Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 7, Ed. 1 Friday, August 22, 1941 Page: 3 of 8
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M«s*mn *km*mmv*
m
re
Defense Manufacturing to Affect *
s
*
the flood of production for na-
Rble.
times
billtao tow
It
*
Sjt1
5
i
2»
!
Insurance Co.
uses for waste product*—In-
i’hone 430-J
There is nof short cut to either pros-
1
50c and $ 1.00
High Schools to
i
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i.
the
A
ICC Loans Are Made Promptly
3
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Ind
$59.50
*
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Tie WWtans Store
4
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FINE CLOTHING SINCE l|g4
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HOT BON]
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♦
a » A
LvwjuJLMLLi
iresh-irom fteiths
MEATS
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I
____
■ .
Taxes All Pay
Already now 35 per eent of what
is taxes and so on.
Taxes an Dividends, Wages
You U
fUJK '
Whatever your loans requirement may be . . . wheth-
er it is to finance a car, obtain a cash loan, or a loan
to pay bills, we invite you to use this prompt, friend-
ly service.
1
i
B
i
In practically every instance, an ICC Loan is made th6
same day the application for the loan is received—
there’s no red tape, no lengthy investigations.
F
of
LET US
Check Your Car
McCray's
VWVLRY (TOR*
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----------Mt
PRICED AT
$12.5(1 to
EUP.COX
Denton Representative
Southwestern Life
» A»wd«« iiwU««ds» •! Um.
‘ xssi****'
|'A-. -y
*8 .M
1 1
L a
The Boston Store
Your Store Air Conditioned for Your Comfort
WF—WWW
Ito
Ito
” ■ _
• -
■n^^
Hni
___
<3
I
! for that vacation trip.
-
3
SB
Brooks Drug Store
Phones 29-39 Where Denton Trades Free Delivery
3^
V^OOQ
Fleeces, Tweeds, Dress Cloths, Nubby
Weaves, Fur Fabrics, Zipper Pockets,
Velvet Collars, Fur Trimmed, 3-piece
Suits. Tailored, Wide Sleeves. Swanky
Shoulders. See our Windows’ All New
Shades. All Sizes—9 to 42.
Do your trading with Denton In-
Diplomas
1
- Be sure your tires, bat-
'< teries, oil are OK. Fen-
j ders touched up,
RAY DICKSON
MOTOR CO.
115 S. Elm
/ Ph. 1577.
” 1
$1.00
HOLDS ANY GARMENT ON LAY-
AWAY! BUY NOW WHILE STOCK
IS COMPLETE!
BETTER BUY
MS- •«
TIRES NQW! \
U. 8. Tires and Tubes aa
weD as U. S. Batf&fcft.
We stand back of them.
Bert Moore Service
•nnmiwPBwrj
Washington
• to secondary,
um> ob taxation to to
tram now* rashing to
3
few years ago when governments
were urging us all to buy morel
Guess if the poUUolaps tot us atone
at ail times to learn Mg experience
the nation would be better off In
the end.'*"* •♦’•*♦« '
Increased Tax Unnecessary
My purpose this week—however—
is not to discuss the proa and eons
of proposed tax bills, but to show
readers how much they are already
*
tiunt^tbi™---
Rufes for FuiFs
60-Day Seaton
WASHINGTON, Aug. 33 — (*> —
America’s 7500JXM) licensed hunters
got official assurance today of A
60-day open season on ducks this
fail, along with welcome, word from
the Fish and Wildlife Service that
the waterfowl population had more
than doubled since 1935.
The interior department’s 1941
regulations for shooting migratory
gamebirds, announced yesterday,
permit northern sportsmen to take
i<> the blinds first, on Oct. 1.
Two other broad lateral sones,
stretching east-west and having the
same general expectations for the
advance of duck hunting weather,
were assigned later opening dates.
personal belongings of Tom Lester
in- the Waketon community, 14
Initos from Denton. He to the ne-
phew of Mrs. Florence McLeod,
I'V>tt Worth Highway. Origin of the j
/ire has not been determined, nor
kl/llW Ulk aetlmnia rxF tViax Iavaaaj
By Boqn W. BABSON
OLOUCESmt. Mgm., Aug.
The chief dtocuaston tn Washington
and Ottawa toda» to over taxes.
Even -price cor"—" *-------J—
as one purpose
keep people T~
buy goods. Some change from a
Are Year Wheel*
j.
Balanced?
We have in our wheel
‘balancing department
the finest wheel balanc-
ing machine obtainable
today and we have ex-
pert mechanics to use it
“Bring year troubles
to us."
Rural Teachers’
Checks Now Ready
f . r ■ ■______
ers for the current school
■ Oo your inuring wtu, Dsutaa te-
< -^tattoos.
I
■ JMgfl
'^‘11
Sr' *
By POTTS BOBWELL
Associated Pram Staff
Back orders turn yellow in the
foe
.: w
REABLEE’S
307 N. Locust Street
— Telephone 88 —-
r ♦ ■«
r
SALAD DW8INC, Par, qL 33c, 14e
L1PTON*8 TKA, with gtaas, f
—I
MAGNOLIA COFFEE, lb. ___ 3?c
LARGE IVOIIff SOAP, 2 f*
OXYDOL or RINSO, large size 22c
BREAD, Family, Denton Maid, 2 large leaver. ...Itc
SUNSHINE Hl-HO ( RA( KER^.fc hm-Ufe
SUNSHINE BUTTER COOKIES, box „Me
taxes I
If You Are Bothered With Hay Fever,
Asthma or Have Sensitive Skin, Try
MARCELLE COSMETICS
Non-Allergic Cosmetics
Complete Line; Face Powders, Creams, Deodorants.
Toilet Waters
’ a
*s, „„ k
The real way ""ta" raise the new
producing defense materials if aluminum,
they are to survive, and we intend | considered
to be In a position to show them
how.”
The shoe is Just beginning to
pinch What's one man’s shortage
in manufactured gooffs may not be
another's Just now. C. B Roberts,
retail field officer for Sears Roebuck
and Company, says. "While we have t
had difficulties in getting goods we
have been anticipating more trouble
than we have actually met."
But Sam. the shoe repair man
complains of a
t......................
leather lu> wants, or the silk and
—
■w ■ ' —
mediate zone Oct. 16, and on Nov.
2 in the southern startea.
A 60-day season and a bag limit
of 10 again was set for ducks, but
dove hunters saw their shooting
pwiod trimmed to a maximum of
42 days. The 15-day season for
wood chuck was continued.''
The regulations continue to bar
the use of bait or live decoys, and
In addition prohibit the use of cat-
tle, horses, or mules as blind*.
Hunters may use shotguns not larg-
er than 10 gauge, and repeating
and automatic guns must be plug*
I ged to take no more than three
' shells.
Duck and goose shooting hours
remain the same—sunrise to 4 pm.
Dove hunters may start gunning
early. In some areas on Septem-
ber 1. but their game will be Umit-
A drastic reduction In the
city from oil field machinery to air-
plane undercarriages.
Texas Industry is slipping into the I ,
armament effort, and the change Is ttevcral important revisions
touching the living habits of Texas last 1
citizens. , *
armored force, died today at the Maryland. Virginia. North Caro-
Massachusetts General Hospital af- '* “ ~
ter suffering a physical breakdown
during an intense drive to build up
and organize the special mechanized
defense units.
Summer graduation exercises far
,31 high school students of both the
Demonstration and Senior High
Schools will be held at the library
auditorium at the Teachers College
tonight at 6 o'etoek, instead of the
main auditorium aa originally sche-
duled. ,
Opening with the processional I
and then an invocation by A S
Keith, the program win continue
with "Clair de Lune" (Claude De-
bussy t played by Nannette Reese
i After the principal addres by T B
Hyder of the college government
’ and speech faculty. A. O. Calhoun. :
| Senior High School principal, will
anard diplomas and Dr. J. C. Mal-
1 thews, director of teacher-training,
vdll make the concluding remarks
Any Make
Pauenger Car
Washed and Marfaked
$1.00
Sam Laney Tire
Company
"Busiest Place in Town”
Ph. 67 502 N. Locust
► K» C. BAKING POWDER, 25e she .
1 HEINZ RipE FLAKES^ 2 baxiB
Small Ik-po ^
Italance >’
, tmd t»- e<«t of your
b tuii<-t'01'
p'iv'a
r0,t all P>'“’ ,,r
you never even
SRKni Rfifi f^RAPlBCf
U. s Navy and five for Canada. In
other words, if we all would get
busy to eliminate crime, our taxes
-------— —’"[need really not cost us anything,
cidedly unsatisfactory ’ The sea- <»_ v *
sons were reduced to a maximum .
of 42 days, against shooting pe-
riods as long as 77 days in some
areas last year.
Shooting Hours
Shooting hours for mourning
(turtle* doves, white-winged doves,
woodcocks, band-tailed pigeons, and
rails and gallinulea (other than
coots> were not changed. They are
sunrise to sunset. f.
No changes were made In the
length of the woodcock hunting
seasons, the shortened seasons of
15 days, introduced in 1940, being
Excess Cotton
“enruty 7 Cen
Work Sfte^
htuing Siam pt
I ,-----------------... ; <
Cotton marketed In excess of 1941
AAA farm quotas will be subject to
a penalty of seven eents per pound,
Chairman J. T. Donald of the Den-
ton County AAA committee mid to-
Ate made the comment as the
“ AAA offtoe stepped up Ito
era! ratoon stamps to a fast tempo
which Administrative Assistant Loyd
O> Sullivan believed wOUK’ enable
the Issuing to bo completing within
30 days.
Previmisly^a^Bhortage
comparatively small daily turnover,
but a large shipment of the stamps
was received Thursday, another to
slated cotne in the immediate fu-
ture and SuUlran does not foresee
further delay.
In this county, the AAA staff
pushed through the preliminary
compMance msnmring and ofltos
work ao that Denton County farm-
ere now, in one trip to the Denton
far 1941 cot-
ton parity peg. C*t their marketing
caMto and their cotton stamps.
Two types of marketing cards are I
printed by the government—a white
card tamed to producers planting,
within their acreage allotments, a
red card to the grower who over-
planted or had carryover penalty
cotton, —j-i-l—;— r~ - ■
Last year Denton County had
only three red card*. This year It to
probable none will have to be Issued.
Bom* 3J500 growers, in the esti-
mated 30 days of issuing the form*,
will sign parity applications and gat
marketing cards. Probably around
3ffM wfll get federal cotton stamps,
which they earned by voluntarily
reducing their 1941 cotton below
their AAA allotment.
Sullivan reminded growers indi-
vidual notice* are being mailed tho*e
whose paper* are ready in the Dan-
ton office and until such notice to
received the cotton producer should
not come for application papers,
card or stamp*.
linen thread for sewing; tire com-
panies advise consumer* how bet-
ter to take care of tires; cotton
duck to on the critical list; heavy
consumer buying has In some in-
stances helped create a shortage In
sheets.
Colls and pins are made of metal.
So are ships, planes, tanks, guns,
shell cases and refrigeration units
for army camps. 'Die army and
navy get first take from the pot.
So a commercial refrigeration
Jobber, setting out to buy that coil
for Joe, may not get even a back
order.
The manufacturer, swamped with
orders under priority to convert ice
boxes In anny camps to electrical
boxes, or to build big refrigeration
equipment for such camps, may say
he can’t hope to deliver.
Tire Jobber does the best he can
to Joe; may luckily And the coil
with another manufacturer, but
when a new army camp goes In the
chances are the Jobber puts in his
bid for the refrigeration equipment
if her can. <*ff4NJMII
To Feel Pinch Later
Industry will be affected, as will
, private business and the consumer, !
trip I jn ratio of materials used to the use [
'of those materials in the defense]
program, says Moore, who believes 1
Texans will feel a deflnite pinch on j
non-necessities within 12 months. ’
After army and navy needs are '
obtainable. These plants must turn talVn care of civilian demand for
to producing defense materials if aluminum, for example, may be ,
15 and the supply for shooting season for mourning doves
was ordered, a survey showing the
numbers of these birds were “de-
ES. NOT NEEDED
■ , aft-____________» i *
nore in dividend* or else eoeh em-
ployee could hgve received MM
more per year in salary With low-
er taxa* Jwi would get mon* inter-
est on ravings account* and lowbr
life Inn cane* oosta. <■
X am net now asking that taxes
be reduced, but I do say it to un-
fair to increase them, ft would be
far better to eliminate all “ta«-
exempts" Existing state and local
Of. S. government securitlm total
620.000,000,000 with over a
new ones - being tasued each year.
It seems 'unfair not lo’ tax all gg*
curittes alike. If there were taxed—
at least the new ones taraed—this
would be another solution to our
problem. * .
Pulltag Iteeple to Work
We cannot have prosperity by
putting a ball and chain on em-
ployers. No sensible farmer put* a
chock rain on a Bataa haaiku a
heavy load. “We cannot lift wage
workers up by pulling Wage payers
down”. There to Ooday a scarcity
of skilled workers; tout at least
000,000 people are still looking for
Jobs. Let us, therefore, encourage
more men U> become emptayera by
making It easier—instead M harder office, sign
—for them.
The elimination of tax-exempts
should help eanployment. meh peo-
ple would then quit burying their
money in tax-exempt bonds. They
would put their money to work
_ „ building more factories, stores and
Let us also remember that the Are other enterprises which give em-
BANANAS, nice and yeBffw, 4g«. —
LETTUCE, head
C ELERY, stalk
GREEN BEANS, 2 lbs.
CARROTR AND BEETS, 3 bonchea
POTATOES, 1 white, 18 Jm,
‘.i v>ur
Snu»9, Easy
dreams I*”
.,1 tnninnx aJvaiKf
v.ncn you w*
miss th* ’noiwy
—*RRW
Owife’s food Store
j ^ "fRSE FAST DEUVERY^
- • — —1 “ ““ _
oTBonren in th* middle of a hlgt
thu iSSr?1- * ***
' 111 '■?■■■
Re-New Your
HOME
Our loan* cton help yon with
that remodeling eg repairing
builoiiig or buying. ~
FARMaHOMB
'VSatJon5'
North Side Square In efflee
JOHN OHB
-------------------------' • ' ■ ■■■B rv---------
------------.
_____T - ----Q|
J
tl
* I
for example, may be
ent, R L Proffer said Friday.
Rural teachers should call
their checks us soon as possible and
(‘ash them before Sept i so ” ’’
the year’s books cun be closed,
Proffer said
civilian use one. In the same ratio
cork is 10-1, copper 5-2, nickel 3-2,
tin 3-2, rubber 10-7, and power 10-9
“To conserve the supply of skill-
ed labor, food and other industries
supplying civilian needs will adopt
certain forms of standardization of
products as the necessity arises.”
Moore predicts.
His office is similar in authority
to those at El Paso. Houston and
Sun Antonio each provides conver-
r hard time getting slon advisory facilities for manu-
the sires In rubber heels and quality j facturers.
leather lie wants, or the silk and As examples of changes tn Texas
---------------------—----------- j industry the DCS cites liie Murry
i Comiiaiiy. once manufacturers of
cotton gin machinery, now making!
shell casings, and Hughes Tool and i
Reed Roller Bit of Houston, which continued because, the announce-
have changed much of their capa- j ment said, the woodcock popula-
- - - - ! tlon had not recovered from the re-
vere losses in storms during 1940.
several M she spend* There are over 140 lnU> Ay* and it to worth ’many
several important revisions from different taxes figured in the cost j Umes thia Boy beans used to te
s yas.?—' ■ K s: an
™ST co,™...™ OP
*■ | pays in operating it. In drag*—a 1 dodm * per ton when turned into
bottle of milk of magnesia carries nylon silk. Even sea water to becom-
37* different taxes. Railroads' taxes' i«K useful far making magnesium
have more than doubled since 1916 | Mid bromine,
—now about one-third of our fare!
|----------------------------
. __ money nedsd for defense to to in-
The American Federation of In- crease the national income and
restore of Chicago shows that the tax rates aa they are. Thto
corporation* owned by 7,lig,0M can done by reducing crim*,
stockholders paid an average tax of suppressing coaunevciatosad evfls
93 per common share, or almost encouraging' naw industries,
double the amount paid tn dlvi- 1 Both U. 8. and Canada need more
derate. U these mmpatotes could 4 c'Wtarera and.. Jswsr.. peMttataaaH
mre paid taxes only on their prop-• Bouas will say “this aaeane a *Mr~*l
arty, either these 7.1HP00 stock- >toal re-birth of th* American pus*. 1
holders could have received 8339 Pi»" Well—why not work for miaV
ORED FORCE DIES 1 ruddy ducks, formerly limited to 3;
BOSTON. Aug 22 - '4^ — Major legalizing the shooting and posses-
General Adna R Chaffee. 57. the I slon of one wood duck in Pennsyl-
flrst commander of the army's new ^ania. Delaware. Kentucky, Mlssou-
lina. South Carolina. Tennessee.
.Georgia, Alabama. Mississippi. Ar-
' kansas. 1 oulsiana and Texas.
HHBkil •—■TTY Ml
ROAST, N, t, M*,. *........ l>j
StEAKS. btei f, T-Btate, lb, -------------------------.tlTe
BACON* Iwm aMcMU riad on, Ik ............. 1W
PORU Wten* B - ... ...35c 1
ROASTS, pork shoulder, lb.
'•S'5° (
W—w Isaac <*w th vlI uCllilll~u, IIM1 I IMUS s/s tsars o via* ••
was an estimate of the loss avail- flies and gaps open in store stocks
as the flood of production for na-
tional defense siphons off materials
I Texans use In their dally Ilves.
And Texas Industry, like that in
I the rest of the nation, to slipping in-
Iaas ; 10 the armament effort, changing
Last pay checks for rural teach- > the of iu labors in a quiet
ycur urt* rrvolntion which the pluin citisen
' ’'2? rw‘?y f°r dlstrlbut1011 thr aUeX to t^ginntng to feel
2^**- . *J?* ^ounty superintend- • effect to two edged—the man-
| ufacturer may not be able to fur-
, ntoh the refrigerator coil Joe’s Res-
j turant want* for *_ new display
tnat 1 case; the housewife may have to do
without that certain kind of hairpin
! she is seeking.
j But conversion to defense Indus-
i try will be* the salvation of many
1 manufacturers, says Charles R !
Moore, co-ordlnator for the defense I
I contract service of the OPM In the
* Dallas area.
Effect of PrioriUes
Priorities are becoming more nnd |
more serious in the industrial and
] business structure of the South- I
west, savs Moore, echoing comment
I by E T. Smith, chief of operations
(of the DCS. made on a recent t**“ ‘
to Texas: ;
I Priorities are becoming more and
; more stringent. In many industries
I serving no war need the time to not
p far off when materials will be un-
cent goes for direct taxes and 251 11 statesmen would spend one-
per cent for indirect or a total of tenth of their time in developing
45 per cent. From every >100 we In<w use« for waste product*—in-
| now pay for clothes, the tax col- I of Increasing toxas—no in-
lectora take 52 different klncto of crease tn tax rates would now be
taxes. U. 8. taxes avdraged last year < becesaary. As often said, the
8109 for every man. woman and I chances for Increased income and
child. According to the Committee i employment through research are
of Americans, 122 East 42 St.. New {beyond the fondest dreams. It to
York City. > our only hope for preventing a
Every time we pay an electric Post-war coltopae.
light bill we are giving 81 out of < R«w cotton to worth only 12 cento
every 86 of It toward taxes An av- I * pound; but put it into new . . .--
I erage of 813 to paid yearly tn taxes I and it is worth a dollar per pound. I n’*M“ento and the multiplication
by every telephone user The house- 1 Petroleum to worth only 5 cento ' ‘ ‘ ‘ **
I wife pays 91 in taxes out of every Pee gallon as fuel oil; but put it
7/: cows
and SUITS ( m
,n tnthH
style'-
have your
and J
emt* | aa^ac a., iazaiwh cut vo eimer pros-
ftber- Pertty or recurity The Ten Com-
table give th« answer to taxation.
w°Te.Bu7* “ - r....
Waketon Community Texaii Industry; Consumers Due
To Feel Pinch Within 12 Month,
Waketon community,
The season will start-in.-the Inters paying ta taean-g-ant.- ■ however, ■■ ■
. -A... ptopoeed -joint hus-
band and wife tax return” to vici-
ous. unmoral and unfair. If 6300,-
OOOjDOO more to needed it should be
raised by higher excise taxes on
things responsible for crime. Crime
alone to costing the U 8. and Can-
ada 91g.OOOMOMO a year.
A serious offense to committed In
the United States every 21 seconds
or a total of 1517AM major crimes.
This averages one tor every 67 per-
sons, includes a felonious homicide
every 44 minutes, a robbery every
10 minutes, an auto theft every 3
minutes, a burglary every I 2/3
minutes, and a iareeny every 36
seconds. Fifty per cent of the crim-
inals are under 25 years of age.
losses alone last year would have Ployment. Thera to enough money
purchased 45 great cruisers for the ln the u s- and Canada to give
--- ‘ “ everyone of good character a good
living. One difficulty to that thn
money to in “tax-raid shelter*”
afraid to go to work. Leth stop our
tax blitzkrieg and give this money
, ___________eonftdence to come out and serve
: we pay in rent goes to taxes. When 018 nation.
k„...--_a --------i speed Mere on Research
If statesmen would spend
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Edwards, Robert J. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 7, Ed. 1 Friday, August 22, 1941, newspaper, August 22, 1941; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1307447/m1/3/: accessed June 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.