Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 129, Ed. 1 Monday, January 12, 1942 Page: 4 of 6
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To Begin Revival
INSURANCE
FIRE
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AUTOMOBILES
ACCIDENT
SURETY BONDS
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MAN ABOUT
MANHATTAN
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severely where not protected
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.--------------O-----
SOCIAL. SECURITY GROWS
the morale of a people and
best
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JVST
AMONG US
FOLKS
By BRACK CURRY
Associated Press Staff
and Mrs Texas begin dip-
welcome |
- f cold J
which hud been the most perslst-
NEW YORK. January 12—Saturday was Barbara
Kent’s wedding day. She put on her prettiest dress
and became the bride of Mr Connor Lawrence, Jr.
The ceremony took place at Fifth Avenue’s fashion-
able Presbyterian church.
It is doubtful if any of the girls at the Powers
Model agency saw any connection between the Bar-
bara Kent they knew and the ’Miss Barbara Mary
Kent Green, daughter of the Hon. and Mrs Ralph
Westgate Green of London and Hayes House. Frame.
Somerset, Englund.’ whose troth had been announc-
ed irt the New York society sections on Decmber 18.
so
In England, tills girl studied at the Royal Academy
«f Dramatic Art. She wantod. Mt become an actress,
and she did make a beginning But after Munich
she enlisted as a war nurse, and came to America
with a group of English children who were refugeed
to this country After she got here she was robbed
of her money. She possessed looks and a good flgurw
and it wasn't long before she had a job as a model.
It was then that her colleagues at Powers sought to
savvy her up a bit. and put her in the way of oppor-
tunity “You gotta be seen in the right places, kid.
. . . You gotta get mentioned In the Broadway col-
umns.”
Registration between 9 and 10
o’clock Tuesday ■ morning in the
science auditorium will oped the
third annual state-wide garden
conference on the T. 8. C. W cam-
e
Five yean ago there wa« no State aoelal security
■ ~ ......
■
the evening
. m,
‘The
--MNNMW.-
NATION-WIDE
SHEETS
lie sheet M>an amazing
•sappers and head-
quarter guards as ordinary infan-
try.
TO OE
Iron
picket
E. Hlcl
Al
1 .jL //
the
__________
iteuM toe explained that this modeat, n-
laee to the heart of the crowded District
i’a best residential district has been the
of capital society io. these many yean,
ratheoed on exclusive invitation only the
lekxia—and in tnlr case that good New
has a double ujeaning. for it includes not
dal reformers, the people who want to
r about the underprivileged poor, but atoo
Unban, the people who want to do tome-
communtiy than attractively plant-
ed yards throughout a town. And
price tn a community and its people
has much to be with maintaining
the .
of Mrs C.
Clifton and Mias Edna Morgan, both Uv-
near Roanoke. were unital in marriage.
_jnnle Jones. J. W. Simmons, In Odell and Bob
Norman returned from Moran where they wen
guests of c. B. Snyder on his ranch.
Jim Ounningliam of Dentop was the first man In
7%xas to sign up for the Ion-Utter* contest that
that the mercury had gone above
the freezing point at any time
■ ■ '; jiS <____ ___—. „„
McLean’S million-dollar estate. Friendship .
PURE
sorgl
Karris
CALL
car
startin
mor mil
813 N |
Nond
Bend
fir pi nl
ty Bhl
ment I
with tl
mentsl
holdrJ
t Ion n 11
and
ra
2 o'cll
day <
riu bld
1041 I
• l^TUn CMKJAVTT OF
GET-TOGETHER AT KVALYN
WASHINGTON, January 12-»T»a
-a mere shoddy thread among the g
raveling on the fringes of mighty
High debate teams were coached
by Carroll FJltt, N T 8 T C. I
graduate.
Five teams were undefeated in 1
the two Saturday rounds—the girls'
[ - .
get a tire when it can be proven
that the Cr----- --
can get atamt
many restrict
hoped that a
that it will n
soliiMy deny
State Gardeners
To Open Two-day
Meeting Tuesday
• • • ♦
If the American soldiers have their way, the
“man without a country’’ to going to be every Jap.
• • • -
Speaking of the Red Cross—give till it hurts
you and you’ll help the hurts of others.
One thing absolutely proved by statistics
that you cant prove anything by statistics.
Hitler wants aU the skis in Germany for the
army. It should make going down hill easier.
i'T"iiii1rri"i' .............T-- mi.....-i
wise dry Sabbaths. Tb Friendship have flocked the
chosen senators and congresantten and undersecre-
taries and administrators and co-ordinators—the peo-
ple of influence — the Honorable Joe Governments
themselves and their wives, checking their beta and
coats at the entrance, being assigned to chatty little
tablen of four or so for supper, and here the com-
pany was mixed up as only a skillful hostess can do.
Sourpuss old Senator Isolation might have as his
dinner partner the wife of dynamic young Congress-
man Intervention, and the other couple at the table
might be Mr Big Corporation, a dollar-a-year boy
ing.
life Germans were said to be
concealing their looses by burning
' their dead in the Tikhvin sector,
and using gunners, cavalrymen,
"A” team from Adamson High In motorcyclists.
Dallas, the Wichita Falls boys'
"B” team, the Denison boys’ ‘ A"
team, the Wichita Falls girls’ “B”
team and the Sherman girls "A"
team.
Expeaento of fqual education for
all would apply an equal rule to
unequals. Dr. T. A. Rousse, Uni-
versity of Texa.s debate coach, who
presented the negative side of the
high school debate question, said
in his talk at the institute Satur-
day Rousse's talk was delivered at
the noon luncheon of the institute.
Mrs Olive M. Johnson, director of
speech, presided.
There is no such thing as equal-
izing education, Rousse said in his
talk This is impossible, he explain-
ed. since education is the sum total
of experience and the total of the
environment—home, church and
community—to always different.
to haa been to got elects
Ml tomato-high omrn.
whose company was being persecuted by injunctions , .
and war orders, struggling to make talky-lalk with will to carry on to the
the wife of Mr Chief Assistant Trust Buster.
Why to it they build homes with every known
convenience except low rent?
Japs Say British
General Captured
LONDON. Jan. 12,-dPi—Round-
about reports reaching here through
Axis channels declared today that
a Major General Bennett, com-
mander of the 28th British Division,
was captured by the Japanese in
fighting around Kuala Lumpur.
Reuters said the report origi-
nated in a Tokyo broadcast picked
up and\ repeated by the German-
controlled Norwegian radio.
Long Distance
— Moving
ROANE
TRANSFER-STORAGE
COMPANY
Postal receipts in Denton during the past year were
84X8MJ2, the largest in the history of the local
offlee.
Ihe Dreamland offered the people of Denton
'Thorns and Orange Blossoms" with Kenneth Har-
J
MBtortte.
. Will Hopkins of Blue Mound was in Denton on
H. O. 'nuuferro was In Dallas' for the day on
tasinesB matters.
Two children of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Tom Bayless
vers sick at catarrhal fever.
63. died after an illness of
iktetM!
» InttoMlb -1**
Nd giM ' -n 1
»n’a other-l News
cltisenahip at all times—tn war or
peace. Few things add more to
at the home of Mias Mattle Mae
Seaborn.
H. O. Harris attended a state
meeting of school administrators
tn Austin. «,
This probably was a somewhat
garbled version of a Tokyo report
yesterday that the commander of
the 28th British Brigade was killed
in the Kuala Lumpur area of Ma-
laya.
There is an Australian Major
General Gordon Bennett, however,
who commanded , big Australian
forces gathering In Singapore dur-
ing 11M1 but Wil, * '
as having gone : _ .
for a conference in November.
An even temperature of at least
AH degrees should be maintained
for the Miecessful growing of plants
indoors.
WASHINGTON
COLUMN
iJaTibsundaynigS.
----------g ,.
c bom
and a
rx on> me ranges at nugmg omrai mom—the
Mt New Year news in Washington was not the
at Manila, but the fall of Mrs. Evalyn WUah
I
tcTuw
veto entitled to the
skirls
<'2 Exchenge ^';
flaks. Rentals, Serrha
Sake Phane— 321
and r
ftwBiu J
" I
• ' * . \*
I, TtXU RKOORD-CHRONTCLK. MONDAY. JANUARY M, IMS
-ST
i
i____________
J most as much
had come. A
‘ pnrl tomnoi
! welcome relief from a wintry siege |
I 4 — K. 1-— J keetlefi OlewtoeS «.< •«<•« gtv-cf
i of the year
DENTON, TEXAS, JANUARY 12. 1942
DALLAS-TARRANT BLACKOUT
Dalias and Tarrant Counties will hold their first
practice blackout Jan. It, which to likely to be the
prelude to several such events, some without warn-
ing. Two months ago, the Idea of blackouts in this
part of the country sounded a little silly and there
seemed little possibility of enemy planes ever pene-
trating the interior of the United States.
But the idea that the Japs would be so foolhardy
to attack this country was exploded Dec. 7 at Pearl
, Harbor, and there is no reason to feel certain that
* onsair planes cannot or wUl not seek out military,
objectives in Texas. Taking precautions now to learn
the intricats problems incident to blacking out a
large ana may save property and lives later on.
Cities which have held test blackouts quickly dis-
covered that they tackled a complicated job. It
isn't as simple as pulling a switch at the power
house, shutting off all electricity. Refrigerators must
continue to run. people want light in their biacksd-
out homes, radio programs must continue, elevators
in hotels and other tall buildings must function as
usual and other vital services performed by electricity
must not be curtailed The blackout job to a task
to bo performed by each individual who must look
after hta own lighting, at home, al hto stare and at
Ms factory ’
to I
one on which all deductions and
other data are carefully detailed,
just as usual.
Optional Forms
The 1040-A Is the optional form,
under which" a citizen may list his
Income and his dependent exemp-
tions and pay a stated amount,
without going Into detail These
amounts are figured on a basis of
deductions amounting to six per
cent of total Income
In passing the 83.500.000.000 de-
fense tax bill last year. Congress
provided for the simplified form. A
graduated table shows the amount
of tax owed.
Lowering the exemptions granted
both single and married persons
and an increase in income of in-
dividuals in the lower brackets are
responaible for the anticipated
large gain Ln the number of tax-
payers. says 3. L. Mayo, assistant
collector of internal revenue at
DkJlM- • - i
A married man with no depend- I
anu, . wnlng |40 a week, nevtr'
befbre has had to worry about in- i
come taxes, but with exemptions
for single persons cut from 8M0 to
x By L. A. M. <
A meeting which should be of
inteerst to all housewives will be
held at T. 8. C. W. Tuesday and
Wednesday, in the form of a garden
conference The relationship be-
tween national defense and garden-
ing will be the general theme of the
meeting, and experts in, varied fields
of plant production will be on hand
tor addresses and conferences.
_____i
to file income I
MORT CORPORATION COURT
CASES SET TUESDAY
Because of the press of other
duties, connected with civilian de-
fense organization, on the mayor.
Corporation Court was due to hear
few cases Monday and most of its
business will be transacted Tuesday
morning. Mayor Lee Preston said.
ter of Mr and Mrs J. c Stinson, man.
who has been employed in Fort
Worth, has accepted a position as
stenographer in the North Amer-
ican plane factory at Grand Pral-
rte- -
F. M. Harris, son of Mrs Win-
nie Harris, who has been employ-
! ed by the Headlee Tire Co in Den-
ton. has accepted a position with 1 March 15. ,
**■* — — . - Those who filed last year and
who had gross incomes of $3,000
Gardening can play another im-
portant part in national m
■ of U*8 for Texas’; and O. S Gray,
_ Many families I Arlington pecan specialist, "z'- -
as well as in the country i State Tree, the. Pecan”
can fairly easily grow some vege- ; After a banquet. t:„ c._.
tables which not only will help sup- ! session, from 7 p. m. until 9 p.
ply their tables with food but also y*11 feature a discussion of
with needed variety and vitamins j New IJay-Lillies’’ by Dr. A. B Stout
of tiie New York Botanical Gar-
den and moving jjictures In tech-
nicolor of the Big Bend National I
“ ‘ Jack Lamb of Fort Worth |
io last wasireocrted ,7M ftnd for ,n"rrle<’ honi
uL W®®0 to tf^po. W1H this year |
Jcents a week to his urtcle
Hie fedeial gasoline tax. the rate
ci which wgs iiMveaaed in 1940, to
now costing the •nation's motor-
tots $1000,000 a day. A few yean
the tax produced only about
half that amount. • r,
r*..... 1 1 -
I
J
ton, has accepted ,
the Goodyear Tire Co In Dallas
Messrs, and Mmes. Ray Craw-
f~“. -___j r,__ _____
born of Ponder attended a party I and 1040-A. The 1040 form to the
-om Record-Chronicle. January 12. 1923 >
were reported as doing heavy damage
• -aln fields around Roanoke.
The' erihans were in an ugly mood as French
troo0s cupied the City of Steen.
Mcr k dna W. Trigg, Denton County Home Dernon-
L stratum Agent, was giving particular attention to
L ixteitry in various parts of the county.
Wg^r. Burton and Mtee Violet Moser, both well
W’S known young people of Slidell, were married Rev.
J. W. Baltteop officiating
John MUffmeyer, who wm injured in an automo-
■L Nle accMeut. waa slowly improving.
Born:'To Mr. and Mrs. Glen Egan. Carrier Street,
a^boy and to Mr. and Mn. Harold Horton, Bolivar
^BteodoreTJllfton and Miss Edna Morgan, both Uv-
at your favorite grocery.
Baked and delivered
. ( week for their annual Income tax
This maximum preceding a low of j accounting with Uncle Sam
*' I As the old gent girds to meet po-
tential war costs of 150 billions of
dollars. 200.000 Texans for the
first time prepare L, -------...
tax returns.
Increased income from 1941 and
lowered exemptions will double the
number in Texas filing returns this
AU Ulis bonne vivante and high jinks is to end
Friendship, going the way of all things, has been
taken over by the gov’ment and will be a site for a
housing project for Uncle Sam's nieces—the type-
writer and adding machine punchers who will win
the war with carbon copies and comptometer.
Now this is a worthy cause, but the question arises
as to what on earth to the upper crust of official '
Washington aoctoty going to do on Sunday nights. ■
after Friendship has been turned over to the wolkin’ >
goils? This Is a problem of first magnitude.
i 14 degrees Saturday morning.
Some damage to grain was fear-
ed from the prolonged low temper-
ature. And livestock had suffered
by
common usage and render valuable
service, although these and many
others can be greatly restricted In
use for a long time fo come with-
out any undue hardship on the av-
for by President
J
From Uie Abilene Rejiorter is Ulis Sunday afternoon with
statement:
Special to Record-Ctironicle
SANGER, Jan. 12.—W 8. WUlta.
minister of Bridgeport, will begin
a revival at the local Church of
Christ Sunday. Jan 18
News Briefs
Mrs H M. Reeves' condition re-
main unchanged.
Mrs T F Dickens Is no better.
Barlow Everly is improved.
Mrs. F. H Schew is ill.
The weather got wanner for Uie
freezing week-end, which wus a v.i
Ilia .first lime since. Jan. 1, ; relief from the Jong siege of
- u„.Jay afternoon ttae mercury j wiiicii had been the most i<ei
rose to 63 degrees, the highest in a i ent spell in two years
long time But winter was not broken The
| mercury mounted to 62 degrees
brightly |
relief
! Sunday’s minimum., however, had i
1 degrees and 1
inywa-s 29. marking Uie 12th !
| success! i RKlay in which freezing |
1 temperature had been recorded.
with 38 de- ■
"Well, it won’t be so bad Most
of us had almost forgotten how
to walk anyhow; now we can
regain the pleasures and prof-
its of that finest of exercises
The occasional auto trip we
take will be all the more pleas-
urable for its rarity. We won't
drive so fast and will see more
of the scenery. We will revive
the helpful and neighborly hab-
it of picking each other up on
the way to work, in bad weath-
er. Aqd we will shove our
noses out Into the cold morn-
ing breezes and strike out for
the office on shank’s mare Most
of us have forgotten what a
bad time we used to have with
poor tires. Any trip up to 23
miles was good for three punc-
tures and a blowout For the
last few years we have been
going 10.000, 15.000 or 20,000
mites without a single blowout
and maybe ohiy one or two
punctures. Wa have been
spoiled by the genius of Amer-
ican tire-makers. We will be-
gin to appreciate that genius
again when we have to go easy
On tires, tuiu ••
make frequent repairs
selves, as in the old days,
will have to learn to take care
of What we have, including
measures against thievery—for
in times of stress the rata be-
gin to crawl out of the under-
world sewers and prey on tion-
sst folk. Loss of a set of ew-
inga, remember, may strand
your car where it sets for
months It will all be a little
inconvenient and annoying, to
be sure; but when your own
flesh and blood are fighting
and dying in far-off places to
protect our way of life, what
right have we to complain? Let
us count our blessings and be (
thankful.”
DteUr tosute a» >14 West Hickory Street. Danton.
Ytenxjweg^teruoon eaoept Sunday by U»e «*•«*<!
- -
ISs Ewitt!-
I.....
_ PHONES
BteMteOte and amtartal Oteee ...........
Octette Department
Uva* mon Lii cwiiv^Tvci ..................
tete sraj^^^^arector.
gtetaa or atenteng of any nrm. Individual or co
— —“ corrected upon being called (
Prem to eaclualvei
rd herein.
. -y- ..... -i .
Russians Slud I
Nazis in Crimea
LONDON. Jan 12.—(JP>—Russia's
Black Sea fleet, operating from the
great Sevastopol base wmen the
Nazis failed to destroy or capture.
! was shelling retreating German
columns in the Eastern Crimea to-
: day. reports reaching here said
I One object of the Nazi drive Li-
to the Crimea was to restrict the
boyj.’ Black Sea fleet Failure of that
atm was apparent when the Rea
1 navy took a large and successful
part in Soviet landings on the
WRITTEN ONLY IN
STRONG OLD LINE
COMPANIES.
’ J. J. Madachlan
NS JaWinfe
| L..... _ PNm SN
war.
The Dutch foi
failed to lenm ji
fail of their own
be struck when It to
him, not where cx_
forces have reinforced
Japanese invaders of Davao
EMonri.
EBUILD
!!■ epair
■^F EPAINT
■ ■ EPAPER
N ■ EROOF
■ ■ ECONDITION
Get our estimates
, Foiworth-GaWtli
Lumber Company
U7 N. Khn r
American people ean easily do
without many of the luxuries to
which they have become accus-
tomed. Most of them run around
too much, eat too much and have
more of many other things than i
they need. They now will have to I
learn to do without a considerable 1
percentage of things they want and
they perhaps will have to forego not
a few of them altogether. The first
big blow came to the automobile
industry, and the most regrettable
feature in this connection to the
fact that ao many people with heavy
investments will be thrown out of
business and face heavy tosses In
addition to many employes who
wm lose their jobs. Aa for the gen-
eral public, it still can fare all right.
It to to be hoped that conditions
soon will Improve to the poipt
Where people imperatively Meding
automobiles for the proper conduct
of their bualneaa will be able to get
enough Urea u» meet tbe moat
pressing demands and perhaps a
new car at intervals;' also that the
time will not be for dtotant where
even the passenger automobile may
owner had used his car
and judicially and is in
of a mw casing. People
iMQg watt enough with
, but it is to be
Jons will be such
s neramry to ab-
as which are in
welfare
now through the production <
food for home use. 1
In town i— —-------------
Barbara Kent was a girl who didn't talk about
herself very much The girls at Powers knew she was
reserved, and they tried to give her the right kind
of advice They thought she ought to be seen more (
in nightclubs They told her the more she got herself
noticed, in the right way. the more offers she would
ave. If a model isn’t ’’demanded," she doesn t get ;
too far
It may have been a natural*English reserve It
may have been shyness In any case, Barbara Kent
was not a familiar figure in after dark life around
Manhattan. When she went out with young men she
went to obscure places, or to the movies
Then, one night, she told something of her story
to John Fitzgerald, an observer of the Broadway
scene. < ~—
timate.
From this new tax bracket, mil-
lions of dollars pocketed by Tex- |
ans in lush 1941 will pour into
Uncle Sam's war pockets to help |
produce the unprecedented
armadas called f_. 1,
Roosevelt.
Heaviest Taxes
In 1942 the heaviest taxes in
American history—double those for
the First World War era—will
1 as
situation grew steadily worse
Soviet war dispatches said cap-
tured documents of the 289th In-
fantry Division revealed that the
division had been reinforced in the
high : past two months by men with
schools in this area Both Denton i wounds in tile first stages of heal-
Um Brooks
Product*
ini be ■—rud af Grade
*A’ Quality. None but
Grade ‘A’ Milk proeeaaed
— in aw piantl
Phone 4S7 Today zj
Brooks Dairy, Inc.
Park by Jack Lamb of Fort Worth 1
The Wednesday sessions of the j
conference will open at 9:15 a m.
Wherefore. Miss Kent abandoned Broadway and
took up flying She got in her licks at the Safalr
Flying School, at Roosevelt Field She won her wings '
as a private flying pilot, and one of the first to con- 1
grot ulate her was a tall fellow pilot named Connoa |
Lawrence. Connor didn’t like the cafea too well
either. But he liked Barbara Kent. They began fly-
ing together, and studying serial navigation together.
•Hie newspapers began to guesa who she was When
she mad an extensive flying tour in behalf of "Bun-
dles for Britain."
On Thursday, Dec. 18, her engagement was an-
nounced. and Saturday. January 10. she became
rum nor Lowrance's wife.
And that's all . . . except that she still doesn’t talk
about herself much. . . . She still doesn't care for
nighUTuta and nightlife and the blare of the mid-
night, white hot clarinet and trumpet sotoa along
the street called Broadway.
pus to which 800 persons Interested
In gardening have been Invited
The first sesston, from 10:15 a.
m. until 12:15 noop. will Include
,a Welcome to the campus by Presi-
dent L. H Hubbard of the college,
a talk on "Garden Soils and How
to Modify Them" by DT: L. O
Of i Jones, agronomy professor at Tex-
sruuoun auuuv itun.es, wtucu, «> i*- ! as A & &M College, and a talk
seif, is conducive to morale of the > on "Gardening Under Difficulties”
“ by O B. Howell, professor of hor-
„ tieulture at Texas Technological
contentment and pride in the home College.
■ - ------ - * Tn the Tuteday afternoon ses-
sion, from 1:30 to 4:30 p. m., Mrs
Hally Bradley Hampton of Fort
| Worth will give “A Report on New 1
| Roses—the ProoHbf the Pudding”; |
E Beavers of Wichita '
Falls. "Chrysanthemums"; Mrs
Stephen Barrett of Dallas, "Iris";
Ralph Ellis Gunn, Houston land-
scape artist. “Azaleas and Camel-
lias fnr Tpyor"’ Anri rb R Grot'
pecan specialist, "Our
For one thing, such a conference : Modify^ Them'
encourages the Vautlfylng of I
grounds about homes, which, in tl- I
for that AU the chestnuta now
___' oountriw, and they’re tZ :
won’t be pulled outiy a fraattel
there, eadi for hto favorite chestnut, but by
Intelligent. oo-etoMaated effort at retrieving
ffa^^^t^ar^h^
but a united victory -Longvlgw . '
BE" *
. Jan. Estelle Taylor and Edith Roberta doing the heavy
■t .'wir.
■FV’- ’te l'.-vh''' f .. .4 * - ------ ■
expenditures, with the possible exception of the in-
tereat and prfncljial payments on the “bread bonds"
voted by the people during the early depression years
Jki 1837 the social security expenditures during Uie
first year were $21,000,000. and since have grown to
a total of more than $37,500,000 in 1941. The proapecte
, are Chat these expenditures by the State In 1942
will reach 851,000.000.
Thfe sum amounts to approximately a fourth of
aU State expenses, while a few short years ago social
Mourity was just an idea in the back of a few peo-
- ptoto eeinte Today, social security expenditures tn
Ytetas rank with the State expenditures for educa-
tion and highways, until recently the two greatest
fryenste eg the Htate government.
Social security to here to stay, and even those who
1 think that the government is becoming far too
paternalistic recognize many of the merits of the
social security program. Nevertheless, social security,
like anything else, can be over done, and there to-
danger that the eoat of the program may become
■ m> heavy as to defeat its purpeee. fiodal security
Still to primarily an individual -responsibility, and
any successful program of helping individuals must
be founded an that fact.
Even at that, the cold spell wasn't J
over. Nightly freezing weather [
continued into Monday. ---
information, and at technical knowledge
b to to realize the problem i
rod to go along
Upon.
For example; It to poaslbte that the holding of
ttw great naval base al Bingajxce to more vital W
.1#»e United States than the holding of the Philip-
pines ttMteteteM. though Mngapare M British a$id
the Philippines nr<- American
There to no reason to expect that any such choice
ta to be presented to the armed forces in exactly that
wdy. whether to hold the one or the other. Naturally,
every effort will be made to hoM both
What we tee trying to establish to that if American
military guttiiMlMte were to decided Io reinforce
Singapore rather than the Allippinae tn the facglof
inability to bolster both, it would bo a decision based
gne fogf Ito importance, in winning the
roc* in the East Indies have not
to bitter tesran taught them in the
homeland —neotety. the enemy must
“ ‘j most advantageous to strike
sentiment dictates. 8o Dutch NET
forced Malay* and struck at Uta
_ 2 iv*o even before any all-out
attack on the nxt has been made.
That to otto cue, tee. There to no longer room for
talk of pulling anybody's chestnuts out of the fire
— ZZ~! belong to all flbe
all in the same fire. Wr
—
MOVED
To Sorth ttb Square!
t - --\,
CaU
Baker Transportation
Lines
.“EsUmates without
ONfoattanr
Phene M Insured
On the central front, where the
Red army continued to press the
scene of battle away from the
gates of Moscow, reports told of
German activity apparently
I prompted by desperation as the
| North Texas State Teachers Col- ;
I lege Saturday afternoon
A Denton High School I
team composed of Bill Spldell and
Geo Hopkins was one of four
teams in the entire institute win- ! part in Soviet landings on
nlng all three of their practice Kerch Peninsula December 26
rounds of debate. Other teams ' —*—■ *---* —'----
---- ....— ------„ --. rwvepinfc through «11 three debate
y™r.^Internal revenue officials es- | tHU ^thoul
a reverse included a
| boys’ team from Grand Prairie
adn girls’ teams from Bagwell and
j Rhome. i
The Denton High School girls’
team composed of Mildred Powell |
and Margaret Cox won two out of i
three of their debates to establish |
a high average for the meet, which
drew 110 debaters from 15
I Denton High School debaters
I took high honors in the fifth an-
I nual high school speech Institute
i
W MWT WIN TOGETHER
Tbe visit of Winston Churchill to the White House
throws • glaring white spotlight on this one faqt
which Americana must keep continuously in mind:
of tbe war effort to a technical matter and must be
entrusted to the beads of the armed forces of the
countries concerned. We must have faith that these
selected leaders, all of arban have devoted their lives
to these problems, will make the right dectotona. Cer-
tainly they hare a better chance of It than
private citizens do, with 0>r tack of the most
________ ai Knowieoge., ;
oblem as a whole, and
whatever measures are
Mr _ .
ping into cash-laden pockets this 1
| which closed a two-day sesslcxi at
to 62
’ shining sun. for the first relief TEXANS GIRD
Since the first of the year. ! PAY UFAVY
Sunday’s minimum., however, had i * s/w I ni-./A V I
been 23 degrees and Monday’s INCOME TAXES
1 minimummUrHn» »•,„ ,<*♦». i *•» vx_.v_z(vi*_ i r'/xu.j
! successir
fpniHPHi*
I Friday afternoon.
i grees. was the first time this year |
• draw increasingly big handfuls of |
’ cash from the public's pocketbook.
_ Uncle Sam will take the equivalent
Miss Charlie Idae Stinson, daugh- of >®7 or more in taxes from every
.. ... - - --- --- woman and child in the
country.
Income tax forms went Into the
mails Jan. 5—the first official no-
tice to thousands ot Texans that
they will be required to make re-
turns on Income for 1941 In the
nation, 2.256.000 will make their
i first reports before the deadline
------ ". «
ford. Shelby Brooks and* Price^Sea- i or ,ess b® «nl iwo forms. 1040
Denton people Sunday felt al-
i relieved as If spring
nan come. A brightly shining sun
and temperature in the 60’s brought i
which had held tight since the first JCeather Cels
Warmer, But
. The min- Freczing Hohls
Unum Saturday was 14, Sunday 23 i .
and Monday 29 Friday afternoon j
the temperature mounted to 38 de-
grees. going above tile
I point for U "
and Sunday
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Edwards, Robert J. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 129, Ed. 1 Monday, January 12, 1942, newspaper, January 12, 1942; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1321019/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.