Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 9, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 22, 1950 Page: 4 of 10
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1
BOYLE'S NOTEBOOK
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How Does It Feel To Be A War
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lurmfay, Aug 21
THE NATION TODAY
Desk (kill
Career G
In
By JAMES MARLOW
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Pink, lih
HOLLYWOOD
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Yea/i, But
THE LITERARY GUIDEPOST
Q’s and A s
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ROGERS
By W
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my
died
WET WAS
City of
em
ployer must pay a tax
515 Moun
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Quizmaster
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money
I
43 Medical *uffi«
45 Siouan Indian
Bv MARK BARRON
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Out Our Way
By J. R. Williams
tai and Clinic. Tuesday morning.
the
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Social Security Plan
Improvements Made
by
$4 '
they have brought
their fatherland a
315 TO GET DEGREES
AT TEXAS CHRISTIAN
raiBLKOUCJIBU
nyuyuunm
IWld
MEMBER OF THK ASSOCIATED PKgSS
The Aaxxlated. Brew la entitled •xciuMteiy to the
uae for republication of all th* local new* printed
la tala newapaper. aa ved ae all AP aeaa aaptkMt
10 Solar duk
11 Twined
16 Comfort
18 Symbol for
erbium
(3 Drew
peasant
VERTICAL
1 Nilotic Negro
Answer to Previous Puzzle
fwiflSiVl
"Y
312 Morri
Hol-
had
was
tor
36 Church
officials
37 Invulnerable
40 Support
41 Native of
Media
■The
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1 lent
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5J
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.__________________________________________________________________
1
A
and
ES
__I 1 1 72
With Major Iloopls
Denton Yestery ear
wi
Dressing t
Ing is, loi i
si rumble lot
they re,< < t
in...sing lien'
xomew here
m i
TELKPHONB 2090
NOTUK TO THS FttMUICi
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, repu-
tation or standing ot any firm. Individual or corpo-
ration will be gladly corrected upon being called to
the publishers' attention.
The publishers are not responsible tor copy omis-
sions, typographical errors or any unintentional
errors that occur other than to correct in neat issue
after it ta brought to their attention All advertising
orders are accepted on this basts only.
<<4
ATE
You Can t Move Lips Very Much
When Speaking In Turkish Films
Old Jack Benny Films Are Being
Dusted Off For Television Shows
Q Do fish vary as to the number
of their fins?
A—Yes. there may be two pairs,
or even three pairs, on the lower
half of the bodv and In addition
there are single flna on the back
and tall Most fish have six. seven,
or eight fins
HORIZONTAL 59 Philippine
1.4 Depicted
radio
quizmaster
8 Wound with a J He u heard
----the air
waves
3 Implore
4 Craftsman
5 Skills
6 Pronoun
7 Cabbage typt
8 Spots
WELL COMPLETIONS SET
FASTER PACE IN TEXAS
MAN. 83. IS GROWING
THIRD SEI OF TEETH
the inhuman futility of much of the
. these take
place before a background of the
rise of Hitler and the recognition,
In high places, that he offera a
chance which it waa feared had
been lost
The canvas la large, the strokes
perhaps too broad.
Y Aug
man
1 to
aw
All
I 1>
w
Denton Record-Chronicle
Fubilabed every afternoon (except Aaturdar) ___
8uu<iay by: Denton Publishing Co„ lae. 114 *
Hickory 8L
Entered •« second else* mail trailer at the pos toff Ice
et Denton. Texas. January 13 1921. according to Act
of Congress. March 3. 1U79.
We ore
but any
or nigh
are if y
First
^2
C^ditorials an J ^Jeahirci
/htf •■KTON (TtaJ KBOOKO-CBBONKXB-_________________________Tuesday, Aug. Kt, 1950
Jewell
HRI — F.1
22 -
w ho sa i s
a dentist
set
MSI
l-JIBl JK3MI
I IWMHI II
l-JMCH J
uftino
■■ak]
a&Mk]
UMiriii
L-JOM1
RIWAHI
IJLII----
! r R I G I
• . *—
KOREA— JTl —ThU u how
feeU to be
grandpappy. .
most frustrated
>7^
said
?i\i' in
1 t>f>e t.s I
bat
Hl oukl' tl
t lieu
1'111 u oln i
it !.’■« that
aiiould be
ship with
locations and
forthcommg
•ie. 'Jfi
form ‘r resident of Lebanon,
and Sun Diego, Cal is one
the most cosmopolitan figures
i could encounter
roN'T'jbu
rVEA lptof^w
To DO ON Ito
TEN TEAM AGO
Th* “Wfty Year Ago Column of the Dallas
Newg: A. B. Minnerly and 8 H. Nichol* opened
• •Iwtjf debate at Denton on whether or not the
«ire. w. u. ixifnana. Route I Denton, was ad-
’DiW*! •• » medical patient to the Denton Hosp!-
*aa1 /Nil mA* ___
Q—How long has the
hew York had subways?
A--Excavation for the first sub-
way was made on March 24, 1900,
It became operative on Oct 27.
1904
‘ Ki* ■
-mweyi ;i=.
soul poaadraes Inherent immorality.
Mias Frances Wilkerson of Spring Hill is vlait-
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Ray Boozier at Argyle
Bom: To Mr. and Mrs Nelson Pockrus of
Argyle. Wednesday night, a boy; to Mr t nd Mrs
W. L. Mercer. 115 Center Street, Tuesday, a boy
Dr. Jack Skiles and hla Mater, Dr. Lena
Skilea, will lee ve Friday for Washington. D C.
where he will attend the National Veterinary
Medical Aaaociatlon convention.
I, Mission!
Accomplished
7 R V, ILL >*|»*S
• In Purls a
my table and
light two
ISLBM RIFT1UN RATER A.SP INFORMATION
Rtngla copies; be for weekdays: lOe toe Sunday.
City Carrier: 2be per week
By mail in Denton and adjoining counties t? .*>0
per year; six months, esixj. three months. 92.23.
one month. 85c.
Outside thia county: 910 per yeer; six moutlu. ee.
three months. 93.50. one month. 91 25.
Q What are the age limit* for
admission to West Point?
A—Candidates are eligible for
admission from the day they are
17 (or 19 If from the Regular Army
or from the National Guardi until
the day they become 22 years of
age Veterans of World War II are
eligible until the dav they become
24 years of age
TWENTY TEAM AGO
i -Bitay" McCray of Denton qualified for the
first fight in the Olen Garden Country Club
XnvltaUon Tournament at Fort Worth with a 78
•eort. .
F»t HamilUn to Rejourning in Michigan and
',mb« RMMdBteut A poetcard ■bowing a sixteen
point 4Mr banging from a camp pole
Danton /lid not quite make the 10,000 class,
though there la a poaaihiUty that a few people
were nieeed.
Mn. V. W. Shepard. Mies Vic Harwell and Miss
Nona Mae Shepard left Thursday morning for a
viail tn Went TMaa with an aunt
. Mr. and Mra. Henry Jtoaa of Krum were In
tap,
O[ |M
ulrtl;
/(gl
IS
— .
VJAMT6 MORE X
ACTION! TOQiGlVr, )
I'LL TAkETM/vr /
6OLDEM WZNC.H ME )
' j USE*, RIGHT
\OUT OF
> Ml<5
( HAIR
r
‘Progressive’ Teaching
Missing Fundamentals?
• Moat Americans—whether in Denton,
Texas, Duluth, Minn., or Dover, Delaware,
—take a great deal of pride in the rapid
strides that their public schools have
made. With much justification, they point
with pride to their modern buildings and
their improved techniques jn teaching.
But in getting away from the “Little
Red Schoolhouse," there is the possibility
that along the way a few educational
fundamentals might be losing ground.
One Indiana newspaper editor writing in
the Hoosier State Press Association Bulle-
tin believes that the "Three R’s" are
among the fundamentals that have been
squeezed out In the curriculum of today’s
public schools. Here, in part, is his com-
ment:
"Several weeks ago 1 hired a young man
as a reporter and I never found a more
willing worker. He is the most energetic
chap I have run across in many a year
and is most anxious to get ahead. But he
is also giving me the worst headache 1
have ever had because his spelling, his
English and his grammar are terrible.
"If there is one thing I cannot stand
in my newspaper it is bad grammar. So,
the day 1 read that ‘he couldn’t see noth-
ing from where he sit,’ I gave the staff
a rough time of it. But the editor and
the oldtimers in the news room explained
that the young fellow just added to^the
etaff makes so many mistakes it is im-
possible to catch all of them. So, I called
the chap in for a talk and reminded him
that he was giving his journalism alma
mater pretty much of a black eye, espe-
cially since he had come to us so highly
recommended by the head of the journal-
ism department from which he had been
graduated. He explained that the course
in journalism could not 1* blamed as he
had been having trouble with grammar
ever since he entered high school.
“'How did thia happen?’ I asked the
young man. ‘Well,’ he answered, ‘1 think
we were given too much visual and
phonetic education in the grades. They
didn’t teach us the ABC’s as you learned
them. We had to learn by the sound
method. As a matter of fact, it was some
time before I knew there were just 26
letters in the alphabet. When we learned
how to spell cat, it was by looking at the
picture of a cat and under it were printed
the three letters, c-a-t. So after that we
were supposed to know the combination of
those letters meant a cat.’
“A few weeks later I told that story to
a college professor who verified every-
thing the young man had told me. ‘We
have to take them as they come to us,’
he said, ‘and it is no easy job to undo in
four years the mistakes during the first
eight years, which are the most impres-
h transport With
above us.
Now, a urandfather
permitted to board a
proper dignity and decorum. But
my colleagues below me were shout-
ing tor me to hurry up. Topside
a tough lieutenant was screaming tai look
that correspondent* would not be tent floor,
allowed to board the ship
I don't know the rules on what
HAG OP
| WEST
iVIRGINIA|g
w
35 Click beetle
26 Female sheep 44 Scoria
27 Fodder vat
29 "Emerald Isle" 46 Unfettered
30 Prohibitionists 47 Notion
48 Capital of
Norway
50 Cooking
utensil
52 Seme
55 Lines (sb )
is
file Dead Stay Young Is Grim
Storv Of Germany Between Wars
tor
man
: clu
rin
a
else
lont'ige m a iv
t .me, iet'ling as
i ,m an obstacle
131is does not
cati' a lack of <
pi arance, but rat
a lack of organlz
find it difficult
details that ket
ainooth working
set up .some .sol
A desk calendt
Is used in offices
Mien an effielec
flight us each ga
its condition sh
to
The first is
l.s a man in this unl-
the name of George -
says tins' and "George
that". . the second fact is
that this attractive young lady who
is a
HI .
of I
you
In the last two years Miss Shep-
ard has traveled more than 100.- I
000 miles on a c mnniting bkslx movement
while she was making pictures in
Hollywood. Italy and Turkey.
knife
12 Hail!
13 Scope
14 Carry (coll )
15 Ruler
17 Heavy
19 Symbol for
iridium
20 Paid notices in H Buihy clump
newxpspers
21 Assam
silkworm
22 Symbol for
niton
23 Bohemian
community
24 Compass point
26 Italian city »
28 Winter vehicle
31 Humor
32 Ventilate
33 Yale
34 Attempt
35 Painful
37 Observes
38 Hebrew deity
39 Measure of
area
40 Afternoon
(ab.)
42 Roman god of
underworld
45 Removed
47 Type of
butterfly
49 Abrogate
51 Tendencies
53 Smell
54Centuiy plant
56 Lamprey
57 Fondles
58 Mirth
Our Boarding Houhb
Correspondent And Pappy. Too?
By DON WHITEHEAD
'For Hal Bay let
who work regularly
owners1, and people working for non-pt oflt
ganlzations
(They can't get in though, until Jan 1. 1951.
and therefore won't have to pay any tax until
then >
2 Public assistance
Under this needy old people over 65 git
help. So do blind people in need So do children
who have been deprived of parental care or sup-
port
< Help for the ncedv aged lemains unchanged
But the law will let more needy blind people git
assistance The government will spend more
money on the oiphaned children part of the
program And assistance now will be given to u
brand new group: totally disable people under
65, If they need it
(None of the people getting "public assistaixe"
have had to pay any tax for It. The federal gov-
ernment and the states share the expense The
government's part Comes out of Its general fund
Money collected from all sources by tax. but not
the social security tax
i On public assistance the government has been
spending about 1.012.000.000 a year. It will add
anothet $140,000,000 to that $75,000,000 more on
the orphaned children part. $65,000,000 additional
for the totally disabled >
3 Children's services.
Under this the government make* grants to
the states for the health and wellare of children
and mothers, and to aid crippled children None
of this money goes to individuals It's spent on
health services It, too, comes from the govern-
ment's general fund...
(Until now the government has been spending
about 122,000.000 e year on this The amount
will be Increased to $42.000.000.000.i
4 Unemployment insurance.
Under this an employer of eight or more people
who work for him 20 or more weeks a year must
pay a tax on his payroll. Generally, this tax
runs less than 2 per cent. The tax money, collect-
ed by the statee, goes into a special fund, kept
by the government for the states.
When a worker in a job covered by this law
lose* the job, his state dip* into the fund to give
him soma pay every week—the amount varies
by states—Uli he can find new employment
(The only changes in this are the way
fund is to be administrated.)
benefits. This applies only to such
workers now living. It is not retroactive for the
survivors or such workers who died before
Sept. 1 >
In any covered job the worker and his
1 1-2 per cent each on
the first $3,000 of the worker’s yearly earnings
This money goes into a special fund
Starting Jan 1. 1951. the tax will be on the
first 93.600 earnings. The tax Itself is scheduled
to go up. but not till 1954, and then to rise grad-
ually to 1970 Bv that time the boss and worker
each will be paling a tax of 3 1-4 per cent on the
first $3,600 of the worker's earnings, or a total tax
of 6 1-2 per cent >
Until now a covered job has been, generally,
any Job in commerce or industry. For example:
A clerk in a candy store or a miner in a coal pit
was in a covered job. There have been about
85,000,000 such Jobs.
(Now another 10 000,000 have been added to
throw open the social security benefits to people
who had been excluded from them by law. people
like domestic servant* the «elf-employed, people/
on Jarms i (but nut farr~'
teeth
W ' am Schweitzer of Perch Riv-
said he had only four of his
second set of teeth left when he
first retired the third set edging
through
Schw eitzer « daughter, Mrs Marv
y B, Phillips, said father is un-
comfortable. but pleased about the
whole thing "
egr
WATERTOWN N
Av An 83-year-old i
he never has been
claims he's growing ills third
.__...
Italian or one
languages in which we
of the pictures, my lips on the screen
would appear to be speaking the
a1 'ntic language "
Among her long log of travels
Italy to Turkey for several weeks,
player to shPi was making picture In Is-
stu- tanbul and in Rome she was play-
ing the Billie Dawn role in "Born
child reaches 18
like the widow of
widow of a
pension at 65.
(All payments under this survivors part of the
program have been increased for all receiving
them, now or m the future. The Micreaee Marts
Sept 1. too >
'Under the pewly-changed program many old
workers—who hadn’t been long enough in a cover-
ed job under the old program to get a pension—
will now be able to get a pension and oilier O. A.
and 8 I
still follow -
woman camo
a kid mv if
ilcarrls at the
aionable in a youngster's life.’
“Which reminded me that I had one
time l>een rather critical of journalism
•chooU. It occur* to mo now that 1 am
partly to blame for the bad spelling and
th« poor grammar of the young man who
is still on the staff, and I believe he will
make good in spite of his poor beginning.
I have lieen one of the l>est boosters our
schools have, but I realize now that most
of my boosting has been in singing the
praises of the high school basketball teams
and the feats of the other high school
activities.
“I have never once looked into what is
going on In the grade schools to determine
whether the kids were getting a good,
sound educational background. Naturallv,
if they get goofy stuff then, they will
probably have goofy ideas when they get
a job. Relieve me, this is a lesson. From
here on, I am giving more attention to
what is going on in thosn first eight
grades.”
....... -
about a rii-
o» n tir.ht g«m»
between the Phillies and the Brook-
lyn Dodgers This corporal was
a Phillies man him,self
"There It was,"
Pliils leading fix
last of the ninth a
The Burns si tie
were two out and two
runners mi tmsi' Ami
damned radio (puns
the Marines it I don’t find
m Korea and 1 was ended."
among the group of correspondents
who met their
NEW YORK i.e Five min-
utes after you meet actress Elaine
Shepard, you have to accustom
yourself to two facts
that there l.s a man
verse bv the name
"George says this
says that" the second
Welch h.n
m\ own
in ' F.u.i v
opens with q
in cuta-
Aug 22—-
University win
at summer
M< nday, the
announced this
EGAD.KLONDIKE.* WE'VE RECOVEREDI WOM AROut
TtAE *650 FROM 6TE/AM8OAT AU ♦k$oO| AMD |R /
SAM,PLUS INTEREST.' MEH-UEH* 5AW\ REALLY <
\ YOUR THUMB IS AS SLICK AS ^**--*» ■-•* ---------
’ A GREASED CHANNEL 6W1MMF..R '
I EVEN AAY OWN GlAALE-T EYE f
X. WAS RAFFLED BY MX_>R /
? SPOOKY DEAL IMG 7 )
Q—Why do sailors, when calling
to another ship, alwavs call out.
"Ahoy">
A—Although it Is traditional
now "Ahoy" was originally the
battle cry of the Vikings
fort worth
Texas Christian
confer 315 degrees
commencement next
registrars office
week
77re class will include 108 candi-
dates for niaste:'• degrees the
largest number of such degrees
ever conferred by TCU.
Adde to the .‘>84 degrees confer-
red In June, next weeks class
will bring TCU s total of 1950 grad-
uates U) the largest in historv
/ MOD FOOL / ALL
---- ------I 7 T>f HOBOED SMELL
/XEMSE THAN IT AK) ART JLMAPIKT
■fo FRY \ \ OFF/ DNJO THAT ,
iftAIM VSMEUL ’
Barbara
to Italy,
help him
on his
there shoot everything In sl'ent
film. Then they dub in sound tracks
to carry tne dialogue They have
to jo this because the players
they uae at that crossroads of the
world speak English, French, Tur-
kish. Arabic and a dozen other
language’ So the onlv solution is
to dub in the dialogue after the
film is completed
"We would shoot the pictures in
sound of our several native
tongues, but we had a problem
with that While I would speak my
dialogue in English, I would have
to ’gargle’ or 'swallow' mv lines so
would not have too much lip
So when the Interpre-
ter would apeak my lines for me
Italy and 1 urkev. On on the sound track in Turkish. Ara-
her journeys between picturi-s, she bic. Italian or one of the other
would rush back to her husband, languages In which we made the
Col George F Hartman, of the pictures, my lips on the
U 8. Army Air Force who
stationed in Istanbul, Turkov
nineteen months Col Hartman is
"George says this, etc
Formerly a contrai t
Hollywood’* RKO and MGM
dios. Miss Sheperd found she was
a star when she joined her bus- Yesterday'' for the Ronin Theater
band in Turkey. The Istanbul ein- Guild, a stage group which plays
ema operators found every Hol- m English
lywood movie in which she had
appeared and began showing them
ail over Turkey, with Miss Shep-
ard appearing in person in as
many places as she could reach
As a result both she and her hus
band were made honoiary citizens
of Turkey.
Tlien she was asked by Turgat
Demirag, a leading film producer
of Turkey, to eostar with Kardi
Erogan. "the Spencer Tracy" of
Turkish movies, in a film which
won the Turkish Academy Award.
"There was no trouble about
playing in a Turkish film." Miss
Hli'-''rd said. '"Thg studios out
a grandpappv should do in such a
case so I ignored the Lieutenunt
and kept goiug up the ladder to
it get the Interviews we were after,
a war correspondent The frustrated soldier was next,
juid to meet the i stopped at qn air strip, and *
soldier in the corporal was moaning
world. and to stare a white ratT dlo rebrondcast
bit in the eyes:
Becoming a grandpappy comes
first A cable from home told me
that my daughter Ruth had giv-
en birth to a fine son—and at 42
I was now the only grandpappy
among the correspondent* on the
Korean front
I waa in the mood to lie senti-
mental.
But tire mint day
arrived in Korea
THE DEAD STAY YOUNG.
Anna Seghers <Little. Brown:
How Germany went from a bad
defeat to a worse one. from the
end of World I through World War
FI. is told In thLs spacious novel
about the suffering people. the
vengeful army officers, the poli-
ticians conniving at power and the
Industrialist making sure they
didn't miss the bus.
As the story opens. Erwin, who
was to have met Martin, is caught
by soldiers called by the weak
Q—Are tenant farmer* increas-
ing in this country?
A—Yej In the last 50 years the
number of United States tenant
farmers lnirea«ed on an average
of 20.000 yearly
u.4* -Oil well
fast pace tn
WASHINGTON - 4’. <T>ngress now has made
more changes and improvement.’ in the social se
curlty program than at any time since it bevaint
law 15 years ago this month. Aug. 14, 1935.
The program us in four main parts: old age
and survivors’ insurance; public assistance, serv-
ices for children: and unemployment Insurance
Here are the tour programs the main changes
noted In parentheses-with fuller details in later
stories;
1. Old-age and survivors insurance
A man who work* long enough in a job covered
by the law gets a pension when he retires after
65. So does his wife, or widow, when she reaches
65. A man who has worked long enough in a
covered job to be entitled to a pension is called
a "fully Insured" worker.
(The size of the pension han been increased for
all now receiving it or who’ll get it in the future
This increase start* Sept. 1 II will show up in the
checks mailed by the government around Oct
Some workers, while still in middle-age, hav«/
worked long enough In a covered job to be fully
insured and so entitled Co a pension at 65. even
through they leave a covered job long before
then
If such a man dies before or after 65 and leaves
uuder-18 children, each receives a payment until
reaching 18 So does tire widow until the last
child is 18 Then her payments stops but when
she reaches 65 she'll get a pension.
But some workers die long before 65 or before
they've worked long enough in a covered job to
be fully insured Would the under-18 children and
widow ot such a worker get any;benefits if he
died?
Yes, if he’s been in a covered job—this is a
general way of saying it—for 18 out of the 26
months preceding lus death. Such a worker is
called "currently Insured "
Each ot his under-18 children gets pay until
reaching 18 So does his widow, until the last
Tlien her pay stops. But, un-
a fully insured Worker, the
currently insured worker gets no
girl Marie and their unborn baby,
who will be the Hans of World War
II. For three decades Communists,
Socialist*. Nazis, workers and em-
ployers will battle among them-
selves. even within their own fa-
milies until
destruction to
second time
The scope of the plan on which
Mis Seghers has developed this
story Is impressive: and it culmin-
ates in a convincing demonstra-
tion of the vicious cross-purpoae*
at which the German people work-
by the weak ed Marriage, birth and death that
ixrstwar government to put down sometimes strikes bv violence,
revolt, and to save themselves the problem* of food, rent and job*
bother of taking him to ja ', they the unfolding of a new generation,
walk him Into a woods and shoot
him There are Capt Klemm, who misdirected effort,
orders them to hurry up about it:
Klemms brother-in-law. Wenzlow,
the lieutenant who kills the boy;
Becker, the driver of the car;
Ueut. Lieven and the guard Nad-
ler
Klemm la big business. Wenzlow broad, perhaps too broad. You'll
is army. Lieven is Junker. Nad- read the book dutifully but proba-
ler is the dumb opportunist farm- blv not excitedly, for It s more
er And Erwin leaves behind his opus than s novel
Then there was tl:e white rabbit
transport* I woke up one morning and
Our pilot boat swung alongside opened one eve Then I closed mv
deck high ejes and opened them again onlv
to find myself staring at a white
rabbit
Sd far hs I know that's the only
rabbit in all of Korea. Where he
came from I don't know
He gave me an inscrutable Orien-
tal look and hopped across ti.e
took a final look over
his shoulder, and went wherever
rabbits go in Korea
I TITLE .ELM
Mis Charles A
ed with a pink
Thursday afU
wire Mines 1,
Testerman. R I
Vetionti Gi
C Glendlnn
, P M Hil
Games were
Prizes were
lv Eugene i
Mrs Wilma
ment plate
guests.
Out of-town
Denton, Pilot I
HOLLYWOOD — iNEA>— Exclu-
sively Yours Ginger Rogers and
movie lawyer Greg Bautzer, after
a year's romance, are giving u
reasonably accurate facsimile of
tv o people blueprinting marriage
plans. Hollywood expects them to
brave the rice and-old-shoes »s soon
as Ginger winds up "Illegal Hrlde"
and gets her final divorce decree
fiom Jack Briggs in mld-August.
Trade paper headline: "Burt Lan-
caster Interviewed While Balanc-
ed on Top of 15-Foot Pole ” Gosh,
things rre tougher than I thought
The Juliette Rhelbv living at la-
guna is silent star Mary Miles
Minter, who took the new tag be-
cause she hates being reminded
that she was ever a flicker queen
Big laught tn "Pretty Baby"
when Zachary Scott sits dowdi at
a lunch table and tells the wait-
re.” "Scramble me a couple of
benzedrine tablets
United Artists is digging into the
vaults 'or more oldies to peddle
to TV. Two Jack Benny* and two
Claudette Colbert* are being dus-
ted off
Danny Thomas, who was hand-
ed a tragedian's cloak at MGM.
gets Ins first i hance to play com-
edy in Fox's "Call Me Mister "
Danny told me
"For once I'm not a Greek dock-
maker For once I do' not ray to
my leading ladv—she was Mar-
garet O'Brien, by the way. and
she’s only got three million -that
I FIVE YEARS AGO
Allied Forc*« land near Tokyo Sunday; Japan
announces occupation plans
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Caddel. 823 Avenue A
have a* guests for several days their son. Harry
Oaddel. and family of Shreveport
Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Mackey and their daugh-
ter. Miss Wane**, have recently returned from
a two months' visit with another daughter. Mr*
Georg* B«ck. in Connecticut.
O- Loffland. Route I Denton.
AUSTIN. Aug 22
completions held a
Texas last week
Completions for the year total-
led 6.675 compared with 6,557 in
the same period last year. For
the week. 201 wells were brought
in, the Railroad Commission has
reported. There were 89 dry holes
reported
Seven wildcat* also reported an
Increase of 14 939 barrel* in the
averauM CHlend*. duv allowable
she should quick drink up her milk
or she will by iaty fur school "
Inside story on Ruth Roman's
failure to land the wife rolv in
"A Streetcar Named Desire" Di-
rector Ella Kazan thought Huth
was too sex" The Roman lass is
still laughing. For years she could
not get a break becauss- Holly-
wood thought she wasn't sexv
enough Bob Taylor is bond
with looking ferocious lines In the
face He* cabled Barbum 8tan-
wvek to rush over to Italy, war
or no war. and help him iibnv
out tlie candles on his birthday
cake
Producer Robert
an introduction after
hi art for Bob Hope
Pa ' " The p;< t.iti-
Hob facing the aurheiii e
wav saving
"No popcorn eating dm inn
performance, irvasants "
It's been eight years sun e Pa d
Kenned popped two < jgnrets in
his mouth m "Now Voyager" and
handed one to Bette Davis But
lie’s still getting ribbed about be-
ing a suave light up whiz Just
back from Europe, where he scout-
ed locations and equipment
hi* forthcoming Rendezvous
Vienna." Paul told me
"This sillv thing
Ing me
up to r
I u > '
same time
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 9, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 22, 1950, newspaper, August 22, 1950; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1315906/m1/4/: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.