Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 104, Ed. 1 Sunday, December 14, 1947 Page: 1 of 32
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A
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VOL XLV
NO. 104
Round
About
A
Town
Full Amount Is
a
F'
I i1
I
LONDON, Dec. 13<*7—A
LEGENDARY NIMITZ
lam-
<
President Truman la expected
r
fuel.
Pistol Believed
may modify
Suicide Bandit s
a
‘ a
on
Fleet
Taking
More Arabs Die
From Bombs As
Riots Continue
with
li
soon
statement
<E
at
I
t.
S 1
WEATHER
TODAY
F
attitude
127
mm MOMay
I
A
9
ntsrw* J:. swmwrri; -
France Expels
More Russians
Four Big Juvenile
Problems Studied*
Agreed But Part
To Go To China
Two Injured As
Rus Strikes Car
On Dallas Drive
role
by i
but the stiffening attitude
It
and
into
self-
de-
of
with
1 of the
Is taken.
Is Found Here
A pistol believed to be the one
[SHOPPING DAYS
Ito chpistmas
THREE KILLED IN
ARMY PLANE CRASH
Quick Passage Seen
For Proposals Of
Joint Committee
i total
China
ra-
il
JERUSALEM. Dee 13
Jewiah warriors striking
bombs and machineguns killed 21
employe
difficult
•to of wheat. flour and other wheat
products in thte country aa a stock-
FORWARD
Denton is On the March
America’s Ideal
“Home-Town” City
Section One:
Sports
Society, Women's News
Section Two:
Editorial
SUNDAY
Mm U Crate
Par Copy
village
used
driven
A
1.000,
over
French Stockpiles L>w
PARIS. Dec 13 — uTi - The re-
cent strike wave reduced stockpiles
ao much that France will be orced
to appeal for more American In-
terim aid If Marshall Plan help Is
delayed beyond March 1. a govern-
mrnl »r* * InrMtvht
<
w
■ >i
■
H?
Associated Press Leased Wire THIRTY-TWO ^AGES
------------------------------,-------
Foreign Aid Compromise
Goes to House, Senate
C-47 CRASHES—At least twenty persons died in this crash of an Army C-47 plane
near the municipal airport in Memphis, Tenn. The plane was en route from El Paso,
Tex., to Maryland. The big plane appeared to be in trouble, witnesses said, and crashed
into a hillside, tearing tops off trees, and burned. (AP Wirephoto).
Christmas ContSSfcJ’age
Colleges
Churches
Amusements
Farm News
Business News
Classified Ada
All three are included in the Wol-
cott bill which is slated to go be-
fore the House Monday. These in-
[ elude extension of controls over
"Saw like a alaea, •*••• *»va."
Bara CTrlilwss Bella to yas.
I -with • tore toft, w toto
» - » - ----ra
TEXAS LAUGHS
By BOYCE HOUSE
I
I
By R J (Bob* EDWARDS
Where la he?-Matthew 3-2
A modern discovery of collected
teylngs of the Lord has this
Cleave the wood and thou shalt
iind me, lift the atone add there
am I. We find the Christ spirit in
daily service if performed in love.
WASHINGTON. Dec 13 — KPI —
One of the legendary figures of the
modern navy, Fleet Admiral Chest-
er W Nlmltz. will hand over the
I Navy s tup job to his successor on
| Monday and step to the sidelines
1 He will JM an adviser to the Sec-
retary ofNavy from his home
FfBt Coast while Admiral
Denfeld sits in the chair
IM of naval operations.
.—Jvtoited the White House to- I
day to *Ay goodbye to President.
Truman
He displayed a sliver cigarette
1'
i
U. S. WORKERS MUST
TEND TO KNITTING
WASHINGTON, Dec. 18—(PI
-Chairman Langer iR-ND*
today ordered the staff of the
Senate Oivll Service Commit-
tee to investigate reports that
government employees are
• knitting and reading newspa-
pers on the job.”
He said In a statement that
such reports "periodically
arise,” and added:
"Whenever some members of
Congress run low on subject
matters, they promptly rake
up old wives* tales x x x on
how little real work is being
done In the executive branch."
Langer said the inquiries wUl
extend into all regions of the
country, beginning tn New Eng-
land and New York State.
1 tioning Russia or Communism by
name
M. A House provision allowing
shipment of "Incentive goods" was
modified and retained.
Surplus Goods
5 Fruits, potatoes, tobacco and
other products which became sur-
plus tn thia country could be moved
under the relief program if the
Preaident approved.
6. Nations receiving aid would
be required to set up a fund of loc-
al currencies to the amount of the
aid. This fund would be used to aid
in economic recovery under super-
vision of the United States.
7. A House provision for a spe-
cial Senate-House .committee to
administration of the aid
n was eliminated as were a
all witnesses agreed was i
a failure of the home—and
haps to make parent! legally
aponslble.
The commission narn&l by Gov.
Beauford H Jester waa em-
powered by the 50th Legl lalure to
make a s**'<Jy of the entire nrob-
1
Denton Record-Chronicle
_________________________________________________________________________________ I - - - —-
DENTON, TEXAS, SUNDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 14, 1947
I
I
^dsy!—
.; kSE « rip
' B ’ ■ [ i|
on ths
Louis 1
of the <
Nitril
PARIS, Dec 13 —(Ab—The min-
istry of the Interior announced
tonight that "about 30" Russians
attached to the former Soviet re-
patriation mission were expelled
from France yesterday. Thia action
I
1. U07.000.000 (millions* "to the
celling on aid to the four coum
irtaa ••
3. President Truman to directed
*1 ll
* tfl
■
!
PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 13—(jB—A new knife that whirls al 800
miles an hour speed could slice you an invisible hsm sandwich just
four-millionths of an Inch thick.
It works somewhat like a delicatessen meat-slicer, but goee so
fast that the actual cutting may be done by a super-sonic shock
wave traveling ahead of the blade.
It spina faster than the speed of sound in air, and cuts so fine
you need a microscope to find the slivers of metal, bone, other ma-
terials it slices off It could snip a few cells off your fingertip with-
out any pain, taking fewer colls than you would lose by rubbing
your finger firmly on a table top.
The knife to an ultra-microtome for cutting extremely thin
sections of many different kinds of materials for examination of
their structure under the powerful eye of ths electron microscope.
Il was demonstrated and described today to the Electron
Microscope Society of America "by Harvey B. Merrill of Custom
Scientific Instruments. Arlington, N. J., the makers, and Ernest
F Fullam of the General Electric Co., Schenectady, N. Y., who has
been conducting experiments with It.
The blade, made of a special steel alloy, to an Inch long and
has a cutting edge as keen as a rasor blade.
Canada May Take
Conciliatory Role Top Naval Mail To
Of UN Council c» " A • 1 in 1
btep Aside Monday
immediately after the Japanese at-
tack on Pearl. Harbor, he directed
the painful buildup o( naval
strength and crashing victories
that smashed the Japanese dream |
of conquest. Nlmltz, calm and con-
tent, signed the surrender terms in
the name of the United Stales
aboard the Battleship Missouri In
Tokyo Bay
Bom in Fredericksburg. Texas.
—but
he
graduated
: <051
step
DENTON AND YICTNITY—Putty
cloudy and slightly warmer *b>
»ACT %xSSStotty MWiir
day Mto Monday w» atowfr ito-
I ■ t'
3 S
erlng tn tropic heat
The word trickled out that he col-
tA*1 — [ lected seashells for one of his
daughters ihe has three girls, one
soni and the beaches of the Pad-
Palestine Arabs—including several f|c got a going-over from devout
Two Negroes sustained minor in- ,
juries when their automobile was
struck by an intercity bus at the
intersection of the Dallas Drive
and Duncan Road about 3:35 p. m.
Friday.
Mr and Mrs A A Jones. Pilot
Point Negroes, were taken by
Schmits Funeral Home ambulances
to the Denton Hospital and Clinic
where they were treated for bruises
and later dismissed.
The car. an old model pickup
truck, was struck by the bus after
Jones had disregarded a stop sign
at the intersection. Patrolman Wy-
lie Barnes, investigating officer,
reported The bus was driven by
[James Kline, 54. of Sanger, driver
for the Dixie-Sunshine Trallways
bus system.
Kline and passengers on the bus
escaped injury I...
Two other accidents were report- i Jews peered at each other along
ed late Friday night on Highway | the muaxlea of their guns.
77 south of Denton and were in-
vestigated by State Highway Pa-
trolman H. P Berkley. However,
no Injuries were reported although
extensive damage was believed
sustained by automobiles Involved.
Berkley was not available Satur-
day for details of the accidents.
Names of persons involved were
not learned.
MS*-"-.
House Will Be
Lions Speaker
At Xmas Party
Boyce House, author of "I Give
You Texas'" and prominent Texas
folklore collector, will be the speak-
er at the annual Lions Club Christ-
mas party and ladies night to be
held at 7 p. m. Monday tn the Texas
State College for Women special
dining room.
Combined with the regular Lions
Christmas party will be the annual
club Christmas party for the chil-
dren of the Cumberland Presbyter-
ian Orphans Home with about 30
children expected for this year's
party.
Music for the program trill be
furnished by the "Dipey Doodlers,"
a group of North Texas State Col-
lege students. Lin Murphy Mar-
tin. program chairman, will be
master of ceremonies.
This year’s Christmas party is
the first in several years that has
not been held tn conjunction with
the other service clubs. About IM
persona are expected to attend.
Reservations were to have been
completed Saturday.
1
'f
r
exports and transportation, and
| legislative sanction for voluntary
I agreements among businessmen
limiting Inventories and authoriz-
ing priorities.
lem of delinquency, and particu-
larly of what is needed to improve
the state’s correctional Institu-
tions.
Today’s session, under the
chairmanship of Dean Leslie Jack-
son of the Baylor Unlveralty Law
School, was the commission's first
Insofar as developing Information
was concerned.
Appearing before it were Chair-
man Hall Logan of the Board of
Control; Board Member Tom De-
Berry: Ed Blair, superintendent of
the Training School for Boys at
Gatesville; Mrs. Pearl Chadwell,
superintendent of the School for
Girla at Gainesville; Mrs. I. W.
Rowan, superintendent of the new-
ly-established School for Negro
Girls at Bradv.
Jester told the comjntosion that
for many yean* in Texas there has
been a feeling "that we do not
have the right structure for handl-
ing juveniles.”
Members of the commission at
the sea-ion were Jackson. Dr. W.
H Elkins of San Angelo. Rev.
Walter Kerr of Austin; 8 L. Bell-
amy of Austin. Miss Rebecca
Townsend Lufkin. Mrs Raymond
Walter Kerr of Austin; 8. L Bel-
lamy of Austin, Mias Rebecca
Townsend. Lufkin. Mrs. Raymond.
Fonvilto of Houston. ■ |
WILLLAMBPORT. Pa., Doc. 13—
OPi-Three persons were reported
killed tonight in the crash of a
twin-engined Army airplane on a
farm a half-mile west of nearby
Howard.
Three others in the plane para-
chuted to safety.
M. W. Zimmerman, a Howard
photographer who reached the scans
of the accident five minutes after
the A-38 crashed in flames, said
Army offitoato were withholding
names of the dead.
Zimmerman aaid both ongtam of
the plane were afire before R
plummeted to earth.
“ Brand New Be^lx *m. free~to-
staBattoto. (Mtoby 8eV. 888 North
Loceet. .
Homer Bingham, who has been
a buyer and seller of fur hides
tor t „ ... ' ‘
was found with a few coon skunn
and possum hide* which .*• hnd
bought at the Trades Square
"They don't bring the money they
used to.” he said "Especially, the
coon hides are hardly worth fooling
with now. as they bring only fifty
cents each I recall the davt "'ter
World War I when coon hides
brought as high as »15 ’’
* the county, and, too. the
brought near that many
children to a morning
The drawings are being
and soon the names of the three
winners will be announced The
drawings proved that there is con-
siderable talent in the school kid-
dies over the county. J P. Har-
rison, manager of Theatre Row.
said, "we were highly gratified
with the response to this /irawlng
contest.”
J was
.-----------3 [facing charges of auto theft, bur-
whlch Senator glary and a possible murder charge
in connection with the shooting
June 7 of a taxicab driver in Okla-
homa City He had been a cab
driver in Oklahoma City and when
arreited here, gave an Oklahoma
City address as well as a Dallas
address.
The body is being held st the
Ooen Funeral Home pending ar-
rival of a brother today to com-
plete arrangements for burial.
were c— ■- —
necessary by the fact that e<i t,y the Communist party or by
FB
fg course the fact that the Madi-
son Square Garden promoters who
were putting on the fight didn’t
have Joe Walcott under contract
for hte future bouts -and they did
have Joe Louis — that didn't have
any effect on the way the officials
decided the fight — oh. no. Nor
that the big Broadway gamblers
didn't want to have to pay off on
those 13-to-l odds against Walcott.
It's pretty much like the cowboy
who started Into a gambling hall
and e friend aald, "Bill, that place
la brooked.” The cowboy aald, ”1
know — but it's the only one in
towp.”
,4 ....
Wall, anyway, now that the great-
eat problem confronting the nation
has been answered. "Who to Mias
Huah? ", we can get along with
Christmas shopping
And Uncle Zeb says things are
moving so font these days, a fel-
low has to run like hades Just to
«u*»
known as the Hre month.’ nut I
ho»e that Denton gets by without | umn
an* serious conflagration.’’
FRIDAY TKMPERAT'nUHh
Nigb •• *«••••«*«-»•««•••«•
taw
s*.
* ■ " tn
‘•We nad a nice trip.’’ said Eddie
Williams, who. with Wilburn Pear
Pon and Ray Dickson, have re-
turned from what proved to be |
fust deer hunting a few days in the
hill country. "We dldn t see a deer.
A nice piece of work was that
of the city force when they leveled
«Cf a part of the Trades Square
and cut down the unsightly weeds
on the lot and along the side-
walk and curb. The change makes
that part of feast Hickory much
conference was "hopelessly'’ dead-
locked.
But French and British sources
said they were willing for it to
continue for its effect on European
opinion tn that they would not take
the initiative to break It off.
A Soviet source said after Fri-
day’s meeting that it would be up |
to Marshall to end the meeting
as the Soviets would not take that
Actual supplies of food, fuel,
clothing and other supplies then
could start moving to Western Eu-
rope because the bill authorises
the Reconstruction Finance Cor-
poration to advance 8160,000,000
for this purpoet.
Vandenberg, spokesman for the
Senate-House conferees, said the
actual share that any of the four na-
tions receive will be determined
later by an appropriations bill.
, "Whatever China gets will have
to come off the otbeca,” Vanden-
Inch’ Is Groaner
WAYNESBURG. Pa Dec 13 —
— The eerie* noises htat have
been startling residents of nearby
Reese’s mills were tracked down
today and found to be originating
in the "Big Inch" pipeline Investi-
gators found the ghostly sounds re-
sulted from wind moaning through
check valves in a meter station
two big powers together.
The overall complexion of the
council is expected to change little
with the general views of Canada
and Argentina on major Interna-1
j tional issues roughly correspond |
ing to those of Australia
~ 1 The Ukraine will go
I the sure - vote - for ■ Russia col-
| umn Poland has balloted consist-
! ently with the Soviet Union on all
1 major issues in the familiar y to
2 votes.
Unconfirmed report,? from Buen-
os Aires said Dr Jos- Arco, chl-f
j rgentlne U N. delegate,
will retire from diplomatic
| Ice
Among those mentioned
that part of feast Hickory
more easy on the eyes. The Square
sees many people. automblles.
trucks and wagons there each
ttay, and it might be well for the
city to do more improvement
which would make tl5e place more
convenient for those who use It.
For Instances there is only one-
drlve-ln on Hickory, not very wide,
at that, and if more openings were
effected it would serve a useful j
purpose for the thousands of peo-
ple who come there to trade, to
buy or sell, or just visit with friends
from over the county. Borne plan of
mrking might be worked out
<rtiich would give more room than |
does the haphazard style of park- j
ing now
ment model Colt automatic, was
found on the Y Cafe periling tot.
818 South Locust St. R was nickel
plated, fitting the description of 18-
year-old Myrtle Sanders of Terrell
whom the gunman threatened when
he entered the home Tueeday night.
The clip magailrfe was also miss-
ing which coincided with the toss
of a loaded clip magasine late
Tuesday night when Ooroltt fled a
stolen car about two milus east of
Denton on the old McKinney road.
Corbitt had eaten breakfast at
the Y Cafe early Wednesday morn-
ing before he hitch-hiked a ride to
Lewisville where Denton city of-
ficers arrested him in a grocery
store He had eluded officers who
had engaged in an all-night search
for the bandit after hte abandoned
They pegged their program to the stolen car.
voluntary limitations on Industrial [ Corbitt, who said he waa 87 years
inventories and voluntary agree- an(j from Dallas, hanged hlm-
i ments to parcel out scarce com- geu with his necktie from the top
modities. bar of a bunk in a city jail cell
The Republicans called for an early Thursday night. He had been
Increase In production, a cut in charged with robbery with firearms
i government spending, reduction of for the Terrell robbery, and
by tumultous receptions and '-he public debt, and lower taxes |
• - In a statement r-*'1-1' c-r— •
Milllkin (Colo* said was approved
nation’s acclaim embar- unanimously by more than 35 GOP
raised hlft* and he repeatedlv cred- senators in a four-hour session, the
A most successful contest was
recently held by the Texas, The-
atre wtych brought around ’ ’
entries from school children
contest
school
matinee
graded
commanders, to weld a fighting,
team of sharply different personal- I
ities.
When he came back from the
Pacific for a two-year term as
Chief of Naval Oncratlons. he was j
met t; . ---■
wildly cheering crowds from coast
to coast.
The natlon’k acclaim embar- unanimously by more
-V*. • a_ i s- - .. j at s as ra ♦ t vs » f At 1 v-Vicx 11
I mil) t»l*U nr i psxr <» t cut » < I vas — i — —--------- — ------, —
ited the Pacific victory to the mil-1 Republicans pledged action during
1 lions of war workers and the fight- | the special session of Congress on
in? men,. three specific antl-irnlatlon pro-
Thou-h elevated to the Navy’s posals
top post, he never changed. An en-!
listed man on duty at an early hour
around Nimttz’s house wax offered ■
breakfast. He started for the kitch-
en, but Nlmltz sat him down at
his own table, and the five-starred
chief of naval operations and the I
man from the ranks ate their
scrambled eggs together. 1
“I can give you the facts
the building of the street, just east
of the Denton Laundry." said J. J. I
Maclachlan as I had it done
and paid for it myself The late
L. T Millican was the contractor
lor the street, curb and gutter on
fCL street by the laundry, C F..
Witherspoon and Dick Huffines
built and paid for the ”h Q-r t h
naif of the street. Finally, when I
the street flooded from water com-
ing down the hill, the city did put i
another layer on top that which
we three citizens had built ar.d
paid for ”
^>f
"I used to keep and kill hogs
each year, putting up all the meat
f»r the family." said Fayette Car-
lenter of Lake Dallas, "but I
haven’t killed hogs in a good
many years. Too, I used to keep
a cow, but when Mrs Carpenter
quit milking, well. I got rid of Uit
cow. Most of us fellows don’t work
like we used to."
LAKE SUCCESS. Dec 13 —(AV-
Canada is expected to assume a
conciliatory role in the new securi-
ty council lineup which finds Rus-
sia still in a two - nation minority ,
| with the big power veto as her [
1 only weapon to block the Western i
I powers, informed quarter* said [
‘ today.
The principal conciliatory
In the past has been taken
Frnac. t
of the French government toward I
the Kremlin may modify that [
policy here.
Secretary - General Trygve Lie
lias asked the Sovle Uhralne. Ar- I
gentlna and Canada, the countries case given him by his associates,
taking seats on the 11 - nation body it bore the names of Mr. Truman
Jan 1. to name their delegates, and several other officials,
and replies are expected shortly.
Poland, Australia and Brazil re-
tire from the council, whose two-
year record shows 22 Russian ve-
toes.
'1411 vxrunv* J • vv w, .----
but we had an enloyable time" | Among those mentioned is pos-
" ' * ‘ ! sible Canadian choices are Lesttr
B Pearson, under secretary of
I state in the department of ' ex-
a good many ye%rs in Denton, ternal affairs; Paul Martin, wel-
found with a few coon, skunk I fare minister; Gen McNaush-
’ | ton. the Canadian delega'e to the
u an r irun it
| Nlmitz wanted to be a soldier
finding West Point Jammed
Joined the Navy Tie
seventh in a class of 114 in
and a few years later started
long career in submarines.
He never forsook his love of "pig
boat*’’ and has predicted that the
capital ship of tomorrow’s Navy
may be a fast submarine firing
rockets with atomic warheads from
below the surface.
The Nlmltz that his men remem-
ber. though, to the snowy-haired
quiet man who seemed to spend,
most of his time inspecting the
forward fighting areas, and set up
headquarters on Own while (httb |
ere' bullets were still whining I
through the air: it was there fiat |
he adopted shorts as hi* official
garb, bringing that wecome hot
weather costume to officers swell- j t
Republicans Pul
Forth Program
To Cut Inflation
1 WASHINGTON, Dec 13— <#* —
Senate Republicans today put for-
; ward a 10-point anti-inflation pro-
gram geared to voluntary action
in combatting rising living costs,
but promised if this does not work
to consider authorizing government
| controls
I LONDON. Dec 13 —(AV-A “no
1 quarter’’ economic war between the
rl United States and the Soviet Union
■; for Europe appeared a certainty
tonight as Britain and France
looked to Secretary of State Mar-
shall to take any lead in ending
the deadlocked conference of for-
eign minister*.
Today’s meeting of the minister*
was postponed until Monday, on
Britain’s initiative, to allow tem-
pers time to cool after yesterday s
violent east-west blow up.
Molotov, who yesterday
basted the Western countries in
severe fashion, had luncheon with
Secretary Marshall this noon at the
home of Ambassador Lewis Doug-
las. An authoritative source said
Ihe luncheon waa "purely socisl’’
and kept deliberately so by the U
8 secretary of state. He *ald no
subjects connected with the confer-
ence were discussed. It had been
arranged early in the week before
i Friday’s blow up.
The majority of the French, Brit-
ish and American delegations "were
reported agreed that the Londm
While the American delegation
saw no hope of reaching agree-
ment. there were two schools of,
throught on ending the session. .. ,----
One group felt Marshall should; used by Tom CorbiU. bandit who
move to adjourn the meeting at committed suicide in the Denton
once to halt Molotov's use of city jail Thursday night, when be
the conference for propaganda ap- , robbed s
peals to the Germa n people An-| over 87,000 Tuesday night, was
; other group, laruelv certer diplo-, found by a Denton citizen Saturday
| mats, urged that the session be The gun, a .44 calibre ^govern-
, hurtled through to the end ci — c ‘ ■
agenda before atty action Is taken,
[ in order to avoid criticism that
i America had refused any last
chance for a settlement.
WASHINGTON, Dec. 13—
(AP)—A compromise ‘‘for-
eign aid act of 1947” emerged
from a Senate-House confer-
ence today authorizing the
full $597,000,000 asked by the
administration but allowing
China to share as demanded
by ths House-
The administration had asked
the 8687,000,000, for stop-Commu-
ntom aid for France, Bely apd Aus-
tria, pending consideration of the
long-range Marshall plan for Eu-
ropean recovery. The Senate went
along but the House cut
to 6680,000,000 and mark
in for a aha re.
The Senate and House bills then
went to the joint conference com-
mittees which drafted the com-
promise after a long session
It now goes back to 8eiyUr and
House, which are expected to ap-
prove it swiftly. Senator Vanden-
berg (R-Mlch), chalrtnan of the
Senate Foreign Relations Commit-
brought to approximately M the tee, expressed hope that both
number of Ruaaiana ejected since, chambers can act Monday, which
Nev. 36. | would send the bill to the White
The foreign ministry said tonight Hous*
in reply to a Soviet protest that1
the latest group should have left,t0 •**n Pro^pUy.
France Tuesday when 13 of the Actual supplies
1(1 members of the mission were put
aboard a train for Berlin and the
Soviet sone.
The expulsions began Nov. 35 {
when 18 Soviet cltisens were taken I
to the fronUer under guard for
allegedly mixing Into French af-
fairs during the wave of internal
unheaeal and strikes
Between then and last Tuesday.!
Dec » seven others were ordered
^X^mSb^oT^’^^Xlation^“• °“*"* ' *‘naen'
mission could not be found when * w-e-
u.°Tx^LC°mr*A* WeF* ”peUe<1 Major changes made in ironing
OharM d’Aftairaa Alex i °',t ®«*to-lfo4iee differences were
nrotlf£d ouUtoed to thia way by Vender-
andre Abramov protested tne
rest* in Marseflletand Parts of eight . ....
of the group of about 30 this mom- ;.
ing. But the Flench foreign office .Ha*1
flatly rejected the Soviet hole. | £. *
. ThL,8?’Wt .n0U ^.'to reteln at toaM“i‘80?OOo’(JOo“m^V
Immediate release and expressed1 - - - -
"profound indignation."
- T*L* ,FlX’?Ch ^r*Pl7. ' P11* or “carryover” on next July
“ “ “ ‘ 1 for domestic use. unless he de-
termines on March 1 next that this
to not necessary.
3. So-called “antl-Oommuntot'*
provisions Inserted by the House
were eliminated. One barred relief
for organisations embracing Com-
munism snd the other would have
cut off aid to any nation "domlnat-
watch f
program
number of Senate provisions that
would have required special label-
ing and identification of all goods.
Some Parts Of
State Get Snow
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Temperaturss dropped to near
freealng as far south as the Texas
Coast early Saturday and light
snow fell at Crystal City, in the
winter garden arsa.
The cold weather waa accom-
panied by heavy ratna. amounting
to more than an inch, along the
coast. West snd North Txas ware
fair.
Some snow fell at Austin and
Midland Saturday morning, al-
though it melted immediately, as
did the Crystal Ctty snow.
Slightly wanner weather was
forecast for West Texas Sunday
morning with lowest temparatursa
34 to 88 degrees tonight except la
the Del Rlo-Eagto Paas area. Gen-
erally fair weather was forecast.
AUSTIN. Tex Dec. 13 — (Ab —
Four basic problems bearing oh
Juvenile delinquency and its cor-
rection emerged from a mass of
testimony offered today as the
State Training School Code Com-
mission came to grips with the
Job assigned it by the Legislature.
They were, In essehce:
1. The need for more money In
operating the correctional Instltut-
tlons for Juveniles. to
trained workers on the
task of rehabilitation.
2. More complete individual psy-
chological studies of juveniles sent
to the Institutions, leading toward
more intelligent classification, seg-
regation. and training.
3. An open - minded
by the public in giving jobs and
otherwise accepting juveniles who
came out of the schools, to afford
them a chance to m«ke a sound
place for themselves in society.
4. Some method to pinch oft de-
linquency at its source — which
mostly
I per-
re-
the Pacific
women and children-and wounded ' sailors of all ranks
| A crackerjack horseshoe pitcher.
| Nimitz would take on — and beat—
I any officer or enlisted man who
| challenged him
[ The stories about his calm, his
1 kindliness of heart are legion
and i probably his most outstanding
characteristic as a leader his Inti-
[ mates say. was his ability to |
smooth our difference* amon« his
almost 100 in a series of attacks
I climaxed tonight by a battle east
I of Tel Aviv. Three Jews also were
killed
Streets In teeming sections
Jerusalem and Jaffa ran
the blood of Arabs killed
wounded in the bombings.
■ Arabs throughout ^Palestine
thirsted for revenge as Jewl'h
fighters retained ther Initiative In
the bitter communal fighting tor
the second straight day
An Associated Press tabulation
showed 223 persons have been
killed in the Holy Land in the 14
days of Arab Jewish fighting since
the United Nations General As-
sembly voted to partition Pale.-..
tine The toll for the entire Middle
East is 339
Hagana militiamen. wearing
[steel helmets and khaki uniforms,
stormed the village of Al Yahudl-
. outo—.. I ya. in Arab territory east of Tel,
atomic commission, and Wl.gress. | X ki]llng spvpn Argbs >nd
seriously wounding seven others in
the latest of a serious of Incident*
today.
A spokesman for Hagana
styled Jewish defense army,
scribed the operations as a reprisal
attack designed to ' w.p? o1 a
nest or brigands who attacked Tel
Aviv.” •
Arab sources at the
claimed the Jewish forces
mortars but finally were
off by the local Arab guard,
house in the village was blown up
Observers said Irgun Zval Leml.
Jewish extremist group, was re-
sponsible for bombing of an Arab
marketplace before Jerusalem's
ancient Damascus gate and the
blasting of a Jaffa coffeehouse in
which twelve- Arabs were killed.
Arab mob* promptly gathered In
the old section of Jerusalem and
appeared to be preparing for a
riotous march into the modern
section of the city after the Dam-
ascus gate bombing Nervous po-
lice fired over the heads of the
milling Araba and struggled with
leaders of the mobs.
Throughout the old walled city—
often called the holiest square mile
in the world—Britons. Arabs and
The personal hero of thousand*
of enlisted men. the 62-year-old
wartime Pacific commander
evoked almost violent loyalty from
sailors who pitched horseshoes
Speculation centers around En- with him. shared his breakfast and
rlque Coromlnas. deputy Argentine swapped Texan reminiscences
delegate: L. D. Wllgres*. former! Taking over the Pacific
Canadian minister to Bwit*eHand;
| and Adrei I Galagan, an adviser,
in the Ukrainian delegation.
j Sources here pointed to the Can-
! adian role of conciliation on such
general assembly issues as Pales-
tine and "war-mongering’’ In pre-
[ dieting she would move steadily
' to close the breach between the
U. S and Russia. Canada has
taken a similar part in the U N
Atomic Energy Commission.
, where Gen A. G L McNaughton
has constantly sought to bring the
"I hope that people will be even
more careful about fire bayards
during the holidays than usual."
aid Fire Marshall Eu- enc Coak
There will be more hazard* even !
s' the best. «o each home owner
should exercise every precaution
against against fire. December is Brazil
_
Economic War Of KNIFE. FASTER THAN SOUND,
‘No Quarter’ Seen cuts THINGS YOU CANT SEE
For U. S., Russia
No Move Made to Break
Deadlocked Conference
Of Foreign Ministers
"Inadmissible character, in the eyea
of the French government, of cer-
tain of the term*" of th* Soviet
note.
"The FYench govanmwnt ha* even
more right to oomplain." the note
added. "In that the Soviet nationals
In question war* not arrested but
expelled These expulsions
made i . ..
these persons should have left unlon soviet Socialist Re-
French territory Dec. 9 at the publica.” Instead » broad-
same time as Col. Filatov and the termed provision allows the Preal-
other member* of the Soviet rope- j dent to cut off aid without men-
triatlon mission "
The note said the Soviet nations
‘‘remained in France wtihout pay- .
ing the slightest heed" either to1
the French government's order for
them to leave or to the instruction*
of their own Russian government to
come home.
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 104, Ed. 1 Sunday, December 14, 1947, newspaper, December 14, 1947; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1315848/m1/1/: accessed June 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.