Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 72, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 6, 1947 Page: 1 of 12
twelve 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:
Denton Record-Chronicle
2090
» **'>( ■
9-
Associated Press Leased Wire
DENTON, TEXAS, THURSDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 6, 1947
NO. 72
VOL. XLV
up
UP
TJ
LATE NEWS
'‘y
j i
BLLLETLNS
I
Ils
•4»’*
* *
I
r
/
. ■ ■
Secret, He S
ys
Soviet Foreign Minister V,
>-.
I a
i
,lo<> Grissom.
_
()» Water Costs
Town
Drive Starts Nov. 12
pushed with vigor.
J
Probe Tactics
WASHINGTON Nov 8 — (/Pt
P.O.
bi
»
f
price
il>-
the first
Jan-
starting
in
had
gave this
l
M
v\ 111
Christmas Seal
Sale Chairman
4
4
Texas
law enforce-
Judge Ben W Boyd has
Laughs
id
ses-
In
by
Con-
nie
have
signment
For
Glen
Fun
"Melll-
I
WEATHER
i committee me oiner oay. is tun-
1 oua for his clothes. Wei], I don't
I
*
as
Oarrl-
Bert Moore s delicious cherry
Lorin McMullen, the sport* wrl-
4
I to assume adefens-lvs driving ' tenses," he said.
T
■ 4
. L.
■MM■
f
9
r
A
£
I*
«
I
.1
I
U 1
Action Taken in Effort
To Reach Settlement
Of TSUW Controversy
Call Record-Chronicle
At This New Number
Address: 311 E. Hickory
Of Five (HI ices
said
by
Riam
manner
the
in
an
the
I
!
1 lie
bi ■
North
Curtis
•>een
Seal
WE tTHER
Cloudy and Cooler
■
I
1
(dill (•
where
w :i -
loss
find
. -4
the Panhandle
WEDNESDAY TEMPERATURES:
High 73
Low 54
A
said
an-
Hu rhes
$5,919,921
iiM
Said,
people
I ,.e
iiiriai.
i.tn I. ■
th e
. ..mp„
MANILA, Nov. 6—UFp— A I).
8. Navy reconnaiaaance plant-
radioed today Uiat a typhoon
waa headed dirivtly for Manila
from a point 290 miles east oi
the city.
8 — PPI — battle between capitalism and com- >
You and I are Just as , on
much a part of that battle, on the time."
I
-1
J
BUCHAREST. Romania. Nov.
6— up, —Georghe latareacu.
vice premier and foreign min-
ister, and three other National
Liberal party membera of Ro-
mania* cabinet reaigned today
under preaaure from Parlia-
ment. Parliament yesterday vot-
ed no confidence in lalarocu
187 to 5 aa a result of testimony
al the treason trial of Opposi-
tion leader Juliu Maniu and 18
others.
Martin Opnosml
To Tax Talk At
holding baby,
Sand Hill School, observe examination of Mrs.
David Thomas as part
El, PASO Tex Nov
Col Homer Garrison. Jr., director munlsm
of the Texas Department of Public
a
with
Europe and anti
pro-
this
session
Mon-
• Ji: I, e J
hoy of the
itTn
46 >li from
insur-
the
Woodie J Mints. 917 West P. ir-
ie St., State Liquor Control Board
I officer.
I Waco district
Moved to II aco
I
As-
"qulckie" $4,000,000,-1 soclatfon in preparation for the
| forty - first nationwide annual seal
I ■
L i
i AS —
with
i op-
LONDON. Nov. 6—t/P>—The
House of Commons approved
last night on Its decisive second
reading a government-spon-
sored bill granting Burma full
independence on Jan 6. 1948.
The vote- was 288 to 114
taxes.
was his
that
J
■H I 111 II I V." u, ’ ~
t war." Garrison told fel-
overthrow of the United States gov- 1 low law enforcement officers
He said it Is popular today to
beat the drums against domestic I to be relatively simple to get
Communists, and added that
this respect he is not a
Hams iRDAP.
Slack told newsmen that "later
won't do us anv good Everybody
will have forgotten about it " he
added
"Tile direct reiult of this situa-
■ion is that the committee has em-
ployed a man to take the Hushes I
tax returns and go over them on
behalf of the committee and at- :
tempt to intervene with the normal >
functions of the office of the com- ■
missioner of Internal revenue. |
had In-
that his
session
f o r
Adolphe Menjou. movie star wbo
testified before the Congressional
committee the other day. la fam-
ous tor his cioihes. weii, i. tjoari
want to brag but I have a suit for
every day in the week. I've got *
on. •
• * * * >, I,
Uncle Ephraim had heard that
his son bad secretly married.
When the young man gave an eva-
sive answer, the father said. *T
ain't askin' you la you ain't: I*a*
askin’ you ain't you is.”
destoyed a fine intelligence eervice
that was built under the pressure o*
war Recruiting in our armed serv-
ices is lagging And. when univer-
sial military training is the ac-
cepted thing tile world over, we
can only argue and debate wheth-
er or not we rhng|«$l|pv* univer-
■mi M
The United States, it la
falls to advertise to the r,—
of Europe the aid this nation is
I *— —• —- —— ta
its
, &'l •_________________ . '
TWELV E PAGES
Advocates Military Hanging
Seeking to Overthrow Government
would be no
Walker
Nor from the other
CaUereoce teams, olUMT.
.■Xi'sS
**.*^*•‘7
1 11 'w^BMB MMMMMKtL' . »....
FERGUSON GREETS WITNESS—Sen Homer Fergu-
son, left, (R-Mich.) grets Charles E. Wilson, president
of the General Electric Company and wartime director
of aircraft buying for the government, as the Senate
War Investigating subcommittee reopened in Washing-
ton its inquiry into Howard Hughes' war contracts. Wil-
son was the first witness of the day. Senator Carl
Hatch (D-N.M.), a member of the subcommittee, is at
lower left. (AP Wirephoto).
Molotov Charges IL S.
Is Preparing for War
A-Bomb No Longer
*
and* Mrs. J. R.
i'l
11-
I
WARSAW. Nov. 6—lA'c— The
Moscow-backed Bolish govern-
ment intensified today its in-
quiry into the flight of Stani-
slaw Mikolajcxyk, which It as-
serted was “actively aided" by
an unnamed embassy, and in-
dicated new arrests would be
made shortly of persons sus-
pected of helping the opposition
leader escape.
LONDON, Nov. 6—(AP)--f ' ' ” „ ” “
M. Molotov declared today the United States was establish.'
ing new naval and air bases close to Rusisa "as a preparation
for aggression."
FOOD FOR THOUGHT
Today's regular Thursday Food Section in the Record-
> aronicle includes:
1. Illustrated feature on turkeys, ... n K
bird steps out in new dress as a vear-arotlnd meat dish, and
the large turkey farm of Mr. and Mrs. \V. T. (Tip) Hall of
■ f
A
asertion that
governm'nt
message dealing
emergency aid
Inflation
the special
no suggestions
F "'mJ
I do r<member Hilly Woods,
M.'ille\ Butler and my-
four bovs that worked there
Boys did not have much
to make money those
I swept out a church al $1 50
and I believe that Nut
Frank Piner. Charlie
Garrison
|Top Problem,
Truman Says
The special features in the Thursday Food Section
prepared each week by the .journalism department and news
bureau at Texas State College for Women, in cooperation with
lie TSCW home economics department.
FOR A HEALTHY FAMILY Mrs
Killingsworth, center, teacher in the - — .
■ ;,,v/ D,. David 1 honias as part oi a health education
<mndurtml by members of the Denton County Medical Society for
At right is another daughter.
is definitely planning to offer
own lax program to Congress
sometime next year
Martin's views ran
1 by
DENTON AND VICINITY Partly,
cloudy and much cooler tonight j
and Friday.
EAST TEXAS Partly cloudy this
afternoon; cloudy, showers in ex-
treme east, cooler in west and
central and much cooler in north- ,
west portions tonight; Friday |
partly cloudy and cooler: showers
in extreme east portion in the
early morning; fresh southerly
winds on coast, shifting to
northerly Friday morning.
WEST TEXAS: Partly cloudy this
afternoon, tonight and Friday:
cooler tonight with lowest tem- ter. says S. M. U.'s great haU-
peraturee 26 to 30 in the Pan- back. Doak Walker, has auch •
handle and 30 to 33 in the south wonderful spirit that, if Coach
I. there
complaint fr*M
SoutkwMl
II
A t<>'ul “t SI 094 <19 Wi>
in nu au<iai H'.is in>oi. ■ i
L'l.uv ol live li iwiitown i
ihe J,i< k on nnd J
buildmus liei<■ dm in,:
lunch hour Wednesday
in’ruder boldlv
e etfl< •
r \ w;i
rhe m
I)’, 'lie >
BERLIN Nov 6—(A1,—A tele-
phone message from a German
translator for the U. S. Army
newspaper Otars and Stripes
said today Joseph Fleming.
Berlin correspondent of that
newspaper, and Henry Bur-
roughs. Associated Press pho-
tographer. had been arrested
in the Soviet setter of this city.
'Shopping With Bobbye" column on what Denton
. — buying and cooking for their families.
6. Menus and recipes to conserve grains and meats.
are |
lni:"i sir none nnd we will nol
clutter up the landscape much Fuq.
< r " fjuxt a few of the very old tim-
ers recall 1? N Hall >
p.„,K, .u; Qty t0 Employ
Firm to Check
continue until Christmas.
Committees over the county will
meet Work under Judge Boyd in raising
funds for tuberculosis control work
of the local association and partici-
pation In the national campaign
Judge Boyd said today that he
would soon complete organization
of committees for the campaign
"I should be happy to have men j
and women volunteer for the com-'
mlttfres," he said "Anyone who trie sign in the world,
feels 1— — *- -----------1 -----------
assignment will. 1
the Denton County
fold him he did not want to re-
sume the stand at once Dietrich
was the witness when hearings re-
versed yesterday.
Ferguson told rejxirtcrs Hughes
persons about the
v was believed to
How- i opening
their descriptions did not en-1
First.
I of Public Safety, transferred
I license and weights division
the Hughes ! still in Denton pending definite as-
trncts " I sltmmrnl
The annual finance campaign of
Boy Scouts of America will strrt
in Denton on Nov 12 and will be
conducted in other parts of the
week on
11 *- ~t by local finance
chairmen. Ben Ivey, finance chair-
man of the Denton district, an-
nounced today.
A kick olf breakfast at the Yacht
Cafe at 7 30 a. m. next W< dnes-
| <>ay for aU Workers will open the
< drive and attempts will be made
to complete it in one or two davs
No quota is set for the campaign
i but an attempt will be made to
If
plains; cooler Friday except in Bell shifted him to guard.
-----4 ■ - ♦
Othvi' members ef the medical
with parents in 1' other rural sc
He declared in a Moscow address theWcret of the a torn
bomb "lias long ceased to exist" and then assailed the United
States for trying to keep the secret.
(A Bolish official attending the United Nations Genera!
Assembly at Lake Success said the secret of the atom bomb
, had been known for some time, hut the technique of pro-
ducing the bomb—putting it together—remained a secret.
Molotov did not specify whether Russian scientists had
learned this technique.)
In a speech broadcast from Moscow on the eve of the
Russian Revolution’s 30th anniversary, Molotov asserted
Russia was intent upon a "durable and lasting [>eace.” He
suggested collaboration was jKissible between the Soviet
Union and capitalist countries.
But he added that capitalism "Is4-
on it* last legs "
"We live in a
roads lead t,o communism,'' Molo-
tov declared
Tiie foreign ministers 85-minute
J address was made to an annlver-.
sary eve gathering of party, gov-|
ernment and armed forces leaders
in Moscow
They voted to send greetings to
Prime Minister Stalin, who haa
been resting in the resort town of
Sochi, on the Black Sea The prime
------------- ...— ----- the son told his listeners.
I part of the United Slates at a time I
I when it should seis— noon the role
i of world leadership j Garrison tsaid the number one Job
j “We have virtually destrowevl our i of public r.afety officials tn this motion
traffic safety programs
“We must lend our influence to
reduce le«al technicalities and trial
delays, to accomplish speedier
trials and more Justice We must
support the plugging of legal loop-
holes in the rules of evidence and
procedure, in severances, and in
c o v e r l ng specific of-
I hqitiin.
3. Illustrated feature on
pie.
4
housewives are
counter to I
... „ Chairman -vl,
- Mjnn i of the House reelected county Christmas
| minister also was absent from the |
i celebration last year and the year
before. |
The Soviet Monitor, which re-
corded the speech in London, said!
wa* a main |>oii-y declaration |
the anniversary, although there (
"I was beating the drums against “President Truman has con-
this! Communists at the same time livened this special session of Gon-
was beating drums against the gress to fight communism in Eu-
i Nazis and the Fascists in Europe, rope It would seem appropriate
frxw T ran/v^.ii-^4 -11 — th- II..!____ _ __
years old biy strong nnd Ignorant,
einpha 1s on the Ignorant I used
to correspond wi'ii Bob Wright nnd
I hud a letter from J S J Gober
and Lem Sone In the passing of told the man that no one
'cars nearly nil the people of those the office as she passed him
received no rep1''
Gently and Ci'y Officer
Lanford were still continuing their
i Invesligallon bv noon today
By R J. (BOB, EDWARDS
The wisdom from above is first
pure, the peaceable, gentle. eas> to
lie treated, full ol mercy and good
Hulls, without partiality, wnd with-'
out hypocrisy -James 23-17
We can test the genuineness <>t
ri Hgious teachings by these char-
at ten.sUCN
Killingswortli, center, teacher in the
Grissom's (laughter. Inez, by Dr. L
rural schools/ At right is another daughter, Wanda .and Mrs. Joe Hobson, nurse
who is giving immunization against smallpox, diphtheria, whooping cough and
tetanus Other members of the medical society are scheduled for examinations and
talks omenfs in 1' other rural schools.
I
tlon inrrmslng district Scout lead-
ers are anticipating the formation
o! more groups
Captains and workers for Denton
and other county towns will be
announced by Ivey soon.
Denton on Nov
in other parts of
county during the same
Representatives of Howard Hughes ! days to be set by local
buy only 25,(XX).000 bushels be- complained today the Senate War
u e of a rise in prices Investigating Committee unfairly is
At the capital. Senator Ball 1R- denying them *pportunttv to
- swer
owes
more tn laxe* for the war years
Committee Chairman Ferguson
iR-Michi contended, however, mat
Noah Dietrich, e x e c u t 1 ve vice-
subjects in the president of the Hughes Tool 00.17^^^^';;^ ^^^^'“olthe
people in order to give them op-
I portunity to assist in furthering Speaker
, work of Scouts in Denton, Ivey
said.
More than 500 boys arc now en-
rolled in the Scout movement in
I the county and some 2(M) men and
women arc working with them as
troop and cub pack leaders and in
other capacities. Thirty - six
troops and packs are how operat-
ing in the county and whh popula-
hearlngs yesterday by Senator Wil- I
Woodie Mints
PRAGUE, Ciechoalovakia,
Nov. 6—)AJr—A communist en-
gineered government crisis put
Communist Premier Element
Gottwald, a former blacksmith,
al the top of the heap today aa
< lechoslovakia's polltlcil
strong man.
day with the statement read bv j man E J. Banks, tsansferred to
wuth Williams to the committee of which : Graham with State Rangers, and
A H Fleming, former driver's
license examiner with Department views tire strictly his own
to ' said the Republican House I
but i Ing Committee, which will
shortly after Nov. 17. may
different ideas
Pile right kind ot back -eat driv-
er may be able to cut the nation *
1 rattle toll according to the Safety
Department of the National High-
wav t s e 1 s < ■ ntereni-e Aciident
. •atistics show that passengers
I re worse than driver .> in latal
. laihes. nidK.il>:. . that paesHiger'
have more to lose from cureless
• ■living or ex< >',*lve sjieed than
■ir drivers Lave, and thtr could
1'i’ablv speak up against (Inn-
> >e- i't'IV Hi '1 lie bale! \ D‘ pal
nt Holes that two out ot ibree
ei> i< 1 >i . in the 1. a I ion la -1 v e.i 1
v >l\ed II.:- .Ike bv di :v> 1 I
-in <■ p: • - umabl v i' • II I (1 Lave
I’.elpi-q pie'ent some of those tatal
bv piotest in ■ a.'ain t
-s <>r undue speed Think
, v >u drive:'' and it'.n't
,0 inucli about 'back-seat
that when we can
man or woman Is a J
a so-called political
: party that has its headquarters in I come-latelv
J a foreign country and that has as
j its object the overthrow of
1 government, we ought to treat that
I person to a necktie party. --r-. —
"I don't mean a mob lynching ! for I recognized them all as the enough that some real attention
the Thanksgiving 1 a KO<Ml old military hang- same low breed of cattle." he said. I might also be given to fighting
nri rneot rliuh nnrl ' lnR Garrison declared in a speech Garrison decried what he termed communism here at home," Oarri-
,,, delivered at a conference of the i vacillation and hesitation on the son told his listeners.
Pacific Coast International Asso-'
j elation of Law Enforcement Offi-
1 ctaLs Garrison is vice-president of
the international association.
The Texan public safety director
described American law enforce-
1 ment as fighting a three-front war
against communism, traffic fatali-
ties. and the “worst crime wave in
1 all our history."
| He emphasized the fight against
communism
"We are involved tn a world re-
volution that narrow* down to a sal military tratni*g.T
built: nc
anti tii'Ii
'.ar- vv.i
Benefit
so< lai ion
binklin.:
lice also ei.lered
when the burglar
cash there
In the I’ennev building, the bur-
glar's el'oit. were hardly re-
■ wa 1 (led when lie took
the ofllci1 ot C M Mi.•.ell. 1
ance aeent. at.il $1 (15 Iron:
It r •: R.-attv ..........
Deputy Sherlft Sam Genrtv
'he burglar gained entrance
using a jimmy tool on the door lock
and on drawers in each of the of-
I lees
A tall stranger, wearing a dark
suit, was observed In the Jai k on
buildin ■ bv two
time the rolibe
have occurred Gentry
Th* Jai k S( hniltz A Son
oral Home on North Locu. t Street,
is nearing completion in a new
home flint has been transformed
from s residence In'o a new nnd |
modern funeral home That's the
history of many of the modern-,
Sec ROUND ABOUT Page 2 I
“Other countries are pretty tough 1 technique baset]
1 spies and saboteurs in war-
he said, noting that this;
Safety, today advocated military [ Internal security front, as we were country is still technically at war i
I He suggested that if present laws i
j concerning treason do not take care
of the present situation, "it ought
tn new law with the Congress going
Johnny- Into session in the middle of the
| month
"President
$1,091 Taken In
l)a\ ll’/llt liUI | A1 U (. capltl)| senator Ball 'Il-
Minn I said the aid program should
l:e tailored to giye the bulk of help
to tho*e countries wiilcb do most
t<> help tliet'iselves.
f-'peaker Martin (R-Massi told
reporters lie believes Congress will
act on those two
eider in which the President re-
quests
Martin added
rubber stamp of
pi ngram
justified all the way. It must
on a soiiti I. intelligent basis "
A lepoiter. suggesting that polls
show a lot of voters don't under-
stand the European reiovery prob-
lem, asked Mr
11 radio address
understanding of it.
Program All (an I'ndersland
Without answering this question
directly, the President said the
administration Is working to get
before Congress as soon as possible
a program that all can understand.
He said it Is a tremendous task
to coordinate all the reports that
| have been prepared or called for
dealing with the United States' alil-
ty to help Eurojie.
I When he gets the whole thing
together, he added, there will be
a message to Congress explaining
specifically the needs.
Mr. Truman indicated
will be submitted
to the Congress
a week from next
assume his
Waco on Nov. 15
One of five state law enforce-! Jvminis
ment officers stationed in Denton,* those expressed
Mints is the third to be transferred Knutson <R - ,
within the past two months The Ways and Means Committee, who sajP chairmen by directors of the
Dietrich took sharp issue yester-J others are State Highway Patrol-j is demanding that the special ses- j Denton County Tuberculosis
E J. Banks, tsansferred to slon pass a "quickie' $4,000,000,- sociation in
000 tax reduction bill. I- — -, ----- -- ’
The speaker emphasized that his 1 ,a|P whtch will begin Nov. 24 and
are strictly his own He I
Steer- I
taxi's Issue which was infected into
Laler. a message on the long-
range Marshall plan for European and show Just
recovery.
• ' " | on the theory that
"the other fellow Is drunk or crazy.”
Garrison's report on crime re-
vealed that Texan crime on the
1 whole is increasing almcnt twice
as fast as the rate of increase na-
| nationally
' The speaker said the reason for
this disproportionate increase is
5 that Texas with 7.000.000 inhablt-
1 ants has approximately the came
number of law enforcement offi-
cials as Chicago, which has a popu-
lation of 3.400.900.
“X x x if Chicago had the same
number of murders in proportion
to population that San Antonio.
Dallas and Houston have the Chi-
cago murder rate wolud be multi-
plied nearly ten times." he said.
Garrison recommended the pro-
1 of crime prevention and
The city commission Wednesday
authorized employment of a Fort
Worth engineering firm to check
the city's flgurea on cost of water
production and authorized Mayor
1 J. L Yarbrough to reply to a letter
from a water committee named
bv the Texas State College for
Women board of regenLx regarding
settlement of a water rate contro-
versey between city and college of*
flclals.
In the letter to the city. W P.
Hamblen of Houston, chairman
of the TSCW water committee,
had proposed appointment of a
borrd to determine cost to the city
ot furnishing water to TSCW
The commission, however. to<< ’-'
decided to employ the firm of
Freeze, Nichols and Turner cc -
lulling engineers of Fort Worth
to check cast record? of the city
and check figures of the city en-
gineer.
Rates Raised in 1945
Th* city and college have been
In disagreement over rates since
July 1945 when the Commission
rat ed rates to about 20 cents per
thousand gallons and the college
refused to accept the increase.
The letter replying to TSCW will
be ready Jo send this afternoon
Mayor Ya rb much said at noon.
It will coipaln points decided on by
commissioners in a meeting Wed-
nesday afternoon: that the city is
desirous to make an early settle-
ment ; that cost of production has
increased; that cost of pumping
water In Denton may be greater
I than in other areac, and therefore
cost cannot be compared fairly;
that if the college can pump wa-
ter cheaper with its own system,
it should do so.
Highway 77 Ideas
The commission also authorized
See CITY WATER Page 2
Boyce House
Boy Seoul Finance
lT\ • O ■ * 1 I £1 In
! tor
would be another statement tomor-
row. probably by Marshal Nikolai
Bulganfm.
Revolution Anniversary
The anniversary marks the day
Nov 7, 1917 — when the mili-
tary revolutionary committee of
I Hie Petrograd Soviet seized govern-
ment authority and handed it over
i to the All-Russian Congress of 80-
! viets.
: Molotov asserted the United
1 State* and Britain Were attempting
j t<> hamper effort* to outlaw tne
1 a 'in bomb.
I "it is Interesting that in the ex-
; panrtonl.'t circles of the United
I states a new. peculiar sort of illu-
sion has been formed about their
nternal strength a lielief in the
secret ol the atom bomb, although
this secret has long ceised to 1 xlst.’
Weapon of Aggression
Moscow radio commentator
cheers greeted this remark.
"Evidently the imperialist* need
this faith in the atom bomb, which
as is known, is not a means ot de-
fence but a weapon of aggression,"
Molotov stilo "Many are Indignant
that I he U 8 A and Great Britain
hant|>er the United Nations from
ad' pt Ing a final decision on the
prohibition ot atomic weapons."
Molotov decared that during the
1 year British scientists twice
See MOLOTOV Page 2
own
tax
1 reductions should be considered as
order of business at the
! regular session
urry
Shortly before Martin i
' opinion:
'1 President Truman
will l>e transferred to the formed a news conference mat ms - .
as supervisor there, message- to the special session | |<j*y/4| I\ IC(1
according to word received in Den-, will cont nn no suggestions fori j
ton Wedne'day from the Liquor revis'on of taxes. > . fl
Control Board in Austin 2 Officials in a position U> know I nr|<|int»< \l\l|
Mints, who has been stationed in had said the Truman administra-j ' rill xoiiiimo gvmi
Denton for more than two years, tlon
"Unlike the committee, the In- | will assume his new duties in its
ternal Revenue Department has
heretofore operated on a basis of
complete fairness and has per-
mitted the taxpayers to know all
the arguments In tax cases “
There will be no
stamp of the foreign aid
1 It is going to have to be
It must be officials will be given full oppor-
tunity to give evidence later
Tom Slack Hughes’ attorney
voiced that complaint that he an I
Dietrich had been refused a re-
Truman if he plans quest to tn tifv on the profits and
to increase public
Round lEurope Aid Is
About
H N Hull l.’H Decilul Street
Oild.'.’e ('-ilibuni.a. call he- up with
;>•! (>;.| f; Ifti I Will C Collin- lor-
m< r Den on man now ol Chiinmnir.
ol. li an item in Roundabout ol
H"< > is I -('!ii< 'iK le Both Hill
I ,C Ilins llv ed 111 Demon in t lie
1^ (lavs as Hall wi lies that he
lett here in 1888 At that Hine he
lived with an uncle. J. P Frame,
a' 'lie (ori’i'i of what Is now E'.ame
am1 I'j>1 ev Road
Hall goes on to remrd the tact
(Ila' lie workiil for th'1 Collin. Nur-
. 1 ■. . f v hr II he |( li'.’es thn' ’he
A Carroll was-the
company (Tbal >
t' it even the old t>“•'■(■•
(I t reciWI > “I worked two dlffer-
( id year pm king troes on the N C
Cl.iolv place in 1886 I believe, but ,
I do not remember seeing you that 1
I ill
John (rill
self
th it f ill Boys did not have much ever, tneir descriptions am not en-1
* h.UK-e to make motley those , tirelv concur
davs I swept out a church al $1 50 Emory S Wi'kins, 302 Jagoe I dealing
per month, and I believe that Nat Sf . co-owner of 'he Jack on build-
Grafton. Frank Piner. Charlie mg. reported seem.’ smh a m*n In 1 trols.
Brim nnd Lem Sone, also tried tic- the building during the lunch hour
buds the summer before but Miss Marlene Graff. 1400
■ out on the third dav. I was 14 1 Elm St., employe of the
Drug Store, saw the man with his
hand on the doorknob of the Mutual
Benefit office
Miss Graff fold Gentry that she
told the man that no one wa: In
She
Special Session
WASHINGTON Nov 6 - I
Martin lined up
President Truman today In
petition to any tax reduction leg-
islation at the special session ot
Congress starting Nov. 17.
Martin (R-Maasi told a news
conference he believes the special
session will be kept too busy con-
sidering!' foreign aid and
legislation to take up
But he said it
•personal inclination''
\\ ASHINGTON. Nov. Cr—(AB)- President Truman said A^CIltS
today he wants Congress to act on emergency aid for Europe I C k d
before taking up anti-inflation legislation. iPlnim
But he con.sii’ci's inflation controls and European aid Vlclllll L llldll
equally important and both should be pushed with vigor.1
Mr. Truman told a news conference.
► He said it would do not good to
make an appropriation to buy 100,-
GIHI.0OO bushels of wheat if the
money appropriated would actual-
I b
>• taken !
i. iv bur-
ottp es in
C I’ennev
the noon .
when the
gutni <1 ent ram c t o
( and t.i'd before 1 he lob-
di:.i 1 >v < . ed
team' los- wa - ■ ut' toned
American National Insur-
111 the Jai kson
XI 071 54 in i hei k'-
itkeli E’llteen (lol-
Irom ’he Mutual
lb ulth amt At chi' 11' As
oft it e in 'la' Jnt kson
an I the Kiw ants Club of-
e. > ape I
f.Uled to
1 giving. And yet our nation
I famous for the efficiency of
! advertising. For example—
In New York is the biggest elec-
; _ ' “ '".A New
he can help in this important | Yorker was telling an English vlsl-
.“t will, I hope, contact tor about the sign. "It has 3.000
C rty Tuberculosis | bulbn and has over a million «an-
Association office in the city hall1 diepower," the American Baid,
annex. People of the county strong- proudly. Tbe Englishman drawled,
ly endorse this work and will un- j “But. I say. old fellow, isn't that
doubtedly cooperate in making the rawther conspicuous?"
seal sale a success.” ' ...»
And a Chinaman said,
cans funny people; they life glass
and say, Here's to you’, then
drink it themselves."
President Is Happy
WASHINGTON. Nov 6 - 1 In -
President Tinman said today he
is very happy over tlic Democratic,
victory in Kentucky, and is hap-
pier still about the large turn-out
of voters in Tuesdays off - year
elections
,T i
»■ !
hatigjng (or persons advocating the • in the last
.n'f.rlhruiL nf IK#. Tlrilt.-zt Riat*, irrw- 1 ir.,.. lax.
ernment
I contend
prove that a
member ot
read bv
mimni.ee oi u nit-n >
for he is a member Anti, as the hear- !
ing recessed, the Hughes official |
told reporters
“I am going to take the stand
what C
I loss*, were on war contracts, "
Directing attention to the conlinu-
when it should seize upon the role ing fight aaalnst traffic fatahties,
Clf tlTOrlr! I fl* n H T* C h I TA j W(*la*ZN«* *ai*4 4 Ka /yri*
armed forcan," hg said “We have field today is “a Job of selling —
of public relations. The people are
— and will continue to be — in a
mood for progressive change,
especially in anything -affecting
their security,” he believed.
He advized concentrating en-
forcement efforts against tbe dan-
gerous 15 per cent of the drivers ■ statutes
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. 45, No. 72, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 6, 1947, newspaper, November 6, 1947; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1315816/m1/1/: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.