Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 236, Ed. 1 Friday, May 17, 1946 Page: 3 of 12
twelve pages : ill. ; page 22 x 18 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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‘ Skilled Service”
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★ Save your car.
★ Save, you money ;f
★ rnay “*• W
- life. ?- a" i ' ft
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Moat complete stock of Genuine Chevrolet Parts in North Texas.
GRACE BARROW CH EVROLH COMPANY
South UeiMt Street ~ v,.. ______ Rbom I
0 Front wheel aliffn-
ment can save tires
and prevent acci-
dents. '
• Worn spindle bolts and
bushings may break.
9 Loose tie rods ends may
pull off.
I
Friday,
May
17.
F mhL
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11
I
SEE US TODAY—
by
KEEP YOUR CAR SERVICED AND
HELP TO KEEP YOUR CAR SAFE—
*
Save your car with skillod torvito
HELP STOP!
AUTO ACCIDENTS
KEEP YOUR CAR SAFE
TILL YOU OET DELIVERY OF
YOUR NEW CHEVROLET
To The First Concert
Of The
CIVIC BOY CHOIR
Admission 50c (tax included)
Sponsored By
JUNIOR CHAMBER
OF COMMERCE
To Be Given
WEDNESDAY. MAY 22
8 P. M.
NTSC AUDITORIUM
Flower Show
Held Today
For Residents
Pa'I
1 Zr J
i
Today, when you need tkiM
•orvieo most, H pay* to come to
Service Headquarter* to have the
work done. Add month* and mile*
to the life of your car—and he/p
to keep your car <afe—by having
our skilled mechanic* give it a
thorough service check-up at regu-
lar intervals. They do top-notch
work, using quality tools, quality
parts, quality materials. See us
for repairs or adjustments today
.. members of America’s finest
automotive service organisation.
I '
Rj
B-29 Sets Fifth
Load-Altitude
II orld Record
“OF COURSE
1 PLAN TO GO AND TAKE
THE CHILDREN"
Have You Bought
Tickets
The annual flower show sponsor-
ed by the Denton Garden Club is
being held today from 3 to a p. in.
In the Lone Star Gas Company
building
All Denton and Denton county
residents have been urged to at-
tend the exhibit of professional and
amateur floral arrangements and
garden specimens
The program of music includes
instrumental numbers by members
of a small orchestra composed of
Misses Beth Purdy. Bernice Lebo-
vita. Jean Smith. Mary Ann Frank.
Helen Finnell, Sonja H ornate Ln. Va-
rina Powell, and Rosemary Bruce.
Entries were judged by three wo-
men of the Dallas Garden Club,
and ribbons for first, second and
I third places displayed on the win-
ning arrangements
Mrs. C. C Smith is general show
chairman, and other members of
the Denton Garden Club are assist-
ing with arrangements
The ostrich is the only bird in
the world domesticated exclusive-
ly for its feathers
' ■
.
Bodies of Di owned
Couple Recovered
GALVESTON, May 17—uF>- The
bodies of Mr and Mrs J. C Wil-
lets of Houston were found in
Clear Lake channel here yesterday.
The body of Willets, tilling sta-
tion operator, was found by a
shrimp boat crewman and the body
of Mrs Willetts was found near
the shore by a schoolboy
Use of tobacco as money is as
old as its cultivation—it matched
gold as legal tender in colonial
Virginia
WEST TEXAN FOUND
WITH THROAT ( I T
BURNET. Texas. May 17—bP>—
The body of Ab Clayton. 61. of
Lampasas. Texas, with his throat I
cut and nine stab wounds in the
back, was found yesterday at a
bridge crossing the Colorado River
12 miles from Burnet. Sheriff Wal-
lace Riddell of Burnet county re-
ported.
Sheriff Riddell said lie had ar-
rested two men but the Investiga-
tion was continuing Clayton had
been reported missing from his
home at Lampasas
tion by a coroner’s jury in the fatal sh(x>ting of a buddy,
Cecil Graveline, Jr., 15, serve as pallbearers at his fu-
neral services in Los Angeles. Testimony at the inquest
indicated they participated in a wild shooting affray,
which liegan in fun, during a desert hunting trip. Left to
right, they are Alfred Smith. 16; William Felix, 17; and
.James C. Helm, 15. (AP Wirephoto.)
YOUTHS IN DEATH CASE SERVE AS PALLBEAR-
ERS—Three sad-faced youths, recommended for deten-
SUKHt
WIIUAMS
CHOICE OF
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1H*—DPTTON (Tax.) MCOKD-CKBOWKXB g
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Logsden, New York.
Field, Guam.
The protect was termed "an addi-
tional milestone in flying history" i
by Charles Logsden, New York. '
who certified the records for the |
National Aeronautics Association
and the Federation Aeronatique
Internationale
F/rC *
TOKYO, May 17 —(4’1—A B-29 ot
I t lie Army Pacific Air Command '
'PACUbAi shattered a fifth world
load-to-altitude record Wednesday
when it carriecj 15.000 kilograms
i about 33.000 pounds i to a height
of 37 400 feet
Lt Gen. Ennis C
PACUSA commander
nounced the record today, said it I
gave the Superfortresses all inter-
national marks for carrying pay-
loads to great altitudes All five
records were set between May 8 and
15 by B-29x flying from Harmon
TPioirt F"liir>»wx |
Hng I
mis i
Phone 958
219 W Hickory
©
ONE-DA Y SERVICE
Ward & Sparks
O K Rubber Welders
71T South Elm ‘
()ur System
Is an 80%
Improvement Over
Steam Recapping
■czl
^;1
It WIN WlUIA Mt
Uninvited Guests
SEAITLE, May 17 —(/T’v- James
H Sim. San Francisco, boatswain
of the Liberty ship Allen C Balch,
slipped away to a justice of the
peace with bride-to-be Josephine
Chappo of Portland for a "quiet"
wedding
But they found that the ship's
crew had beaten them there and
formed a wedding arch—with chip-
ping hammers and marlin spikes
The couple dashed away amid a
shower of rice and a promise from
the crew that their honeymoon des-
tination was no secret, either—"and
we're all going along.”
hum
ir A
iik
I*
/
A
1 brides and children
Algol
412
AAA
TRAVEL BUREAU
OLDEST AND MOST
A
RELIABLE
it
Call, write or wire for reservations and in-
formation.
C
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y
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SPECIAL MUSIC
74
OUR MOTTO:
"A GOING
■F
CHURCH
FOR A
COMING LORD"
C".
Central Baptist Church
SUNDAY SCHOOL
I^arge Atomic
Energy Power
Plants Foreseen
Cars to California and all major cities in the
United States. Daily share expense/
'Ml MAIN ST. - - DALLAS
Telephone Riverside 5000
<ene
nber,
TROOPS AND BRIDES
DUE AT FOUR PORTS
SCHOOL CURRICULUMS
WILL BE EXAMINED
BROTHER JAMES LEWIS
Choir leader ^nd sqnday School
. Superintendent
Young People’s Services at 6:30 P. M.
V isitation each Tuesday loginning at 10:00 A. M. Young People’s visita-
tion at 6:00 P. M. each Tuesday night.
DAILY RADIO PROGRAM
• 9g
li
Seatrain
troops
REV LOYS VE8S,
Paxtor of Central Baptlat Ghuirh
and Evangeim.
fT* '
* 1
Sub ________
traiuspoi t i demand
ahrnit
%T IKtM'IMO
MUcellaneouB on following Presi-
dent Adam* from Okinawa Algol
Numbers Mixup
MANKATO. Minn.. May 17 —<4>i
—A woman motorist, in traffic
court on a charge of speeding, in-
terrupted a policeman who testified
ahe had been driving 55 miles an
hour.
Fifty-five?" questioned the mo-
torist "Not me. I was hitting 60 "
"111 make it fifteen." broke in
the Judge "That is fifteen dollars."
■
k ■
L
I BALIIMOKI
I^tkehurst. mLscvIlaneous
WABHfNGTON, May 17. </P)-
Dr Leonard I Katzln, West Coast
scientist, today rated large com-
mercial atomic energy plants a
practical possibility In two years
and saw them curtailing Industry's
reliance on other sources of power
A research chemist with the plu-
tonium project at the University
of California, Dr. Katzln described
why he considers such a deVelop-
mtnt financially and scientifically
jxissible in an article written lor
the current issue of Army Ordnance
Magazine.
Through industrial application of
atomic energy, undeveloped areas
rich in minerals Like Canada, could
be made highly productive, waste
In general could tie curtailed and
life made more liveable, lie theor-
Suii'L'i.v School at 1(1:00 A. M. Studying the loth chapter of St. John.
Sunday Services at 1 I :00 A. M.
I'Senifig Services at 7:30 I’. M.
t he Pastor will preach at lx>th services.
Sunday Night the Pastor will give a report of his tour through the South
and East and also about the Southern Baptist Convention that is meeting
in Miami, Florida.
Lach morning Monday through Saturday at 8:00 A. M. and Sunday Eve-
ning at 5:30 P. M. Over radio Station KDNT.
\ llltGO
on following;
it SbH 011
I
' A
HOPE TO BE TOGETHER—Major Hans Hornbostel
gently kisses his wife’s forehead in San Frartcisco as he
presses his petition to enter the leper colony at Carville,
l,a., with Ins wife who, they say, contracted leprosy while
a prisoner of the .Japs at Santo Tomas internment camp,
Manila, P. 1. (AP Wirephoto.)
ized.
"In its present state of develop-
ment. atomic energy does not com-
pete with common fuels, but this
need not be the case in the fu-
ture," said Dr Katzln.
One pound of uranium complete-
ly consumed by fission, he pointed
out, will release as much energy as
the combustion of 1.500 tons of
coal. 250,000 gallons of fuel oil or
gasoline. 80,000,000 cubic feet of ar-
tificial £as or 40,000,000 cubic feet of
natural gas.
Whether atomic power can com-
pete financially with ordinary fuels
depends on the cost of production
In order to compete with bitumin-
ous coal at *5 a ton a pound of U-
235 should cost not more than $?.-
500 to produce, Dr Katzin said.
"Competition with 15-cent gaso-
line is effective at $39,000 a pound
To compete with artificial gas cost-
ing 50 cents a 1,000 cubic feet it
may still cost $39,000 a pound, while
natural gas at the same cost would
I a competitive price ot
about $20,000 a pound for U-235 "
Dr Katzln then said tnat avail-
Presl- able data indicates a pound of U-
1 I 235 probably would ebst about $2,-
600
Glazed tiles, used in the United |
States chiefly as floor and wall |
coverings are also used in Europe I
war i as an exterior finish for stoves i
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Eight troopship bringing home
eunU' 6 600 war veterans from Euro-
pean and Pacific theaters and one
war bride ship air scheduled to put
Into port today on the East and West
coasts
Shl,pn arriving
ST XIU VOKK
Miscellaneous troops qi) following
vessels Ernie Pyle from !.■.• Havre.'
Chanute Victory from Le Havre Costa
Rica Victory from Bremen
Algonquin from Naples
\t s.
Miscellaneous
Tender Nereus.
' Charles Carroll
AUSTIN, May 17—bFi—Eiemen-
| tr.ry school principals and super-
visors plan to examine every phase
of the elementary school curricu-
lum in Texas when they meet here
June 4-6.
Tlie conference is sponsored by
tlie University of Texas, the State
Department of Education and the
Texas Elementary School Principals
and Supervisors Association.
i Principal topics will be discussed
I in morning sessions and clinic
sessions will be held each after-
noon.
I?
Too Big to Swallow
REDDfNG, Calif, May 17—(/Pi-
Forest Ranger Harold Peterson re-
ports the presence of a fish in the
I headwaters of the Pit River arm
■ of Shasta Dam "as big as a truck"
-and if you don't believe it. he'll
show you the truck
Peterson said he used his forest
truck for a comparative measuring
stick to estimate the big fish's
length.
He came up with this data
was a sturgeon. 14 feet long
’ -w*»
■
\\ ill !»<• ivrx'crod by thp Girls Sextet from the Central Baptist Church here
in Denton. One of the best girls sextet there is anywhere.
Denton's fastest growing Sunday School. There is a reason. COME AND
SEE.
I
*
OUR CAR SERVICE IS
Motorists who know
will tell you • • •
r
As'... -
YOUR BEST CAR SAVER
SC'
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Q
■■fe -
J
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 236, Ed. 1 Friday, May 17, 1946, newspaper, May 17, 1946; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1335955/m1/3/: accessed June 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.