Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 18, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 4, 1945 Page: 2 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 21 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
—-3--
-7
Mc-
Budget Director
Trio of Freed
Denton Record-Chronicle
‘pea
D
a
#
-------Pje"Twe
Tuesda
%
NOTICE!
[f ।
Agency Control
*333
NEWS ABOUT PEOPLE—
Bre
Am
North Side Square
Will Be Closed
said
। Dr. and her two sons, Dan and Bill,
I son, in Waco.
i : .
n.
photographers
waiter Reed Hos-
2,
1- '
I . ,
THE EAGLE
off the I J. S. S. Houston.
(AP W irephoto) .
Child
Claude chanic, an uncle of her first hus-
W
urday at their home in Justin
Claude Castleberry was master of
te
re
FOR SERVICE a REPAIRS
in
de
LONDON, Sept 4.
Prime
★
FMANKIE
MARGARET
★ NOW SHOWING ★
KEEP YOUR EYE ON THE ZENITH RADIO
$
MI
.1
MUSICAL -- SPECIALTY - NEWSREEL
CALL
★
370
NOW !
the
been filled with waste xpx’r
NOW !
p
t
WANTED!
«ve
t
Pl
strong to 25 cents higher.
common
Other
DURING THE MONTH OF
AUGUST
Let
erate risin
WF EXTENDED LOANS FOR
LELA FOSTER
• Hospital and Doctor Bills
6)
Livestock Loans
Purchase of Used Cars
£ Auto Repairs
»
■I
• Taxes of Various Kinds
% Remodeling, Repairing Homes
fresher dhan the fowers in May::a
Clear Up Accumulated Bills
CAUTION-Proceed With Care
DN
©
318 Jackson Bld. Ph. 323
ESSENTIALS
When Powerful Drugs Are Being Used
ENJOY A MEAL AT
THE GRILL
210 W. Hickory
Ind
dit
BROOKS DRUG STORE
{
L
Lunches!
Home-made Pies!
/
e
s
26
uu.-;
, A
asg
F’
I
v
8
(jexns
• *
(patariL.
Re
DRUMLAND
OU
Gen. Marshall,
Stimson Due To
Step Doun Soon
Brothers Meet On
Pacific Isle After
4-Year Separation
Attlee Blames War
On Failure to Deal
Sternly With Japs
Vogue Babyland
721 North Locust
Annulment Sought
By Bride After First
Husband Found Alive
| alarms
pertod
ittle Eliers
h V. S. Soil
left today for a visit of several days
with her mother, Mrs Louise Wil-
was not until 6 20 that afternoon
that the last of five grass fires was]
extinguished.
Country Club
, attended by
band.
The action follows discovery that
Iowa
De ti-
the start,
erased in
Youth Killed With
Souvenir Nazi (Jun
the
re-
nt
Bend
will be
order i
porters and
wer taken to
Revival Opened
At Lewisville
re-
they
The Rotary Club meeting this
week will be in the form of a picnc
at the city park Thursday at 7 p
m., with wives of members provid-
ing food for their groups. Stanley
Monroe, president, announced to-
day. Ira Fullerton is in charge of
arrangements. Following the picnic,
the group will be guest of J. P.
Harrison at the Texas Theater
slow-talking Lt. Chase
m of Hyrum, Utah, as he
-----
"L-/
"addi
A stag barbecue for Kiwanians
and their guests will be held to-
nignt at 7 o'clock at the Country
Club in lieu of the usual Tuesday
luncheon meeting held in the cafe-
teria of the Texas State College for
Women.
shortly after midnight.
After a brief session with
CHICAGO—
Wheat—Easy hedge
had landed several days ago.
Japanese reports said nearly 15,-
War Crimes
(Continued From Page One)
BIRTHS
Born to Mr and Mrs
ig
weather
V,
aa0"
SWV
gt gpxa.
Wholesome Foods I
Short Orders!
"g ' '
UNTIL SEPT. 17
For Vacation And
Repairs.
| the girl's first husband, Sgt. Gene
! D Birdwell, 21. reported killed in
| action over Burma, has been res-
i cued from a Jap prison camp at
I Yokohama.
W- have Just renewed our contract with the Zenith Oo and one
of these days we'll be showing the new, improved Zenith. In the
meantime, bring us your radio when it needs repairing.
TALIAFERRO RADIO SHOP, Phone 780
PHONE 10
Member F. T. D. A.
pital for a physical checkup.
All of the fliers were from the
only two Mitchell bomber crews—
of 16 which flew from the Hornet
on April 18. 1942, mission—to fall in-
to enemy hands.
AN
F
l
Jajmn
continued from Page One
]
.3
time in 41 months.
' “This to the first piece of the
United States I have seen since
the deck of the carrier Hornet,"
ii
BEAUTY sHor
Call No. 4 for Appointment.
108 East ak.
LINDSEY’S BARBER
SHOP
left an army transport plane at
National airport
Equally happy were Lt. Robert
L. Hite of Earth, Texas, and Staff
Sergeant Jacob D Deshazer of Sa-
lem, Ore. The three, rescued two
weeks ago from a Japanese prison
ramp near Peiping, were flown here
from Karachi, India They arrived
_ of Tokyo stepped on Unit-
ed States soil today for the first
l- j
..1
9 2 286422"
sdhssudbwu. s.t' ’
La •
SALESLADIES!
; for
DENTON and DENTON
COUNTY
U ZIERS (OSMETICS
INC.
Write or phone
Godfrey & Godfrey
620 N Walnut.. Sherman, Tex
Pm
DYNAMIC DRAMA
2 BEHIND PRISON
gapez GATES!
ALSnECRIEJEIES
COMEDY—MUSICAL
WASHINGTON, Sept 4—
Three drawn and weary men who
took part in the Jimmy Doolittle
t2n06Sino
EM ' - ‘
-va
Uu
— f.
Elizabeth Arden Euentlalt In the refrigerator for
your dolly beauty routine.
occupation of the capital, and said |
20,000 others were landing today at 1
Tachikawa Army Air Base. north- 1
west of Tokyo.
American naval forces confiscat-
ed 20 Japanese suicide boats in the
Yokusuka naval base area on Tokyo
Bay, and said nine more Japanese
rja. ■ ■
Gary Loretto
COOPER’YOUNG
“rasa,
' €-"2
l . a
lacking and many market leaders
operated in the minus column Mod-
* ‘ g tendencies appeared at
actional gains later were
rmerous cases and mild
RE-ROOF HOW
(&iey
ROOFING
| The next meeting will be a regu-
1 lar business session Sept. 6 at 8 p.
The first fire for the period start- : m in the Castle Hall on the south
I ed at 12 20 p m Monday and it 1 side of the square
32
{eg” >
Business for the Denton fire de- ----- ----------
I partment reached the year's peak Claude Castleberry was master of
I between noon Monday and noon I ceremonies for the informal pro-
the 24-hour
I_________________
2 L2
• •" • Ml
I
.2
create a "One-of-a-Kind"
Corsage for you from
flowers that can be
different!
W
% a® Coata
• ' .9 Dresses
A e Shoes
“9 Suita
V Accessorles
DENTON, TEXAS
nertrsntesensmsns
A
and medium grades steady
answered in
DRIVE TO
ELMER HULSE
TEXACO STATION
502 N Locust
- - specializing tn - -
Marfak Lubrication
Washing and Lubrication
Havoline Motor Ous
Fire Chief. Sky Chief Gesolines
__B
Bendi t-automatic home laundry
win be available soon. Place your
order now. Quinby Self Sales Co. 23
If you need to
BUKO UP
0000002
Duo To Monthly Losses
If you lose so much during monthly
periods that you feel to weak, dragged
out” thia may be due to low blood-iron
—so try Lydia K. Pinkham's Tour,
cm of the greatest blood-iron tonics
you can buy. Pinkham’s Tablets are
also famous to help relieve symptoms
ot monthly functional disturbances.
Follow label directiona.
Ufa E Pimkham's TMCCTS
I becue held at the
Thursday night wii
over 100 men.
Japan's formal surrender has clear- >
ed the way for more changes in the 1
Truman administration. including !
the Elin Street Hospital and Clinic.
Mrs. F G. Rogers, 711 Schmitz, 1
and her daughter, Elizabeth Rog-
ers, were both admitted to the Elm
Street Hospital and Clinic Monday
for surgery.
—==================
gzGRssz
PETE SMITH SPECIAL
Com—Easy; geod grot
Rye Mixed. short covering nearby
contract. Liquidation in others
Hogs Active and fully steady. Top
41471
Cattle—Prices mixed, choice grades
wwrmc
Wonderful way to keep cool and stay lovelier
fmn all through the Summer heat. Chill your
/1 i lN
“ ’ ps-,
PERSONALS
Miss Perrie Ann Pierce, daughter
of Mr and Mrs. C. P. Pierce, 4427
McKinney Ave., Dallas, arrived to-
day for a week's visit with Mr. and
Mra. Eugene Cook, 513 Bolivar.
Miss Marjorie VanderhofT, daugh-
ter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Fed Vander-
hofT, Decatur Hwy., has gone to
Midland, where she will assume du-
ties as a fourth grade teacher in
the public schools.
Mrs. J. L. Myers, 604 Ave D, and
Mrs Will Parks 1114 W Chest-
nut returned Monday from a week’s
visit spent in Denison with Mrs.
Park's sister, Mrs U S Bridge-
farmer. and in Ada and Sulphur,
Okla
Mrs. George W Hinkle. Decatur
• TNT can wreck a battleship—the wrong dose of
medicine can put you out of commission, too. Our ex-
perienced pharmacist sees to it that every item used in
compounding your prescription is fresh, pure and po-
tent. Your doctor’s prescription is followed with preci-
sion and accuracy. Phone 29 or 39.
FOR
Complete Insurance Service
IOE GAMBILL, JR.
See Your Mutual Agent For The
“BEST FOR LESS”
i Cook said that it had evidently
-nmamy—a-
" - te fomon.....
CONVthtlfNl URMS
NOTICE TO OI K FRIENDS
AND CUSTOMERS
We haxe added an additional
operator and can now take
care of all jour beauty needs.
hiremen An suer
Seven Alarms in
2 l-llour Period
common 8 50- 10.25; Stocker calves
were treated as such.
“You had to stand rigidly at at-
tention with your hands at your
side while they beat you. But you
must understand this: the Japs
treated us like they treated their
own people. These people don't talk
our language an, when you fight
people who are like wild animals,
you must expect them to fight back
their way, not ours."
Gen. George C Marshall, 64, who
passed up an opportunity to retire '
nearly two years ago, may step i
down within months, possibly to be j
succeeded as chief of start by Gen j
Dwight D. Eisenhower
Secretary of War Henry L Stim-
son, who will be 78 Sept 21, also is
I week found herself with a surplus
of husbands, today filed suit in
Jackson County circuit court for
annulment of her marriage to Jack
Marshall, 33-year-old Wichita Me-
KANSAS CITY, Sept 4.—(A—
Mrs. Ann Birdwell-Marshall, 19-
year-old Kansas City girl, who last
Davis
Continued from Page One
submarines and "many" Midget
suds and one-man suicide torpedoes
were picked up, in addition to 44
Hying bombs. •
Evidence that hatred of Amer-
icans was not universal came from
—of all—places—the desolate field
of ashes to which an atom bomb
had reduced the modern city of Hi-
roshima.
Associated Press War Correspond-
ent Vern Haugland was approached
by a bearded old man who said the
atom bomb had wiped out his fam-
ily—and he ofTered to shake hands
He was, he said, a Christian.
We Are Known By
The Customers
We Keep!
And we know Denton
folks like our menus, our
service and our prices
—otherwise they would
not keep doming back.
IF YOU HAVE NEVER
EATEN AT THE
EAGLE—
bring your family here
for Chicken dinner
Remember “The Proof
of the Pudding” is at
Minister Attlee last night pinned
the blame for the six years of war
upon failure to deal sternly with
Japanese aggression 14 years ago.
and declared victory will have been
in vain unless all are ready to
shoulder "the heavy responsibility
that our victory entails."
“It will be our task in closest as-
sociation with other nations to seek
to establish a world order in which
I war shall everywhere be banished,"
| he told the British people in'a
speech marking the sixth annivers-
ary of Britain's entry into World
War 2.
n
e- ,
i ?
| -
HOSPITAL NOTES
W C Moss, route 1. was admit-
ted today to tlie Denton Hospital
and Clinic as a medical patient.
Miss Jonnie Etta Hoskins, daugh-
ter of Mr and Mrs J. H. Hoskins
of Lewisville underwent a tonsilec-
tomy at the Denton Hospital and
Clinic today.
Miss Connie Jean Moon, daugh-
ter of Mr and Mrs. R. R Moon of
Ponder underwent a tonsilectomy
today in the Denton Hospital and
Clinic.
Mrs Ted Trice. 1203 W Hickory
was admtted last night to the Den-
ton Hospital and Clinic as a medi-
cal patient.
J A Myers, 210 Congress, was
admitted today to the Denton Hos-
pital and Clinic for minor surgery.
Mrs. Louise White, 2308 N. Elm.
was admitted to the Elm Street
Hospital and Clinic Monday for
major surgery.
Mrs R. E. Knight, Meadows
Street, was admitted today to the
Elm Street Hospital and Clinic for
surgery
Miss Reba Boren, 225 Bryan, was
’Holcomb of Justin, formerly of j
Denton. a girl, Frances Lynn, Sat - ’
DALLAS, Sept 4— (A)— A Ger-
man pistol brought from the Euro-
pean theater as a war relic brought
accidental death today to Billie
Paul Payne, 15. of Kemp, Tex. The
Payne boy was visiting a friend
here and relatives reported they
were playing with the gun and an-
other of the same type when the
pistol was accidentally discharged.
F ■
It ■ < h
Ahefi,
Q«
ci
» ; •'L'Mk.. 'I t »1 ’ i ■■'■'-k
-2/- u. ,.a
a possible reorganization of
military high command
.. .11 ' A i..
- ' ■
: '■
Capt
prof ess
Texas
Field. <
aration
ton, wL
charge!
to an i
Since
a leave
in Ai
as dire
Majors
rector
Eagle 1
Capt
sume 1
Septem
nell sa
Anot
mein be
now s
Ala., is
duties
Lt Sin
nalism
the Ar
irregularity prevailed near the close.
Dealings slackened after a relatively
active opening. Transfers topped
1,000,000 shares Resistant most of
the proceedings, some in the "new
high" division,wereU. 8 Steel. Gen-
eral Motors, Pullman and Radio
Corp, Santa Fe. Southern Pacific,
American Telephone, Public Service
of N J„ Sears Roebuck, Du Pont,
Boeing and U. 8 Gypsum Resitant
were Great Northern. Chryslers, U.
8. Rubber. Kennecott, Cerro De
Pasco. American Can. Dow Chemical.
Texas Co. Johns-Manville and J C.
Penney.
N DRUG STORE
orth jSideof Square
Hdeg2 i ■ , fl
500 Allied troops would occupy cities _______ _______ ________
south and west of Tokyo preceding , and yearlings 812 75 down, stock cows
110 00 down.
Hogs 100, steady, top 614.55 paid
for god and choice barrows and gilts
' of all weights; sows 413 80. pigs up
."T.
a
6
%
"c l
NOTICE TO LOCAL STUDENTS
WHO EXPECT TO ENROLL IN
THE TEXAS STATE COLLEGE
FOR WOMEN
Please call at the Registrar’s of-
fice on one of the following days.:
Tuesday, Wednesday. Thursday, I
Friday, September 4, 5, 6, 7, in or-
der to fill out a blank for Local
Students. If you have not attended
the College previously please bring
your high school or college record.
By doing this you will save time
for yourself and the College on
Registration day.
FRANCIS W. EMERSON,
Registrar. 18
Justice Owen J Roberts.
Mr. Truman has been urged by |
some congressional friends to ap- l
point Robert P Patterson, under 1
secretary of war, to the Supreme I
Court vacancy.
W•
Jh A
“ a
to 815.00.
Sheep 5.500; active, steady to
strong, good and choice spring lambs
up to 412 50; medium and good
411 00-12.00. common 49.50-1050:
medium an dgood shorn aged ewes
44 75-550; cull and common 83.50-
4 50; most feeder lambs 410.00-12 00
Fort Worth Grains
Wheat No. 1 hard. according to pro-
PORT WORTH, Sept 4— (AP) —
tein and billing 81.73 3/4-84 1/8.
Barley No. 2. 41 14-17
Sorghums No 2 yellow milo or
white kafir per 100 lbs , celling price
Oats No 2 red 70-71C
dsmi
Hospitalization
For Every Member of
Family
Ask Your Hospital
About Us.
XIEayarElasAgSUDXNT?
YANKS FREED FROM JAP PRISONS ATTEND SURRENDER—Freed from Jap
prisons, these Yanks attended surrender aboard the I I. S. S. Missouri. They are (left
to right), Lt. W. F. Harris, Lexington, K y., off Corregidor ; MM 2-c L. C. Shaw, San
Antonio, Texas; Lt. J. W. Condit, Washington, D C.; Cmdr A L. Maher, Chicago,
On Sale! One line of
children's summer dress-
es and pinafores, size 3
to 6 years. Also several
100’ wool suits and
slacks.
(>
You will appreciate the friendly personal attention
you receive and you will be grateful to discover how
closely our convenient monthly repayment ptans meets
YOUR exact requirements.
classes weak to 50 cents lower Top
418. the ceiling.
stork Market
NEW YORK. Sept 4—(AP)—As-
sorted stocks attracted a fair amount
of support today although post-
Labor Day enthusiasm was notably
said to be considering retirement
to make way for a younger man
Meanwhile. President Truman
soon will send to Congress his se-
lections for federal loan administra-
tor and the Supreme Court vacan-
cy created by the retirement of
1 . rzgh
A
sn"2
KT ;
WASHINGTON. Sept 4—(P—
Budget Director Harold D. Smith
goes to Capitol Hill today to back
up President Truman's request for
more control over federal agen-
cies.
Smith was asked to explain to
the House expenditures committee
(1 p. m , CWT) why Mr Truman
thinks he should have more author-
ity to reorganize the executive
branch of the government.
The budget director faces a
group unconvinced that any ma-
jor change should be made, partic-
ularly if it involves taking away
congressional powers.
Chairman Manasco (D-Ala), for
instance, told a reporter it would
be "futile" to try to pass a meas-
ure along the lines suggested by
Mr. Truman hi a message to con-
gress last spring
Instead, Manasco placed before
his commute a bill exempting 21
agencies from any presidential re-
vamping—unless both the House
and Senate agree.
Mr. Truman said in his message
that many of the agencies should
be reorgnized in order to achieve
more efficient and economical ad-
ministration.
The late President Roosevelt
made -a similar request, but con-
gress refused to go along.
M.ami
Backs-FrumarrOn----
-
LEWISVILLE, Sept 4 A large !
crowd attended the opening of the
revival at the First Methodist
Church Sunday The Rev Robert
Markets at a Gilance
NEW YORK, Sept. 4 — (AP) —
Stocks Mixed; buyers turn cau-
tious.
Bonds—Narrow; favored rails re-
sistant.
Cotton—Higher, spot house cover-
ing
। Tuesday, Fire Chief Eugene Cook ; gram on which veterans of World
; said today in reporting seven j War II spoke
BELL
ROOFIHC SHEETMETAL
PHONE 796
Markets
Fort Worth Livestock
FORT WORTH, Sept 4—(AP) —
(USDA)—Cattle 5.000. calves 3.500;
opening slow, early bids and sales on
most slaughter grades steady to 25
lower, medium to low good grassfat
and cakefed steers and yearlings
411 75-14.00, common 49.00-11.50.
heifers 47.00-8.75, medium to good
rat cows 49 25-12 00. common 88.25-
9 00. good and choice fat calves
12.00-13.25; medium 810.50-11.75:
was reported. |
The second occurred at 10 a in J *
when a small out building at 221 j -
Bois Dare was destroyed by lire
gp,
. when Howard lived in
Park and Ona lived 11 I
ton
Plc Campuell joined
Army in April, 1944, and
celved his basic training
Sheppard Field
REEVES b WEBSTER
Phone 188 East Side Square
The Alathean Class of the First
Baptist Church will meet Thursday
at 10:30 a. m. at the church to go
to the home of Mrs. T. W Buell on
the Sanger Hwy. for the day A
covered dish luncheon will be serv-
ed, and a business session will fol-
low, with Mrs W H Lindsey pre-
siding.
The Standfield Lodge No. 217 will
meet tonight in a monthly business
session at 8 o'clock in the Masonic
Hall on the east side of the square
with J. R. Kirkpatrick in charge.
COOLED I. . H l r HH.I At ION
Cook pointed out that several
’ tunes during the afternoon all three
fire trucks were out on minor calls,
leaving the city completely unpr
I tected from large fires. He urged-
that all residents be particularly
I careful in the handling of fire dur- j
I ing the next . two months when
1 grass is diving
Gruss fires Monday included one
al file corner of Scripture and Ave- |
। nue l at 12.20. Qe on the old avia-
l tion field in the northwest part of
1 Denton at 4. one In the 600 bhxk
] of Ruddell at 6. one at 209 Ave F
j at 5 30. and another in the 500
। block on Railroad Avenue at 6 20 -
* The first alarm today came at
750 a in when an automobile i
| parked in front of the Eagle Courts I
on South Locust was partially dam- '
। aged by fire Cook said that, the
blaze was out when the fire de- j
partment arrived and little damage'
admitted Monday for surgery at
^Jou/n topics
Th ras V L'.ll. Mary ANDLRSON LdwardYAN Mark STEVEN:
wise punished as a result."
"Our menu consisted of milo
maize and rice in a combnation
tasting like chalk supplemented by
soy bean soup which was mostly
water. As an occasicnal treat a
fishhead or seaweed was thrown
in."
I Ridley of Carrollton is conducting
the revival, assisted by the pastor,
the Rev L W. Shivers, and J M
: Edwards is directing the singing
(Tilton Cram ... IM, 2.00,3.00, AM
Skh Lotlon ...M, IM. 375, AM, 15.00
elve Crepm ... 1,00, 2.00, 3.00, AM
92002 Ms Cram. a. IM, 1,75, 275, 4.25, AM
OMMfeg Crium , H 1.00, 3.00, am piu tames
.a 4
★ ★ ★
It's a small world after all
eii’ii if it does take four years
to find a person on it, accord-
ing to Pfc. Ona L Campbell of
Denton and his brother, Howard,
of Iowa Park who recently met
on a Pacific island
When Howard, a corporal
with the Tenth Army, landed in
the Pacific theater of opera-
tions over 29 months ago, his
brother was still stationed in the
United States, and both agreed
that chances of a brotherly re-
union were very remote
On July 3 .however. Ona land-
ed on the same Pacific island
and eight days later the Texas
brothers were united Today
they are bivouaced only a short
jeep-ride apart and are closer
by many miles than they were
100 Attend Knights
Of Pythios Barbecue
i
l The Knights of Pythias stag bar-
★ *
WASHINGTON, Sept 4 —IP—
6,3- „e“n*"
- i--
•95 "
g.,., i6
a, w
L 3 98285
b 388
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 18, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 4, 1945, newspaper, September 4, 1945; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1430805/m1/2/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.