Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 56, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 20, 1946 Page: 1 of 24
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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1
■ri
’I
J
q
1.1
1
I
of
I
Ennis reported Thompson
r
From Jail Here
IV
Llttlc-
SHEVEPORT, La Oct
19
le-
thal
of
the
TODAY
College.
LACE PANTIES
PETTER THAN
NONE, HE SAYS
received
Beeville
El Paso Sheriff Says
Robbery May Have Keen
Motive for Slaying
EL PA8O. Tex.. Oct 19 —(AP) —
-.1 D. Thompson. 24. former
Section One:
Markets
Sports
Society, Women’s News
Building News
Section Two:
Editorial
Churches
Colleges
Amusements
Business News
Farm News
Classified Adu
- -1
Xk Ar
'■***'•
if.
Navy Vet Found
Stabbed to Death
sei gave notice of appeal to Dis-
trice Judge A S Mauzey
A Jury at Plainview first
j has been remqyi
sler City Jail td i
found mutilated and bound in bed
at their residence. He was trier!
only in the death of Dr Hunt
Thomas won a re-trial because of
a Jury ^regularity and the case
then was tried at Lamesa on a
change of venue The Lamesa Jury
also convicted Thomas.
In Rail Box Car
con-
victed Thomas, who was arrested j
Oct 27. 1943, a day after the I
bodies of Dr and Mrs. Hunt were
iff s office disclosed today
convict
who was arrested yesterday
two charges of highway robbery.
ted from the Bos-
anolher undisclos-
ed Jail for safekeeping
Methvin. 36. was once sentenc-
ed to death in Oklahoma for the
killing ‘Of a police pffiepr. He and
Joe E. Aycock. 41, of Minden
were arrested yesterday by State
Trooper J M. Thomas at the in-
tersection of two highways.
They were charged with
theft of the automobiles of a Mind-
en taxicab driver and J A Me-
j Inly re of West Monroe.
Pwtb
itm-
r
I
:_____
jfl
. >«• ».. j
WAITING FOR MEXICAN CATTLE—A steer stands
alone in stockyards at El Paso, Tex., which were readied
to handle movement of Mexican cattle across the Ixirder
from Juarez. The U. S. quarantine on importations of
cattle from Mexico was lifted Oct. 18. (Al* Photo).
Roy <Pete> Traxler, notorious
i Southwest desperado held in the
i ar-
*nv limn nnu wwn v
I six hours, officers said
I arrived here at 12:05 a. in.
■ Ennis reported Thompson was !
believed to liave been alone on the |
trip He received his discharge '
from the Beeville Navy Flying
| Field about four months ago.
Robbery may liave been
i motive. Ennis added, but ’—
able to say how much money the
youth had with him.
O.C Benson of Refugio,
the |
was un- i
OMAHA. Oct 19 —(API— At
Doctors Hospital here a nurse be-
gan trimming hair away from a
head injury suffered by a pedes-
trian who was struck by a car.
About five ships too late, the
patient shouted “stop" and snatch-
) ed a very lifelike toupee from his
| --£------—
Excitement for Nothing
SALISBURY, Me., Oct. IB ♦—
• AP) — Traffic was stopped here
by a fire engine, followed by an
ambulance, a state police car and
the fire chief.
The fire engine was $n route to
a field blase, the ambulance was
on a non-emergency trip, the pol-
ice car just happened to be pass
4hg through and the fire chief
wm returning from lunch.
O.C Benson of Refugio, rancher
i and race horse breeder, was own- )
er of the horses which w ere being !
shipped to J P Armstrong of I •---r~-------—
Phoenix. i Denton county Jail since his
METHVIN SPIRITED
TO UNDISCLOSED JAIL
tion order granted Tuesday in or-
der to give the bandit's attorneys
time to seek a writ of habeas
corpus. An application for a habe-
as corpus writ was filed here
Thursday morning, but absence Of
District Judge Ben W. Boyd pre-
vented a hearing before the Fri-
day midnight deadline.
Traxler, whose life of crime
started in 1924, was released ta
December. 1944. on a bench war-
rant from the state prison at
Huntsville, wher he was serving a
term of from five years to life.
The warrant was issued by Walk-
| er county, where Traxler was in-
dicted for robbery with firearms.
He was freed there on »1.5<X) bond.
He had been employed tn Den-
......... wa t
com-
KANSAS CITY, Oct. ID—
(AP)—Secretary of Agricul-
ture Clinton Anderson stated
flatly today that the govern-
ment had no intention of re-
storing pi ice ceilings to live-
stock and meat at any time
in the future.
"As far as me livestock industry
is concerned, we have reached the
er.d oi the control period, and con-
trols are off permanently," Ander-
son told a press conference.
Anderson did not refer to state-
ments made recently by Republican
campaign speakers suggesting that
controls might be leimposed after
the November elections, but stated,
this is no on and off proposition.
1 he chief purpose in removing live-
stock and meat ceilings was to pro-
I mote the earliest practicable bal-
| uncc between supply and demand.
Orderly Procedure
Al tile same time, the secretary,
who Is in Kansas City to itteiid
the American Royal Livestock
| Show, appealed to livestock men to
— iollo* an orderly |>rocedure In mat -
I ketlng their animals.
I Pointing out that there had been
j so many hogs shipped to stock yards
j that some markets had been unable
j to handle them. Anderson said this
added to the marketing costs to the
producer
“It most assuredly will be to the
producers' Interest If they will check
with their market agencies io make
■ sure hogs can be handled at the
I marketing center before they are
I sent to market.
"It will not be to the interest of
| either tire producers or consumers
■ for livestock to go to market when
jit la not In slaughter condition, Tlie
situation today calls tor all of the
meat we can obtain from hogs sold
al normal weights.''
Heavy Marketing
In the .same manner, he added,
the situation now calls for heavy
marketing of cattle now on the
range and pasture lands b
"The number of beef cattle; on
farms and ranches now is
dangerously high level, and the sit-
uation is now extremely favorable
for moving large numbers of grass
fed cattle."
Removal of controls. Anderson
said, has "given the livestock in-
dustry — from the producer on
through the distributive system —
the opport unity to give the con-
! Gumers of the nation an ample, well-
balanced supply of meat. The In-
I dustry can do this by proceeding on
1 an orderly, sound basis. To do
j ot hcrwlsC would fall the opportunity
the industry now has hi its own
Thomas Again
Convicted Of
Killing Doctor
SWEETWATER. Tex . Oct
'AP'—Jim Thomas, 51-year-old
convict, was convicted today for a
third time on a charge of murder-
ing Dr Roy E Hunt of
field and assessed a sentence of
life imprisonment
On wo previous convictions of |
the same charge Juries had de-
cided dealh should be the punish-
ment.
After today s verdict was re- )mrUh sher.
ported at 3:30 p in. Thomas coun- i — --- ...
Henry Methvin, paroled
right to
wear lacy panties as women
do." was bound over to the
court of crimes on charges ot
indecent exposure under $100
bond.
He was arrested on com-
plaint of Mrs C. Baughn. his
landlady, who told the court
Demmer was "parading around
his apartment attired only in
pink panties."
Demmer told the court he
had purchased seven pairs be-
cause he couldn't buy men s
shorts.
"Ami they're much cooler,
too. your honor," Denuner add-
ed,
Demmer said he would seek
the aid of a lawyer and con-
test the case.
ton since the middle of Ji
a wrecking and construct*
pany working on a veterans hous-
ing project at North Texas State
College. j4, '
WEATHER
, '"L '
; DENTON AND VICINT"~
cloudy, not much char
peratures today and M
EAST TEXAS: Partly «
day and Monday.
to moderate southerly
the coast.
WEST TEXAS Fair St
Monday* wanner in
and south Plains flhl
■ ------ w --
Armstrong of
i rest here Oct 6. wgs transferred
j to Durant. Okla., Saturday by
, Sheriff W Q (Bud) Taylor of
Bryan county. Okla., to face
! charges of robbery with firearms.
Traxler's removal to Oklahoma
followed expiration at midnight
Friday of Acting Governor John
j Lee Smith's stay of an extradi-
on t' J *"* ~ **“
Jap Slayer Acquitted
EDINBURG. Oct. 19 — (AP) —
H. L. Rhyne, 55. charged with the
V-J day slaying of Isao Date. Jap- , .
anese-Ainerican farmer, was ac- A Bald Mistake
quilted today by a jury in criminal j
district court here. Isao was shot I
to death Aug. 14. 1945.
MIAMI. Fla, Oct. 19—<4*)—
Whether or not John Demmer.
65, has the right to wear
women s lace - trimmed pink
step-ins in absence of the more
commonly worn men's shorts
will be determined in a higher
court, Pface Justice Henry L
CMNuUxrn Juled today.
tvrmmer. who said in a hear-
ing before Oppenborn that "he
has just as much
lacy panties as
was bound over
------ ' ' \ The dealh in-
strument was not found.
EL
i Earl D. Tlwrnpson. 24.
i Navy enlisted man found stabbed I
i to dealh today in a box car. was
seen alive at a stop 40 miles be-
fore reaching El Paso, a Bee
| county official said today.
The official. Sheriff Vail Ennis.
I said al Beeville that a train crew |
40 miles from El Paso reported
seeing Thompson Ur the box- car
in which he was accompanying
four race horses being shipped
from Skidmore. Tex., to Phoenix,
! Artz.
Thompson, former resident
Norwich. N Y , left Sidmore
bout 3am Thursday, Ennis said
At El Paso, detectives said there
were 40 small wounds in Thomp-
son's chest which they theorized
j may luivc been made by a pitch
fork or hay hook
Ltrnmnnl u rvrxt (
The man had been dead about 1
1 Tile car ]
. luinds."
j Traxler Moved
To Oklahoma
Agriculture Secretary
Ignores Statements
Made by Republicans
Meat Controls
Off Permanently
Livestock Men
Urged to Market
Animals Orderly
I
• X/-*- * '
‘■5"
- ■'* -
•’ * - J
—.. V.
_ - WIT
XL ; ‘ - Ila
ijCT j
«
I Prices Sent Into
I
I
I- ’
I A
!
19 —tAP' —Tire removal of OPA contri
CHICAGO. Oct
WASHINGTON. Oct
promises to be relatively plenti-
t
I !
and
(BOB) EDWARDS
By R. J
never
. $ I lx Illtllvilll Ivl'txl 1 I I 1 L II It , ot«J“ |
In spile of the continuing short- . lng prlcea wou)d hlghpr unU1 dp_ |
tiro. lha> fllKhxsr llldllfitrv i.K ' . ..^,...,4 V,........... 4____ - 1
aid
Needed, Says Texan
regarding
jpatxd
choice steers closed
Denton and Denton county
medium
and good
The chairman ot the U S Sen-
Yugoslav la
on the way home from the Paris I
lu
of
I <mr Killed In
Plane I rash On
to 8!) < enU
These prices were represen-
' AI • •
corn
ol
seven
within a mile
gan
the end of two dollar wheat
jury commission had not met.
- - -
Dec. 2
95.
X
i O
WACO
19 — CAP) —
lex., Oct.
1 >
laboratory Tests Made
Tex., pilot; Col. Clarence 8. Irvine, St. Paul, Neb., commander. (AP Wirephoto).
if
I
II
Grand Jury Panel
List Released
dlound
dhout
J own.
Republican strong For
‘Patient But Firm’
Policy Toward Russia
Arnold I. well and favorable known
by m.my iriends in Denton.
Assistant i
Teel, the i
PROSPECTS GOOD FOR
U. S. AID TO SCHOOLS
was
had
1 for
BliJartlsan
J
■
1
1
County Court
Opens Monday
By HAL BOYLE
ABOARD THE qllUEN ELIZA
BETH, Oct 19 —(AP'— Sen Tom
Connally <D-Texi asserted today
--------r for Europe !
die 1 and added that "The United States I
BYRNES'STAND |
SUPPORTED BY !
Return unto Ihy rest, O my soul,
for the Lord hath dealt bountifully j
with thee Psalms 116-7 I try, eggs.
drop to rcmotal of ceilings on other)
tats and oils.
Shop fur Best Buys
Ihe American Meat Institute, say-
I he party will be from 1 tu
Herbert Arnold was re- Monday, drZp|>ed 10 29 cents al the
week's close.
Eggf also weakened, and
sources explained that with
District Court
i t.nv of State Byrnes Endorsing
I Byrnes' remarks. Connally said the
I conference achieved "notable re-
1 suits."
He declared that "on the whole
the United States did very well.'' |
Cecil Odell Grimes. 34. owner and
Ceci)
WI« »
Philadelphia, radio operator; Co). Beverly H. Warren, Omaha, Neb., and Plainview,’
Tnv vUInt • f’/wl O T —-I—CIA. n___1 a , a w-» .... . ’
is used in
curbs, and. top, it has been lound
able to mow "Lincoln Park," the
little park at the intersection of
North Locust and Sherman Drive
'Hiosc three, in times gone, said
they took care of that park, but |
if we remember correctly the Park
has a much neater appearance now
then wliten the tHo trimmed and
VANDENBERG
moved It.
A W Jamison, native of Collin
County, where ly lived for 65 Years I
prior to moving to Denton, said, "I
hJE
W 111
that
it
mand is met, urged housewives to;
the best buys '
: Seme dealers refused to buy meat
at high prices and tile president
uf tile New Jersey Independent But-
cher;,' Association urged consumers
to "strike" until meat prices come I
' down "within reason.” 1 « •
Qerman industries
that Mr.
Byrnes'
had
| keep price! down.
Tile prices of all livestock shot
up. despite an avalanche of re-
ceipts, and record highs were estab-
lished in some markets. Both cat-
tle and hogs prices, however, ex-
perienced downward trends when of-
ferings were the heaviest
In the commodity markets, the
price of soybeans, lard and flax also
However, a long list of oommodi- ,
The only exception, he said, is the
T8CW student charged with mur-
der in connection with tha death of :
I her newborn baby In a college
cu >< s ot contagious diseases in the
county. Dr. Mel Hutcheson, city-
county health officer, said. We
arc In good shu]>e from u health
standpoint, us I know of not one
single contagious sickness in the
county."
DREAMBOAT CREWMEN DECORATED—Gen. Carl A. Spaatz (right), Army air
force chief, decorates members of the crew of the Pacusan Dreamboat in a ceremony
at Washington, In the group are, from left: Maj. James R. Dale, Jr., Wise, Va Flight
Engineer; Maj. Norman P. Hays, Seneca, Mo., navigator; Lt. Col. Frank J. Shannon;
V R Greer and A E
Lewisville; Dewey
under, unlawfully carry a pistol:
,, ,, ,, , I Arthur C Sullivan anil Howarc.
drew the limelight on a $25 a bale j Hunter, driving while intoxicated.
Psalms H6-7
Faith anchors the soul, it we be-
lieve and trust we will never be
tossed nor ship wrecked
bfe'" -s?-
n
MERIDIAN, Miss . Oct 19
The bodies of four
Bays said that no Jury had
I been selected for the first week
Ilogs Arc Higher
Ilogs in Cliicugo flnUhed $6
$7.50 a hundred |>ounds higher.
Tire old OPA celling on cattle was
$20.25 and tlii/e was a subsidy
ranging from 50 cents to $2 40 de-
pending on grade Hogs had a ceil-
ing ot $1625 and there' was a sub-
sidy ol $1.75, regardless of grade
Food articles which compete di-
rectly with meat, such as poultry,
i closed the week with price declines.
Fowl, selling at 35 cents a pound
in the Chicago wholesale market
lived over there 65 years and when
I have been here that long, I guess
I'll move some where "
♦ * <i ♦
Is Walter Wilson constable of
precinct number one, or is he not?
Four years ago he was elected to
tliat office, but never took over.
Since that time no one has offered
for the place, so one wonders If
Walter is still constable. (He is
Walter Wilson of Denton, not Wal-
ter Wtlson of the Wllson-Merrlck
Ranch near Slidell
Dizzy Spin, Buyer
Resistance Grov^,
!
•t
! Aj.
GUARDS GOERING CELL-I’vt. Thomas Saunders,
Hamilton, Ohio, starujs guard outside the Nuernberg,
Germany, prison cell in which Hermann Goering com
mitteel suicide. The cell will be guarded until an investi-
gation of how the suicide poison was obtained is com-
pleted. (AP Wirephoto via radio from Nuernberg).
Messrs and Mmes. Herbert Arnold
of Greenville and Jack Bonds of
Denton will attend a barbecue md
d mce in honor of Gov. Coke Ste-
venson. Goucrnor-nomlnate Beau-
ford Jester, Lt Gov John Lee Smith
and Allen Shivers, Lt Governor
nominate, to be given at the Divs
Ranch on October 22 by Karl Love-
lady. Jackie Yett and George Ben-
dett!
9 o'clock
centlv appointed Collector of In-
ternal Revenue of the North Texas
District, in which office he has oeen
a soclated lor about 14 years. His I
vutln? home Is in Greenville, but. of I
County Judge Gerald Stockard I
i will convene the fall session
county court Monday with 14 cases
set for trial the first weeK, kccord- I
assistant ,
I til after the grand jury session.
<*4 4\4 t 1V4M lift* 1 VUi iICU k/H 4 11V . — • - . • ...
sheriff said the plane, a two-engine
Cessna, apparently struck a tree
while attempting to make a turn , , . ,
K I her newborn baby in
-------- I dormitory The case is set for trial
| gyle, and C. W Fanning, Roanoke
Meanwhile Assistant County At-
torney Rogers Tee) said Saturday
(hat a list of cases scheduled for
grand Jury investigation had not yet
been complied He added that cases
| being held over from previous court
of transactions and closed all mar-
kets on tlic last day of the week
Grain futures were highlighted by | of the court session, and had the
♦ v m n n 4 A_______. ___ . *
long list of oommodi- |
ties dropped in price. Including poul- 1 fi
butter, wheat and cotton 1 .
Trade sources attributed the butter j '
No hales on laird
Lard, which had been under ?
.1 18 cents a pound, was
city purchase a power mower which quoted on the Chicago board of
( Utting weeds among [ trade at 36 cents with no sales How-
ever, there were many sales con- ) ton following a picnic outbig May-
10 Several others were seriously
injured in the accident
Slated to appear on the charge
rti, I 11VIII 41 <1 ID ftiiu 4J141C4 I - o —- --------o-------
If the materials can be ] Brices of livestock as the week
kept flowing, however, the present I closed were under their highs, but
consumer demand may be met soon- still well above the former OPA
Most steers finished the wec.t c . ___
at $18.00 tu $23.00 a hundred j peace Conference, made the state- I
pounds.
Jurors will l>c .summoned this
week lor grand Jury duty at the dis-
| trlct court term convening Oct 28.
|Di:tri<( Clerk Clarence Maxwell
: announced Sai unlay.
Releasing tile list Saturday. MuX-
• * " ’ ) closed.
Mes-t - and Mmes J Holford |
Russel. Ben C Ivey and W H Hicks
attended the Texas-Arkansas foot-
ball game hi Austin Saturday. They
made the trip by Hain I‘
said. T may 1
» t'l
X I
! above old OPA ceilings,
i consumers and trade
liave joined hands in
WASHINGTON. Oct 19 —(AP>
Senator Vandenberg (R-Mlch) ‘
took a strong stand beside Secre-
tary of State Byrnes tonight for
a "patient but firm'' policy to-
ward Russia amid indications
President Truman might speak up
1 along the same lines next week
As Vandenberg a lop U S ad- I
j viser at the Paris Peace Confer-
) elite followed up Byrnes' Friday
1 night report on that nioeting With
a radio appeal for support of
■America's Bipartisan Foreign1
Policy," there were these develop-
ments at the White House:
1 It was announced that Presl-
| dent Truman's address opening
I the United Nations General As-
{ semblv in New York Wednesday
be a 25-mlnute speech
he will fly there to deliver
use
“sa ;
and
is , ' Bipartisan" policy
the price pattern for most major items In the American food budget into
a dizzy whirl and there were indications today of growing consumer re-
sistance to those products which turn up with a higher sales tag
The Impact of sudden decontrols hit the markets an erratic blow I
and it was too early to tell how the food dollar of the near future would i
compare with its buying power of last week. I .
The major staple decontrol—meat—promises to be relatively plenti- | j
--------------------------------—-—«ful in butcher shops across the na- | .'
‘ tion in a few days but at prices i
I «xVx^x«<_ «-viz4 Z ID A r»A< 11 rv tvu !
associations !
efforts to
. would have the power to enforce
any decisions it makes on Trieste,
despite the statement of Yugosla-
| via that she would not bide
| decisions oi the Parts Peace Con- |
I ference regarding the Adriatic
j port .
| The senator said that "certainly
I wc don t want another Flume in j
.nr eua.m.u.. u. u.e o o oeu- 1 lr0UT^. ’ referring to the
ate Foreign Relations Committee, | difficulties Italy and Yugoslavia.
- 1 had over that city after the end
of the first world war
Connally also urged the clarifi-
cation of the "dubious and uncer-
tain language" of the United Na-
tions charter regarding the
of the veto by the Big Five
we can tell where it ends
stops.''
He said that "iny opinion
that it shouldn t apply to proce-
dural or incidental mutters This
modification may not come at this
session, but it must come.’
Connally held his conference
after listening to a rebroadcast ol
last night's address of L S Secre
of State Byrnes
Ml i 4If —(At1-
| Prospects foj securing federal aid
I to schools, in the form of a bill
now before Congress, are good,
| Dr R B Marston told a gather-
ing of Texas school administra-
tors and teachers here today.
Dr. Marston. National Education
Association legislative-federal re-
lations director, aaid the *250,000,-
000 annual appropriation bill pro-
vides *10.930.000 for Texas schools
Eliminating any possible federal
control, the bill has received bi-
partisan support in both houses of
Congress, he added.
| ments at a news conference at
| which be also expressed confidence
to I that the U. N Security Council
Fall Session Of
In Helena, Mont, housewives
) started a chain telephone call move-
ment advocating buyers strikes
against butter prices ot 89 cents to
$100 a (round
In tile nation's livestock mar-
kets there was no official trading
today, although hogs and catt.e
age of tires the rubber industry is
ahead ol al! previous records for 1 shop around foi
tire production and rubber con-
sumption 'lolal tire production for
tlie first quarter oi 1946 is an-
nounced at 19,967,057 units—more
than 4,000,000 more units thali from
the same period in 1940. tile last
peacetime year
Estimated production tor 1946
may attain 000.000 to 90.000.000
units more than 40 per cent above
the 1940 level The rubber industry . today, although hogs and
has faced problems oi supply in coal, ; were in the pens waiting tor open-
textiles, steel, chemicals ano other i trading Monday
materials I
II GY Io Ci id Came I
* | well said summonses will be given
to Sheriff Roy Moore Wednesday
or Thursday tor service on the 16
men selected by the jury commis-
sion Oct 10 Mctnlxrs of the Jury
are R B. Neale. Jr..
Jack Bonds and John D. Faught I
! The grand Jury panel includes J !
! \V Pender. H G. Brown. Fred D.
Moore. R L. George. Joe P Hob-
( VI 1 <1 M l.-»x VI t I V V4 4 I X. X I I I V/ U t X. ( |
Io the Alabftina-Tennes.se game In scn- Balthrop, Eli P Cox. 8r., (
Knoxville Tenn . and apparcntlv ‘*'1 of Denton; Andrew H Pluxhe.
, Pilot Point; V R Greer and A. E
- Grace. Lewisville; Dewey Herd.
Sanger; M M Bradley. Lake Dal-
i oy n am. rvns. mi ss weeK s close. 1
. not know how to act dropped from 87 4
on these up-to-thc-inlmite trains in ! cents. , ...
use now. as I haven't ridden on one I tative of changes at other markets,
in 25 years '
Jimmy Baldwin, Bill King and)
Pete Simmons were Rind to see the ] ceiling of
city purchase a power mower which qUotcd on
oiaieu io appeal on me <
of selling intoxicating liquor are |
Joe Hargrove and C H Tipps, the ;
latter facing six ot the seven I Pllni °f the plane Cecil Leon
charges I Bachus. 22; Dr Earl Barton Keith
Others to appear are Willia Alex- | 31 <'”™pnu tor; and William Wal-
ing to Woodrow Bays,
county clerk
Released Oct 4 by
County Attorney Rogers
i criminal docket list set for ap- ,
I pea rance includes seven cases of i
! selling intoxicating liquor, two of
. . , , driving wlillc intoxicated, two of
18'; to 89 .enU a t>oun<l in '!>' defrauding with a wprthk'bs the. k 1
| Chicago wholesale Monday nnf> aKgrHVut<M one unlaw- \
may. iney was down to 80 to 80S cents at ful)v CRrlvlng „ plst()1 ,uk1 onJ
Mrs. Hkk.s(uu. Wl.ek!> tloMV New York butter ; oJ , n .nl holnlclde. .
dropped from 87's cents to 79 .<-80 i I
'cents These prices were reoresen- John Riley Manry. 23-year-old bodies of four men
veteran, will be tried on the homl- 1,11 oooics oi loin men ,
cldc charge in connection with (he 1 found in the wre< kag • ol a plane '
! near Key Field here today where | commission
I identified bv Sheriff W Y Branie
i as residents of Victoria. Tex
He said a telephone call to Vic
Iona disclosed they were en route
still well above the former OPA
er than most forecasters had antic- cell'ngs. | that the industrial rebirth of Ger-
At Chicago representative of all ] many was necessary f
...arkels, choice steers closed Jie ; and added that "The Ur.?..J
weeK $8 00 to $1500 higher Com- ) doesn't want to destroy" that van- )
trade
more )
) meat available a diminished demand j
... . , I fol eggs was ex|>ected At Chicago.!
00111:1'. stay:. In Dallas for his work [ a grade of eggs which brought 57-60 I
cents a dozen xliolesale Monday
! sold at 53-57 cents as the we< k
a grade of bull r wl:l<h brought
88'; to 89 tents a jmiuikI in .Ik |
It was disclosed
I Truman had approved
Friday speech in advance,
listened to It on the radio, and hud
telepl. >ned the Secretary of State
immediately afterwards to express
warm commendation
3 Hie President. Byrnes, Un-
dersecretary of State Dean Ache-
I son and Senator Austin ,R-Vt>.
i American delegate-designate to
I N conferred for more than
I two hours on United Nations
. Mailers
The Wliile House aid nothing
. about tlie content of Mr Truman's
Ju. N. speech.
High government officials ob-
served, however, tliat a speech of
25 minutes' duration certainly
1 would contain more than words of
welcome.
Tehy pointed to the close Tru-
maiirByrnes liaison on the latter's
Friday address and to today's
lengthy conference as possible
evidence tliat the President might i
make a major Foreign Policy talk
) in New York
by I May Wipe out Confusion
If it follows the line of the
Byrnes and Vandenberg broad-
I casts, it might help wipe out the
I last bits of confusion which re-
sulted from Mr Truman's origin-
al endorsement ot Henry A Wal-
| lace's Madison Square Garden ad-
dress last month, which was sharp-
ly critical of Byrnea' policy
In any case, tlie officials as-
sumed that Mr. Truman discussed
what sliould go into the speech
with Byrnes, Acheson and Austin
htrnes has announcad he will be
tn New York for the President s
talk
Vandenberg said this country's
is one of
j peace, not war. and predicted it
' will succedd "unless it is scuttled
here at home. '
firmed in the open market at 50
i cents.
| Cash corn which sold Monday
' at *2 04 to *2.06 a bushel was down
| to $1 86 at Chicago by week's end.
| Oats at Minneapolis slipped from
80N-82’ , to 74',-75’,. Wheat at
I Kansas City fell from $2.06-*2.10 a
| bushel to $196’2-156',.
In the futures markets, cotton
NUERNBERG. Germany. Oct.
19—(AP)— An Allied commission
investigating the mysterious sui-
cide of Hermann Goering is await-
ing the reaulto of laboratory tests
before announcing its findings.
Col. B. C. Andrus, in charge of
the Nuernhtrj >n, said today.
I
Sheriff Brame said attendants at [
' IM II IK UxlU 17VUI 11 Olli J?lx VIOLIN LuUIl .
terms will not be set for trial un-
I ill rxCfax*- • *x , v , z I *•**•■, oAOol <x * x
ter Cranberry. 36
Howard I
brake over a threc-day period This j
produced charges from Sen. Elmer gan. defrauding with a worthless '
Diomas (D-OklaJ of a bear raid, cheek, and Woodie Marion ag
brught a government investigation | gravated assault
Hie wreckage was discovered in |
~ swamp area within a mile of i
I H O Hensley and Woodrow Mor- j Field
I anil dnfraiirUtitr xx/ith u wnrf hlncc ; (QlsAriff Lz«<»«««x <> »x*
j Key Field reported a plane circling
i the airport about 7 o'clock last night
and field lights were turned on The
and Woodie Marion
death! bf Ethel Lee Sacks. 28.
■l Negro, who was killed when Mun-
1S i ry's light truck sideswiped an-!
other truck carrying the woman )
! and other Negroes back to Den- I
Io.,t then direction
He listed the victims as Howard | Ltrace.
| las; C C Wilkins. Krum; Howard
' Gibbs, Justin; Revy Matthews. Ar- '
markets,
are , ...... ...
fortunate in the fact there are no nl0n' medium and good grades! quished nation
were up $1 00 to $5.00 after losing i
$4 00 to $7 00 from the mid-week )
j peak' ----- --— ..---------i
I?
Denton Record-Chronicle
FORWARD
-
Associated Press Leased Wire
VOL. XLIV
NO. 56
DENTON, TEXAS, SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 20, 1946
Denton Is On The March
America's Best
‘Home Town’ City
V- v
^7
TWENTY-FOUR PAGES
SUNDAY
Price 10 Cats
Per Copy
I *
$37 Result from
68c Investment
icle want ad.
You, too, can get quick re-
sults from a Record-Chron-
A woman inserted tlie following
ad in Friday's i*pcr at the cost
of 68c and by 7 CO p. m. some-
one had called to answer her ad
and she recovered her purxe
•Lost: Tan coin purse cm
table In post office. *36 in
currency and change. Re-
ward. Helen Kelsey. Phone
249 or 1224-W."
I
St
iy
9
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ire
I1WWJII —
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 56, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 20, 1946, newspaper, October 20, 1946; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1312923/m1/1/?q=Cadet+Nurse+Corps: accessed June 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.