk-talors
has been removed his subjects are
not getting out of the war It had
been believed that only Mussolini
was keeping Italy In the war: now
- -. -j— r — •--~rc—A.-i there are indications that only
real vfctory goes to Hull on pointe because the State through his removal could the na-
to nCW tlon ** kcP‘ nghting. a d ao Hit-
-• •>— jer appears bene I Ing from
| another break, as he has from one
break after another since the war
first began
10
------o------
FORD’S ADVICE
Htenry Ford. 80 yeara old Friday, told a group of
■young naval cadets last week his secret of good
teaKls and tong life T*e important thing, aeoerdtag
to Ford, “lx to keep going.”
The pioneer automobile manufacturer long has
iprwcticed what he preaches He was past 40 years
old when he built his first car. an age when most
nwnt are content to sit back and take things easy
for the rest of their lives.. Al 60 he was many times
* millionaire, and could have retired without a worry
to the world. Now at 80. he has reassumed the
direction of the great enterprise he founded and de-
veloped. an age when moat other men are dead.
- -Rtnile or in poor health
* W0 Iford stopped work at the usual retirement
ye. be might not have lived this long. The frequency
JMth which men die in a comparatively short time
>ftor their retirement from work frequently has
jatoad a question whether it is wise for a man who
<aas worked hard to drop those things which have
■Mmulatud hte muscles and mind for so long Some
JN* have hobbies or avocations to which they can
ym, but thoae men. like Henry Ford, whose hobies
also tbatr relaxation, must
Last Sunday when it was an-
nounced that Mussolini had resign-
ed. the feeling was genera] that a
real break had come at last and
that this turn would knock Italy
out of the war at once and per-
haps mart the beginning of the
breaking up of the Axis hierarchy
• • • •
But after a week ft begins to ap-
pear that what happened “
Mg turned to the benefit
Germans Hitler has been able to
beat the Allies to the drew in
nearly every instance and prob
ably has done so again
• • • «
Possibly Mussolini's resignation
was forced by Hitler Undoubtedly
the Nazi leader could see that Ital
Ians would not tight with any heart
tn support of Mussolini's regime
Now that he is out, some sources
from Italy indicate that the Ital-
ians may rally to the defense of
their country, and that what once
appeared as a near walkover for
Allied forces in taking over Italv.
may turn Into a most difficult'
and prolonged battle, with rallied
Italians and German armies hold-
ing off attacks
* • • • •
Hitler has been quick to size tin
events and hasn't hesitated to
throw anybody overboard when
need arose Since It eould be seen
by everybody that the Italians were
not giving Mussolini support, it
would but be nature! that Hitler
would seek his removal and under
take to put somebody tn his place
who might rally his country. The
new government setup in Italy ap-
It may be posible that Italy can
be knocked out of the Axis llne-
UP, but developments ot the week
' . - - - . ) un
with the desires and policies of the State Department. Jth«/ United Nationa_get wme
reason to believe that Italy Will
trail along with the Germans.
SERGEANT SMITH ,„ r_ ________ J
Uncle Sam takeb care of hte own. and knows how
to honor the brare and faithful. And nothing, per-
hapa. ta current hiftrey. move* American hearts more -----
than the story of a little fellow only five feet four. For Sul
upon whose modest breast Secretary of War Stimson
the other day pinned the Congressional Medal of
RMBCy,
Sergeant Maynard H Smith of CJaro. Mieh. a Fly-
othm •* “* _
spsr-ssH
"?*■**' . H* «»W 8bto» • salute from evwy man
a the UMted States Army, including the four-star
•am*. fancy ttat!~ftrt Smith Bouthweft
“*“■ .u________ . ■
_ canoLAaoa
reftSSy
own iiwwq in io MWWBe
C ” 5°* protacwa ®-
CENTRAL BAPTIST CBURCB
Rev L. R Bradley, pastor.
307 Bolivar Street
10:00 a. m—Bible School.
11:00 a. m—Sermon by the pas-
tor. "Confession. Compaaiaon. Cleana-
“ii p. m.—Young people's meet-
nf :30 p m —Sermon by the pea-
tor. "When Muaaollnl Stands Before
the Great White Throne of Judg-
ment.”
.—JL:,
I tame* as ns ww NMcot
ten afteranm except Sunday bv tba autaT
* Mta PauMne Spikes of Denton spent the week-end
ss.^
jn* were loaded for shipment Wednesday.
-Mta Marjorie Bates is ill at her home on West
* Miss Ila Swinney of Hugo. Oklahoma, la the guest
ff ter parents here. Mr. and Mrs W M Swinney
a Mrs. A. Angell. Walter Miller and Mias Irene Ry-
•ne toft Monday for New York markets.
Mrs. E. D. Curtis and children spent the week vis-
iting ta Justin
. T. B. Daria was in Fort Worth yesterday to see hto
jnother, who Is ill, but to much improved now.
- Mrs. Hattie Laney of Cooper Creek was here TUee-
3 ay
* «• N. terd ot Hebron was in Denton TUeeday
M. Russen Jp. of Dallas spent the last week-end
-□with Mr. and Mrs. J. Holford Russell.
y wm to.™**
at~the~Denton”country
Dreamland' today offers The white Sin" in
Madge Bellamy to the featured actress
. Margaret Griffith, pioneer citlsen of th*
r <Med ** Man«u“' Oklahoma, at
“*er home 133 WMt ®«htow’ Street.
by unknown origin
•UBWBIPT1UN RATB8
8uer (ta advene.)
ami kg well (in agveam)------
|*
!■■■■
toft what's wrong with secretary of Commeroe
* tee been discovered He doesn't have ^single eol-
a«e pwfaseor or econonttot among the 7.000 em-
— on the RFC payroll
•Prtsident Hsnry A. Wallace tea told some
friasMb and fonner associate* .in the Depart-
rf Agriemtare that all the talk about hto being
d from aeecnd place on the Democratic ticket
I doesn't bother him In the least that he is
to do any job they want him to do. but that
no personal political ambitions.
The Seed House
Mainney gt At RailrWf
A.-* .. ' \
DtnlonKecord^hrmM^
,.e
I Z
. WE8T 8IDE BAPTIST f HI RCH
Corner Avenue G and Prairie 81
Rev D T Bryant, paator
10:00 a m—Bunday School.
11:00 a m Bermoti by the
tor j
7:30 p. tn —Song service.
8:30 p m.—Sermon by the
tor.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY
103 East Oak. Room 308 Korn-
blatt Building.
0:30 a. m—Bunday School.
11:00 a. tn—Lesson - subject.
"I^ve”
FIRST ISAPTMT CHURCH
Dr. Frank Weedon, pastor.
0.-30 a. m Bible School
10:50 a. m.—Sermon by the pas-
tor. "Dtvlne Deliverance”: quartet
composed of Mtoeea Mary Frenoee
Neale and Buna Belle mtee, B. B.
Neale Jr., end R. M Chainbet*, sing-
inc "Beneath the Crore of Jesus.”
730 p. tn.—Baptist Training
Union.
XM*S- ■- Ktert of Hebron was in Denton Itaoday.
E i >arirwSri.'aM”i^::j: HtoujrJ'ltiiu' ~
• Mtoa Neils street vu ta Pilot Point Monday.
[ . — Mr»- Oom Martin and Mr. and Mrs. Finley Hare
. JMU be boat and boateoaes al the Denton Country
Club dance Friday night.
- - - -
<0^
Loo Crowley, in Hto 8 1-3 years of government serv-
ice, has always been the middle-roader who has
been a peace-maker and never an open conteetant |
ta the many p amen el fends that‘have soiled the
lofty thoughts of a reform administration.
His abhorrence of controversy, of dogmatic ver-
dict* about people or issues, kept him from being, in
the last election, chairman of the Democratic Na-
tional Committee Leo tells how a political chieftain
necessarily must act a* though no one but the mem-
bers of hto own political party are entitled to hto
consideration. Crowley, unofficial New Deal political
expert on Wisconsin and Minnesota < preferred to
engineer closer ties between progressives. Demo- -
crate and other pro-New Deal eiemente than to as- to mythology, were attached to hl
sume a one-party job.
tn—Worship hour. Sermon
a* Hungs.” Services held
Joon pn the church grounds
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CBUKCH
U. 8. A.
Wret Oek and Bolivar Streets.
Rev. Joseph J. Copeland, pastor
8:46 a m—Church School
10.50 a. m Sermon by pastor.
"God's Prayer* "
0:80 p. tn.—Youth fellowship and
■upper
8 00 p. m—Sermon by the pastor.
"The Transfiguration "
CATBOt lC ( HFRI H
1304 Bolivar Street
Bev Charles W. Smld. priest.
7 30 a tn—Holy mare and sermon.
9 00 a. tn Holy Mere and sermon
11:00 a. m.- Hoiy Maes and ser-
mon.
jMnnm <m a dote
even to people wte
g to spend her va-
iport of the "Don't
Th* WILLIAMS Star.
a nr «a -.a-
...Ik-Illtli-ll.-JI-J.- l-'-L-l-L’l '-I i
■. r L
GOOD FOOD!
PROMPT HER VICE
Christian Science
Service for Sunday
"Love” to the%Qbject of the 1
son-sermon for Chbrchre of Cht'
Scientist. Sunday.
The Golden Text to: "O God, tl
art my God; early trill 1 seek th
Because thy lewtng kindness
better than life, mv lips shall pre
I thee” (Psalms «3 j. 3>
. Amo«« !he citations whicl
Slayden, dlrec- j prise Ute .esson-sermon U tne f
It begips to appear that the Al-
lies have been robbed of the fruits
of anothrt break in the war which
a week ago looked to be ta our
BONAR & ORR
INSURANCE---REAL ESTATE
Office Over Boston Store Phone 1510
•J. E. BONAR C. W. ORR
Oscar ]
Corner
0:46 a. tn.—Church School
10 50 a. tn.—Sermon by minister,
"Parable of the bower."
0:16 p. tn.—Young people meet.
7:15 p m.—Sermon by the minis-
ter. "Zeal Without Knowledge
ST. BARNABAS EPISCOPAL
CNVBCN
1300 North Blm Street.
Rev. Homer Rogers, prieet-ln-
8 (5) a. m — Holy Communion.
10 «0 a m—"Holy Communion and
Address
FIRST METBODI8T CHURCH
Rev. Philip W Walker, pastor.
9 80 a m —Church School.
’ ” SIR US FOR
AIXMAKW
Kmt RmHo A J
Q—What legendary character is
supposed to have flown like a bird?
A—Icarus, whose wings, according
.. _ : ----ii_.i— hto
body with wax. and fell away When
he flew texj close to the sun
10:50 a. m —Sermon.
7:46 p. m—Young People's Meet-
‘T'46 p m—Worship.
8^s p tn.—Young Pc
ly Nour. - c--
HIGHLAND BAPTIST CHURCH
Highland Street.
Rav. J. L. Roden, pastor.
8:46 a. m—Sunday School, Owan
Griffin, superintendent.
H OC a. m.—Worship and sermon,
by the paator
7:00 p. m —Baptist Training Un-
ion. Mire Ruby Lee Cl_.—_, ”---
tor.
8 30 p tn Sermon by the pastor
WELCH STREET rHURCH OF
CHRIST
C. A Buchanan, minister.
♦03 Watch Street
8 46 a. m — Bible Study
10:50 a m. —Sermon. -(Jc—
Coat.”
0 30 p
los.
8:00 p
Spiritual
FIRST CUMBERLAND
PRCNBYTERIAN CHURCH
Corner Welch and Maple Streets.
10 00—Sunday School
11:00 a’m.—Sermon by Rev D E
Will lama on Life La An Unfinished
Symphony
7 :45 p m - Young People
8:30 p m. Sermon by Williams on '
‘‘A Mrevawas TTrosnov "
CHURCH OF THE NAZARENB
Boiivar at congress.
Rev H A. Carey, paator
10:00 a. m —Sunday School, R. A.
Battereon. superintendent
1100 a m—Sermon by pastor,
"Four Types of Christians " Com-
munion service
7 15 p m —Nazarene Young P
plea Society, Mr*. Houston Ma|
president.
5 oo p m—Sermon
"Open Windows "
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
120 South Elm Street
Rev H. Q. Goodykoonts.
9 <5 a. m—Church School
10 45 a m—Sermon. "Have a
Plan;" hymn-anthem "Gently Lead
Ua." old Welsh air
No Westminister Fellowship
No svenlng service
FIRST CHWIRTtAN CHURCH
West Hickory Street
Rev G L Messenger Jr , pastor
9 45 a. m.—Church School
lo.50 a. m.- Worship. Sermon.
’•'Christian Stewardship"; solo. ' Bless
' Us. O Lord" (Hamblen), by Miss
I Mary Jo Thoma*
! 8 00 p m —Evening service. Ser-
mon. '"nie Prophet E*eklal.”
ST. PAUL'S LUTHERAN CHURCH
703 North Elm Street.
Rev Paul O. SUickert. pastor
10 15 a. m.—Sunday School and
Adult Bible Class led by the pastor.
11:00 a. m—Divine worship and
sermon. "Our Temple Oates,'---
the Germans, and there to rca
operation—and that's what all the fighting was
about
Hull’s name never appeared in the controversy at
all, but behind the scenes the State Department was
embroiled as much a* anybody else over such ques- 1
tions a* how much rubber or mercury shall we buy 1
where at what price outside of the Urflted State*.
Take It from Crowley himself hto instructions and
are indications
mOb^k ilBH—
intentions in the new job are to buy in accordance have not favorable and
That, incidentally. Is a key to the charerter of the klnd of qulck actlon there now Is
Wisconsin Irishman that Mr Roosevelt selected to * *“
reorganize the foreign-purchase activities of the gov-
ernment. <
i
T
W1
the ei
US
L
70
•»
quick
clean)
vince
Ci
I
I
Fl
18
Our
Cot
Johnsor
was my 1
life and
few facte
report th
That’s
"No, I
"Try a<
"I didn't
"Why i
"Do I
you?”
"It's w
It spells I
it spells
Nothing.
I tell yo
shots froi
G I s ai
you get
that's no1
headlines
flicked a
"All rl
listening.'
"Cocky,
plastered
I watcl
began to
held a n
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SAVE POINTS
By Buying Frozen Fruits w
and Vegetables J
— tree fresh .S
— garden fresh
— delicious Su
— economical E
Smith Frozen Foods
CHURCH SERVICES SUNDAY
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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/m1/2/: accessed June 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.