Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 77, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 11, 1944 Page: 4 of 8
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Nice Going—On Adolfs Roads
I
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AP NewrfeaUires
r PRUSSIA
1 — Howell
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Lste^S.
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lursmbsr*
Ksrltruhs
Musick
Stuttgart
Milss
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other that cost less may sell sever- |
H-
ra-
AMONG SICK
energetic gentleman with an abun-
for implementing them
WIRE BRIEFS
on
. for
tribute the wear evenly.
Ph. 573
LEWISVILLE
ot tier
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SCHMITZ FUNERAL (BOMB
Mr
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LIFTS-
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SEPARATES-
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Sdvtank*
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WEARS!
SALEl
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RICH CREAM
up.
Vi
. feel ever so mu ch softer.
J-ornijif
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AN UNEXCELLED FUNERAL
RKKVICZ far OVER a HALF
W ■ CENTUBT
ARMISTICE DAY
“Memorial Service”
COAST GUARD MAKES HISTORY
UNDER “IDEA MAN" WAESCHE
r. •
I
You’ll enjoy your big occasions
more, if you’re feeling peppy
and happy. So start with a "fresh
up" and start with a smile.
The fresh, clean taste of 7-Up
will freshen your spirits. You’ll
like every sip of this sparkling,
lively drink.
**Fresh up" at any store dis-
playing the 7-Up signs.
ORDER A CASE
FROM YOUR DEALER
• A richly lubricating night
erean for flaky-dry, parched
ski*. Used regularly, it
WHAYNE FLORISTS
800 N. Elm L_
I ton.
Mrs.
which is then executed in muslin on
u mannequin.
Minor correcllohs are made
slstant pastor of the First Baptist
Church of Denton, gave a. devotion-
al and Mrs E W Province of Den-
tou gave a report on t— ------
hi an all-day session at the Baptist
Church Monday with Rev. r~—
son <
session
Alton Lee Lynch, Hanger, under -
about the face in an accident Fri-
in the
usual
Great
welcome
square.
roads. Th<
the super-
over again.
Cost is not counted In the origi-
nal creation of a Paris t.«vuv.. —-— —
was t
"I
■Ide
77
r
and
were
re-
and
driving. Photo below map shows a section of the
'esseling.
■•k1
Sfettm’
kv.:
ife BRAS
tronkturt
Cepr 1944 by The Seven-Up Company
i
^666
CbXf A^pcratfaM «• dfoaefed
Reverse the position of your rugs
in I every three or four months to dis-
Hk4
LEARNS HOW •
PARIS STYLES
ARE BORN
unreported
votes V™
___ 15 times .
^111 I 175,000 oflcers and
and
, as i
Halbei son, 1403 North Elm
returned home Saturday
WASHINGTON. Nov. 11-HP)
—The United States, Britain
and Russia today Invited the
De Gaulle government of Erance
to assume full membership on
the European Advisory Commis-
sion.
Mallard
to
^osth sfa
tag her condition was reported sat-
tefcetory.
Capt Paul Stevens, recently re-
turned from overseas service as a
chaplain, will address the adult de-
partment of the Sunday School of
the Fust Baptist Church Sunday
morning at 9:30 He formerly was
asssitant pastor and educational di-
rector of the church.
Born, to Sgt. and Mrs. Jack Dial,
Saturday morning in the Denton
Hospital, a daughter, who has been
WANT-ADS
■"-’jwM
Admiral Waesche . . . idea man of the Coast Guard
! *
t '■
4 ’AtAHk',
'Tfesfi
■’ ■
| t <^,4
The slick tailored lines
•nd precision-cut of
these famous bras will
snap your bust up to
the high, proud lines
that command admira-
tion in women every-
where. And they’ve got
the stamina to take
plenty of wear and lota
of laundering j^at’» M
important ddht, loo.
< rs
Fifty-eight year old Waewlie,
trim as his cutters am! just
salty, lives In Chevy Chase Md
manifestly proud of his service and i
Its rword on the beachheads o! the
world He chafes nt his battle sta-
tion ut the desk and has twice scur-
ried away for inspection tours of the
Pacific and European theaters Ot
List three sons, two are r,i the Coast I
Guard one a
the third Is
11 |C< I
LONDON, Nov. 11. —0P>—
Thousands of Austrians have
deserted from the German ar-
my While on home leave and
joined guerilla forces In the
Alps, Archduke Robert of Aus-
tria said today.
!
aw ■
W «
I ' ;
S’ "
•IS-'
PERSONALS i
Mrs Carroll Weedon of Terrell
er parents, Rev. and
Dodd. 802 West Oak
faces of enameled or porcelain re-
frigerators and gas stoves
scratches.
Vi-'..
MEt.. .
K.--
'■
BOSTON, Nov. 1L—cA’h-The
Gestapo is in America today-
in the prison camps where al-
moot 100,000 captured Germans
are held — according to Brig.
Gon. Blackshear M. Bryan, Jr.,
assistant provost marshal gen-
eral. Be told a press confer-
ence at First Service Command
headquarters yesterday that
“Nasi party leaders are even
on the alert in prison camps
to discipline any Germans who
might profess disloyalty to their
fudhrer.”
£
B'
s-
I
■ a®
fit. /
con e.s|xmdeiM <
. ol'leers
STT '
-
Ir~
- - -
AUSTIN, Nov. IL—ol'—- The
American Association of Uni-
• verslty Professors wax hopeful
today that new regents named
to the board of the Cniverslty
of Texas would elect a presi-
dent who would ably administer
the school.
cutter .skipper and
an Army Air Force !
Hava yonr.. sisihss.. rtsaned and
pramad at Camp Cleaners. Ph. UMU
fW^^NArNa^a^szuzNa^az-sA^NaAsz^^Ni^A^i^^a^a^sz^^^A
I FLOWERS I
Havw yarn alathaa cleaned and
Wimi at Camp Cleaners. Ph. 1IU
Nice Mr. Hitler! He gridironed Germany with some of the world’s
finest super-highways, and If he thinks the Allied armies aren’t going
to use them in the race for Berlin, Adolf doesn’t know a carburetor
from a steering wheel. Map above shows the "autobahnen” network,
whose heart la an oval running through the suburbs of Berlin The roads, |
ostensibly built for "tourist txaffic”, are actually four-lane, concrete i > .
— S11a^_ IsAanhweuwBMi mU««as* Bit dosed tws saft/OH n/lth rv/» I U LU
molds with her
Hemburp^
Hseesvs'J
r
EM
hl-
Ml ?
koica railroad.
Tre outflanking movements de-
veloped attacks on German and
I
ii
‘11
East Sycamore
a tonsillectomy
■e located the drive between
the Tiam and Danube Btven
2yth of the Mm OogM-Beel-
MOflOOW. Nov. 11—UP>-A wide
outflanking movement took shape
of Budapest today
Thbwir' ' '/
I
Mrs. James Ussery, Denton, und-
erwent major surgery Saturday
morning in the Elm Street Hospital
and Clinic.
Political Races
Still Uncertain
In Some States
i By Associated Press)
Missouri’s Senatorial race
four Congressional contests
still in doubt C'day as counties
proceeded with the counting of ser-
vicemen's ballots.
Tabulation of an estimated 85,-
000 absentee ballots. Including about
75,000 from soldiers, was proceed-
ing so slowly that final results may
not be known until next week.
As the counting progressed, Re-
_ • j
*1.00’mgafarfr 11.71
•1.95*rvgid®iy»3.00
LIM1TIB YIMII
Tobin Drug Star.
-
•
Sfc--
IF <
1 -4r, .
■■■ ■
J
Ifc .'
■IB*'"
Uch
W.. '
‘‘New Freedom”
Kitchen Projected
TTlie New Freedom Gas Kitchen ’
•” Is |the name aeiacUid lot Uie post-
eoaxeaskln to look smoother i
*
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Am*
by-pass all large cities, to mold traffic Jams In the west, I foidj> t(u|l arp
---,----ghways converge in the Rhine-Ruhr heavy industry area design Inspiration appears
into which Allied forces are now fighting. In the east, they run down ' d works, and
--------— — ... SS-.-K --------------- XTtle m "tMs drajd to ner pdbbcan Gov PoFrest C Donnell’s
" " lead over Attorney General Roy
McKittrick. Democrat, in the Sen-
atorial battle, was wilting away.
Servicemen's votes already tallied
had trimmed Donnel's margin to
5,859 from the 8.239 plurality given
him by civilian balloting last Tues-
day.
In Pennsylvania, too. the service
votes could swihg a tight Sena-
either way. Democrat
Francis J. Myers Is leading Sena-
—, — . Ly
! to keep her staff Mme 1.593 votes with civilian votes from
>1.. “ cn]y three precincts
1 Pennsylvania’s service
j be counted Nov. 22.
and '
Woodsboro
and Mrs. Robt. .
university to study electrical
gineerlng
After his
I Street
' Don
Street, returned home
ilium the Elin Street Hospital and
ft>u//fce/f... ’4
it likts you
1
k -L si
j q£
r , Nm. lD-|P>-Tha
havu la—tBkd m aH-
MaraiaM Bakmri
MHt aM have paw-
hanatatir OoL Kraut
Mr reported today.
H Milliken attended a reunion of >
the 90th Division In Dallas.
Mrs Amanda Miller has moved to 1
Fort Worth
Mrs J. F. Lowf visited Mrs. Billy
Sigler and infant son
A wax polish^ helps protect sur- , Mrs Nannie Hamlyn him moved |
_» re, to Carrollton.
from , Mrs j a Perkins returned to Sul-
1 phur Springs after visiting Mr. and j
Mrs. J K DeLay
Mrs Thurston
daughter returned
| after visiting Dr.
E. Robinson.
Mr. and Mrs Fred Foster of
Florence visited Mrs. Dixon Hayes
Staff Sgt Geo J. McCurley, who
had been overseas the past 29 !
months, is visiting his wife here, j
Wm Lloyd Garrison, stationed .
with the Air Forces at Altus, Okla . ,
visited his wife and children here ,
By NEA Service
From a huge room on the sev-
enth floor of a drub building on brother thought
Pennsylvania Avenue, Vice Admir-
mandant for a third four year term, was too old to £
he is the most unbrassy of the trical engineering,'
adorned hats, and un amiable and
B...—. ..... .,'.2. -7. • Waesche was given the
dance ot ideas and a rare knack I Coast Guard itinerary —
r „ .... laikes, Arctic and Alaskan waters
Associates like to relate the story I Pacific, chasing
ol an officer who asked to make a |i-------' — J
speech about the Commandant He
prepared the address, submitted it
to tlie Admiral’s aide lor approval
It came back emasculated. "Its a
great picture of the old man, said
the aide, "b it good Lord. man. we
can't let people know how he has
busted rules and traditions.’’
"The aide was right," admits the
oficer, "but the Admirals busting
of tradition is exactly what has
made him the greatest idea man
in Coast Guard history."
Waesche‘s Coast Guard - small-
est. least known. Inferentially a
coastal defense unit—Is an un
usual military conglomerate. Un-
der his leadership it has mush-
roomed 15 times -1 personnel to
■ men, and as-
I sumed the functions of two other
I services—the Lighthouse Service
! and the Bureau of Marine Inspec-
tion. Waesche believes the service
is the proper agency to handle
maritime matters Which were lor-
merly interspersed among
government agencies
Bom in Thurmont. Md.,
ulation 12001 he was 15 when he
got out of high school and weut
to work in a Pittsburgh steel
mill, 10 hours a day. seven days a
' week at 17 cents an hour His lath-
I er was a mining engineer his broth
I er taueht civil engineering at Pur-
| due University and at the nge of
17. Russ Waesche enrolled at that
M
jMMNL
MOULDS
Neal Leatn has returned to his
home. 800 North Elm Street, Sat-
urday morning from the Denton
Hospital, where he recently under-
went an apfiendecloiny
Bryan McCain who recently und-
erwent surgery In the Denton Hos-
pital, returned to his home Satur-
day morning
Mrs. Mark Waldrip, who has been
a medical patient in the Denton
Hospital, returned Saturday inorn-
Lefoi'e ! to *ler 1710 North Elm
SYl-O-MODE
GOWK
of Suoddlo fionnel
*$■ ?
• o < ft sfordutf twiftkling
youF wiw^Dw • • •
wtiilw you cuddlo in How
Schrenk'i lilting blot-cui
■ ♦
—
[ The Boston Store
'' YmtSI
Events Monday
City Faderation meats at 9:16 a.
m. in Women’s Club.
Artel groups meet as follows:
I Literature department with Mrs
' N. W Edwards. 1119 West Oak;
1 music department with Mmes. Lee
R. McDonald, 1819 North Locust,
and Lslia Mae Cote; art depart-
ment with Mrs. Mattle Lloyd Woo-
ten, T. 8. C. W. tea room; Varied
study department with Mrs. W. R
Blair, 1018 l*an; modern era with
Mias Emma Lou Long, Marquis
Hall.
Special to RecordChronlcle:
LEWISVILLE, Nov. 11—The Den-
ton County Baptist Association met j
hi an all-day session at the Baptist — .
Church Monday with Rev Patter I Kenneth Owens, will be in Thrifty
son of Dallas delivering the main next week, visiting a daughter and
address. Rev. W B Bernsten, as- sister, Mrs. R G. Liles.
— j James I. McConnell Jr. Seaman
! first class. U. S. Navy, attending
; Harvary University, is the guest of
the County ! his grandmother. Mrs Anna Bur- j
W M U work. Lunch was served j goon. (
by women of the church.
Mrs Kenneth Young and infant 1
ht.ve returned from a Dallas hos-
pital
Mrs J F. Lowe and son visited
Mr and Mrs John Whitlock hi Car-
rollton.
Joe Cobb, L. T Hoskins and M
nf-«
Ml
1
Visit the new paint, wallpaper,
gift and antique store. You are
llandals, north
UMnm
Xrs H. J. TurrenUna, 1891 Oak-
land Avenue, underwent major sur-
1 gery Friday in tlw Madlcul Arts
PARIS. Nov. 1—Howell Dodd Clinic Dallaa, and Saturday morn*
liaa learned how Paris styles are
bom
As a mere man, taking time out
from sketching front-line battle ac-
tion. he dropped in at the studio
of two famous FYeiKh designers—
Lucien Le'.ong, head of the Paris
couture, and Mme Gres, better
known to Americans us Alix. The
two work in an entirely dilferent
manner, but the final effects are
both impressive ------------------
U‘!on* ..,lr8t named Pamela Grace. Mrs. Dial Is
** ~ 1 the former MUs Mary Grace Smith,
I daughter of Mr and Mrs Ben L.
1,1 I Smith, 1116 Moore Street. Sgt.
the muslin mode), and the costume Dlal Ls stutloned at the Fort Dodge
Is then made in the chosen fabric. ’ Army Air Base. Fort Dodge, Kan.
If this does not meet with Lelong I County Commissioners Court
approval, the whole thing is done wm llleet, Monday tnonilng ut 9
o’clock ofr the monthly business
--------in vhc | session
;1 model, Dodd ! Alton Lee Lynch, Hanger, under-
told. One expensive model may weut major surgery Satuday morn-
Ltll only a few limes, while an- Ing In the Denton Hospital
i "rummies" 1
smugglers, destroyers until,
a young lieutenant Jllst L, .
World War I, he was assigned to
Headquarters.
He developed a complete plan
foi a communications system in-
volving 2506 miles of lines, und had
it installed In a few mohllv. Wae-
sche worked out a promotion plan
lor officers based on nnrlt. not
•stodgy sc*niorlty
He proposed u con es|;onden< e .
school for warrant ol'leers and |
enlisted men to improve them L.
their jobs. Seamanship by mail was
unheard of. but Waesche j>ut it
iicro.es and built up the now flour-
ishing Coast Guard Institute Jump-
ed from commander to Hear Ad-
miral and Commandant. Russell
Waesche continued to cut corners,
lop off loose edges Thirty-nine ad- I
mlnlstratlve areas were pruned to I
13 each under a district command-
er answerable only to headquirt |
i
Clinic, where he had been u medi-
cal putu nt
E Barber, 624
Street, underwent
Saturday morning
In Denton. 1
■f.6AV£
■8 YOU
'^TjPeadTAe
VWA
To-day 8
THE VANITY SHOP
*Slii>e »r Style and Personality"
■fab-atdW----------- 1 . IT—e...
| ilF'thJtlng her
‘Mrs. J. W E.
| Street.
j Mrs O C Pass and her daugh-
! ter and baby Mns J L Owens and
w4r co-ordinated kitchen to be
promoted by the gas Industry to
make the American housewife's
cooking responsibilities easier and
more economical. The name was
the Winning entry among 5,134
turned In by gas industry em-
ployes throughout the United States
and Canada in u contest conduct-
ed by the American Gas Associa-
tion; The winner was Everett A.
Taylor of the Providence (Rhode
Island) Gas Company, who was
awarded »500 In War Bonds “The
New Freedom Gas Kitchen" will
be used extensively In the adveiUs-
ing of the gas industry.
R M Scofield of Dallas, chief
meter and regulator Inspector for
Lone Star Gi^> Company, receiv-
ed a »I(X) War Bond as erne of the
nine regional winners. His entry was
' The Matchless Service Gas Kitch-
en.” Gas company executives gen-
erally have inoicated their intent to
show and advertise the most modern
gas kitchens available and new free-
dom will be the keynote.
Tiie gas industry is developing a
packaged kitchen which will con-
tain a gas range, gits refrigerator,
sink, and cabinets and will be so
ventilated that it will be cool in
summer and warm In winter, and
also will remove cooking odors. The
contest was held to get a name
101 this modern kitchen, which will
be ready after the war.
-^—S • X
■ .
I T
Hr 1
p* ' ' ■
freshman year, his
a little military
training would help the young
al Russell Randolph Waesche directs student. So Russell Waesche took
the Coast Guard with a quiet and the Coast Guard Academy exam-
precise vigor and an unrestrained 1 mations, passed them and became
disdain for formalism and regula- 1 a cadet. "When I woke up I found
tlon. Recently re-appointed Com- ' j liked the service too much and
----.---,j -3 back to elec-
' 1-j," he says
Starts Schoul
Waesche was given
—,1 Guard
on two —_ ---------
while the main Russian olrces
holding the city under siege clung
to their porittons In the capital'*
southern suburbs against desper-
ate Nasi counterattack*.
» One group of Marshal Rodlo Y.
-----*—•- “—Ukraine anny
_ 1 the wide Tlssa
River bridgehead capturing addi-
tional strong points northeast of
. Budapest and strengthened their
bold on the vital Budapest-Mis-
teolcs rwllroad
Other Russian units and Yugo-
slav Partisan troops of Marshal
Tito pushed forward west of the
Danube River in a drive up through
‘southern Hungary aimed at Pecs.
TTO outflanking movements de-
veloped attacks on German and .
Hungarian positions over a 200-mlle ,
iiont. either end of which can turn j
into a serious by-passing of Bud-
apest
Malinovsky’s troops yesterday I
broached the Budapest-Mlskolcx
line at Meeokovead, 65 miles north-
east of Budapest. -------------------
Slogging forward in heavy mud.
the Russian infantry added eight
villages and one railway station to
the Soviet Salient stretching from
the upper Tlsea River to the base
<M the Matra mountains, Moscow an-
nounced. The advance was the only
eeeential change of the entire ceat-
em front reported in the last 24
hours. -
HI
! of her design. Inspiration appears
into Upper Silesia and up through East Prussia- - toward which the'
Russian armies a “
super-highway at
I..
I; a
I
J
I /
fl ♦ j
jUjr
| Miss Bobbie Harris, ZM Eaat Oak
al hundred times. The Paris couture Street, who suffered minor scalds
does not go in for mass production. f---L. —
The price of an original model in- 1 day. is receiving treatment
eludes not only the cost of fabric JIMnton .Hospital.
, snd workmanship, but also the idea. '
i That, it was explained, is why the
I cost is high.
Mme Gres , or Alix, works tn a
j manner completely unlike that of
! Lelong Breaking her customary se-
! elusion, she received Dodd in her
■ apartment near the Bols de Bou- !
logne, where she drajies her models !
on Mvni, her adopted daughter.
1 Surrounded by medieval works cf
art and oriental treasures collected
on her African travels, Mme Gres
appears to work aS a sculptor rather
than as a dressmaker Working with
u bolt of fabric, she deftly drapes
and pins the model, dipping free-
ly Into the huge pocket of pins
‘ . As she works
fingers Uie
military highways, averaging about 60 feet in width, with no cross-
rma-.— *11 !*■>** ototaa baw traffic tame Tn tilts U/toRt fMle
iways converge in the Rhine-Ruhr heavy industry area
satisfaction, it is carefully
moved from the mannequin
stitched together.
During the occupation of France,
the Germans tried to force Mme.
Orts to work in Berlin. She replied
that she would either work in Paris ,
or close her salon and devote her-
self to music. In spite of constant j
threats, and the forced closing of .
her establishment for several months __
earlv this vear, she has managea James j oavir,. Republican, by
Gres will tell you proudly that she
never has made q dress for a Ger-
man woman
i
DENTOM, WXAB,CLK, SATURDAY, MOVPOO 11, 1M4
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6 00
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Sweater News
Galore
LA MODE
South Side Square
For College and
Career (.’iris!
New. Slrevrlesx Pull-Overs.
Supsr Over bluuxes. t'ardisaii’i
and Classics.
Glowing Fall Colors!
TUSSY
RICH
CM AM
The GLOBE and the MORTAR
Into a pharmacist’s mortar go medicants from every
corner of the globe. Many rare and costly items stock
our prescription shelves. Our large vohime permits us
to keep them always at hahd, fresh and potent. That
is one of the reasons your physician directs patients to
bring his prescriptions here for careful compounding;
calls us for his office needs.
Skilled service, plus the highest ehtical standards com-
bine to make this pharmacy “Prescription Headquar-
ters.”
Brooks Drug Store
Phones 29 and 39 East Side Square
CARBONS
TvD^writer Ribbons.
Complete line of
OFFICE SUPPLIES
Repairs and Rentals
see
Denton Typewriter
Exchange
Phone 321
~ -
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Edwards, Robert J. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 77, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 11, 1944, newspaper, November 11, 1944; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1321278/m1/4/: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.