Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 285, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 11, 1950 Page: 4 of 10
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WASHINGTON
TODAYS
BIRTHDAY
By JANE EADS
Q s and A s
BROADWAY
By MARK BARRON
old
a
Out Our Way
By J. R. Williams
t -
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h.
Hi
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iyyeN TmPi > ac< too sCjt»
>1
Recording Actress' Rapid-Fire
Conversation Takes Lots Of Dots
first All-Star
Dream
GRANDPARENTS EXPECT
3RD CHILI) IN DECEMBER
OH. EXPLORATION PACE
HOLDING I P IN TEXAS
event
mark
theie ar* Job
Clawson says
*
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c.
Doing Pretty Good So bar
WEK'HiNG
CHANCES
ra
L *,*4^ I
*■ ■ * >
. -x-ts
A.’ for mu-
lt s Dixie-
theirs
research
The t.h“ory
in 300 B c
t wo
of
wa s
c a r r led
w as
a tele-
a Inch
It has
brand new
our music
la a good many year*
Unique School For Vi omen Charges
No Tuition, Has No Graduations
Q ’.Vila!
viclered io
the French
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it
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HOLLYWOOD, July 11— op> -
Etio Pinza. M and hi* wife Dor
ia ar* ex pectin* a third child in
December.
The celebrated Basso, her* for
hi* first movl* rol*. mad* th* dis
closure thia week. Only last Hentern-
closure thia week. Only last Befrtem
her Plnsa became a grandfather
when his daughter bv a previous
marriage. Claudia, gave birth to
a boy.
Binau and bis wife, the former
Doria I>e«k were married in No-
vember. 1940 Their two other chil
dren are Clella. * 12 and Peter.
•U.
I W
come to be
song and
on The Hit
Q Ate there at y states that still
observe Fast Dav’
A New Hampshire is the onlv
state to cling to the observance t f
Fast Dav ‘usually the last Thurs-
da\ in April' first proclaimed in
1681 when the governor of the
province ordered a day of public
fasting and prayer
s was dis-
slinultaneousjv bv
Talbot, two men
independent lv of e.*-h
However theirs was the
of
IS
conn- "Thanks for your wire I nevei
Charleston is the rage thought I'd wind up with such rich
again. . .you can't gn Into a club people Aa I told you in the men's
room, you are one of my favorite
comics. And that also goes for
th* ladies room where. Incidental-
ly, I would have been much hap-
pier. Groucho Marx.''
is genera llv < on-
the beginning of
Revolution?
Ihc ’efz.lng of the Bastille by
the people of Paris
and
themselves and
Were training
train one at that age But indu-
try wants secretaries much young-
er, so were training them. The
best housekeepers, however, are
mature women—a vigorous 50
To start with, the school Is teach-
ing three courses—executive house-
tfor hotel and hospital
commercial food prepara-
tion (restaurants, tea roc ms, etc >
and secretarial subjects. Teachers
are women direct from industry
Students learn by doing right in
the school where they live Those
studying housekeeping arrange for
graauation buying and preparing food for
other students
in fields where
openings ' Mis*
As time goes on
we hope to add many new courses
like commercial art. transportation
management and needlework "
' Mr Garfinckel especially want-
ed to help women suddenlv thrown
It's going on labor market through divorce or
15 students widowhood, or younger women or-
to 54 years al- phaned and deprived of parental
"Age limits are support, who were capable of work-
ing but without training, and who
"If an Industry wants a desperately need in income." Miss
Clawson said
CLARENCE BUDDINGTON
KELLAND born July 11. 1881.
at Dirtland. Mich . of "poor
but Republican parents," he
says Former publicity director
of the GOP National Commit-
tee. he made a fortune in fic-
tion and whs famous for his
"Mark Tlrid. ’ American Bov
stories
kEFP HINA V'\
TOO I ONt - - •
HE HA'S TO **.-»'
, GET TO HIS Vk? C.
\ art lesson; / >>>* t
■’k-v
RS MH
■ k
Q- When was photography rtlvov-
et e 1 ’
A In 1839 The proc*-
roicred almost
Daguerre and
w orking
other
culmination
mi' for centuries
know n to Eiu hd
Q Where was the
baseball game played
A This so-called Dream Game
began nt Chicago's Comiskev Park
in 1933
to bring in the informaton that her
next tour is going to be in c oils
boration with Dannv Kaye and thev
start out from Atlantic Citv Steel
Pier on July 2 I don't know where
thev will end up unless Miss Gibbs
and Kay* run out of breath and.
in both cases, that would seein im-
possible.
Sid Caesar, the comedian
wire to Groucho Marx the oth-
day complimenting that man
with the unlit cigar and almost im
posslble-to-see spectacles — the one*
that h» pelnts around hl* eyes
for a recent broadcast that Oro.i
, cho did. Caesar, who has been
playing in one affluent show aft-
er another on Broadway stages in
recent months. quickly got
gram back from Groucho
said
"Thanks for your w ire 1
WASHINGTON—The long-
time dream of a wealthy Washing-
ton merchant at last la coming
true. When Julius Garfinckel, own-
er of one of the capital'* swanki-
est store*, died 13 year* ago he
left *3.000,(XX) to found a unique keeping
school dedicated to bettering op- jobs';
portunities for "worthy women, un-
der the necessity of earning their
own livelihood.”
Named after his mother, the Han-
nah Harrison School of Industrial
Arts is a resident vocational school,
tuition free, with no
elate and no fixed length of train-
ing. "It's a school to train women
for jobs, get them jobs and to pro-
vide them with a home during
Ualnmg.” Mac August* H Claw-
son, director, told me.
Many delays, due to settlement
of the estate, war-time shortage*
and selection of proper land, halt-
ed setting-up of the school until a
couple of months ago
great guns now with
ranging from 17
rcadv enrolled "Age limits are
tho*e set by industry,” Miss Claw-
son say*,
woman secretary 75 years old, wed
Q Should the word D d'level be
capitalized1
A—Nouns derived from names of
persons usuallv start out bv being
capitalized, but in time thev lose
association with the person and
become simple lower-ease- nouns
Diesel is now being often written
with the small "d” and in the
course of time will lose the capital
"D" altogether
yTv>?W'l',’Ar‘
AUSTIN. July 11 .F The fast
pace of Oil exploration is holding
up in Texas
Drilling applications to date to-
tal 8.571 compared with 6.608 m
the same period of 1949 Oil well
completions so far in ’980 totalled
5 434 compared w ith 4 551 last year,
the railroad commission announc-
ed
Of the completed oil wells, 295
were wildcats
NEW YORK—42—That gal Geor-
gia Olbbs I* arguing again that
"the old things are the new things
and all you have to do Is have
patience so that, old songs,
style* and old dances will come
back into the height of fashion.
Just finished with a television show
she hurried out singing that oldie
"A-Razz-A M*-Taxz,” and said she
couldn't stop singing It because
she had just made a recording of
it.
About the current hits which are
in so many cases, refresher ar-
rangements of entertainment from
the 1820 '», Miss Gibbs, also known
as 'Her Nibs,' said that "It seems
like everything ’hat is old
new in 1950. All across the
try the Charleston is the
without running into it
sic . . . of course
land ”
Miss Gibb* talks like a house on
fire with no idea of being extin-
guished, so the only wiv she can
be correctly quoted is to use the
three dot system like this. and
make no attempt to quote a com
plete sentence "Seem* Ilk* any-
thing today, to be successful, must
be at least 20 years old and in
that period
almost a
a lot of
Parade
older.”
Georgia had to pause* for breath
at this point, so ft is a good time
7
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&
TumUv. July 11* IBM
THE NATION TODAY
dared there will ,fye
z
I W
A.nia
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ANALYZING THE NEWS
Russia Has Satellites
weap-
f?
fore** In th*
up
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Joint Chiefs Of Staff
Map Wartime Strategy
ing its own forces set
moves by th* Red bloc
c onsidei a
eq uipment
and planes
Lu
«Mk
*M
America
.1
il
z
-
' LOOKING BAtK
Denton Yestery ear
Doing Her*5 Dirty Work
By DEWITT MACKENZIE
AP Foreign Affairs Analyst
One of the most important aims of Servlet str*
tegy in furthering it* world revolution is to bleed
the Democracies economically with the hope of
thus rendering them vulnerable to Red attack
This crafty line “of thought long has permeated
A prime example of it was
That
long
Si
■
tf tfitre fo • big farm yield this year,
„ and trust there will be, we hope prices
Sr .
L-’
: i -'v* asB
Hightower adds that, depending c~
flghtlng goes, this development of a
mlstlc outlook about an
I
wisely de-
clared mere win ,r^e no slackening of aid
. to Western Europe a» result of U. S. com-
mitments in tiie Korean war.
Some members of Congress recently
dropped hints that since we must now
spend more in the Far East, we jterhaps
can spend less in Europe.
That’s something like removing fire-
fighting equipment from the western
half of a city because the last couple of
fires happened to occur in the eastern
half. ‘
JTha free world’s defenses against Rus-
"*■ sian communism must be world wide. Any
--•<ppr iiable reduction in strength any-
H?.' ^Aiitre would plainly embolden the Soviet
Union or its satellites to probe the soft
spot as was done in South Korea.
Naturally some of those who advocate
cutting down on aid to Europe are isola-
tionists who seize upon any excuse to jus-
tify "economy” on that continent. But
others are honestly concerned that it may
be Russian purpose to spread us thin on a
multitude of fronts, to bleed us. white
so we may be too weak ultimately to re-
sist.
The danger here is real. Yet we have no
. alternative but to take the risk. Anything
less than fully effective aid to the free
world’s trouble spots is probably worse
than no aid at all; it would give an illu-
sion of strength that doesn't exist.
There is evidence that even before the
Korean war we were not committing our-
selves heavily enough to the military de-
fense of Europe, that the sums already
voted by Congress or pending there are
not much more than tokens of our intent.
As for the Far East, the Korean war
itself is proof that our efforts to hold an
Asiatic line against advancing communism
were yroefuUy short of the effective mini-
mum. .
" The blunt truth is that the job is one
of tremendous proportions. We are slow
to get it through our heads that Russia
is a far greater menace to us than was
Hitler’s Germany at the full tide of its
power.
Up to now we have deluded ourselves
that this combat with the Russians could
lye conducted conveniently and comfort-
ablv. at no large sacrifice in our relative-
1” luxurious postwar pattern of living.
. Possible, however, the loss of American
*♦ li’ es in Korea will serve as n sharp and
necessar- corrective to our self-indulgence.
John Foster Dulles said the other day
that we must now be prepared for greater
s"rrifices. Having seen Russian intentions
nakedlv exposed in Korea, we should all
recognize the magnitude of our task. To
right means to spend billions more
■on all fronts. Almost inevitably that will
ftiesn higher taxes, and perhaps fewer
civilian goods available for our pleasure.
If we are unwilling to face this prospect,
then we are not truly ready to meet the
Soviet Union’s challenge.
No tyrant that ever stalked the earth
could match Russia as a peril to freedom
Ha3f-hesrted measures are not the
ons to destroy such peril.
FIVE YEARS AGO
United States and Great Britain take oxer Berlin
under Soviet rules snd It was announced that
all Soviet tegulatlqn* and orders would be con-
tinued In force "until specUl notice "
Maximum temperature yesterday. 72; minimum
69
Mr*. H. L. Stanley, 1821 West Hickory St . re-
reived word that her son. Tech 8gt H L. Stan-
ley, Jr., had arived In Fairbanks, Alaska
Don Faught, 616 Congress, Is visiting Mr. and
Mr*. Leon Faught In San Antonio.
J W. Roach. Route 2 Denton, wag admitted
Wednesday to the Denton Hospital as a medlral
patient.
k'i
If U
ili
_ itoriah and ^deatureA
| 3 w ^jgpiTON (Imj gaoow-cmoxMO-
— Ve Can’t Stop Reds With
lb‘
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Denton RecordChroxigi e
Cubilebed every afternoon (except Haturday) ano
Sunday by: Denton Publishing Co.. Inc. SIS ■
Hickory tit.
entered aa «*cono ciaa* man matur at tn* poatoltic*
et Denton. Texas. January 13 1821. according to Act
X CongrtM. March 3. 1878
Hl HSCKirilON HA I t* AM> INF1IKM A I ION
■ingle oopiew: Sc tor weexdaya; 10a tor Sunday.
City Carrier: 36c per week.
Sy mall In Denton and adjoining counties *1 so
per year; elx month*. 8S.00; thee* month* 82.35
on* month. 86c
Outetd* this county: 810 par yaar: ux months, e*i
three montha. 88.60 one month 81 38
TKLEPHONK 2000
Nurit-fc to run plhuc:
Kay erroneous reflection upon thn charseter. repu-
tation or standing ot any firm Indltiduai or corpt,
ration will be gladly corrected upon being called u
the publisher* attention
rhe pubilshera are not responsible tor Copy omis-
elons, typographical errors ot any unintentional
errors that occur other than to correct In nett isau*
after it is brought to their attention AU idrerttetna
order* ar* accepted on this basis only.
MBMM* OS' TNH ASHOt IAT*.O r*UI
Hm AsMxleted Frees le entitled excmeisaiv to tto»
MS* for republication of all the local new* printer
in this newspaper, as well as aU KP n*we dispatches
.
i-7 "*•
Bolshevist operation*
the Russian blockade of western Berlin
forced Aineilca and Britain to maintain a
and tremendously costly air-lift to provide the
city with necessities
And it's notable that Moscow carried out this
coup without expending much strength herself.
Now we have the Korean show, which is more
or less a piece of! the same cloth Russia has
two main objectives In backing Communist
North Korea s Invasion of non-Communlst South
Korea
These objectives are <1> to gain control of the
strategic
(2’ to
to
a billion dollar flow of arm* t ~
th* Middle East and Southeast Asia, while
to deal with any
Jr"..JftalffHearted Efforts
f • w ? * * * The government has wise
rs1rsw>rw4 i^Dt*a will Ra no ulurLpnint
TEN YEARS AGO
Le* Brady, former Denton reaident and now of
Harlingen, was her* Wednesday for a few hours
I believe I would have made at least eighty
bushels of oats per acre had the rains been
kinder, said Lee Lampkin of Ponder.
Bom; To Mr. and Mrs. V. C. Coulter. 116 East
Oak. Monday nl*ht. a girl; to ML and Mrs.
L. N. Edwards. 702 Bell, Wednesday evening at
the Denton Hospital, a girl.
L. F. Rowlrt. Jr., who is in Company D of th*
Sixth-Armies. Is here ftr a visit with his parent?,
Mr. And Mrs L. F. Rowlett, 617 South Elm.
Marriage license* were issued to: Wesley N
Martin and Minnie Ruth Russell; T L. Nash
and Vela Mae Crawf srd; Robt T Anderson and
Juanita-Ward.-
\ TWENTY YEARN AGO
Edith Lanier Ellison, small daughter of Dr
and Mrs. L. M Ellison, is recovering from a
broken arm at the family home
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Huggins of Brownwood sre
visiting their parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Hig-
gina, and Mr. and Mix. J p. Kerley
Mr.^and Mr* T. C. Eubank of Krum and
Mrs. Don Mathison of Odessa visited in Denton
Thursday.
Mrs. Anna Burgoon and her son. H. T Bur-
goon, ware in Dallas Thursday to see her nephew
Bitward Bushong, who la in a hospital there
I following a tonaU operation
I Jack_Oakl* is featured in “Th* Hoctai Lion”
iMflrjBMw*.
| - a.
By JAMES MARLOW
WASHINGTON, July 11---(APz— Four men—the
joint chiefs of staff -are the top military plan-
ners in this country.
It's their Job to figure out what the armed
forces of this country can, or can t, do or should
do in any given situation.
Back in 1947 Congress decided to put an end
to the old conflict between the Army, Navy and
Air Force.
While each was completely independent of the
other, they often worked at croaa purposes and
competed with each other for money to spend,
for equipment, and e.ven for men.
And their ideas on military planning went off
In opposite directions. If, somehow, they could
be brought together, Congress thought, this waste-
ful ooiifllct might be ended.
So in 1947 Congress passed ap act to "unify''
the aimed forces. Under this act the group
known as "the joint chiefs of staff" was created-
Its four members are: General Omar Bradley,
chairman; General J Lawton Collins, chief of
staff of the Army; Admiral Forrest Sherman,
chief of naval operations; and General Hoyt B.
Vandenberg, chief ot staff of the Air Force.
All four men have their offices in the Pentagon,
that massive home of the armed forces But
they don't meet every day, sitting around a
table, arguing eight hours a day.
They have no fixed schedule for meetings
They may get together once a week or twice a
week, or every day if there's a crisis, as there
was with Korea a week ago.
The reason they don't have to meet round-
the-clock is that thev have other people doing
the spade work for them This is then turned
over to them for final decision
Working for the JCS 1* a staff of about 200
officers from the Army, Navy and Air Force
This staff occupies a wing of the Pentagon and
it Is broken up this way:
1. Committees. There are several committees,
each specializing in a certain field Each com-
mittee has three members—one from each of
three branches of the service, Almost always
these committee members are generals and
admirals. For example: there's a commute*
on strategy, another on Intelligence or military
information, and so on.
2 Each committee In turn has the help of a
"group." A group is made up ot Army, Navy
and Air Force officers, part of the 200-man
staff which works for the JCS.
And the way the job is done goes like this:
Say it's necessary- to figure out how we should
fightr a war with Russia, if that becomes neces-
sary. Should the U. 8.- try to attack from the
Arctic, through Western Europe, or from
or perhaps from all three directions?
The group on strategy will tackle this, calling
on the other groups for help, such as on military
Intelligence or information
Hie strategy group will have to
million details’ weather, clothing,
transportation, the number of men
and ships needed, whether long-range bombing
or land attack is best__________ ____
entire Korean peninsula because of its
value In possible future operations, and
compel America and other Western Allie*
spread themselves and ■ to expend economic
strength in defending the South Korean republic
Again w* note that while Russia has trained
the North Korean armies, and has provided
many sinew* of war, the Soviet itself hasn't be
come directly Involved As usual she is using
one of her satellite* to do the heavy work for her
—under expert Russian military guidance, of
course.
Evidence that Russia again has been crafty
I* seen in the reaction by th* western powers
John M Hightower, AP diplomatic expert tn
Washington, reports that administration offcals
are beginning to regard the Korean
long, difficult and costly struggle for
t on how the
,------- 5 less opti-
earlv end to the war
apparently mean* a steady build-up of American
•_ wgr lone—increasing require-
ment* for money? men and munitions. Fdrther-
8 i» faced with the need to keep
to Western Europe,
— .....-.......J keep-
new
ar* told about it.
■
Wa atiH don't understand why so many
Belt-made men inaka themselves so dog-
|i ronafat
t
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lor City Alder men
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21 Infinite
duration
(•Hill 4
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7
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24 Entrapped
33 Lent
35 Sewing
implement
36 Coalesce
38 Deteriorate*
40 Glided
41 Chemical
suffix
42 Opportune
45 United
46 Pronoun
49 Musical
syllable
SOThat thing j
52 Railroad (sb) •!
53 Within |
HORIZONTAL
1.6 Depicted
U.S. preudent
13 Rugged
mountain
spurs
14 Sympathetic
15 Oriental
measure
16 Vaporized
water
18 Steamship
(ab )
19 Domestic sla\ e
22 Dine
23 Flesh food
25 Encounter
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CHYAiQUE AND F«AY45vjj LC^k^'}
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Second Infantry Division* Veteran
Of Two Wars, Readies For Korea
[QTy. IBLA!N| |Oit
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Independence,
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the comply
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VERTICAL
1 Seraglio
2 Ascended
3 French Island
4 Right (ab )
5 Affirmance
reply
6 Conjunction
7 Strong drink
8 Interjection
9 Parent
10 Handled
11 Bird?' horn**
13 Female saint
(ab )
17 Babylonian
deity
29 7nte“restZ'(• b ) ™ Umwceuary
27 Born
28 Compa'» point
29 Physician
(ab )
30 Symbol for
stannum
31 Lower Nil*
(ab.)
32 On account
(ab )
33 Hawaiian
garland
34 Footed v*se
36 Greatest
quantity
37 Submerged
ildge of sand
39 Facile
40 Soak up
43 Notion
44 Registered
nurse (ab.)
45 Palm leaves
47 Th* gods
48 Bivalent
chromosomes
51 Vibrate
54 Redacted
55 Sea eagles
tough now I
s nnil v
jhi iked i
Bo i tie i
fortunes of
decree that they
Trim-
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letter frl
408 Oakwol
daughter J
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a: I.st ■> mo*
in niaiij ill
nounced Lil
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u- and a
oldest boy
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Tun and I
f TO DROP
THE OX-Y9KF
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STATE OF
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solemnly s
the best of
UW.MMUUmuUC-lJJUH
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Vli and
Silverton, n
e- a c isil d
Chestei si
Tlie\ arc tn
land and I
a pioneers
t(i::al nril
11:.-f dru|;-l
her paten
the fir'd st
years ago
stoics that
day He h
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fhnilliees
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'fell m lod
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engage<l ini
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a Negro preai her
Democrat'll ba lb t
for city aiderman
lAMERICANir
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195(1. pursi
in act ord*
t agaii.
veteran sergeant
by his fn l
George 14
to show (I
Aloha f-'estl
odist ChurJ
i* a very I
the founda
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ago. and 11
has a tins
Hires when
Mrs Ripla
Mis Geor
Sy i a more
a trip to sl
t: i|>a they I
t . well all
NeRVEG CRY OUT FOR.
REHABlLITATlOM*——
DO YOU CHAPS HA\I&
Any VACATION iDCAfc ,
—-A 6POT VdHERG
RE AT AND ANOTHER X
mature would knit )
? AVY RAVELED
•STRENGTH.?
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Thev have a pride of
arm*, tradition of perfor.nr.r.ce m
battle a morale tn bel'U. tiiat
measure our military strength as
a nation
It is true that they mav be sent
to the Pacific Are* a* oc- ipr.tion
troops in Japan to replace the 24‘b
Infantry Division units summoned
already to Korea That could be
temporary or permanent, as the
needs of the situation develop But
I am sure that general MacArthur
will be less lonely tn ha. e them
under his command For the tradi-
tion that this unit has is wha’
top commanders like to re!'.' on
when the cards are down, the
die is cast
They want to have under them
because
man. the federal Judge held. Nom-
ination of a Democratic equal’
15.1'00 election in this stale on the fringe
men in the division marched wi’h "f tbe South
it through Fr ance and German - R G M Daniel comimttee i I.alt
Rut thev are * hard solid i ore of man said the commit’ee uoub.
trained men to paa» on to the comply with Judge Trimble* or-
youngsters the second
lOVJtR THAN A "'-J
MOLE'S BRAKE£>'A
I HAVE TO ROLI V
r UP MV SLEEVES W
> TO STRIKE,
. A MATCH.' )
By HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK—dB—The guy who
wears a badge that looka like the
other sldex ot a buffalo nickel is
going oversea* again- ready to
light for America.
He s done it before, he's ready
now and he’ll do it anytime he s
called on.
Who is he? He's the guy with the
Indlanhead patch on his ahoulder
the GI Joes who have worn this
emblem of the Second Infantry
Division proudly and with great
combat success In two World Wars
It's a famous division Everyone
In the Army knows It—and knows
ns record. It has been alerted at
Ils Fort Lewis, Wash , base to get
ready to go to the Far East.
And this news today must send
a thrill of warm memory through
tens ot thousands of Americans of
two generations Some who served
with the second infantry at the
Argonne in 1918 had gons who
went with it from the hedgerows
|of Normandy to the River Elbe
between 1944 and 1945
1 don't know who posed for the
profile Indian view of their em-
bleni—Sitting Bull, Crazv Horse
Geronimo, or a tired old buck from
a dreary reservation in upper New
York Slate
But this I know about tile second
infantry division from a long ac-
quaintance — a year in wartime
equals a lifetime of peace, and
just a bit more—and that is this
The wearers of the Indianhead
patch are an emergency outfit
Like their shoulder-to-shoulclei tern-
rades in Europe, the equally fa-
mous ' fighting first' infantry di
vision, thev are an old-Uae regular
Army outfit. On their performance
depends the professional reputation
of the professional American Army
They are used to delive.mg in
emeigencies
We n et
s111 t-1 Ma
\\ 111: .i: 11 F
'■ n-'-rnn
i Ian at A a
here !■ r tq
kuis annou
tbe Arthur
Hie R B
< .s; over 1
The. d.di.'t
un day and
Maj Gen a
LITTT.E |0CK
The name of i
will be on the
ax a candidate I
tn Little Rock
Federal Judge Thomas C
ble ordered the county
t.uatlc committee to phu e the t(
name of the Rev .1 H Ga'-
lin on the ballot for the .Tuly\25
piimary. The order set a precedent
for Arkansas
The committee previously
ruled against Gatlin.
Gatlin (ould not be refused »
i hance to win the niinmation sole-
a division that has proved itself ly because he Is not n white
before in battle Wouldn t you. if
you were going to bow a big huh”
Only 8? of the present
tradition of standing firm •
of trouble
If they do meet tlie test
I can imagine a v.,
telling a boy swept
fear of death
"You think it's
Just about five
months ago we wee
tlie German-Belgian
looked out nt a
day and damned U it (Him I s' • •
like they were throwing the vv b
Nazi Army against us
“We were on the Northern she .
der helping piotect Lievie our b. :
supply dump And if Riev'd w t
through u.s the war would have
gone on some longer They hit i.s
with every damned thing they could
think of—tanks, and artillery an I
infantry and even spies weaiin,;
our uniforms and I idlng in capiui
ed Ainerii a’i jeeps You couldn t
even tell a buddy from an enemy
-for sure
"But we held them
get through. It went
night. The old man Maj Gen
Walter M Robertson, he's ietired
now <alled up the cooks and the
truck drivers Hell, we knocked o .t
German tanks by settm,; lire to
gasoline cans and dropping 'em on
them from command headquai
ters
"But. dumnnt. we uidn t let them
through. They didn't get bv
Tlie mam thing now about the In-
(hailhead Division is I don t be-
lieve even the U, S Marines w: 1
find anything to object about i's
battle ability It 'the
war should ever
light, side by side
1 Commo
3 Surplus
4 Undlide
« Domain
a nr
7 Tune d
and
8 Public
poll
1! Totsl al
I
SMIMMMHMK
--
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 285, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 11, 1950, newspaper, July 11, 1950; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1315870/m1/4/: accessed June 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.