Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 114, Ed. 1 Friday, December 27, 1946 Page: 4 of 8
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Friday.
Miss
Pilot
Rolx
a
to
if
PILOT
Leona Mi
Mrs R
became t
rett, son
Garrett. 1
day in
fl 30 p
bride s p
I he Re
officiated
inony
Miss
played tr
ami Miss
Because
Given
the brid<
woolen <
designed
wore a i
carried i
white Bi
Miss L
sister of
the brldi
ing a su
corsage
Paul '
groom a
Follow
(Ion wa.
wedding
Norma .1
nifred M
service
Those
wedding
(Jarrett
Mis (■ ’
Buster.
Louise I
Tile c
Point ar
Mrs
the Pile
North I
■ she was
Cm t ent
tlir hut
and of t
BOYLE’S NOTEBOOK
the year
ANALYZING THE NEWS
ft
ft
in
the guy
gets around the
a
?’i
7
wasn't
1
HOLLYWOOD
By HOB THOMAS
THE PEOPLE UNDER FRANCO
But the
Spain Faces Grimmest \\ inter Since Revolution
a
Now
and
THE NATION TODAY
t re-
27 —The
eat
ALLEY OOP
and the
(
more
£
I
as;
7,
It had
J
r
early for
U'r
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A
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co** *YkAL.
12 11
By ERGAR MARTE f
Tenderfoot
If)
GWtlW
I
By J. R. William* Our Boarding House
GIVE ME CREDIT, MEM
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a
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/.
1
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£
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'll.
UK
1
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1
RFQ.
•■5
■Al
V
, I
Dutch Hope To Retain
Ties With the Indies
border
will be
Wages And Prices
It has long been said that the main cause
of price inflation is a large volume of
spending power coupled with a relatively
small supply of desired consumer goods,
m_____.__ai_:„____
1U
I
[1
tainlv should be entered
1 he defense.
.-/I
I would like most to
dentist s chair — my
SNIPING PAYS Oi l
ON POSSUM HUNT
com
worn
By JOHN M HIGHTOWER
(Substituting for Janies Marlow)
KRUSTlER GEt-OM
CAL? 1*51 NIGHT.'
ME TRAIL-UM TO i
NESTER \KllE> ' J
J
Ik
"Chloe-
and
tf
1
i
to
bearded
£-Zl \
'a "Xi
& ‘
L’t
•■ iN
/i-ir
TAKW THtSt ClOSaS.BlOT
CXA JIN TO UY \
5WHk TVAWt BOY DIDN'T
HOME- NOTHIN' TO OO WITH
PICKIN' TVAE.SC OUT
> ,y|
A •* a
■
) IJ
wi 1 1 w s
WASH TUBS
T': ’
(Qditoriah and Jeahirei
DtNTON (Tex.) RECORD-CHRONICLE— Friday. Dec. 27, 1»46
/QUlBBte. THB
COUNTtse HHM
LEGAL AtWICB.
fiHI'S HAO BAb
MEWS COSCBBMtNG
THE RASCAL SHE
IS ONORCING
'Kfll i
V IM
s/j
$
I
A 1
f 1
L £ v
who
highways
ankle has
pastlc cast
4s^A-"
The Sleepy Donkey
True, as this may be, it is obvious that
therdare other extremely important infla-
tionary influences—of which the contin-
ual pressure in favor of higher wages
without a comparable increase in output
and fervice is one.
Today’s prices are certainly not the re-
sult bf higher unit profits in manufactur-
ing End retailing. Many of the country’s
Careful, Quibble
") f SHE'D saved '
SOM* MOHEV
09 CONCEALING
IT FROM THIS
FORTUNE hunt-
ing WRETCH. /
. AB /
TAKE YONG
LADY, TOO’
Of Silly Season Made bv Boyle
.Z 7771 -it's Still Mae West, boys
The most outstanding lace of the
Jimmy Durante wins by
EX T M MG 1
I com
12 21 I
hi
£7) (well x the calvS ' -
Kr^EAEOcT. MAVfE ('ANCK'5
. KEEN IT- HROEUVERS
SUfTlIg*. TO AILTHE
.. RANLHEK A.NP T. -—
A HOME KTEACS.' Z' >
VjUO
d'-Sr
AHHf THfcfct. IS UNEXPECTED]
PLEASURE! I THEENK I
J t ^AT Off
BY W|A StftYI
By LESLIE TURNEI
TRV TO CALM."
By V. T. HAMLIN
T
Denton Re< ord.Chronicle
KAHF11 MIRE MI.MHKK AMNOCIATED PRBB*
** “** P0*10™0* At Drfhtpn. Taua. January
H. 1M1. ax mall mattar of the aecond elaaa. aooord-
la» to the Act of Congreai. Marek », 1«7».
I yep; they'SK 6OHMO
I I ^POIL U«i 6000 , 'E WK
I! AIN’T GfXWVOL '.
1
U. S. Treads Lightly
In Russian Dairen
(I KWOW HE WEEL'. OH V TRV TO CALM
FLEASE, vOU GENTLEMANS NOURSfLF.COWTEJJ! j
MU5 HELP ME SAVE MV ----— ... —
\ souse on gossamer
TERRACB!
ON TvAE LATEST W>ORV> ■
IN \NE5klT6/A BELATED
CfUCISTMAG pcesent —
IN vJORDS OF ONE .
SELLABLE, TA AT
MEANS IT GOT aeqe
late / class,eia?^
I I
EGAO, Pl KE-f
I'VE SEEN
MATERIAL
LU<;e TrtAV
Before.
giyt ne'Jer
OPP A
WORSE —,
KYlX-k'Vl)Ri
ARie/- ’
u^ficaTioi
s <.
2 i/
i .
i
i
NUBNCaiPTlOIM EAfM:
At aooater and nawatanda: Sc per ou^j.
9f Oarrtar: 15c per week; *7*0 per year.
■» Mell (lt> Advance): One year »5 25, alx month!
MAO three months tlBO: one month 75c
MOTICR TO TUB PtTBLIC
Any erroneous reflection upon the cnaractar. repu-
tation or standing of any flrm. individual or corpo-
ration will be gladlv corrected upon being called to
the publishers' attention.
The publishers are uut responsible for copy omis-
sions. typographical errors or any unintentional
arrora that occur other than to (correct In next issue
after it Is brought to their attention. All advertising
todeee are accented on this basis onlv
Out Our Way
ft isn’t t■.(> early for a wintertime tip:
If you’re worth your salt you’ll throw it
on those slipperv places.
witM the game of unreasoning political
tisanship, Secretary of State James
Byrnes, Democrat, and Sen. Arthur
i
<
I
"i.S
a few years
penny.
BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES
i . .. — ———.............
JPA.THE CVAWOPVVJ 'VWOULOK.’T OUGHT
t TO HQ\)t GLWT SUCH A VigJV
1 CVKRIST MRS, SO* '. FAY FAY Y Y '.
___ *>O MANY POVTY
-rvMKvos)
'funny STOFF
EH? SON OF^-r
PEEG. I
7 KEEL l&LZ
^You.»y
wi
VlZ
L'VA PV.UFA® WIOR.OLEO ABOUT
TH' W>AY aoOT«i AN' ROONEY
ARE aRWOGIH' 'WA UP
TOVOM '. VLE'5 ----
•oft/-’
w
wasn't kid
all <>f The
(
Greenstreet to Get High Salary For
Role of Soap Magnate in ‘Hucksters’
T 7^MCjHOM. i Ain't St LN .T&J
m 4 Cxlf nw.'" ■
Pi"-1-'
I-' _
run three hours, des.He
that 20th-Fox cut down
number of her lovers from
Australia Is trying to get into
the big-time with its motion pic-
ture Industry The country is offer-
ing munificent deals to film tech-
ni< lan.s here and several have ac-
c epted
Direc tor John Ford
ding about filming
south of the
music al score
I
/2M\
Jealous of Kil
w ho
the
and puffing
The State Department's attitude gives
than usual meaning to the forced departure of
American ship from Soviet-controlled Dairen
WELL DO All we
CAN. UTS SH -
IP (T WAS OUT
OF YOUR NAME
TfMFORABlLN -
7 Icbrfl Jfff y Mrr™
’Dir trft-
of con-
a snip**
p'v'
ANDERSON S C ol’i
dittonal hazing operation
ducting a greenhorn on
hunt, leaving him holding an cnip’v
hag out in the middle of nowhcie
on a cold dark night. [Mild oft
for Mrs. Emerson Bussey
Recalling the snipe hunting tech-
nique of her high school days. Mis
Bussey snatched a sack from the
trunk of her automobile and quick
wittedly bagged an opossum whose
presence on the highway forced
her to stop her car.
Mrs A F Elrod with her. got
out and 'surrounded the possum '
Mrs Bussey related and he walked
right into the bag '
need of the
an uncommon
X OH. MR OunBLi * HE AGREE
DS \ TO GEEVA ME DIVORCE W'EM HE
I T'INK I HAVE NO FORTUNE LEFT.
D> I NOW HE HEAR I BUT HOME ,
NG / EEN PALMETTO BEACH'
7Zrr
Nation Above Party
While many of their colleagues go on
par-
F.
. . . II.
Vandenberg, Republican, continue to give
the United States one of its finest ex-
amples of the type of statesmanship which
places nations above party.
Raising the aid he has received in the
past from Senator Vandenberg, Secretary
Byrines has announced that he will ask
the.Michigan Republican to accompany
hirri to the foreign ministers' meeting in
Moscow.
Fugitive
Even the
done in Mexico City
Mitch Lelsen is tossing the right
kind of a New Year's Eve party
He'll entertain 500 guests in a barn
and supply taxi service for those
shouldn't be menacing the
Alexis Smith s broken
Hollywood touch
GLADSTONE
TAIZEIT*.
principal industries have been operating at
a lo^s in spite of materially increased
priciy. Retailers’ margins, in general,
havt*ii<>l increased, and in some cases have
been; voluntarily !'-dii< e ! ns a protection
for {lie con.suttier T’ e price s’ructure is
simj^y the reflection of much higher oper-
ating costs in factories and in stores, of
whit}) wages are the main factor.
< 'lutiniial dr; res to force the legal min-
initifli wage upwnrd nrs a "Ttive potential
dantfei'. A lav. P> 'l i" end will appear in
the Itiext l onj'ie-' and vnr.ous similar
measures will Lo introduced in a long list
of state legislatit)o- All of these proposals
ignore th’’ fact that the minimum wage is
a basic wage -the lowest income on which
an unskilled wor'ter can live. Once it is
loath? a luxury ware, no matter how mod-
erate the decree, the entire Wage struc-
ture is endangered, and the price struc-
ture dong with it.
TO raise the minimum wage lieyond the
basil wage level is to destroy the incentive
to 4tork harder, and to assume greater
responsibilities. It automatically results in
new wage demands by all classes of work-
ers,-who naturally feel that the differen-
tials between pay for the skilled and un-
skilled should be maintained. And more
inflation follows.
FublMbed each aftarbocm except Saturday. and Bun-
day morning at 114 W Hlckorv Bt Pbonee 04 and UH
Riley Croae Publlabar
\ »UT THEE5 HOUSE I CANNOT \
\ HlOe, WHEN HE ARRIVE THERE '
IN TWO DAVS' OH. WHY k TUBk7^X
DEED 1 BUT EET TEEL / J"? >
/-.AFTSR DIVORCE’
--->/ "--- | THE PROFERTT
I I OR CONTEST
\ TOUR WT .
as "a superb record in the face of
mendous obstacles,” Senator Vandenberg
has said he is ready to participate with the
Soutn Carolina Democrat in the Moscow
conferences.
America-—and the world—owes a debt
gratitude to these two men it can
scarcely repay. Whenever the capacity
of the U. S. brand of democracy to pro-
duce bipartisan co-operation is questioned,
the case^ of Byrnes and Vandenlierg cer-
as Exhibit A for
nfeiil'ii
By HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK. Dec 21 — <AP» —
This is the silly season when as-
serted experts draw a bead on the
waning year and nominate the ten
best-dressed seed catalogs or pi< k
the twelve and half prettiest fire-
horses they would like to sit on a
flagpole with
Not to be outdone in any intel-
lectual salad tossing race, I have
gone to considerable expense
and much hectic
compile an all-
to end
|x_>und The scarcity ol native cit-
rus fruits and o olive oil is partly
explained by the fact that 80 per
cent of the country's production is
earmarked for export, but every
Spaniard is convinced tht the gov-
ernment practice of fixing prices
at 50 per cent below production
cost has done the most damage.
Wives of city workers make ex-
cursions to the neighboring coun-
try districts and try to pick up a
few kilos of potatoes, rice, flour
butter and oil for which they pay
the farmer double the taxed price
and in turn sell the goods at a
good profit in the city Housewives
doing their marketing in the city
are accustomed to being accosted
by men and women offering all
sorts of produce hidden away in
private houses
Everyone who has relatives in
the cotWM.rv is fairly well off But
those whose occupations do not al-
low them to make forays into the
countryside are the unfortunate
ones
R
; ..-x)
By FRED IlARMAh
DC TAkE SiEMA
r ncak * y
Tired of lieing an Orphan!''
. . . with . . . Major Hoople
DON'T U n LOOKS like 3 EG
— (.AST YOUR peepers 1 quote)! GOMEBODY Za r
7 ME Zs ^Cieo TO GET M V
I till \t>even yJitb^oo\ l
S X GET Y MASBE '(OU }
MY Z1 IKIED ONE OP (g
\ (Smoked \ Youc jokes onK
I \GLA6SES/h A GUY vJBO yf p
y 7 f wpyer for Ji kt
\\ \ GETS AM / k
" \jNsuLiyJ
time is money —
brain waving to
time list ot nominations
nominations
Hold on to your hat! Here we go
The best book to throw at a cat
— "Smithsoian Physical Tables, '
be sure you get the eighth revised
edition
The woman who best keeps her
beauty the lady on the White
Rock bottles.
The one I would like most to see
in a wrestling ring with Primo
Camera Gargantua
The person I most iiated to see
grow up Shirley Temple.
The man whose eyes look most
like an eagle's — Jimmy Doolit-
t le
The Job I would hate most
shaving a circus
an
10 days ago
The ship went there to deliver mail and sup-
plies to the American consul general
Soviet permission to enter and remain 48 hours.
It took along an American business man and
two newspafiermen, and American authorities ne-
gotiated for permission for them to enter Dairen
without jrrior clearance from Moscow
Tills permission was refused That alone might
have been the subject of complaint by American
officials here if they had wanted to let the world
know that thev do not like the way the Russians
are running things In Dairen
In the course of their unsuccessful negotiations
the American authorities at Dairen kept the Navy
ship there more than the specified 48 hours.
A two hour extension was granted by a Russian
port officer Toward the end of that time this
of'icer reminded the American authorities they
would have to leave in 20 minutes Otherwise, he
said, he could not be responsible for the conse-
quence
The
to see
door
Smith
The biggest
mon man
an
The two people 1 would like to
see get married but whose chil-
dren I would hate most to adopt
Simon Legree and Ladv Mac-
Bel h
The fellow most
roy the little man
there
What I would like most Io find
-la' the lost chord, ibi
e-e-e " <c> the missing link
< <1' a landlord
The man whose signature I
would like most to have on a blank
check John D Rockefeller Jr
The people who I hope most will
never get a new automobile —the
Four Hosemen of the Apocalypse
They cause enough trouble with-
out putting them on wheels.
year
nose
The most upstanding man In the
public eye the guy who sits
front of me at football games
’ The thing that
most -a girdle
The thing I could do least with
out some people I know
The thing I could do easiest with
out- some other people I know
The one thing ttiat helps u man
to keep his head up a pillow
The two ladles I would hate most
caught in me revolving
Elsa Maxwell and Kate
RED RYDER
By GLENN BABB
AP Foreign Affairs Analyst
Gradually the Netherlands, a community of
some 9,OOC.OOO Europeans. Is putting into Written
form the admission that she no longer possesses
the power to hold 70,000,000 Indonesians in colonial
subjection Into a series of agreements she is
writing her hopes that despite the end of political
domination the economic ties that before the war
bound the Indies to the mother country can be
•salvaged For the empire that is slipping away wks
one of the richest ever held by a European power
The Netherlands East Indies formed one of
the most glittering prizes for which the aggressors
of World War Two reached out But for their
wealth ot oil, rubber, tin and other basic com-
modities the whole course of the Pacific war might
have been different Japan's warlords were of
two minds, torn between a desire to grab the
Indies and build an economically self-sufficient^
and Impregnable empire and the urge to settle .
accounts with Soviet Russia while Hitler was
driving on Moscow Had the latter motive pre-
vailed It might have been Vladivostok instead of
Pearl Harbor, 'he United States might never have
rntered the war. the whole course of the conflict
might have followed channels that challenge the
imagination
But the Japanese struck southward and so the
fate of Holland's eastern empire, already put in
the balance by Hitlers victories of 1940, was
sealed 'The colonial rule of the 9.000,000 over the
70 000,000 was ended
A week ago today the lower house of the Neth-
erlands Parliament gave overwhelming approval
to the draft agreement initiated Nov. 15 on the
future status of the Indies Christmas Day saw
the establishment of the new government of the
"Great East," a group of rich Islands destined
to form the second unit of the federal "United
States of Indonesia "
The basic draft agreement still has to be ac-
cepted by the Indonesians and after that there
are months of negotiations before all details of
the comnlex new setup are accepted
main outlines have bene drawn in these bold, broad
strokes:
By Jan 1 1949 there is to be established with
Holland's blessing the "sovereign. Democratic
state" of the United States of Indonesia, to be
linked In "jierpetual union" with the Netherlands
as equal partners under the king or queen of Ute
Netherlands
Equal jvartners within the United States are
to be (1) the Indonesian Republican, embracing
Java. Sumatra and Madura under those out-
standing figures of the Indonesian revolt. Presi-
dent Soekar.So and Premier SJahrir; (2) the
"Great East,' whose new govemnjent came into
being Christmas Dav to administer all the Dutch
Islands east of Java and Borneo except Dutch
New Guinea, and <3> Borneo The place of Dutch
New Guinea remains to be determined
No More Ftxilin'
5) (HERL . FATGO, )
| 1 CATCH.'
/ HEY?" -
(
By ROZETTE HARGROVE
NEA Staff Correspondent
(Second of Two Articles)
LIBSON, Portugal. Dec <NEA).
— The olive oil producer shrugged
his shoulders in dlspalr and .said
■'In Spain today, everybody.cheats
the government
“Until the government butted
In," he explained, “life was dis-
tinctly easier for everyone
producers declare only 30 or 50
pFr cent of what they make
grow The rest goes to the black
market ''
The result is a food economy
In Spain that makes it impossible
to obtain food al the prices fixed
by the government ano a black
market which Franco not only can-
not stop but which flourishes full-
blown among the bureaucrats of
his regime
And because of It, the wage-
earning population of Spain, both
in the cities and in the rural dis-
tricts. face the grimmest winter
since the revolution
Although you can eat all you
want, at a price, in luxury hotels
and restaurants, the working-man
"white collar " employe
must depend on the staples he can
buy and take home, and these
staples are officially rationed in
amounts that make the quota for
one week look hardly enough for
one meal
Bread.three to eight ounces a
day. depending on the category of
the worker
OU, one pint a month
Rice, cereals or grains, a little
over three ounces a week
Sugar six ounces a month
Meat is no longer rationed, but
is obtainable, on the legitimate
market, only on Tuesdays. Wednes-
days and Thursdays Butter, fats,
cheese, fresh fruit and vegetables
also are unrationed, which means
they are unobtainable except at
stratosphere prices.
For his official ration, when he
cannot get It at official prices, and
for whatever else he can buy to
avoid starvation, the laborer nr
white collar worker making from
12 to 25 pesetas a day <at 11 peseta.,
to the dollar' is confronted by
these black market price tags;
Olive oil. 50 to 60 pesetas
quart, ham and butter. 90 pesetas
a kilo <2 2 poundsi; beef. 35 pe-
setas a kilo; mutton, 25 pesetas a
kilo; cheese, 15 pesetas a kilo;
potatoes. 7 pesetas a kilo; eggs,
36 pesetas a dozen, a small chick-
en. barely enough for three peo-
ple. 40 pesetas
The cheaper varieties of fish,
once abundant, are unobtainable,
sole, lobster, and prawn arc avail-
able at high prices Milk is plenti-
ful at the official price, but Is fit
only for cooking
Tangerines, which
ago were five for a penny, now
cost from one to two pesetas a
WASHINGTON. Dec 27—(Ab—The United
States passed up this week an opportunity to blast
Russian conduct in China
It chose instead to dismiss lightly an Incident
which only a little while ago might have been
subject of considerable diplomatic huffing
have
lady.
The man In public life with the
finest character Gen Omar Brad-
lev
'Die man
have in a
dentist
The most outstanding figure of
HOLLYWOOD. Dec 27 —<APl —
One of the highest salaries ever
I>aid an actor will go to Sidney
Greenstrect when he plays Evan
Llewellyn Evans, the expectorat-
ing, hat-throwing soap magnate
in "The Hucksters He will re-
ceive $50,000 for laboring but four
days In the filming of Frederic
Wakeman's popular novel MGM
Is sparing no expense to make
Clark Gable s second postwar pic-
ture a happy one Co-starring
Gable and British star Deborah
Kerr, the film will start after the
first of the year
Vivien Leigh and Laurence
Olivier won t be coming to Holly-
wood as scheduled Thev didn't like
any of the numerous scripts sub
milled to them Forever Amber '
will run three hours, des.ite the
fact that 20th-Fox cut down the
30 to
A secretary in a large bank told
me ' All last summer our nightly
meal consisted of a dish of vege-
tables cooked in water We Just
couldn't afford anything else, not
even a small piece ot meat or fat
to season it Only once m a while
a kilo of grapes as a special
treat Fortunately my husband and
I live in the suburbs and we raise
rabbits Every Sunday we kill a
rabbit for our dinner and consider
ourselves lu< kj at that Rut we
had to stop keeping < hi< kens as
(lie feed cost too inuih.''
Most of li< c workers -even when
both husband and wite work
have to take on another Job out-
side their regular oHlfe hours to
face the high cost of living
The bank se< retary. like count-
less others. < laims that the last
ten strenuous years have been
harder on the white collar ' class
than on any other class of the
[xipulation The result is a tired,
dis'[iirited people, with little faith
in the future
A New York pharmacist attempted
suiFMe hy swallowing drugs. It would be
interesting to know where he procured
them.
State Dc[>artment could have protested
the Russian authorities had acted in an unfriendly
manner by delivering a virtual ultimatum
But what the department actually did was
uphold the legal right of the Russians to order
the ship out
A department spokesman said, in fact, that
there was no ultimatum in any sense of the word.
The department did say it hoped the Russians
and Chinese eventually would make arrangements
for the Chinese to take over administration of
Dairen from the Soviet military authorities But
it disclaimed any American right to Intervene In
that situation
None of this ap|x>ars to signify much change
in American policy toward Russia Secretary
Byrnes has defined that policy as one of firmness
and patience What the Dairen Incident does
seem to indicate is more emphasis on patience
and less on firmness
A
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r
*.». I
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II
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THE FAMILY
HOPE
12-27
J'.QW'LL'AMC,
'LISTEN — TH’ OL’ MAN AN’ \
ME WENT WITHOUT LOTS k
^ TD PUT YOU THRU COLLEGE,
♦AN’ YOU FALL FER A >
1 SIMPLETON SHOP GAG- )
I PROP THAT CAN AN J
\ BEAT IT BEFORE I j—
>> GIT NASTY.' ____<
■V I
WE PUT V
TH' NEW \
GUY UP TO
POWDERIN'
TH' BRASS
BUGS - - AN'
THAT MUG'S
GPOILIN' TH'
FUN!
k
B
THAT'S HIS BROTH-
i ER - HE Gcrr 50
\ LITTLE EDUCA-
TION THAT HE
( THINKS A COLLE6I
X SHOULD TAKE
CARE OF
X EVERYTHING.' ]
•*< A
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 114, Ed. 1 Friday, December 27, 1946, newspaper, December 27, 1946; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1312981/m1/4/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.