Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 169, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 27, 1945 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Denton Record-Chronicle and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Denton Public Library.
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For Miss Surber
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Spring’s Newest Hits!
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in the north when the Canadian
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Women’s Shoes
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IN TECHNICOLOR
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DREAMLAND
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01 THl YtARA
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TEXAS
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Western Auto Associate Store;
Phone 2 W. Side Square
velle
I by
n a week
solid Mt-
Shoe Clearance
GAUM RAM
. warn am
bomb wmrh
A
B.F
*
*
TODAY
TOMORROW
THE MOST IMPORTANT EVENT IN 50 YEARS
OF MOTION PICTURE ENTERTAINMENT!
r~tr
&
fleet is gauged at about 38.-
i barrel* of fuel oil a year.
„ san experts estimate the navy
can operate for a year on available
For every pound of used
fltts get 2 red point* bonus!
Used fats are still urgently
needed to main battlefield
medicine* a'nd other
''Nofin-AempoAhdbn
it pomp Io rfidote to
are! Get outf
CM a HENRY KING «a.1.wS~.v.UIMl IltHI
sMoni * AttsMBw RttgwaM • Ttasu* MRdMM • Rsfii Mtttt*
IMM Ma • MMa Eytte • Baty Astern • Cast M 12.000
Mfi
BLAINE
NOVELTY - SPORT
r O. P. A. ODD LOT RELEASE OF WOMEN’S SHOES
I RATION FREE
.‘...•Ms ■ AjL.kv’■'»’'■* T,; '
f - •'
v'
tee-Ptert
Thursday
lived bere 10 yean.
SHOWS TODAY
Mg J
•:U
£ I-L
County Girls in
T. S. C. W. Races
7 VenoNe(L..Afcmo
f with a thousand 1
intripvM. ...ina*urp- S
inp battle far pcworl r
a 20*
CINTWMY*FOX
mreu
I
The Vanity Shop
“Shop of Style and Personality*
A
F. DONI
Rai Beyle)
You always see it FIRST at
LA MODE
SOUTH SIDE SQUARE
Buy Bonds!
BUT INSURANCE
sJKiLSLr.
Phone UH
■EMNEMHWdwJ'’-41
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..... ^ABT DAT—
HKtSMST
IaSmm OQEHS^hBQQmUI
CARTOON-NEWS
WED-; THURS.
AlilMnEElIXll ’i«»*ic*ie»
to a half Of their an-
i requirement*. Con-
* product* by Japan
Washington gov-
ernment circle* at about 55.ooo.ooo
TODAY
KMBMBI
DAW
- +
truth in tb* library, an-
J field. Th* philosopher*
Metre* wrangled. «nd the
uSEwpt
th* MM WMA the
pared to them, and
i wind roared. they
CermaD® Attempt «. w*»
tiner wnetoab^t StclIMl fit Erft ** MMeSSr work, buck aa
we* mapm* sending kits to soldier* at Ohrlat-
From the national budget, medi-
cal supplies were .shipped to Greece,
“ ‘ * ----- he Netherland and
dent fl
more journsliwi major fr<
•hall. Mm Morrow, Junior
ban najor. & a candidate J
Atett’eaiD^^ltat^rth
Clever little purses to spice every outfit! See our
round-up of box bags . . . handle bags . . . each one a
hit! Failles ... felts . . All tagged at low budget prices.
$?*
r
tvttarli fonpuet
*| wagging. -
ride* dormitories, showers. bar-
: r OiubmobUe*
are an extension of club facilities to
■mall concentrations of troop*, out-
lying base* and position* near the
front. Rest homes are operated for
Army personnel in need of special
rest and recreation.
Here at home the Red Cron meets
the basic need* for food, shelter,
clothing and medical care when
disasters such a* floods, tornadoes
and epidemics occur. It assists in
re-establishing the home* of per-
sons requiring financial aid as a re-
sult at the disaster. Experienced
staffs are maintained to direct re-
lief operations In the field and to
their
pre-
O1\J
v . ■..
iMtr-------------
ien suddenly you know
a reeling of wonderful,
itment; of knowing that
ire you belong, this is
this is where they talk your
n<X exciting. The excitement
F; was when Eddie Bali came up to the
r U. 8. First to relieve you. The ex-
citement was in the packing in
BEp Parts, in boarding the plane in
Scotland before daybreak, and look-
ing down on Bostons lights that
midnight. There was excitement
even in the custom's and health in-
spection. Then, suddenly, the ex-
citement Was gone and you were
home.
Turn to Reserves
overseas, i
4 Ml U
r, Chilteothe, for student
„ jpnt; Nancy Casey of
and Anne Crook. Blythe-
ville. Ark., vice president of the
student body; Faye Clark. Temple,
and Betty Jo Cook. Bryan, secre-
tary; Sue Jones Greenville and
Mlntle Simpson Texas City editor
of the Daedalian gnnual. Patricia
Beraftno./'Duncanville, unopposed
for editor of the Daedalian Quarter-
ly; and Katherine Greer, Dallas,
unopposed, literary editor of the
i helped to relieve the
caused by robot bombli
uantity of supplies has
ival!able through Che AfiMTl-
Croes to North Africa.
Italy.
I
i
I
K-'
b '•
L ... 1IIM—1
sete oC..«mVMttre from
re« and Manchuria. F _ _
pacify of this inner aone I* about
IJ.OOO.QOO barrels.
In 1H0 the Dutch Bast Indies
i Htiked flfth in world oil production
More than eo.fiM.ooo barrels of ctt.----------------- „ —■
flowed from Indies wells each year. Guarding the western approach Poland France, the Netherland and
Refining capacity was more than ths once stately buLnoatlxaub JUthuanla for the civifian popula-
----------- tbtn ---------------------- A -- --------* M—
I •coo.oog barrels
islands.
X
Mons. U ahipped. eai
mated at HM8.000 7<
hMpiuis mt up UMrt
Russia. This equip*
drugs, surgical drag!
■tnimeut*, laboratory.
X-ray equipment ho
fwniture and linens.
4 •
M
-
-Ji''
N»ent estl-
10 500-bed
sd cities tn
it Included
is and in-
________ ______WMBta M
medical laboratory and hospital sup-
plies to China have been continued
and shipments of clothihg to Great
WMNII — —
ferine t
large quanl
made at,—
can Red <
Sicily and
RmtebUqiIi tw Af*isd Fsrc^s
For U 8. servicemen overseas,
Red Cross clubs in leave areas ov-
erseas furnish recreation of all
kinds and other facilities. These
Include snack bars, game rooms, li-
braries, social centers for dancing
r 800k
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Sl *ourBy DeWITT MaeKKNOB
Asaeeiaiod Frees War Analyst
Munitions Minister Shigeru Yo-
shida, appearing recently before the
House of lUpreeentattvea to Tokyo,
outlined the diflicultka.
He admitted military reveries had
made transportation of oil from tire
indies “increasingly difficult'’ and
C,—» w* —- i ■ - . | njwrwcr, utuy .mir
"strenuous effort* ' to hike petrol- j gpwulatioh-will give w the
The great offensive goes well—ter
have exacted
. tankers.
oil faculties have
been hard hit by Allied air assaults.
Carrier-borne aircraft of a power-
ful British naval force have smack-
ed oU refineries at Palemburg, Su-
matra, twice. It is believed that
thee* attacks destroyed the source
of three-fourths of Japan’s avia-
tion gaetMte'-'
other Sumatran refineries previ-
ously had been smashed by British
planes, and U- 8. aircraft frequent-
ly have pummeied the mammoth rr-
nforiM at Ballkpapan, Bomea.
With an estimated reeerve of 11.-
00CBM barrel* of aviation gasoline,
* is believed Japan can operate her
air fleets for two yean at the pres-
ent rate. Available lubricating oils
wUl last 1«jnonths.
DARRYL F. ZANUCK'S
VVI
reduced 25% and more, affording excep-
tional clearance values in important
groups at
*1.50, *2.00, *3.00
NO SHOE STAMP REQUIRED
Remember, sizes are broken and only limited
-----selections are available—various types are in-
cluded, however.
NO LAYAWAYS! NO C. O. D.’fi! NO MAIL ORDERS!
NO EXCHANGES! NO RETURNS!
ALL SALES FINAL! ..
- Friendly Talks
ErE.
ws*t wind *
waan ths u----------—,
turned their head* toward the mouth
er—as did Um man who want ainonc
them seeking truth.
Here to j*rve you to toe taw* of cwr
Here to assure you at reepeM.,'
Bare to sfirtw* y*i about the oast at
the eeratooay.
QfckfMiht funeral
• OrtaMlMwd IMS
Mom • .. CNutaL tMSfi
the same line.
I TbM sf Son in Service
The man on the train to Wash-
ington says, "Here, you take the
seat by the window—I m getting out
pretty soon," and then he tells you
about hl* son who is with th* Fifth
Army in Italy. Your dad’s partner
ha* a son with the Navy to the
Pacific, a nephew on a submarine,
another at First Army headquarter*.' Consumption by the battered Im-
You bear that Johnny Bathe, who
used to be a copy boy in the AF
■port* department, ha* completed 50
mlMions a* Fortre** gunner out of
England The last time you *aw
Alan Gould's son he wa* at Cornell,
writing for the college paper, and
you were covering the Ohio State
game. Now ha 1* stationed in Now
Mexico, and wean the DFC after
completing his tour aa B-17 navi-
gator out of Italy.
Maybe, a* some people toalrt. the
folk* back home don’t know there *
a war on. But I doubt that. It wa*
the same <njf In AiBttoMa and
again to England. The folk* back
r home can’t help knowing there’s a
I Ing looked at your uniform, like to war on.
strike up conversation*, and those I Practically all of them have some-
I—--------convereation* all follow pretty much | body in It. —---------——■
r gig I'I" I iTii ■■R
A total of 5111 to ftnea WM* M-
*The ,ffiM»t,l^ded • Msahing
charge of S2S. a vagrancy flharge of T
»36, one Intoxication charge of 525
and six *pe*dlng charges of 55
tech __
Aarwtte' Liat thay ForgtH
A
A
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Hr* * * ♦ * * A » A A A
________________11H
t»M -J:- f-r • -1 = A
■id Ly***' ..............
»*A»*'<►*•* * ■
Nintt ’
Wsiditt lit jRwflttn* " HI
•«
—...i..-.Ms
i Ctydene fitmpoon of Au-
B IWliaa M011UW 01 HMM, I
are candidates for student
body offices at T. 8 C. W. for the
Melon and' have x begun
their campaign. They will be pre
■ented to the student body In as-seni
bly Thursday with election day
slated for March 1. ’
Mis* Simpson, a sophomore i
piano major, I* running for *tu-
chairman. Her oppon-
Frances Scott, sopho-
‘ from Mar-1
•journal-1
for Lass-
Miss
Candidates for other CDttege Gov-
ernment Association offices include
Mlsaes Joan Farrell of Electra and
shattered cathedral atty at Ootogne
to «to little rivar IBft, which stmg-
gleg northward across the roiling
plain to empty into the Rhine near
Diwaaeldorf, and if you wUl watah
what happei* when the Allied ad
vanee hit* the Erft I believe you
will be able to solve the mystery af
whether the Germans intend to
mak* a stand west of th* Rhino.
To be sure. Naoi Meld Marshal
von Rundstedt hs* bwued a rir<ltw
ordai of the day. calling on hl*
troops to fight to the last man to
defense af the approochas to th*
great manutuctui'ing center of the
Ruhr—which to the heart of Hitler s
war industries. The marshal says
•11 Will be tost if th* Ruhr goes
That's a true bill, but the Ruhr to
•art of the Rhln* and Rundstedt's
order naturally doesn't disclose bow
he intend* to make his defenm.
Well, it wont be long before we
know—OM1NHM it will be today—for ‘ and information Ckok* A club often
the American Ninth and First Ar-|nb*lJ" --w“
wiles, which are driving forward to bsr shop and laundry.-------
the center of th* gmat battte-Mne, *
ar* near th* frft a* this to written,
that Isn't much of a river, but it’s
th* last natural d*f*aae of Cologne,
and Rundrtedt wUl fight there un-
less be intends to retreat to the
east of the Rhine If withdrawal to
hto scheme, then h* undoubtedly
ha* moved some of hto forces sctom
stiouid the Nad commander man-
age to perform the tremendously
difficult and dangerous feat of
crossing the Rhine to full retreat,
be Badd have deprived th* AUies
Of th* decisive victory Whiflh tUi
would achieve by annihilating ins
anntes on the Ootaqne Plain. Then
Eisenhower would have to follow
over the Rhine and finish the job
there.
However,
-PASS LIST SUSPENDED-.
v;,
only time—and not
•answer.
that th* government would mak*
"■trenuog* *Bort*" to hike petrol- .
eum production in Japan. Manchu-. w^._
ria and North China. The govern- bettor than sould have been antl-
cipated-not only in the crater but
of the exploration for n*wwells.' to north the Canadian
Yoahida aarared th* Diet that pint Army <a fine outfit that) to
“the production of synthetic gaao-. driving against the German right
Mm, bauxite and otter materials, fiank. and la tte south where Pat-
iMisBenaaH* to th*- war to being ton 's heli-raising Third to turning
tocreoaed to the three countries." | the Oeman left.
assist chapter* to organising
local resource* for dlagster
parednes*. If requested, when the
need during an epidemic exists, the
Red Cross will set up an entire hos-
pital complete with all equipment
and staffed from orderlie* to phy-
sicians
Blood for BatUefronta
The largest controlled undertak-
ing in medical history was taken on
at the beginning of the war by the
American Red Cross and every per-
son in the country ha* been given
an opportunity of sharing in the
worthwhile project—that of send-
ing blood to the battlefront*. The
project has called for 103 volun-
teer donors each week and during
1PM over 5,000,000 pint* of blood
FIRST GREAT-ROAD SHOFATTRACTIONOE 1945-
•' Oort to used for cartridge plugs,
bomb part*, insulation of plane* and
tanks, life preservers and other Ar-
my and Navy war equipment.
A AAAAAAAAAA A
A A
: GETyOUR :
: Extra I3«l feints:
* *
New Yorks Central Park was
laid out in I8U. •
were sent to the Army and Navy
Tire mobile unit from the blood
donor ceuler at Port Worth was In
Denton 10 days and tiic quota ol 150
pints each day was exceeded. The
Denton Canteen Corps and Nurses
Aide Corps assisted all of the ten
PRICES
MATINEB (IkX toeiutedi
All amts M* Lews* Fteor
Men A Women In VnMorwi ..........Ige Men Al
fipselal AtMtetaYriw
5MMNUXN) barrels.
Japanese imported
a year from them I
Product!** Bate Up
W regtoring finny of the w
and processing plant* destroyed .
the Dutch, as they retreated in
1MB, the Japanese, h is believed,
were able to attain a high produc-
tion add refining rat* to th* Indie*.
Attacks by Americ
•nd plane*, * ~
Announcing Opening of a Complete
BATTERY REPAIR and.
REBUILDING SNOr ig
We repair broken coven, cases, connectors, dead or
shorted cells. Also batteries rebuilt aceordinf to fac-1
tory specifications by a factory trained man.
_ _ J(»r servVM for MNB Bvriyn
Sue Surber, who died Sunday, were
held Monday afternoon to the
Church of Christ, conducted by tte
minister, Oscar Ellison. Mr*. M. L.
Hutcheson sang "The LoH’s Flay-
er" and When They Ring Those .
Ttolden- Beibr. aswawpantod by
Teachers College Octette, and tte
Octette then sang a cappttla, ‘Near-.
er My God to Thee." •
Burial was in Rosetem* MeoMrito
Park, and pallbearers wen Steve
Alexander. Waco. Corp Alm ’Witter-
Stein, A. O. Calhoun and Bobbie
Jones, all of Denton, Ray Klingl*-
smlth, Dallas, and Hal H. Cherry,
Fort Worth. »
The floral tribute was unusually
large and beautiful. Add * l*rg*
number of relative, and friends At-
tended from out of town, including
Dallas, Waco, Gainesville, Bowie,
Cra nd Prairie, Paris, Nocona and
I other places.
By MUCK CUBBY
a fed to get bom*. Sometimes WASHINGTON, Feb 31.—With
even have worried- about It, the Philippines and the China Sea
‘ *“ slipping from her grasp, Japan from
" deep n0W «i mu>t depend primarily on
that this, on stock-piled In th* homeland to
- '5 your I supply ter navy and ah’ fore**.
’ These reserve* are limited. The
Japanese will face a critical short-
age of petroleum product* within
12 to 3* month*.
Since 1842. the JapaMee have re-
lied on the wells and refining facil-
ities of the Netherlands test In-
dies to fill much of their oil re-
quirement*. Now transi* station of
petroleum from the Indies will be
praaUcaUy curtailed if not stopped
Little Is Left
From Japan, Korea and Man-
churia the Nipponese can draw only
from a third to
nuai petroleum i
.sumption of oil
is estimated in
r-**
- hr - • • ' —
WinalRitetSeM
[Dies Tuewtoy
Mn. N. E. Snoot, mother of H K. L'
Snow, 10N Panhandle Street, died
'at 9 30 a. m. Tuesday in a local
hospital following an illness of sev-
eral weeks. The body is being held
to the Shepard Funeral Home,
pending arrival of children to make
funeral arrangements, but the serv-
ice probably will or hekHn ’ ~
Methodist Church Thursdt
Mrs. snow had lived bere
Surviving ar* five children: H P
Snow. Las CrucM, N. M„ Mrs J
E. Richards, Sedan. N. M.. Mrs A.
C. Walker and H H Snow, Denton,
and H F. Snow, San Francisco.
Oallf.
J
"4 ''
- 2 Satisfaction Grew*
„ „ It has been more than
now, and that feeling of l_ .
tefactlon is growing Thirty months
away from New York and 27 months
away from the country; «.ooo miles
by plane, and 12,000 miles by ship,
apd who-knows-how-many miles by
jeep end on foot' and by landing
bangs and elephant through New
Guinea and Australia, India, Bur-
ma, China, Holland and France and
Belgium and Germany none of
these things have left a gap be-
tween vou and home
There have been changes, certain-
- Iy-*Ymi hardly notice them at nret
in the rush of realising that the
girls are even prettier and better
dressed than you had remembered;
that you still can get a taxi; that
there is milk by the quart to the
teatex.
instead of a can; what the man"
behind the bar pours is not rotgut
cognac and does not cost MA0 a
shot; those are real scrambled eggs
at breakfast, and when you turn
the faucet what comes out is hot
wafer (
But it doesn’t take long to notice
the one big change that has taken
place store you sailed from Ban
Francisco to November, 1842
You notice It because people, hav-
I
WR**n’» rweonc*
with Mrs. C*ftJ
I
LlililftMLlliH
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Edwards, Robert J. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 169, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 27, 1945, newspaper, February 27, 1945; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1370414/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.