Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 54, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 16, 1943 Page: 1 of 6
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•V
l
t
VOL.
HeavyAir
■ A. A
V
1
• « .-
I
V
'
a
j NorlA of N
cffer-
MTURY!
J
worth of War
Pwr
By
I
SHI
les For
VELLA LAVELI
ties
ivefie.
After*
IES AND
-7
WASHINGTON. Oct
:ery
FOR
NTALS
lephone 1726
rarely recently.
u
*•.*4
Back to Work
A HURRY
ury
j.
s.
i
i
FER
NOW!
Jan.
potato thin
$1.26
a
,, ■
State
Ml
an
-
<
!
i a ’
i
.4 J# *v
Ji
without
___. I
I '
I
I
and Collin
A. Wood"
IMS
K
'W.
chat no toss ■
troops ware
tephRownpiis’i
Pacific One*
SOLOMON II
TOlOKH
tf
ay ».
3jWt*
FmS
eae driv-
Yunnan
SATURDAY AFTERNOON. OCTOBER !•» IMS
Road Closed ?
KOLOMBANGJ
GIZO
Scout Campai
Progresses W,
•r of Pre-invasion Prop
loit Smashing Victory
I
I
I
I
t
wlinea and rotten to
Monday.** Lewie tato-
IT. ROLL
BTC.
airdromes, i Ma reh 23.
I The 32 at Oorrkana was a season
, 1 Worth
to wreck registered 43. the lowest this au-
Havlng cornpli
forces baaed on j
and one of the most vell» can strike i
"i
SOVIET TROOPS
PLUNGE AHEAD
TOWARD CRIMEA
CAIRO. Oct. 16—
iton
e Corp.
Buttonholes,
cleaner.
P
r
=x=a
Associated Press Leased Wlrw
S, INC.
IS
lern
b
D
Ascertain If
Cost
Bank
nee Corp.
i
United Stateo fiacretai
corden Hull wiB take
play an Important tote
Ina the Anal defeat of <
L 4 CO.
VICE
Phone 428
■
No
wodTon ____ _
graphed the steam.” >
Small Girl Dies of
lOUGAlNVBU "
l” te BW
r-----
ION
lephone 570
A MKT.
• '''"^7^3
ID““*
New Advance
Fortress Over East Prussia
crit-
Jew-
antl-
eemitte th notare”—wm followed
swiftly by lifting of the ban
Yugoslavia—A major battle Wfis
reported ragtag for* rail bridge
between Ljubljana and Zhgreb
Ms,W Three German pianos
raiding southeast England wen de*
Fortt
to it.”
■■
JTSEyrttSttrJS
: tai of your matches
^Work Stoppage in
' Coal Mines Feared;
Blasts New Britain
______ ■
4 /"**’>• •»■ V • .
jr
SEE
Lee Toothaker. superintendent of
the Bolivar School for the peat 17
yean, was ,in Denton Saturday. *T
guess I’m getting to be an old timer
in Bolivar, but I den’t know of any
better place to be in, as there are
the finest of people living in that
section of the county.’ ’he said.
County Court
Session to Open
No jury has been summoned for
the first week of the three week
jury easeion of County Court which
begins Monday, according to Judge
Gerald Stockard.
A light docket is in prospect, and
?
I
o. nunci,
t J. Head-
grc, vw Mi WMuauu, w. P. Brooks,
O. B. Lord. J. B. Price, W. W. King,
M. L. Rainey. C. E. Mercer and bam Stockard said that the Oases pro-
Lansy. “-- ----- - - - . . - - - - - -
later date to elect officers.
The first frost of the fall visited
Denton this Saturday morning, as
the thermometer dropped to u low
of 42 degrees. It, is not believed,
he sever. that the frost will do any
damage. The temperature this
morning was seven degrees lower
than that of Friday morning at 48
"Hie high Friday was M ar compar-
ed with 78 a Year ago. when the low
was 82 *■'
NEW VORK, Oct. 18—Sum-
ner Well s, former under secretary
of state, urged today that Britain.
Russia. China and the United
States agree soon on certain basic
principles to assure creation of a
stable world sifter the war.
Buch an agreement, he said in an
address prepared for the 35th anni-
versary meeting of the Foreign
Policy Association, would consti-
tute “the very solid foundation" of
an “ultimate international organi-
sation.”
District School
Men to Confer
Surely God will not hear vanity,
neither will the Almighty reward
it.-tab 38-18.
Here J am and hare I shall n-
main. Adolph Hitler on Russian
front, ordering bis men not to re-
treat another Inch.
WANAWANA v
RENDOVA'kc*;
TETlFAai
Ml
tea
WAONMn T
NKW I
BMM
The Dentcn Texas State Guard
is to meet at the armory Sunday
afternoon at 148 o’clock from
where they will proceed to Corinth I
for rifle practice. Capt. L. H. U- I
gon urges each member to be pres-
ent for th'- practice
i daily: We ex-
o lay in stocks
<e of cash dis-
jusiness which
Ve offer check-
‘apid, safe and
provide a safe
valuables.
Death or serious injury awaits
any foolhardy serviceman who
Ignores this warning Sign was
erected by ‘sappers" assigned
the ticklish task of removing
boody traps sown by departing
Japs on Klaka (U. 8. Navy
photoi
Sharon Kay Btaigfit. 81-ff
daughter <X Mk. and Jft,
a teiort Ulnsas. Itas
sszsfisw
cooperation, as did
communist party new
recent issue.
_____ -4rhr front mm artifile n
eonjtew. «. mW «
BrttSh^American and
fictate wm given in Premier
Stahn'e meeting test nigh
Donald Nelson, chtef «< Ute
States Way ------- ~
nurvFy Bovi
Flying Cross
To Col. Storrie _
I —
. Cot Karl R. Storrte, sen M Mr.
and Mrs. P. O. Storrie of Denton.
Friday received the Distinguished
Flying Orom in A ceremony in
which 11 officers and enlisted men
from ths medium bomber uniu
were were dsccoted by Brig. Gon.
Robert C. Candrc. commander of
Attacks Ac
As Allies t
At Rabaul.
The 18JOOO Japan
Burma road into
laptured Piemna
•Tokyo said Japan had
- in mticipa-
iX
r
9-
MsMURIUY
Pram War Editor
Allied Arnies captured '
ijF major dtfenae towns in
uthern Italy in advances up
six miles and surged on to-
re i Solomon,
copters 04
totnkongore
Precarious
remain on
___ _ ’..1 land
gets iw Nertbera Salsmaiw.
Straighten Li
Agoss Italy
■ ’jL: ?•'
Germans Indicate,
M&Vp.to BreaM^B
Awajf from River.
■re ri j . -nr
SI
.........min Uh
Tbe^eurtANamiF MMMmm
nowneed today teat a bUmp
WASHXNGTON. Got !•-(»>_ l
John L. Lewis, president of the Un-
ited mine workers of America, to-
day called upon thousands ofL
striking miners in Alabama and to-
diana to "call a meettag and vote riot
to immediately return to work.” m
*T hops saoh mine woriter win itali
MBta mcriaoe hie personal interest mtet
and ouborbinate his righteously Yue
the two steamers, waf almost des-
erted yesterday when the TWa
Maru—yith a British harbor pilot
aboard—edged its way to its wharf,
the passengers waving and cheering.
NEWLRECORD 1,
FOR EARLY COLB
ROUND-
ABOUT
TOWN
in
*==
w Georgia: More Targets
4.^1^"'w
Miner, to Go
: Prem dispatch from London. /
... ...... .t i.. y
WIRE BROS
NABBVUXE, Ttam. Ost 18-
(A>>—The state Mghway patrol
OmtervBte. TenaM late MgM
Airliner mMI
iirmne abeard were MB-
Dlp Ptarson, west of Denton was
in town Saturday morning He
sustained an injury to his left eye
a few days ago He whs working
on a tractor with a screwdriver to
some manner the screwdriver came
in contact with the fan, which was
running, and it threw the screw-,
driver into his face, cutting his
nose and bruising his eye.
Bducktorg of four counties have
been invited to meet in Denton
Tuesday for a conference boM by
Dr. Joseph R. criggs, member, of
the State Department of Bduoatton
and chairman of the state com-
mtetee on southern ooUsgm and aeo-
DOtiton, ~
1
way on New Britain aa Allied pfama gyatemal
their amashing victory at Rabaul with heav]
*— • »■ — which hftV^i shiddcci J&i
Jthwett Padflc.
Tired Don J
■ -7' CBV AMocwtwl Ptbm)
An aerial poundinf of pre-invasion proportion* apw
ly exploit thc„ .
taekg upon subsidiary airships
greateat feeder base in the Soul
airy. Gen. Douglas MacArthur
announced 60 per cent of the Suo-
my’s air power was knocked out
I in the 860-ton attack upon Rabaul
Tuesday, heavv and medium Eche-
lons of Allied bombers have con-
centrated or three other important
New Britain airbases
Heavy duty bombers struck sav-
agely at Lindniliafen in the Gas-
meta area on tne laianca southeast
coast, at Cape Gloucester on ths
woshra Up end at Oops Beskina,
midway down the crescent shaped
island from Rabawl. Gloucester's
airdrome faculties and the runway
were pulverised with 43 tons of
bombs.
MacArthur's light naval eraft.
— ‘ 2j boats, bold-
Brttaln waters to
off
Prooent reports from teams mite-
itlng for contributions to the Boy
Scout Budget •— '■
in Denton *7 .
have been very _
Bon Ivey, finance chairman foe the
organteation. A final report of fin-
ancial accumulation has not been
made, however.
Any cUtera or business non urn
who has not been contacted on the
drive may become a siiotalniiw
member of the organtagtten by _
smiling contributions to Ivey. Sue- who spent
tataing munber to the name given T
those who make regular annual
payments to the
citation.
Lewis Calls on
"It a killing frost doesn’t come
aden. Doc Oliver and I may have
some swee^ potatoes” said Joe
Reed, 'but tbev’re not near big
enough yet. I hope they make
better than did our Irish potatoes.”
P>MUiiMNtia Here
■ LONDON, Oct. 16—(41—Beating I
back waves of desperate oounter-at- .
tacks in and around Melitopol, Rus-
sian troops are plunging steadily i
westward across the low fiat plains
iesdlng to the Crimea in an auda-
cious attempt to entrap upwards of
100X100 Germans reported garrison- ,
Ing the great peninsula, dispatches ,
from Moscow said today.
j Other Red army forces, having -
successfully Infested Zaporoahe, in- I /f/teMir/f
dustrtal city on the bend of the ' /SUOam
Exchange Ship
In Good Health
fo«
Soi
to, _____ _
ward Rome today through | >
the crumbling Nazi linen north
of‘the Voltuipo and Calore ■
Rivers and ii the mountain-)
9ua central spine.
Th< American Fifth Army seised
Calzxo, a hard core of German
resistance a mitemorth of the brldg- j
ed Volturno, and Ainorobi. north of
the Calore and lust east of its
junction with the Volturno.
The British Eighth Army cap- p
tured two major highway hubs in ft, •
the center, Camjx»basso and Vln- . < . , - - - - - —— - - - .
chlaturo. after driving six miles Having completed their conquest of the Central Solomons. Amertoan also drove bac> attacking Germans
forward Campobrom is a provincial forces baaed on ftendova, New Guinea, Kolombangara and Vella La- *
capital of SOjAo and one of the most vel1* can strike at the last cluster of Jap positions to the north. Map
important road Junctions in south spots location of enemy bases on Cholaeul. Shortland. Ballale. Falsi, Bou-
central Italy. It Is 114 miles south- galnvllle and Buka—the last remaining islands In Jap hands,
east of Rome. Vinchlaturo is six „ .
miles southwest at the crossroads of 7
Work Stoppage in Willkie Want.
r-i M;1k*'rp°ar. Issues Clarified
north of the Volturno about M mites GOBI 1711068 r CuiCQ , , .. z^__r_1Ar
to a point on the Adriatic four miles 16-<AA-Decter-
above Termoll Thifltown! fell lv—- ” lnK that hr know* from personal ob-
after determined iMMilta." fee, WASHINGTON Oct *“1^**“1rcPorted ■‘•‘n *«» .?•«• hand’.
_H— New work stnepags in the uattocu 1L. Wlllkie warned the Republican
l«-mftolWMteiiaMiw.|BB»..»il to choc- a presi&^l
shattered, the Bermans showed signs lea's wai machinea, was leered to- 1
i of breaking away from their pool- f 4BV minrn «n Alabama and Ln-
' JtaTriL ^rT^Mfth unlOn had I
But Gen. Clark s Fiitn army nad , ? ... ,
to» absorb wave after wave of coun- I no bontrac. with the operators,
terattacks as it moved Inexorably
forward. Several bridges were con-
structed over the Volturo and across
return work to insure capacity
and tanks to ever increase ths pres- ti>« unn
sure on the foe. By Thursday.'
the Fifth army had fought its way
up the slopes which command the
whole area. They advanced over
the bodies of large numbers of
German dead and wounded and beat
Mites
0_______25
■
Pacific Ocean
Charlie Justice, who h.is lived In
* the timber around Oak Grove for
quite some years, said. "I'd hate to
live on the prairie, where no trees
afford shelter In the summer I
can take a lot of summer, provid-
ing there are some shade trees
around, but this winter business
isn’t so hot with me." Justice re-
cently bought the Robertson school
Hcuse. thy school being abandoned,
and he’s building a fine home with
the lumber
Mrs. Nick Akin has a letter from
her son. Bob Morris, who is sta-
tioned somewhere in Iceland with
the United States Forces. He
writes that the climate there ft
about the same as Chicago, but
that the winds never cease, and
that there are no trees to halt em
He says they blow 34 hwn a day.
*T just gotta zo deer hunting this
winter.” said Ollie Bushey. “I iJiVe
bought a rubber-tired wheelbarrow
for the trip. H I <xn*t get any
gas, and 111 push awhile and Con-
nie Gary will ride, and then hell
push a bit.” R B. Shannon, an-
other ardent deer hunter, is getting
klndo* jittery about hh annual
hunt, and is wondering bow* he*s
going to maks it. He says. “Maybe
the OPA will realite the necessity
.. at us hunters helping out on the
meat situation.1** Pete Tebin, vtok
proxy of the obe-bird club, said,
“Teah, i think Tve goe enough shot-
gun sheila to quality for the club
again. I have about two boxes.”
Mart Stover thinks he’ll surely re-
tain the presidency of the chib, as
his dove-shooting Indicates h|s
ability
, Otari C. Hoffman, better kno*n ke
•BUI Fun* has been mighty suc-
cessful with cream peso and sweet
S. potato* ihls year. From • Snail
•After this frost, Tm going to flfil
off the vines, so that any troit
hereafter wont go down into the
<’ potatoea.” BUI Fun has been tak-
ing in the (ropes* from his pou and
potatoes during the summer end
TRACT, Calif, OH. M
A irswksi Grepbeowd paMte-
ger bus and the Weetara Paci-
fic RaDrMTs cHMk ExpesKMn
Flyer met In a ssriiik of teor-
wfi'taVBb^ • Nwileg mw
Ttoey last night, and at leata
Six of the bos^fiNMnsm wow
killed, acme 36 Bihsro injured.
ALUED HEADQUAfirU <
Algiers, Oet. 14—(AV-The Oar-
■MMHI Bl1* UM Wb*
die gfiktisas tn Beene and gee
taking ttMM te Germany, niece
n «m WMdM
Land-based Liberators carried out Confd
M Ugbir »
kasoctated Prom
to- ‘-’<’•••*4
ToB.
k—
ova'c >
TMA6UPY lt £> ■
Solomon Seo /*
V •.« to .MMrewwrexs. ■ J. wVf■'a,wi
f •• ■ ■ , •-/JV''- v *
DENTON RECORD-CHRONI
..... ■1 rrnr-rl-j------*‘*-*~ ..... ' ; '■ *-■■ _______________....... ............ '
NU L , ' ■ ‘ DENTON,
> • 1 r
rCaptut^u
I- i Temperature at
39 Degrees Here
The minimum temperature re-
corded at the State Experiment
Station Saturday morning was 38
degrees, just seven degrees above
freezing. This to (unusually low re-
corded for this early ‘ in the fkfi.
and some frost probably formed in
low places.
Vtvwd by four
Bobby Joan. C
W E. Scherle. oil man. to still
working on getting another oil test
started tn Denton County. He mid.
“I’ve been In Fort Worth and Dal- *
las in recent days trying to get
some of the ‘blue chips’ out of the
■ pot When I get W lined
I’ll make another try for an on
field here."
Omua Peterson of Roanoke herb
Saturday morning, wher\ asked if
'rost > formed at his place. *aid.
"Well. I don’t know: I didn’t get up
that early, but you Alight ph'tie
Mrs. Peterson to find out ’
Merchants Elect
New Directors
New directon of the Retail Mer-
chants Association of Denton were
' elected at a luncheon meeting Pri-
— as — --A*-a tllV
thi^Crtnea and absorbing wivro j to*i7wto ^d^r VMW cflKto'to i?lr1UnChe?L
ef German ~""!ter“ttac!£* In the *_ thf>lr infiu-n-. halt the ,h »»'• wrirfav
streets of Melitopol. Further north, w nBK ’
ihav warn ak>wlv httttB»riniy through 1
defense of Kiev and 1
Lord Belbome, British 1
minister of economics warfare, said
4.000,000 German troops had been
killed in the war. 3,600.000 by the
Russians.
Central Pacific—Navy Liberaton
bombed Kakin, northermost Gilbert
island. It was the latest test of
Japanese defenses in the central
Pacific, possibly leading to a major
offensive against the Gilberts or
Marshall islands.
Southwest Pacific—Three Japa-
nese bases on crescent-shaped New
Britain island which cradles Rabaul
were bombed Motor torpedo bbats
attacked offshore shipping. The lat-
est blows at Capes Hoskins and
Gloucester and at Gasmata followed
the pulverizing smash at Rabaul.
Argentine—President Ramires re-
buked signers Of a pro-democratic
manifesto asking the government to
awing from neutrality to American
solidarity. He called them “foreign-
ers” although many were prominent
political and business leaders.
President RooeWOitl
idem of the forced
tah nongk
Semitic in
exchange ship Tela Maru are in attacking west of the Between
good physical condition despite their **!*r
-J months in Japanese occupied Mr- jjhe enimy
’ to offset kB&bed
after a brief visit board era Burma,
ed an offensive in Burma" before
an allied drive could be opened. *
From Tokyo, by radio, came word
that HMphoiag, Indo-China hart
The tiny tropical harbor, newly- been raided again by China booed
dredged to permit the docking of planes c< Maj. oon. Chdro Chen-
m-- .--.-------- ---. n.* nault s Command.
Pacific fleet headquarters al
; Pearl Harbor announced the second
attack |n ires than a mouth agatnst
Japan s once secure Makin Island. <300B
about 3.000 miles south of Jtono|UhL
an attack deocribed
Mr to the north, A
Correspondent Norman E
porting on the Japanese---
MDOQ Z*l LU W^dnMClAy Mkid
4 Jana- nw» ro^ AoRNff ”W
The crispest weather of the eeas- j txxnb snUnter There was iw?
----— a™ —with k^ bwT«r STk
'raids against Japan* Kurile Is-
i lands.
the
ent month are still available and ;
that each Bond bougl
war to a quicker endl
protection to our fighting forces
of German counterattacks in the
Sv*( CM, v* —,w« «■>,
they were slowly battering through
the outer defense of C
Gomel. Lord Belbome.
I Welles Advocates
Allied Agreement
On Post-war Plans
Denton cltiaens showed they
knc<w a good investment when they
see it by oversubocribing the focal
quota on War Bonds during the
Third War Loan Drive last month.
This week they're being offered an-
other investment that will oring
greater retnms than money.
This Investment now bel
ed by a group of Denton <
an opportunity to support toe work
of Boy Scouts. It Is an u*Wstm<*nt
wherein dc'Jara pay dividend., in
character, in better citizens. In
fewer crimes. Denton oeopie are
asked only to invest 44.000 for this
purpose, which Should be easy for
a city that has lust bought more
than a million dcHgrs
Boiuis.
Meanwhile, don’t ewertook the [
fact that War Bonds for the pres-
et brings the 1
ling and gives
They bomber enemy
the ground and shooting down 19 low aa was the 40 at Wichita Falls.
. ---------------.— Longview had a moderate froit.
The temptrature at Austin fell to
46. lowest this fall, from a high yoo-
terday of 71 San Antonio record-
ed 48 degrees at 8 a, m.
probably motor torpedo
b entered New BrKata
MORMUGAO. Portuguese T—H-r ■*nk a Japanese coastal vota
Oct io—pp>—The 1 JOO ♦—<— Boo** Biand and daotroy or
. ! one eight bargee
Canadian and Latin-American dvQ- Chungking report rd f '
i lan repatriates aboard too fkysn— than 10,000 Ispsnsss troo*
exchange ship Tala Mani are in attaafflng
‘ * A^mas tan
town of Pienma Was captured by
in an apparent attempt
Y’SftBt in North-
_Ji , Radio Tokyo an-
nounced the Japanese have launch-
Dnieper. (By AMKiated Press)
artillery •“ ... -- - --
• mowed dopn fierce counter-attacks on rnergteed' Texans totlar
John L. Lewh. head of the United was considered by some to be the Germans were being methodically temperatures since last spring
Mine Workers, refused to comment keynote address of his campaign blasted from one line after another, ^^2^1
early on the appeal from the War for the 1440 presidential nomlna- the nPWS agency reported. ) degress, coMsot Oct 16'on record
Labor Board urging the miners to tlon I Red Brmy alrp|anM. commanding 1 and coldest day since last March 83
/ —r -m 'mn i r tlUtt f t,'e1,r**lnll>‘ , the skies over the front, broke up Houston recorded 48 degrees, tow
production of coal. The WLB i Uncans picked an able mon. “a man ----*•——----—— ■■-• *----••---—*— -—— ——-
scheduled a meeting later today to whose record leaves no doubt, that
discuss the coal situation. 1 ” - —
The government took over opera- support him.'*
tlon oi the mines during a strike
last May. Secretary of Interior Har- “you have heard men call me In^
--- -—,otld Ickes, as wartime solid luels t-,-,.
down determined rearguard action, administrator, this week completed i
attempts
---- In Dallas, ttm mercury tell to 17
ths Tess news agency reported. .degress, coidsst Oct. 16 on record
Red army airplanes, commanding ' and coldest day since last March 83.
WLB | Uncans picked an able mtoi.
flv tZ« whrwaes rroVitri 1msv»« rim
i countless German InstaUations, and mark since April 20. Fort
------- ----— ----------- thwarted all attempts U Un iww —M-
he is qualified. i wlU. of course. ; RuggUn bridgeheads over the river. ' tumn and the briskest day since
■■■nnnrf him They bomber enemy airdromes. -------- “
Wlllkie told bls listeners that , Sa(rlng or destroying 33 plane, on ■
>m* ..... „r..u unm um me *.i- y., Kround and shooting d"“" 1
teinaUonahst and with ihst word ! Xair^ttle. over the rt?er
they try to get the implication I !
: am thereby less un American. I do I
‘ believe in international coopera-
tion, not because I tore America
i but because I love her more—
—leriea of well-being, of jobs, of
I opportunity, of ideals and of tree
rmsn.”
I
dustrial city on the bend of the
Dnieper 65 miles to the north, were
battling their way down the railway
that leads through Melitopol to the
Crimea.
Today s Russian communique said
this column already had driven the
hard-fitfhting Germans back
through five railway towns, includ-
, ing Plavnl. 17 miles southeast of
Zaporoshe More than 1.080 Nasis
! were killed. 33 tanka were destroyed
*■ > and 30 big guns captured in this
I operation •'
Red Defense | jj r -- - - - ’
J Far to the north, the Russians i .. , , - < ; ,
were beating in through the outer '’‘wy. American consular official'
] defenses of Kiev, repulsing repeated ““ Ux,B;
counter-attacks. Red army troops ! veo* .. .
...... Z The Swedish liner Gripebolm.
south of Gomel, in White Russia. . J*P*n«wfor exchaat
Germane in the Crimea were fac- , ®»IWctaa » arrive today, bo
ed’with another threat from the •Wiuif’ • Mali.
1 Taman peninsula .in the western U”? t«>Ptoal harbor, 1
Caucasus, where strong Soviet forces '
were reported massing for an
amphblous attack acron the Kerch
straits and the Black Sea.
At least 1.500 Germans drowned
» crossing the Dnieper at Zaporoahe
as the Russians cleaned up the east
bank of that sector, the war bul-
letin said, and another 3.000 were '
--------------—------. ™... „„ *___;___iz
16—(*>— to America for leadership, Wendell ' to-hand fighting in the town of
—**— ’ Melitopol. from which the enemy
party not to Chows X presldurtfc! wai, Mowb but surely being driven. ..
| candidate “who hedges or qualifies : The communique reported bitter
or whose record te ambiguous on fighting on the middle Dnieper,
the issues of the day.” I where massed Russian
i The 80-minute address, on r ' -----------„„ . *«*„. w,w.
radio network broadcast last night, ,, north and south of Kiev. Here the some pointe recording the lowest
u/Ot rtfthwi/ttoVtoH Ker wtwxa t/x Has t Has 1 WCTC tC* “lu. . _ _a_ a _ l.l’ < _ J
Mine Workers, refused to comment keynote address 'of his campaign hiasted' from one line after another,
Doric rxn tho orvrwral frrvsvx War for tho 1AAH Via 1 rmmlna- ' **_ _ . ______ ___________’
^.CMuroi
•tew ttewJSXP.a
OMaSateansI
Coral See
otld Ickes, as wartime solid fuels
At tea. destroyers^ flying the un- ■ the return of the coal fields to their I
ton jack intercepted two German- owners. Lewis' no-strike pledge,'
guarded Italian ships in the Adris- ilven when thp (,c,verninent assum-
tlc. capturing a tanker and sinking control of the mines, expires less
another loaded with bauxite <alum- October 30 ~• - Aim
inu ore) after the Germans set it j Nearly 25.000 miners had left
•fire- * i*. i their jobs up to late last night. The i
Once again. Allied planes soared walkout centered in the Alabama .
to Greece to bomb the port of Sal- i coa] fields, but quickly spread to |
onlka. where the first world war be- J properties in Indiana,
gan to end in 1918. -No contract—no work"—the old
Elsewhere tn the world war were i slogan of the mine workers'—WM
these developments I their expressed reason for quitting.
rwK-r T*11" ,lme- however, the walkouts
- ,J .. ..... were unauthorised by either the
Russia the Red army was beat- Yiational or local units of UMW* • t———w- ■ ■—-w
ing/across the tow fiats leading to ] w„ T4)w n.->ard annealed I day. whan it was voted to hold
- - - - -----------1 * rc MOWI DVWCU wppvBi™ h.nrhwm
. the association, on the third Friday
, of each month instead of twice
monthly as before.
Nyw directors are W. 8. Miller,
G. E. Taytor, Ben Ivey, ~
lee, WUl WUllams, W
G. ». •• riMf, W- w. rv**8®,
Lee R. McDonald, L. A. Dungan. :
W t. r? r* MrovwtMw and Cam
Directors will meet at a bably wiU be tried during the last
* —, two weeks. . „ :
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Edwards, Robert J. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 54, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 16, 1943, newspaper, October 16, 1943; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1317760/m1/1/: accessed July 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.