Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 120, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 1, 1944 Page: 3 of 6
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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.. 11594
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DENTON, TKXA8, RECO»D-CHBONICLK, SATURDAY, JAWABT 1, 1M4
tAa
*
DENTON
Diesin
.1
*4:
the
*.
3
annels
the threatened steel walkout which
rain. 42.
came these
The War Production Board esti-
mates two tin
three
thrown away.
are bell
The body will be held at Schmitz
No preaching services will be held
FLOWERS!
r
WIRE BRIEFS
the pastor, Rev Paul Strickert.
PERSONALS
118
Phone :
Miss Sammie Jean Bothwell of
March.
Girls Attend Camp
R. L. Selby & Sons
i
government.
"far
secret
Plor ists and Nurserymen
lishings'
New Location:
-to -W ear '
--
PONDER
a.
If
nasium at Teachers College begin-
Hickory Street is ill of influenza at ning at 9 o clock tonight.
HELENA.
04
8
C
Foxworth-Gaibralth
Starting today
all remnants
COURT HOUSE
fore moving to Port Worth about
THEY LIKE IT
Jf. M. Ruddell £ Sossa Ca.
War at Glance
!
IT LIKES THEM
Luther Knieasi
N ■
WANTED
' ■ "i
I
T
N19H
mu n ■
12 PRICE
T
You Can Save
$ 1.00 size
50c
*
Precious Ration
for ) pur
"2
HAPPY NEW YEAR!
Owamt-wC
/
PLUS TAX
it.
.. .r
LIMITED TIME ONLY!
• Ils
fl
14
-
/
--- #
PPI lt R -
P
mm ll
4
c0-
7up
*803
Argue Effect of
Strikes in War
And Propaganda
Mother of Denim
Woman Succumbs
Hitler Hints
At Offensives,
Secret Weapons
For New Year
•
Married Despite
Hiccoughs, Dies
Day Afterward
Denton Misses 38
Freese, Light
Rain Falling
HERE IS OUR
SINCERE WISH
are now reduced to 1 2 price . .
tine rot ton, rayon and wool pieces.
Celina is visiting her grandmother, I
Mis Ton. Bothwell, 1812 North Elm
Stre-t
lour days after Americans landed
on the cape the day after Christ-
mas.
Corpus Christi, rain. 61; Browns-
ville. rain. 64; Beaumont, rain, 45;
Abilene, rain, 45; San Angelo. rain.
Pallbearers will be W J. McCon-
nel, W C. Orr, 5. A. Blackburn,
Camp Howe soldiers and Denton
Geo members greeted 1944 midst
rail
[ged
WS
VCEf
firemen. H W Fraser of the con-
ductors and T. C. Cashen of the |
Funeral Designs, Potted
Plants, Corsages
written from his overseas station
that he has begun to receive the
Record-Chronicle and is finding out
through it where other Denton boys
were
Mr
While the men found the cele-
bration more like New Year's Eves
of the past than they expected, the
r
1. The Axis has taken the
and steel situations and pl
GERMANY TELLS
OF MANY SHIPS
SUNK IN 1943
, Best wishes for a happy new year
to all his Denton friends was ex-
pressed in a letter to the Record-
Chronicle from W D. Lanford, who
is in the U. 8. Navy now on duty
outside the United States Lanford
wrote that he was receiving his
paper and keeping up with events
in Denton.
man radio asserted today
The broadcast claim, which was
without Allied substantiation. added
that most of the sinkings were by
U-boats which accounted for 593 of
the merchant ships
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS
Josephine Davie et al to Clifford
H Stroud, lot in Moreau Forrest
survey, 82.000 Dec. 14, 1943
Methodist Church here.
Burial will be in Roselawn Mem-
Have your elothers riseaed and
pressed at Camp CTeaaw. rh. 1212
Funeral Chapel until the time for
the funeral.
um out of every
be salvaged now
ited at Bell ville.
Mr and Mrs John Paddock vis-
ited at Fort Worth and Poolville
Mr and Mrs O J McCullar of
Fort Worth visited Mr. and Mrs
John Paddock.
Ponder; Glegh Knight. Sinton; E.
O. Knight. Tyler.
Burial was at Rose Hill.
exiled
Cairo
lien "
-4.
we
(
on’Me
mod
-hAWL
A Berlin broadcast declared today
that German escort vessels have
sunk three ships off the American
' North Atlantic coast
I There was no Allied confirmation
of such a claim.
w i
1
4
Stamps, Time and
Money
, Herbert Harris of Camp Fannin.
AMONG SICK
church was pened for prayer while
organ music was played throughout
the time.
of Mrs. Evelyn Patterson.
Woodson Herbert Harris, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Woodson Harris. 425
Pry Street. has been promoted to
the rank of sergeant at Camp Fan-
: nin. Tyter,wrere ne I stationed
Harris has been in the Army since
/20A
a , g
f J t
n*e ane
Mr and Mrs J. C Lee
Mrs. Cecil Knight of Denton was
I here.
Mark Gives Facts
Of Jesus* Life
North Side Square
Flowers, Plants and All
Varieties Corsages,
Designs.
at the last minute.
They were made by such an Im-
portant figure that they could not J
be ignored, even though his name i
could not be used
Scores Administration
Church Servicesa
2
CRADDOCK
Grocery & Market
FOOD VALUES
Phone Tf..
-2-
First-class mechanic, al-
so mechanic's helper,
wash and grease
man
CARUTHERS" MOTOR
COMPANY
Phone 109
Charles Bette Pledger. 219 Jagoe
Street, is now training at the pre-
flight school of San Antonio Avia-
tion Cadet Center with 245 other
--------------- enemy.”
rail strike call, averted when the i
if you will resolve now
to let us do most of your
pastry baking during
1944!
, , B’r
P__
Purity Bakery
. PHONE 106
fresh: it’s Americas"
1 up” for every age beca
they like i, i likes t
' by Rev H. E. Gatti, Guthere. Ok .
' former assistant pastor of the
I" ■
- 4
seked the carrlers, and ; W. N. Masters
dissolved into orderly arbitration 1 _ g .
hineral Sunday
Final rites for W N Masters. well
known educator of Denton, will be
held at the First Methodist Church
Sunday at 4 p. m. Rev Philip Walk-
er will enduct the service, assisted
C. Ross and T. B. Bl
She has resided in
than 20 years. "
—2---—
Allies Repair
Airdrome Taken
in New Britain
- 9 —— _ a
Members from all Denton
churches met at the Pint Baptist
adly so well known among those tor
whom Mark wrote that he felt it , p
unnecessary to go into matters which 5”
Luke. for instance, felt it necessary ' '
auAn
ER’S
oxv IN/ED
( STORE
; STORE
wire hangen
Church Friday night for a New
। Year s Eve watchnight party and
1 ---- service 1
PONDER. Dec. 31Mrs. Fred Moel-
lers of Electra visited her parents.
Year’s ball will be held in the Wom-
en s Club tonight. The dance be-
gins at 9 p m
are stationed in the service
T U S S Y
WIND AND WEATHER LOTION
w . * .....„uan
amazing drawing power of the Mas-
ter
Herr too. we come upon a word
that almoat marks the character of
Mark's Gosper It is the word
'straightway,' and it is an interest-
ing. project to count the number of
times that Mark uses the word in the
Gospel. It is indicative of the im-
medtacy of everything he tells. Noth-
LONDON, Jan. 1—(P— Facing the
grimmest year of his Nazi regime.
Adolf Hitler offered his people and
soldiers New Year’s hints of of-
fensive blows against the enemy and
new inventions of warfare. and as-
serted the Germans were ready for
any invasion from the west.
A wordy message to the home
front played again n his favorite
porpaganda themes, but acknowl-
edged that 1943 had been the year
of.' heaviest reverses.”
'To troops battling to stave off
fresh disasters in Russia, Hitler at-
tempted to ''explain” Soviet trium-
phs, declaring that the shattered
Nazi offensive of last July had been
"Tecessary to force the Russians to
launch their pending offensive dur-
ing the summer in order to exhaust
as far as possible its force before
the beginning of the winter "
"The year 1944 will be a very hard
one," he told the soldiers. “But
it will be our common task again to
overcome the period of pure defense
1 and to inflict heavy blows on the
FINAL RITES FOR
FRANK EVANS
to relate in detail at a later time.
Mark's explicit purpose was to set
forth the fact of the divine life of I
the Son of God, as manifest in the I
earthlv life of Jesus of Nazareth. .
and his method was to do thia by i
portraying that life, in all the vivid-
neas of the Mastef’s own acts and '
words He does not philosophise, as '
does the Gospel of John. He does not i
engage in elaborate arguments and
assurances What he does is to set
forth the life and let it speak for
itsefl: and thia be does with great
•
7 ‘ 4 359
I ' w‘8
' • ed
God and man."
The Gospel of Mark was probably
the first of our Gospels to be writ-
ten. and these things were undoubt-
san Marines had
out of their stra-
them through propaganda
in an efort to show that conditions
here arin a state of chaos.
■ , " ■ rta
II । l ■■■
Mts.J.R.Wil
A • .
I
A
e-ih
-X%.1
28
Special to Rec. rd- Chronicle.
• LEWISVILLE, Jan. 1 —Funeral
services for Frank Evans, 75, who
died suddenly in his store near ■
—=-ti- , . .. * - • m2
uepsmg"Ft-* L
rMobmuener-r-teheee
I Mrs W A Chambers of Denton
I has been called to Abilene, where. J ow» * Rall, Tn
i her mother is reported criticaliy ill. .
Mr and Mrs. Woodson Harris 425 Dance Here Tonight
I Fry Street. had as holiday guests ,
Mr and Mrs Ed P Williams and
daughter, Linda, of Fort Worth;
Lieut, and Mrs. A. G Parsons of
Fort SUl, Ok., are visiting Mrs. Par-
son’s mother, Mrs. Gladys J. Smith,
912 Oakland Avenue. Mrs Parsons
is the former Miss Janice Smith
recent rail-steel labor troubles may
have unduly prolonged the Euro-
pean war hit Ulf nation with
sledgehammer force today, brought
immediate protesta of innocence
from union men and inspired harsh
words about the White House hand-
ling of threatened strikeg
The torrent of reaction was un-
leashed by a declaration of a person
high not only in the United States
councils but in those of the United
Nations. He said:
I
SOUTHWEST PACIFIC—Japan-
ese attempts to retake Cape Glou-
cester airdrome repulsed
Corp. Stan Landers, Camp Howse,------—
! Pvt Donald Dowlen. Sgt Hensley, fyig confetti, bursting balloons,
' and Pvt Gheraradi, all of Camp . blarcs horns avid to the camp or-
I Bowie, and their son Sgt Woodson ichestra’s rendition of Auld Lang
Lieut. Gen. €ar A. Spuaiz,
who -vill command all Ameri-
can strategic bombing of Eu-
rope. arrived in London today
Worth, sons, are
1 ■ 91 ■ i
vv EraD
■ ■ BOOKBY
This is a filthy propaganda story the Frist State Bank
designed to arouse the American - •—•
mg is happening at second hand; we
ar right on the scene Was there
I ever a more wonderful narrative
than the 16 chapters of this Book of
Mark* What a privilege to tudy It I
And what an experience if we come
I to know and see Jesus as Mark knew
1 Him and saw Him!
Funeral Sunday
For Mrs, H arret
Paul's Lutheran
The stalements referred to tin
From the unions
m.H., wor.s patteran ana Hav- of the effect of His message upon the
Walter Forest Patterson gw Hay- | nshermen who their nets to fol-
nes Street, has been promoted to the i iow Him—toe first evidence of the
rank of private first class in the “ ----
Church U. s Manne Corps. He is the son
Sunday because of the illness of --- — - —“-----
ndens. An address by Rev. W. C.,
Lloyd, pastor of the Cumberland
Presbyterian Church, followed. The
meeting closed at midnight with
prayer.
New Year's day religious services
included Holy communion at the
St. Barnabas Episcopal Church at
9 a. m and holy mass at the Cath-
olic Church of Immaculate Con-
ception at 7 and 9 a. m., and the "
union prayer service, sponsored by
the Denton Ministers Association.
(By Assciated Press i
HOT SPOT:
NEW YORK.—Fire engines
clanged through the night club
district to put out a blase—at
the Torrid Zone cafe.
About 38,000 pounds of copper 1
go into each million cartridges for
[ small arms
Mrs Jmbs R wiey tSi •KW’
day at 10:30 a. m. at her home, IN
West College Avenue, -following a
year's illness. 14.-
Funeral services •wl be held in
the Schmitz Funeral Chapel Bun-
A surplus of aluminum closed four
1 production lines in two govern-
. inent-owned plents tedey as the
Funeral services of M s W L
Knight. 79. mother of Mrs. John
Gale of Denton, were held in Fort
Worth Thursday afternoon, follow-
ie early part of the evening was
pied with games and refresh-
THE VANITY SHOP
“Quality and Personality"
had left
destina-
seven daughters, three sons, a sister
and two brothers. Daughters are
Bern to Mr. and Mrs. Colman
Moss of Aubrey, in the Denton Hos-
pital Friday night, a girl
The Officers Wives Club New
A stunning statement that
Ihe OPA has established retail Cope. Ponder: John Gale. Denton.
: < ellings of 10 cents and 15 cents a | T. A. Gale. J. W Lord, Louise
pair on rubber heels sold to con- , Hutton and Miss Clara KnightRoct
three sumers who lack them on their
a
4 a
"Had the admmistra- I orlal Park cemetery
Pfc. Edward Bates Smith has
at St
First Sgt. John C. Beck, whose
wife is the former Miss Frances May
Fritz, daughter of Mr and Mrs. Ben
Fritz fo Dentotl, was recently a
featured personality in the camp
newspaper at Fort Jackson, 8. C.,
where he is stationed. The sketch
of Beck traced his 12 years in the
U. S. army from the time he en-
listed at Fort Bliss, through his
experience of patrolling the Mex-
ican border and on into his present
post at Fort Jackson. The story
said Beck hopes to be able to take
his wife and son, John C. Beck
Jr., back to his native Texas some
day.
simplicity and directness.
8C Mark’s Gospel is a narrative of
action. He brings us right on the
scene, and as much as anyone could
do through writing he makes every-
thing happen right before our eyes.
He sets the man Christ Jesus before
We Shall Ty Our Best To Help
You Make It So!
ing her death at her home in
I War Production Board moved to re- i prt worth Wednesday afternoon.
I duce monthly output by 40.000,000 Mrs K ight lived at Ponder be-
। punds.
Burroughs. 65. who will retire
Friday after carrying the mail
for 41 years. figures he has pd-
ded a distance equal to lour
trips around the world But
he's taking on a new job A
door-to-door salesman
NICKLE NURSER:
LOS ANGELES—Police orn-
cer W W Wheelock arrested
a pencil vendor for operating
without a city license, found he
was lugging around $2,534. Ex-
plained the vendor: "I don t
trust banks. "
COUNTY MEN
IN SERVICE
cd today Amcrtei
cleared ths,enery
tegio Cape Gloucester airdrome on
the southwestern tip of New Bri-
LONDON, Jan 1— (— The Ger-
man navy in 1943 sank 607 Allied '
No. 1 Friday night. They
prompt retorts:
Ralls—D B Robertson of the
day at 3 p. m.
Mrs Wiley is survived by her"
husband, two daughters. Dr. Au-
trey Nell Wiley at Denton and
Miss Margaret Lee Wiley at dom-
merce; and two sisters, Mmes. A.
(By Associated Press)
ITALY—Americans seize
heights.
RUSSIA—Reds speed on
recaptured Zhitomir
about Him
is not that the ideal way to know
the Master and feel His power—not
by hearsay, not by what others say
about Him. but by discovering Him
for ourselves'’ Here in the beginning
of the story, following the baptism
of Jesus, Is the simple record of how
Jesus began to preach and of what
he said Then follows the evidence
25 years ago She is survived by
Funeral services for Mrs. Fannie
Harrell, who died at her home
Thursday, will be held at the Syca-
more Baptist Church north of De-
catur. Sunday at 3 p. ri
Mrs. Harrell t survived by her I
hustand, C a. Harrell, 312 Frame
merchant ships totaling 3,784.500 ।-----—
tons, an aircraft carrier, six cruisers, I switchmen:
63 destroyers, 18 submarines, three i tion permitted this case to have ,
corvettes. 58 motor torpedoboats and I taken its orderly course in all prob-
several midget submarines, the Ger- ability a satisfactory settlement , R. W B l; arn°prld H
So wholesome and good is -
7-Up that youngsters can 1
copy it with their granddads. )
Brisk and clean in flavor, L
chilled 7-Up leaves no ■
bombers already has been carved
out of the jungles of Bougainville
Island to the east Midland, rain, 41; Big Springs,
The Cape Gloucester airdrome I rain. 41; Houston, rain, 48; Tyler,
fell to marines in bloody fighting
. f
I
boys from Texas. The training
period there lasts nine weeks.
shoes themselves Such heels are
from sold mainly by variety stores.
ED !
gruy hair. danl
r. Kch) scalp to
Tobin Drug Store
Nori h Side Square ’ ' . Phome
Mrs Beverly Sanifippo. 406 South
Elm Street, Is a medical patient tn
the Denton Hospital
Jess L Stowe--whc underwent a
toriiectomy in the Denton Hos- _______
pit’ll Friday, has returned to his1 girls had a treat, too. The ratio
home 912 Sycamore Street f of men to girls were around 10 to
Mrs Homer Rodden and daugh- I one
ter. born in the Denton Hospital,' The Denton U80 New Year s
• have returned to their home | dance will be in the women's gym-
Mrs E W McBride. 336 East
-3---
. Mrs. Newton of Fredrick, Ok. vis-
J ited here.
Mr. and Mrs Hubbard Haren vis-
Street, seven children and five t
brothers. She has been a resident |
of Denton County 15 years and’was
a member of the Baptist Church.
Whayne Florists
S00 N. Locust. Ph. 573
A Ji”;
1
A Me , -32
■V"* ‘ m •
- ‘ HE
,+1-4 ,2. ..
---m-etnrmd
people against labor unions despite
their amazing production records
It is the type of propaganda we
might expect an American Goebbels
to disseminate.”
Entirely separate from all this
was a statement put out coincident- [
i a Liv late last night by Elmer Davis. ;
chief of the Office of War Informa- I
tion.
Davis said the fight against infla-
tion is in danger of being lost be-
cause- "too many pressure groups |
are out for all they can get, regard-
less ot its effect on the national '
• economy,
( "If a soldier at the front decided
i that he had done as much fighting
as he needed to do and he might
as well go home now, that could be
called desertion in the face of the
nemy." said Davis.
People at home who stop war
work for no valid reason, or stop
thinking about the war and put
their minds on what they are go-
ing to do afterward, are deserting
। in the face of the enemy, too"
. are its prin-
above, are Cor-
nero and Catir
Woody Herma,
tain and that navy construction
workers were busily whipping the
captured air strips into serviceable
condition All Japanese attempts to
retake the airdrome have been
"heavily repulsed,” MacArthurs
communique said.
From the Cape Gloucester air-
drome, Rabaul lies only 285 miles
to the northeast on the opposite
end of the crescent-shaped island.
Thus, fighter planes based at Cape
Gloucester will be able to escort
new and more formidable air ar-
madas against Rabaul s harbor and
supply installations.
Another fighter base for these
03a
--2-44
Singer* to Meet
In Denton Sunday
The First Sunday Singing Assoc-
iation will meet Sunday afternoon
at 2 o’lock at the new Central Bap-
tist Church auditorium on Bolivar
Street Dallas singers as well as
local people are to participate and
1 all singers were invited
Mont—W Rush
WASHINGTON, Jan 1—(APi— Mmes. A J Woodrum, Waco, Bob
Teat: Mark 1:1-22
Hy WILLIAM E. GlLROY, D. U.
• The lessons for the Arst quarter
of the New Tear consist of studlee
in the Gospel of Mark under the
dominant theme of that Gospel, the
Gospel of the Son of Ger 4,
* the Gospel of Mark is well adapt-
ed for such a study though It is not
the best Gospel for a study at the
entire life of Christ. For that we
need all four Gospels, for each sup-
plies something that the others leave
out, and each has Its distinctive
quality.
The Gospel of Mark begins with
John the Baptist and his work of
preparation for the poming and min-
istry of Jesus From that we come at
once into the adult ministry of the
Master, without a word concerning
this situation has had any effect ' Minor.
upon the war or ofTers and psychol- Honorary pallbearers will be men
upon the war or ofTers anv psychol- 1 of the Board of Stewards of the
unions are not responsible " | First Methodist Church, faculty
Steel—An unnamed official of the i members of Teachers College, and
United Steel Workers of America I officers, directors and employes of
I tor of the First Baptist. Chureh
I Evans had lived in the Lake
i community about 30 years Pall-
bearers were John Slater. Harvey
Grace. Damon Newton. Albert
Washington
CAMDEN, N. J.Jan. U— (AP)—
Frsnk Smith, 23, was married in a
hospital here, unwilling to can-
cel his wedding because of a sev-
ere attack of hiccoughs.
Next day he died Physicians
said the hiccoughing had aggravated
a heart condition
Ritter Lake Thursday from a heart A.A,, v
attack, were held at the Ritter NAT-EA---'
cemetery Friday afternoon, con-
ducted by Rev N B Burns, pas-
-—-
$,2
39,6}
haps dlay rvols in subjugad -
2. The net effect has been to stiff
en resistance of the Axis allies and
countries this winter— uprisings
which could have spelled swift col-
lapse of Hitler's house of cards
3 The whole thing has been a
great tragedy.”
In keeping with President Rooee
velt’s proclamation of a day of pfay:
er. The prayer service was held
H. ananmmgty.oa! FombyterntchRh,"u."s"A."1
service I he persuades us concerning the di-
the vine life of the Master, by what He
is, and not just by what Mark says
prirr ■ Iew
N\M x ta
r < onl. iuinr
fond- l the
and just a-
le ~har anai
rdiatc iced-
il DOM . .
Japs Caught
By Surprise at
Cafte Gloucester
By MURLIN SPENUER
WITH THE MARINES AT CAPE
GLOUCESTER, New Britain, Dec.
29—i Delayed) —(P—— When giant
Sherman tanks spearheaded the
marine attack against the Japanese
at Cape Gloucester airdrome, the
enemy was caught completely by
surprise.
"The.Japs were so surprised when
the tanks approached some of them
just got up and started at us before
they got smart and tried to run.”
said sgt.. Frank Cosgrove, Miami,
Fla., a member of a tank rew I
talked with while they rested after
the battle.
“Other huddled in their pillboxes
until we or the infantry blasted
them out or ran over them,” Cos-
grove said. el
Resting on the jungle trail were
tankmen, inluding : Lt. Jaques Lewis
of San Baba, Texas.
Sgt. Leroy West, Independence,
Mo., gunner on one tank', is thankful
for the heavy armor these thanks
cary. One shell from a Japanese
75 milimeter field piece hit squarely
in he front of thank where West
was riding, but it ricocheted1 of.
Private Michael Sweeney. Tion-
esta, Pa., told how he was inching
forward on the front line when
someone crawled up from behind
and puts his hand on Sweeney'
shoulder, then moved on.
When he got by. I knew it was
Jap because they smell that way,”
Sweeney said. "But they gt him be-
fore he went far."
Private John F McCrohan. Prin-
ceton, N. J., can't wait to get to
Tokyo—he found a Japanese of-
ficers bag with a huge roll of bank
notes
L—(API —
APA~ nnippG menesed
NEWMA MWIII• next Christmas holidays at home.
ILnJ DKILIJ
His miraculous birth, and the won-
derful story at His babyhood and
chidhood There is no picture of
Jesus. In the Temple, and no record 14' pAn+ NAxA VAn,
of how He grew up in toe normal Urect 11 CW 1 car
life of a boy. "Increasing in wisdom
and in stature and in favor with
adsdhej
. .ooa .
MARRIAGE LICENSES
J E Jones and Rosella Hartley
Penton, which has been exper-
iencing freezes with frequency ot
late missed that temperature
Friday night, when the mercury
stopped at 38 degrees at the State
Experiment Station here. The
maximum Friday was 56 degrees A
light rain starting during the night
measured 18 of an inch to 8 am
Dreary Weather
For New Year
(By Associated Press)
Dreary weather jolted New Year's
day in Texas Saturday as rain fell
in every portion of the state
Temperatures, except at some
Panhandle points remained above
the freezing level.
Rain threatened to cut attend-
ance at bowl football games at
Dallas, Houston and Odessa
At mid-morning, weather condi-
tions over the state included-
Pampa, rain, 31 degrees, Claren-
aon, rain, 33; Wichita Falls, rain,
38; Fort Worth, rain, 41; Daitas,
rain. 40; Waco, rain. 41; Austin,
rain, 44; San Antonio, rain. 47;
' rP
«epaR.
ndt‛
Syne."
Forty girls attended a New
I Year s Eve ball in Service Club
$2.00 size
& yi
1 man of the
s Stan It. who
eamlan Fridav
"Pronti Furi.
1 is concerned
coach obber ies
n nght
i . S-
-mma-ae
Va . M3Tas2
1 . .8822..2770112259
.2
„mo‛ l
pur
Y
•a
LONDON, Jan. I—(AP)—A
Keuters dispatch from Cairo
today said King Peter of Yu-
zuslavia, who has been with his
WASHINGTON, Jan.
(EILING NET ON RUEBEH
HEELS FOR SHOES
LONDON, Jan.
ofBt.Jo.f -
iton more
o.un, y-e
accompanied to the camp by
ar>d Mrs Prank Smith
ADVANCED ALLIED HEAD-
. . QUARTERS, New uinea, Jan. 1.
■ z(AP)—The new year found Allied
» e Torces on'New Britain cleaning up
the second air base capable of pro-
viding fighter protection for bomb-
- , ing raids on the Japanese strong-
hold of Rabaul. s
Gen. Dougtas MacArthur report-
-^■■..■..,,1.,.......
* e
„ • - pemutnmre
7
.3 aymsg-amdrm- -Mete-,
4
$1.00
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS,
ALGIERS. , Jan. L—(AP)—
British troops making a dar-
ing raid on the Tyrrhenian
coastal sector in Italy destroy-
ed an impart»nt bridge, infliet-
ed casualties, and took prison-
era. It was announced omcially
today.
her home.
Miss Lizzie Johnson. 1812 North
. Elm Street, is ill at her home.
-----------
SURPLUSES OF ALUMINUM
CLOSES PLANTS
WASHINGTON Jan I —P—
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Edwards, Robert J. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 120, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 1, 1944, newspaper, January 1, 1944; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1426891/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed June 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.