Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 130, Ed. 1 Monday, January 14, 1946 Page: 1 of 10
ten pages : ill. ; page 22 x 18 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:
I
T
13
wetheucer tir "ra Ax
• -"/ FFa
6
-d-tue
DENTON, TEXAS, MONDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 11, 1946
VOL. XLIII
NO. 130
I
9
8
2rt
E2
Houston
*"7"
Central.
*
:t
J
JL
| 1
1W ■
—-a
Vm
2,
Nationwide Steel
j
•3
I
Churchills Due Tonight
Oil Order Issued
Weather
government-backed
through its regional offices here. I strike for
■ 2
today issued a complaint against i wage Increase of 171/3 per cent.
Jo-
The board announced it will 1
' 1k,
be.
-
• i
\
8
hai
0g
e
U
Rail Embargo On
Livestock Ordered
And Tidephone
Strike Delayed
Byrnes Calls For
Quick UNO Action
On Atom Control
•They'll Get Me
Yet’ Gun Victim
Tells Officers
Profit Sharing
Proposed as Way
To Avoid Strikes
Fleming Is New
Scout Executive
farms.
Blue
American Soldier
Given Death For
Killing Two Japs
OSAKA, Jan. 14.—(P)— Pfc.
Board of Education
Names New Chairman
Round
dbouL
Jown
NEW YORK. Jan. 14.—(P—Win-
ston Churchill and his wife will ar-
rive in New York tonight.
2’6
I
Heavy Loss Of
Life Feared In
Tanker Explosion
On Fact-Finding
Boards Sought
WASHINGTON, Jan. 14.—
12
e
-
■
3--
.98
psl 7"
id z - .Ai
—-L-
2,
2g-aa
I
I
'. *
13
> e
W
v
I «9
Speed Legislation
WASHINGTON, Jan. IL— (A P)— The 79th Congress
began its second session at 11a. m. (CST) today with a re-
quest to its leaders by President Truman to expedite action
on his unfinished legislative program.
Acting House Speaker McCormack of Massachusetts told
reporters the President declared at a White House confer-
ence,with congressional leaders he+---------------------------
1e3"*
-l2--233K
f
I
!
k. ! 0
t.F F
Slain Girl Identified
By Yellow Bobby Sock
SARATOGA SPRINGS, N. Y..
Jan. 14.—(P— Assistant Dist. Atty.
Carleton King said today a nude,
headlessrand-armless torso discov-
ered neat* here yesterday had been
identified “by the family" a* Louise
de Chants, 30, missing from her
Saratoga Springs home since last
Wednesday. King mid a yellow
boby sock was Instrumental in com-
pleting identification.
e}.
LONDON, Jan 14 —(P)— Secretary Byrnes called upon the United
Nations Assembly today to “approve promptly" the creation of a special
commission on control of atomic energy and to pledge land. sea and
air forces to a world police force.
Opening the first general policy debate in the assembly, the secret arh
of state pledged full cooperation of the United States in the new wod
organization. He spoke after the assembly broke a deadlock over the
18th and final seat on its Important economic and social council
Urging the assembly to approve the formula for the atomic com-
1
g
.l,.0
212f
U • X'■’’ag!
W
Young Dems Call
For Fight Against
Party Deserters
tional interest.’' intervened in the
strike that has idled 175,000 produc-
tion workers across the nation.
UAW-CIO charges that ___
Motors has failed to bargain
lectively on wage*. »
2Udr.jmc"..‘d2bjod"ev.lagu
' i
p l
K 2
ft
OKLAHOMA: Mostly cloudy today;
rain and colder south and ex-
treme south central this after '
noon: tonight rain or snow; cold-
er northwest; tow temperatures
middle 30s in northwest to 92
southeast; partly cloudy north-.
- weat rain or snow south and enst
Ea
n—"
T
, j
i- - ^1
% SekAhna
,e d
f l
ed by two higher authorities
for* it can be carried out.
2
1%8g
i
•h"
■
AUSTIN, Jan. 14,—(P—A state-
wide proration order calculated to
result in dally production of 2,126,-
504 barrels of crude in Texas dur-
ing February was issued today by
the Railroad Commission.
FORT WORTH, Jan. 14.—(A—— It will be impossible to handle live-
GM Action Rapped
InNLRBComplaint
DETROrT, Jan. 14.—(API—The. ed proposal to settle the 55-day-
"Al
11
-
By R J. (Bob) EDWARDS
He that saith he is in the light,
and hateth his brother. is in dark-
ness even until now I John 2-9.
It is human nature to hate those
whom we have injured.—Tacitus.
• ♦ • ♦
After attending a meeting of the
stock unloaded here.
The stockyards company in a no-
tification to all commission firms
this morning requested that no
truck shipments of stock be sent
here after noon tomorrow.
Meanwhile at Chicago Edgar L.
Warren, U. a Conciliation Service
director, reported no progress in
talks with union and company rep-
resentatives in the meat industry
dispute, which threaten* to erupt
Wednesday into a strike of 335,000
AFL and CTO workers.
“While there is no direct progress
to report.” he said last night, "I
am hopeful that a settlement will
be reached."
Warren held a series of separate
conferences Sunday with John E
Wilson, general superintndent of
Swift and Co., and officers of the
CIO United Packinghouse Workers
and the AFL Meat Cutters and
Butcher Workmen unions.
1 (6
§ ,2
/ /,“3
AUSTIN, Jan 14 — (P)—Dr. A M
Long of Valley Mills today was
elected by acclamation new chair-
man of the State Board of Educa-
tion to succeed Maco Stewart of
Galveston. Clyde Hanks of Pales-
tine was elected vice president.
Retrieve. Clemens,
i
be educational.”
The executive committee urged
the governor and the attorney gen-
eral to take immediate steps to
clarify the machinery by which ex-
service men and women may vote
The total acreage of the eleven
farms amounts to 77,000 acres, or
approximately that. On the farms
around 4,000 acres of land was
planted to cotton, from which, to
See ROUND ABOUT. Page 2
----
Ner Colieetuai
Depots Set l^p la
Clothing Drive
Board at 1
visiting five
National Labor Relation* Board, old CIO United
। ton from Fort Worth as soon as
housing facilities are available.
era. we have learned from expert- । races will not win," he commented
ence. This time both the United “but even so their campaigns will
An embargo on shipments by rail
of livestock to Fort Worth, with
1 the exception of that billed direct
to the plant of Swift & Company,
K was announced today as effective
\ tomorrow at 11:59 p. m and a plea
was also issued to shippers not to
send animals here by truck. -
The actions by the railroads and
the Fort Worth Stockyards Com-
pany were based on the impending
I strike scheduled for Wednesday of
2.500 members of the United Pack-
inghouse Workers of America
• CIO). The swift plant is not in-
volved in the wage dispute.
The rail embargo was announced
by the Fort Worth Belt Railway,
the only rail trackage connecting
the stockyards with inbound trams
of all lines serving the city. V
It has been feared that due to
the strike, which will involve live-
stock handlers at the yards here,
EIGHTY-SECOND DISPLAYS ITS MIGHT—Members of the 82nd Airborne Dvsion march through Washington
Arhin New York clity as they begin a victory parade up Fifth A venue from Washington Square. (AP Wire-
photo).
• i
I .
//7
, iL
a
was “very anxious” for early action
on his legislative program
McCormack said the entire pro-
gram was discussed in a general
way, and the strike situation was
reviewed.
He quoted the President as be-
lieving early action Imperative on
his proposal for a law setting up
fact-finding boards to handle ma-
jor labor controversies and provid-
ing tor a 30-day cooling off period
before strikes take efect.
Senator Eastland (D-MIsa) told
reporters he would seek immediate
Senate action on the fact-finding
legislation asked by the President.
“We've either got to get out some
strike legislation or surrender the
country to the CIO," he said.
As Hie lawmaker* reconvened,
Mr. Truman sent them a recom-
mendation that appropriation* and
contract authorizations be cut back
by 45.021.887.483
This would be in addition to $50,-
345.409.169 in recessions approved
by Congress near the close of the
last session.
The President requested the re-
ductions in funds for war and civil-
ian agencies. He explained in a
statement that appropriations to-
taling $5,751,428,483 and contract
authorisations of $420,079,000 should
be repealed but that future neces-
sary appropriation* to liquidate
contracts would total 41.149.620,000.
shoes, bedding and piece goods for over to the Security Council for So-
the relief of war victims may be de- ! lution.
posited at any one of the three “Twenty-five years ugo we in the
Denton fire stations, in the north1 United States were not fully aware
basement of the city hall or at the of our responsibility. But with oth-
Clothing Campaign. C P Whise-lof security."
L. W Fleming of Sherman began
his work as Denton county boy
scout executive today after J. W
Majors resigned the position to go
to work in Marshall.
A graduate of South Eastern Col-
lege, Durant, Okla., Fleming was
engaged in Scout work for more
than three years before entering
the Navy in 1942.
He was discharged from the Navy
with a petty officer's rating before
coming to Denton.
Mrs Fleming will move to Den-
Texas Prison
Monday and
.„ -«=-E- ----mgTE
nant, chairman, said today, that I
new collection depots over the city
have been designated.
Starting Monday used clothing.
Auto Workers
Commission Slated
To Act Tonight On
Engine Contract
The city commission will have
a called meeting tonight at 7 o’clock
to reconsider an ordinance author-
izing the execution of a cntract
with the Cooper-Bessemer Corp,
for a new engine for the muncipal
power plant. Mayor Lee Preston
announced today.
Official action on the ordinance
was delayed at the commission's
last meeting Friday, when compaay
representatives explained that the
contract had been inproperly drawn
up and that it had been sent to
Dallas for correction.
City Engineer L. R. Burrow said
today that the contract had been
returned and that the commission
could act on the ordinance tongght.
In this year's elections without
payment of the poll tax.
It passed a resolution asking Gov.
Coke Stevenson to call a special
session of the Legislature to enact
a registration law, to redistrict the
state for legislative representation,
and to make possible maximum
welfare payments for the aged, de-
pendent children and the needy
blind
Dates for the next convention, to
be held at Houston, were set for
Sept 26-28
■ • dhan.
"-A
Za! 4
deadly human warfare.
Cold and rainy weather have so to EeaabulihmenprSbiemaomamlslon
seriously hampered the collection the discovery of atomic energy is
of used clothing for the Victory I inseparably linked with the problem
-.................... „■ ...... -._ a _ - _ ‘ ..... ' _ _
DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLE
—~ J W — ■- - SH
Associated Press Leased Wire TEN PAGEL
The compromise, approved by the
union's General Motors council
Sunday, marked the first time the
UAW-CIO had shelved, even temp-
orarily, its 30 per cent wage de-
fhands.
The corporation’s first reaction
last night was to repeat its rejec-
tion.
However, the 200-man GM coun-
cil of the UAW-CIO gave the cor.
poration until Jan. 31 to reconsider,
warning that after that date the
union will revert to the original 30
per cent demand.
In Washington, meanwhile, the
National Labor Relations Board,
moved by whit It termed “the na-
g. r " 239
———-3 —-—-----4
s £
E..2
aumd
General Motors Corp, charging it
with refusing "to bargain collec-
tively in good faith” with the Uni-
ted Automobile Workers (CIO).
Hearing on the complaint was
set for Jan. 28 in Detroit.
The tomplaint was issued on the
basis of charges filed against the
corporation by the union on Nov.
8 and Nov. 27. The charges were
made while across-the-table con-
ferences were under way between
GM and the union on the UAW-
CIO demands for a 30 per cent
wage rate increase.
At that time the union claimed
the company deelined to discus*
the wage issue with it The man-
agement maintained the union was
attempting to inject into the nego-
tiation* matter* outside the collec-
tive bargaining realm.
General Motors Corp. had for
consideration today a once-reject-
•mission drafted at the Moscow
forelgn mnisters conrertn e, Byrnes
declared :
"We must not fail to devise the
I safeguards necessary to insure that
I this great discovery is used lor hu-
man welfare nd not for more
muchgs
The resolution to create the com-
mission is sponsored by the Unit-
ed States, Britain. Russia, Cana-
da, France and China. In effect, it
would turn the atomic problem
hud Iard of numerous young
Democrats who had announced
they would seek legislative and
other state offices, and of others
who were itching to run.
"All of those who are in these
Ridge and Ferguson and also the
unit at Huntsville, during the past
week, it is good to get back home
and again in the harness.
At the meeting k Houston plans
were laid for the construction of
u dormitory at Ramsey Fann to
cost in the neighborhood of $300,-
000; however, that amount does not
near approximate the needs for
new buildings on the various farms
it will accommodate around 150
persons and personnel while the
amount of new construction on
this one farm should have been
around 4700,000. To construct the
new building the Legislature ap-
propriated only $150,000, and that
amount will construct a building of
approximately $300,000 value, since
the Prison System can furnish the
labor. the brick, tile, sand and
gravel for cement. All construction
of the Prison System is done in
the main by prison labor. That
labor, under superviston, enables a
man to learn a trade or profession
that will stand him well when he
is discharged or given clemency
States government and its people
are deeply conscious of their re-
sponsibility. This time, on their be-
half. I pledge full and wholehearted
cooperation."
Yugoslavia was elected to the
MANILA, Jan. 14 — (— A tank-
er blew up in Manila harbor to-
night and waterfront observers
feared loss of life was heavy.
The explosion occurred at 9:45
p m. and threw a brilliant glare
over the entire harbor.
A military policeman aboard an-
other vessel, the Robert D. Carey,
said the tanker was anchored
about 2,000 yards out in the harbor.
I saw a bright flame silhouet-
ting another vessel nearby” said
the M P. Pvt. Archie D. Geddes,
"and within a fraction of a second
the tanker was completely envelop-
ed in flames.
"Then a column of smoke and
debris shot up a thousand feet.
"Then I heard very loud explo-
sions which lasted for five minutes.
"I Ain sure that many of those
aboard must have been killed."
A fire boat rushed to the acene,
and an hour later it appeared that
the remaining fire was being
brought under control.
Herbert Noble, 36-year-old Den-
ton county farmer and rancher,
lay In a Dallas hospital today re-
covering from a pistol wound he
suffered early Saturday morning
when two unidentified assailants
shot him in what officers believe
was a vengeance plot by West Dal-
las gangsters.
The attack occurred just north
of the Dallas-Denton county line
after an automobile chase from
downtown Dallas to a farm house
where the two men finally cornered
Noble
Noble still feared for his safety
even in a guarded hospital room
and he told investigating officers
that “they will get me yet, so there
is nothing you can do about it.”
County Attorney W K Baldridge,
who made two trip* to Dallas with
Sheriff Roy Moore. In connection
with the case, said his office had
dropped an mvestigatien at the
request of Noble.
Won't Press Charge*
“He told us he did not want to
press charges and asked us to get
off the case,” Baldridge said. "You
couldn't give them — enough jail
sentences to keep them from killing
me," Baldridge quoted Noble as
saying.
Baldridge, who talked to Noble
Saturday and Sunday, pieced to-
gether the following story of the
attack.
Noble, who was driving a 1941
Ford automobile, spotted two men
in Dallas who apparently were
trailing him through downtown
streets in a 1946 Ford Friday night
The two unidentified men were
driving only with the aid of park-
ing lights and they followed Noble
persistently even through heavy
heavy traffic and on to the city
limits of Dallas
80-Mile-An-Hour Chase
The chase continued on to Webb
City with both automobiles being
driven at 80 miles per hour. Noble
turned north at Grapevine on a
road to Denton and began a race
for home.
At that time one of the men in
the other car began firing a pistol
and struck Noble's machine four
times, two of the bullets penetrat-
ing the front windsheld.
When about two miles north of
Grapevine, Noble spotted a farm
house and wheeled his automobile
off the main road toward it. He
fled from the car and was dropped
by a. single pistol bullet that struck
Bee SHOOTING. Page 2
* "22" 32
ncgd
3- Ara 1
Tuesday afternoon. Fresh north-
east and IM* winds on the const
becoming southerly, ‘Tuesday.
WEST TEXAS: Cloudy; rain this
afternoon, tonight, and Tuesday
except some snow mixed with
rain-in El Paso area and from
upper Pecos Valley northward;
colder Panhandle. South Plain*
and upper Pecos Valley Tuesday
and in Panhandle late tonight.
Wind* becoming strong northerly
Panhandle- and South Plains
Tuesday.
. _ "" • • " "nzpem
office of the Bell Roofing Sheet
Metal Co , on the corner of Austin
and East McKinney
Previously. community zone
chairmen were charged with the
collections. Whisenant explained,
but if the bundles have not been
collected by Monday, they should
be taken to one of the designated
depots
Persons who cannot arrange to
have their contributions taken to
the collection stations, may have
them picked up by calling any
member of the Denton Lions Club,
he added
DENTON AND VICINITY Cloudy
with rain, colder tonight and
Tuesdav. ,
EAST TEXAS: cloudy, rain to
west and south portions this aft-
emoon: cloudy with rate tonight •*
and Tuesday; wanner tonight
and in southeast portion Tues-
day: colder northwest portion
Senate To Probe
Succession Line
Of Presidency
WASHINGTON, Jan 14.—(AP—
The Senate received legislation to-
day calling for a study of presiden-
tial succcession and election ques- i
lions by a joint congressional com-
mittee.
The bill would set up a 10-mem-
ber group—half from the House,
half from the Senate— to report
not later than May 1.
President Truman last June ask-
ed Congress to amend the succes-
slon law to make the speaker of the
House next in line to him, rather
than the secretary of state. The
House quickly passed such a bill,
but it never came to a vote in the
Senate.
A - a a a ‘ Immediate Action
Congress Asked To
AUSTIN, Jan. 14 —(P— The
Young Democrats of Texas haven't
forgiven the Texas Regulars
There was no mention of the
senior executive committee's failure
to take disciplinary artion when
the executive committee of the par-
ty's ' younger offshoot yesterday
unanimously approved s resolution
calling on club members over the
state to "use their votes and influ-
ence against those who deserted
the party in 1944, that they not be
elected, appotnted or returned to
any office." —________
Tie committee also uanimously-
agreed “to encourage liberal and
progressive young Democrats to be-
come candidates for the legisla-
ture"
Members of the committee dis-
cussing these points commented
that while the Young Democrat
constitution forbids that any club
endorse a candidate until he be-
comes the party nominee, there is
no prohibition against fighting
those who were characterized as
"party deserters."
Jack Carter of Fort Worth, pres-
ident of the organization, said he
Pearl Harbor Probe
Committee To Hear
Kimmel Tuesday
WASHINGTON, Jan, 14 —(P—
Chairman Barkley (D-Ky) said, to-
day the Pearl Harbor mvestigating
committee will hear Admiral Hus-
band E Kimmel tomorrow as
scheduled.
Barkley told the Senate that
committee members had decided to
go ahead with the hearing, which
will give Kimmel his first oppor-
tunity for public testimony since
the Japanese attack, despite ar-
rangements for Gen. Dwight D.
Eisenhower and Fleet Admiral
Chester W. Nimitz to address leg-
islators informally on demobRiza:
lion at 9 a. m., Central Standard
Time, tomorrow.
final vacancy on the economic and !
socal council after New Zealand
withdrew.
British sources said Britain prob-
ably would offer to place Britain's
mandated territories from the First
World War—Including Palest Ine-
under a new United Nations trus-
teeship system.
The question of trusteeship,
which is urgent for Britain, is not
at the moment so important to the
United States, whose chief aim is to
make sure it keeps control over stra"
tegic base areas captured in the
Pacific.
U.S. Secretary of State James F.
Byrnes said he would open a general
discussion of international issues,
Including atomic energy.
Debate on atomic controls may
continue through Friday or Satur-
day Other speakers are expected
to include British Foreign Secretary
Ernest Bevin, French Foreign Min-
ister Georges Bidault and Andrei
J Vishinsky. Russian vice commis-
sar for foreign affairs.
To give some idea as to the im-
mensity of the System and its hold-
mgs, it may be of interest to the
public to know that in the classifi-
, cations of livestock in November
past, It showed, as follows:
7.296 head of Stocker cattle; 1,-
502 mules. 246 horses. 185 mares;
1,890 dairy cattle, 2,111 hogs, 207
gouts, 33 sheep; 261 dogs and 7,629
poultry.
aS9g626msmarim"
= ee:
Low-----—g2
12"211102 k*r’*-.*<* .122122072202 *•
Legislation calling for a
congressional study of profit
sharing between employers
and employes as a means of
avoiding lahor strife was in-
troduced today by Rep. Claro
Boothe Luce (R-Conn).
Mrs. Luce’s measure would
direct.the House way* and mean*
committee to complete studies on
the subject which were started sev-
eral years ago.
Senator East la nd announced he
will ask for immediate action in
that chamber, en President Tru-
man’s request for legislation for
fact-finding boards in labor dis-
putes
The Luce bill calls on the ways
and means committee to report to
the House upon all existing profit-
sharing systems with a special view
to:
1. The completion of an authen-
tic record of experience;
2 The consideration of what ad-
visable contribution. If any. may
oe made to the encouragement of
profit-sharing by the federal gov-
ernment. including the grant of
compensatory tax exemptons and
tax rewards;
3. The consideration of any other
recommendations which may prove
desirable.
Mrs. Luce's bill declared that
"the prevalence, persistence and
intensity of strikes and labor dis-
pute* are symptoms indicating that
the establishment of a new
ciple of relationship between
and capital * * * is urgent II in-
dustrial peace is to be restored
and maintained." It added;
“A fair „andequitable.ditribu-
tion of the fruits of industry is a
basic condition of a Just and
healthy capitalism."
Eastland said: "We’ve either got
to get out some strike legislation
or surrender the country to the
CTO,” the Mississippi senator told
a reporter.
Eastland said he would ask the
Senate to discharge its labor com-
mittee from consideration of a fact-
See LABOR, Page 2
seph E. Hieswa, 20, of Wallington,
N. J., has been condemned to death
by an Army court-martial for the
murder of two Japanese, 98th Di-
vision officers disclosed today
Hicswa's death sentence, believed
Hie first to be imposed on an
•' American soldier for a crime
against Japanese, must be review-
xh.
,24-
The Prison System is one oi the
largest investments the state has,
yet it is one of the least known
about. The piblicity wually eottea
by the System is ot the unfavorable
kind, us thone good things that
could be told about are seldom, if
ever, heard about by the general
public. So in this brief statement,
" we will try to give some of the
highlights of the System and its
property, all of which belongs to
- you, the people of Texas. One hears
about the breaks' from the farms
or the Central Unit at Huntsville,
but one seldom hears about some
of the men, after discharge, who
go out in the world of competition
and make good For instance, there
was one prison-trained printer re-
leased. He immediately got a place
which paid him $75 per week, and
later accepted another place with
a newspaper at a higher wage An-
other prisoner, who, by the way.
was somewhat obstreperous when
. . he first entered the walls, is now
in business for himself and is mak-
ing around ten thousand bucks per
year. He attributes his present
prosperity to training he got in
Hie Prison System. Too, there are
many former inmates who made
enviable records in the armed
forces during the last war There's
really many such instances that
could be reported. The inmates who
daily perform their duties are not
heard about
32 .4— -a—-*.
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Telephone service in Texas re-
turned to near-normal today as
workers trickled back to their jobs
in compliance with mstructions
from their national union leaders.
Service had been curtailed since
Friday when telephone company
workers began respecting picket
lines thrown around exchanges
over the state by the Association
of Communications Equip in e n t
Workers. who went on strike lay
week ngainst Hw Western Eirctrh
Company.
Austin operators were the first to
return to their switchboards Oth-
ers began following suit h Dallas,
Houston and San Antonio
The threat of a nation-wide tele-
phone strike was put off for at
least 30 days today and striking
Communications Equipment Work-
ers began returning to their jobs
'Ilie Assoclation of Communica-
tions Equipment Workers, which
went on strike last week against
the Western Electric Company, was
directed by telegraph today to get
all members back on the Job by
1 p. in, local time, at each place
they have been on strike.
Tins action was annoumced by
association officials after a tele-
phone [Mill of their locals on a
request of the executive board of
the National Federation of Tele-
phone Workers that hey defer
their strike.
The Federation, an independent
organization, yesterday ordered a
national telephone strike but quick-
ly postponed it tor at least 30 days
to permit its locals to file strike
notices as required under the
Smith-Connally act.
At the same time the wheels of
the nation's steel industry kept
turning today as CIO-United Steel-
workers reported for work, their
scheduled walkout postponed a
week for further wage negotiations
w -Ga*."
A&M Specialists
To Hold Poultry
Meetings Here
Dr. E A Grist and 54am Moore,
poultry speclalists of the Extension
Service of A&M College, will con-
duct two meetings in Denton coum-
ty Friday to discuss poultry prob-
lems wth Denton farmers. County
Agent O R Warren announced to-
day.
The first meeting will be held at
JO a. m Friday on the farm of Fred
Hopkins, Jr, three miles north of
Krum, where 150 hens will be cull-
ed. poultry problems discussed, and
method* of examining diseased
bird* demonstrated by the men.
Poultry owners who are having
disease problems have been asked
to bring one or two sick birds to
the meeting for examination.
The second meeting, which will
cover the same material as the
first, will be held at 2 p. m. Friday
nt the Justin High School. If weath-
er permits, this group will go from
the high school to the Walter
Peterson form to cull poultry and
examine a turkey flock for turkey
problem demonstrations, Warren
said.
Men, women and 4-H Club boy*
and girls Interested in poultry rais-
ing have been urged to attend eith-
J er of the meeting*
■MT N
sdF"e
Wyr T E
A
5
■ 3.
* • ■ e-d wua te —0
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. 130, Ed. 1 Monday, January 14, 1946, newspaper, January 14, 1946; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1458614/m1/1/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.