Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 39, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 26, 1950 Page: 4 of 10
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I
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torials and JeatureA
>bo
Tuesday, Mepl. 38, UM
(Tm.1 MCOBD-CMBONKXB-
By HAL BOYLE
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and
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BROADWAY
\ isitors Can See A Lot (hi Broadway
Without Having To Spend \ (ent
YOU A ND THE
THE LITERARY GUIDEPOST
SERVICE-
By W O ROGERS
111
WASHINGTON - ' NEA <
A
1
Screen Star
A
I i
I
nn\ one
i).
HOLLYWOOD
t
ANALYZING THE NEWS
t
By HOB THOMAS
WANT
ai
35-
f v ■; u i s 11
wot I t
. the only fair way
YOUR
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5
7
to
it
LOOKING BAlK
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Denton Yesteryear
is
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they have been retldlng for the
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tf you pe
the physical
17
a
With Major Hoopla
Out Our Way
By J. R. Williams
i
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Nehru s Explosion Should
Contribute To Peace
Uncle Sam May Have Hard
Time Registering Commie
Departure Of Star From Studio
Can’t Be Termed Entirely Amicable
THE LITERARY GUIDEPOST
Sequel To ’Cheaper By The Dozen'
Provides More (’buckle's On Family
I
tew
/Al EUROPE
<*?
Aniwer to Previous Puzzle
nr
Hrpiibli
ij'ii r luting
I
I
THP 5MOOTUU RON
1 ■ W 1
9 Measure of
area
!0 Surrender
“Mg
H
ingredient
40 Rational
41 Shoshonean
. Indians
4? Br ia Id?
43 Snare
I. i ':
<td ■ i.:
David
at the
I
!
OH A
HORSE U
FLUES,
i suess.'
at
on
so.
51 Symbol for
selenium
53 Hight (ab )
E
C
/ 1hb
Diploma^
a
II
EAlEN
l/NOVJ
\WIO
I) IS
A IA27 fire ingurnncl
POLICY, AMD
SOMB OLD)
> TURKEY i
Xticke Ts/
the
RUS-
-i*
Us<
w<
lot
In
OBE
= FUC
Hickory St
KIot Too '
: h i! d I
• l‘ic-1
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2 st.''
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rhe i
,T P MU
^tjvjiakr.. r m,
^5?
don't
Hl.\ -
mobs
it
FLAG OF
OHIO
J
r.
‘ Tex
nV
VJ
worked
and R
«
Fae
fooled
guess
madder.
go "
Said
j
a- i
■
a?
expensive
which
narrow
It I ey.it
a Broadway
BOYLE’S NOTEBOOK
The Private Was Type Of Soldier
That Make's A Fighting Outfit Great
King Sololmon
the best film
ac-
horizontal 50 Waah lightly
I Depicted
acreen rtar,
Paulette —•
8 Steps
1.3 Interstices
14 Rugged
mountain spur J Yawms
19 Fastening
device
18 Coal digger
18 Rebound
10 Eart (Fr 3
20 Well groomed
21 Note In
Guido's seals
22 King of
Egypt (Bib.)
29 Chemical
suffix
24 Burmeae
wood aprita
27 Writing
implement
29 Ancestor at
Pharoaha
30 Indian
mulberry
31 Symbol for
iridium
32 Chinese
measure
33 Nocturnal
flyer
34 Vamiah
ingredient
3® Pronoun
37 For the take
of honor (ab.)
30 Worm
41 Fanatical
48 Over, (contr )
47 Indonesian of
Mindanao
48 Indian
gateway
49 Scottish
sheenfold
Our Boarding Houm
52 She is an
able----
54 Woody plants
55 Club-shaped
braying tools
VKRT1CAL
second clar.«
If you hate
w
12 Division of the 38 Salad
calyx
17 Early English
(ab )
25 Operatic solo
28 Pungent
8VBNCH1PTION RATES AND INFORMATION
Bingle copiM: Be for weekdays; lOo tor Sunday.
City Carrier: 3ftc per wee*.
By man Ln Denton and adjoining counuaa: tn so
per year, six jr.ontha. S4 00: three months S3 M,
one month. Un
’ Outside thia county i *10 per year; ala months. •*.
three months. 33.50 one month *1 M.
TCLCPHONB 2000
NOTH * TO TH* FCHLIC:
An» erroneous reflection upon the character, repu-
catlon or standing oi any firm. Individual or corpt,
ration wul ba gladly corrected upon being called to
the publishers' attention.
The publishers are not responsible for copy omis-
sions, typographical errors or any unintentional
errors that occur other than to correct tn next laaue
after It la brought to their attention All advertising
orders are accepted on this basis only.
MRMRTR OF THE IATKD FREbe
The Associated Press la entitled exclusively io
use tor rapublloaunn of all the local news pi in tec
I* this newspaper, aa well as *1 AP news dispatch*
EG ad, Boy s? The ovyls^J i ra \
------- I
FAR.'1
BEHIND W
ON DDES
TREAA-)
,URER/y
This Always Tills the Cook With Clee
By JOE WINO
NEW YORK
New York
in
i4»i :■ .
ceitaln cucuni-
i be determined
acthe duty
the service in three yenrs. Can
1 be recalled for active duty any
time?
A Yes
exam
lat
and given a
« a < on
. JCIIIMBI
f.niMi:i>i
L3WHS711II_________
(ZHZJALUL-iCHsJLJUJI
Hilus
l-Kzilli-4
MUM
MI-4MI2)
I4UHH
CHS W LJI3 I
Mnut»a|____
HGyurahsSiWBii
LJI 1i;H ilSHAMM
w
A r*
d/boy \
J TMATS I
' / 5HARP S
1 SMOOTH
<S > J
I Attol
and I
II ion till
< ld doi umentl
Daniel says I
i laded 88 lilJ
hi- ernlv fll'l
nnd personal I
: e< ted with tl
annexation. I
'lliese dot u
•’i h-ni ly showl
ecl exactly wt
to
H
ile.’llHUlig
nine River
l: tl’.<> O
—
«rsv
COFWSnYFoR
Dinner/
'GIVE \
MF A
SHOT
BE-
FORE
> THEY
I KETCH
___\ ON ?
Crowder.
Moria Oberon, Lawreuce Olivier and
Niven are featured in "Wuthering Height* ’
Texaa Theatre.
TWINTT YIAB8 AGO
B- Light of Pilot Point returned from Hender-
«m. where he had been on buaineu
Mt. and Mr*. Martin Le41y and daughter of
Denton war* guasta of friends in Krum.
Mia* Leia Mae Fortenberry haa gone to Annona.
Mr. Hund-
- iH
IF
L •__
THE NATION TODAY
^ET
. Jed.l
Ing World 35 ar II He
answer questions only in
apace, not by mail I
den battle shock or long exposure
to danger.
He climbed laboriously into the
back of the truck. As it swung
slowly on up the heavy yellow
road he sat down wearily among
the gasoline cans next to another
hitchhiker—Ben Price, an Asso-
ciated Press correspondent
.Capsule Review
Mines'' is one of the best
adventures in recent years,
tuallv filmed on Afrl< an locations,
the fantastic story of a search
for r lost diamond mine becomes
amazingly real Only drawback is
use of several cliches that
serin to be unavoidable In Jungle
epics • most notable: The heroine
being frightened by various wild
beasts i But the Hardy players—
Deborah Kerr. Stewart Granger
and Richard Carlson—make the
whole thing believable.
Kibler Hundley, a
l*y. ta *Mt of acut*___________
Mr*- J. •. Cherry, Mieeee Alma Lon* Joyce and
Jcaate Bell Cherry <rf Sanger vtaited at Parvin and
Mr* N. i. Ru* returned home with them
, •“** Kd*ton 1* featured !■ "Dough Boy* ' **
Tex:rs was
with'.n Its
tidel cuds "
T?n bl si
for, < .,n be I
<IO< l.’ll 'Ills I
1 I'., Deed
<t:il v H' l of 1
i ii. Hep ibllc <1
’ 'I 1,1- Juul
xi.i.r Texas]
. '< 1 Stated
As the truck pull'-d avvav Pi.. a
glanced al where (lie private ha ;
stood. In the golden dust glean,
ed several blight drop1- Thev wen-
red.
1KDITORS NOTE: Here's
one of a que»tl<>n-and-ans« er
aeriea that tells how the Korean
war affect* reservists, veter-
ans, draft-age men, and any-
one likely to be called to aerv-
Ice. The author, a member of
the Washington staff of NEA
Service, conducted a widely-
read column on “I'our (>l
Rights" in the months folloa-
wlll
this
- Bv MAXI
AUSTIN.
ho|>es hlstoryl
its fight to n
tidelands.
The Bupren
is to rule oil
a Ietivnril.g d
i e< ognizttig tl
uii'ut's ' pariii
ibinerged 1;
Gulf Cmi-t
Texas coi.to
oily opinion
the price of admi-sion Standing
on a Broadway street cornel , y< .
can see for five movies of a sort
watch the moving strip of letteis
that specls out New York limes
t ews, and learn about Hit- weiuh. r
forecast a.s indicated by coloied
lights
Broadway and Times Sq
too expens've for the
theatei which have
ciown the
off from
need
wav;
will
mav
is ringed
of b.p first
Since
THEY'RE A
LITTLE OREEM
YtT-- SAY
WHATS MAKING
THAT HOH&G
JUAV’ AMP
g KICK LIKE <
Ote THAT?V
2 PraVer
3 County (n
Missouri
4 Accomplish
9 Charitabl*
gifts
8 Train track
7 Low? sand hill 27 Coffin cloth
8 Oyster claire 28 Pseudonym of 44 Speed contest
Charles Lamb 45 Pismires
33 Move with life 46 Soviet city
and v igor
11 Interferometer 35 Dairy product
rod 36 Vital part
rnr
I( says further that Communists and Com-
munist fronters can't pul out propaganda- by
mall, radio or television—without distinctly label-
ing it as coming from Communists.
And the law says that anyone violating these
orders can be Jailed and fined. But—
None of thia applies until the government has
gone through the legal machinery mentioned
above. So, until all that la finished—maybe three
or four years from now—it won't be possible to
punish any Communist who may work for the gov-
ernment. or in a defense plant, or who may put
out propaganda without a Communist label
If you read the law you could see why the Com-
munists would not register under this law.
The law says there is a world-wide conspiiacy
of Communism to take over every country. It
says this conspiracy Is directed by a "foreign
power,” meaning Russia.
This foreign power, the law says sets up "action
organizations" in various countries to help
carry out the world-wide conspiracy. And—
it says these action organizations are controlled
by the foreign power
In turn, the law goes on. these Communist
"action" organizations set up Communist "front"
organizations to help carry' out their plans
(The difference between a Communist action
organization and a Communist hunt—under the
definition given by the new law—is this
(1 Action organization— It s secretly plantUMg
forceful overthrow of a government, directed and
controlled by the foreign power, Russia
<2. Communist front—. This Is controlled by the
action organization, to help carry out its plans,
but may have members who aie Innocent of its
real purposes.
<8o with the new law the basic dlffeience be-
tween the two Is this: A Communist action or-
ganization is made up of Communists, a front out-
fit is really-run by Communists but may have non-
Communtst members or even members who don't
know it's tied up with Communists at all >
The Communist party in the United States is
made up entirely of Communists. But if the
party members stepped up and registered as an
"action oiganizatlon" they would be admitting.
1 That they were direct and controlled by Mos-
cow.
2. That they were really plotting to overthrow
this government by force
By JAMES MARLOW
WASHINGTON, Sept. 25 —<45 Under the anil-
Communlat law—it became l«w Saturday—Com-
munists are supposed to register with the govern-
ment.
They are supposed to do that within 30 days of
the time when the act became law, or 30 days
from Sept 23. But leaders of the Communist party
said Saturday night they will refuse to register.
Can they—at. the end of the 30 days or in fact
any other time— be jailed or fined or punished in
any way for refusing to register within 30 days
of Sept 23?
No. They not only cannot be punished for this
refusal, but they cannot be arrested or even
questioned about it. Is the government then help-
less to make the Communists register at all?
No. Under the new law—once the 30 days are up
and the Communists haven't registered—there is
legal machinery the government can use to
make them register It calls for findings by a new
subversive activities control board, reviewable
by the courts
But—Tills doesn't mean the government puts
the Communists on trial for refusing to register.
It means only that the government uses legal
machinery to force them to register.
If at the end ot all that Communists still re-
fused, they could be arrested and tried for re-
fusing AnS that would mean a trial and long
court fight
So altogether it may be three or four years be-
fore any Communist could be sent to the peni-
tentiary for refusing to register under the ai t
which became law Saturday when Congress over-
rode President Truman's veto.
All this means something else, too
The new law says that Communism and mem-
ber* of Communist Irani organizations can't work
lor the government and tliat Communists can't
work in defense plants.
IJ says further that
FIVE TEAKS AGO
The first rain for a couple of months fell in Den-
ton. accompanied by rather high winds, which
brought acme relief from the heat, which has pre-
vailed her* during the past two months
Capt. H. D. Baker, who has served mostly In
England and on the continent in the sir force head-
quarters. has been honorably discharged and is
now at home.
Luther Allan. Catherine Baldridge. E C Perry-
man, Mrs. D. E. Holcomb, Mrs. G. C. Watkins
and Mrs. Phoebe Mlzzel) celebrate birthday anni-
versaries on September 28.
Mrs. Walter O. Harris and daughter, Ann. 225
Jagoe St., hxwe returned from Neosho. Mo . where
they have been residing for the past two years
while Cpl. Harris has been stationed at Camp
F - You can still
see New York on a shoestihg,
bearing In mind that shoestrings
have gone up
Let s plan a trip
You check in at a
midtown hotel and, if you
any sense go to bed for a good
night's sleep before bucking the
big city. Since you haven t that
much sense, you amble over to
Broadway to take tn the biggest
free show tn town.
Most interesting part of the show
are the people Un nise(,ve-. jam-
packing the sidewalks and spilling
out mto the streets. There are
tourists hke yourself, and bojs
and girls from the New York re-
gion out on dates. New Yorkers
and their wives on semi-annual
nights out. servicemen, hangers on
and Broadway types Don't try to
scan all their faces or it will wear
you down in no time
At an hour when stores m staid-
er streets are long since shut for
the night. Broadway establishments
ere bustling. Up above, the most
spectacular advertising s.gns in
tyie world are ablaze. They're worth
to in a hospital
"They said I hud concussl in
and ought to stay there tor at lea l
pression men often get after sud- a couple ui. (lays. But 1 dldn l
den battle shock or long exposure want to dope ofi on m> outfit
not ai a time like this So
suid ' o
to rejo.n
she hadn't
for r year
/ " i’
1 ML17A£7
.-Iio'.vIi.k In
your honu
t.i gi'i.
cy about seeing iht m Ho ap\,'
the Music Hnll 11, R.x kt feller C' i.
ter over on Sixth avenue
many tourists'
If you have a taste tor
films or famous old
ones that appeal
1 lie de: i .1 >|
< outi al y to I
agreement bl
bi.ties mid thl
it contends I
i ourt s declsll
Dinted State!
tion resolution
was submltteq
Texas.
Texas
1 iiunel
spent i
y I was a 1st Lieutenant in
World War II. and given a cer-
tificate which said I was on In-
T haven't heard from
in three years.
CLUB SOLELY NEEDS '
A LIBRARY, AMO THE \.
I/HOV4ZITALL ENCYCLO-/I
PEDIA I'M GELLING
WOULD PROVIDE A S'
GPLENDiD START/—UM' A
1 HOPE -PIERE'S ENOUGH
”s> the
■ TREASURY)
TO <
PURCHASE?
<THE 5£T/.
£—
Naktong
"I was iw the second wave ‘ he
said, "They shot up our boat wph
__________„ J and it went down
Then a mortar shell hit hi th*'
river by me and It seemed li
the wntei was squeezing me to
death."
Thp private held Ins chest a . I
coughed painfully and spit on
the side of the truck He sh'i< >.
his head When Prue offered L u
a cig alette
"I blacked out and I guess 1
would nave drowned if some ot r
buddies hadn t pulled me into an-
other boat." he said "Doni re
member anything about the i< '
12 hours. ex< cpt standing tn a
Then 1 came
•-i . < tins
■ i t h r tl
t . ■ ,>: ovld'-d
| (li'Ut,
By DEWITT MACKENZIE
AP Foreign Affairs Analyst
Hope ot resolving the dangerous India-Parkistan
differences has received a fillip from an indiiect
but dramatic extension of the olive branch by
Indian Prime Minister Nehru.
Nehru s gesture came in a rebuke to extremist
political followers at the annual conference of
his all-Indla Congress Party. These extremists
had demanded retaliatory action against Hindu
India's Moslem minority because of alleged mis-
treatment of 12.000,000 Hindus in Moalem-domi-
nated Parklstan. Referring heatedly to such re-
taliation. Nehru declared:
"Even If some people want It. can it be accept-
ed In the name of Democracy ? If that Is called
democracy then I say to hell with such demo-
cracy. Democratic principles are not a matter of
convenigence to be treated as suits the whims
of anybody.”
Nehru proclaimed that he refused to bow to
"the wishes of the mob ” He added thst if Con-
gress wanted him as premier it would have to
follow his**lead "unequivocally." Otherwise he
would go out and fight Independently for his
Ideals.
The outcome of the theatrical session was that
the congress gave Nehru an overwhelming vote of
endorsement
f hickey'6 Director of >.
^FINANCES, MA30R— BUT
the last Time he frisked
THE Tin BOY, ALL THU Re
' WAG iNblDc WiAH> G0ME-
X DON'T J JAP 60UVENIR CURRENCY,
father, and a mother to carry on
his tradition indomitably, it was
perhaps even more like being born
into an army A Oilbreth hnd as
much privacj' as a OI private
They went cm vacation en masse,
they passed on one another's beaux
and belles, and each boy passed on
to his young brother his suit, which
was bought both for present wear
. and for a bequest. It was Mar-
tha who carried on when the mo-
ther went away, arranging cutrate
haircuts for the whole platoon re-
quiring requisitions tn triplicate for
a nickel for soda
This book may be a little fur-
nter than the first, and In fact the
authors worked to make it so, for
m places, as in the title, they ob-
viously try for laughs And they
get them But here as In the first
volume, while you enjoy the young
people, you are constantly aware
of the parents in the background
They dominate the picture They
are unique. Coming from this for-
tunate home, the authors should
be ashamed of themselves if they
eoulon't write an unusually good
lx>ok
Q I
would like to know if the Army is
taking dogs like they did during
the last war?
No, the Army does not need
dogs at Ulis time.
Q. If a man is employed on a
farm is he eligible for a defer-
ment from the draft'’
A Yes. under <
stances width can
by a man s board.
<4 Will the Army take
with syphilis?
A. It a prospective inductee
passes ihe physical exam save for
this disease, sod if It Is in an in-
fectious stage, his condition lx re-
ported to local health authorities
He is then referred to » civilian
ugenev for treatment, being given
a choice of a private pbjshian, or
lapid treatment at a VD dime.
When he is cured he is drafted,
If the disease is not in an tnfei •
lions state, he must also receive
tieatnient prior to Induction
R My brother was killed in serv-
ice I am the only remaining son
although I have two sisters. Am 1
deferred automatically?
A. A.s a sole surviving -on you I
are eligible for deferment But
it Is not automatic. Your drait
board has to act on vour case as
it does on every individual <ase
Q My son received a form from
Ins draft board called "Certificate
of Acceptability." On It is checked
the statement which says "found
not acceptable for induction
this time " Docs that mean he
cla islfied as 4-F?
SOMEWHERE IN KOREA—4N _
A small supply truck trundled up machineguns
Attacks On Taft Lack
Fair Play Principle
The Truman Administration and organ-
ized labor have opened up their big guns
on Senator Taft. No surprise in that,
since they promised to make him their
chief target in the fall elections.
But the tone anil character of the initial
attacks fall far short of American
standards of fair play. Nobody expects
politics to follow the rules of a gentle-
men’s club, but there ought to be a cer-
tain level of decency.
’ John L. Lewis, boss of the miners,
didn’t even approach it when he wrote
to th® Ohio coal operators threatening to
take his jjien out on strike if Taft shows
up in the pita on any campaign swing.
That threat Belongs side by side with the
eggs tossed at Wendell Willkie back in
1940.
The element of choice between men and
policies is a big feature of our democratic
system. If that idea is to work, both sides
must be given a hearing, no matter what
the listeners’ previous prejudices about a
candidate or his efforts. Flat refusal to
li&l.tn amounts to saying you don’t believe
in getting both sides of a story.
Taft already has had one experience of
this kind. A hundred men walked off the
•job when he showed up at a factory.
.They didn’t seem to realize, any more
than Lewis does, that they were delivering
a greater affront to democratic ideals
than to Taft.
Some say we shouldn't compel anyone
to listen to a man he doesn't care to hear.
Of course not. We can't force a man to
■vote, either. But he should want to listen,
just as he should want to vote. Taft isn't
belling soap or patent medicine. He’s one
of the men guiding the destinies of this
jeountry. It shouldn’t be any hardship on
ji miner or a factory worker or anybody
«lse to listen to him talk for 10 or 15 min-
htes.
j W. Averell Harriman, the President's
foreign affairs assistant, reached low in
Another direction. He suggested Taft is
giving aid and comfort to Russian com-
munism by his opposition to Administra-
tion foreign policies.
; That’s * poor thing for a high-minded
•man like Harriman to say. Taft may l>e
dead wrong on many points. But whether
he is or not, he plainly isn’t taking any
viewpoint because he thinks it will help
Russia.
This Harriman argument Is reminiscent
of the campaign statements by some
Democrats in the war years. Vote for a
Republican, they said, and you’re helping
Hitler.
Talk of this kind has no place in an
American election. Harriman ought to be
ashamed for indulging in it. We must
assume that whatever their differences all
candidates of legitimate political parties
(Communists excluded) have American
interests at heart. Some may l>e right,
and some wrong. It’s for us to decide
that—without reference to how Moscow
or Paris or London or Berlin will regard
our decision.
Democracy is in a bad way if we have
to campaign on the level set by lA>wis and
Harriman. There ought not to l>e another
day of such talk between now and Nov.
7. Let Taft lie heard, wherever he wants
to go. Let him stand or fall on the merits
of his v,ecord and his viewpo’n* That is
<! I
(I
ll
I
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p .I'll,' <1
; 8
; ., i. >.iil
v Kepubl
di"!
is ,< mi.
itineraries A
lei p.ii",
favorites ■:
s nail gre..ii
of people lx .re to re.nl <le
n< u-p.qier ads and pn ►. o,.l wn,.'
J un want to see
to the Nekton* River, south of a
ruined city called Waegwan.
It was the day after the 24th
Infantry DlvUton had stormed back
over the river on the long return
road to Seoul
The supply truck was loaded
with badly needed gaaoltne Bld
al one point along the rutted road
it paused with the undeviatlng
courtesy of the battlefront to pick
up a solitary, hitchhiking soldier
He was a private first class
and he looked like a tired battle
straggler lost from his company
He was a stocky youth of about chow line somewhere
22 with blue eyes and a stare
that combat soldiers call "the
thousand yard look." It is an ex
Denton Record.Chronicle
Publlahed avery afternoon taxcapt (Saturday i ano
Bunaay oy: Danton Publishing Co.. Inc. 31« F.
Hlcxory St.
Rnterea as second clasa man trniter at the poslottice
at Denton. Texas, Jsnusry 13. 1021. according to Act
of Congress. Msrcb 3. 107*
HOLLYWOOD Sept :
Gloria Grahame Is m id.
The blonde actress believes that
her career has taken a kicking
around from her studio. RKO. Her
contract will be ended alter she
finishes her current picture. "Ma-
cao " Usually when a players
contract Is over, the announcement
says "the parting was amicable.”
This Is not tiue In Gloria's < a -e.
"This in my part In 'Macao,’ "
she said, showing me three pages
from the script "That t* all '
The gal. who drew an academy
nomination for "Crossfire" and
Just co-starred with Humphrey Bo-
gart, couldn't understand it.
"I guess they offered me
part hoping I would take .a
pension,” she said "They could the
keep me on suspension for a year
But I fooled them. I took the
role I guess that makes them
even madder. Now they have to
let me
Gloria
at the studi^
half
"I took suspensions." she said
"First they wanted me to play a
second lend to Av a Gardner, be-
fore that a second lead to La-
ralne Dav They also wanted me
to play in B pictures I refused
"Meanwhile, I had a chance to
play the Shelley Winters role in
A Plat e in the Sun ' The .stu-
dio wouldn't let me I also had a
ehnnee to get 'Born Yesterday.’
Again they said no."
She hinted that the Powers mav
have gotten mad at her becauae
she took a test for "Bom Yester-
day" at another studio without
RKO's knowledge.
The actress added that she did
not know what to make of her
"Macao" role. The pictuie star*
Jane Russell and Robert Mitchum.
"At first I thought something
could be done with It,” she said.
"I made some suggestions for
line* and thev seemed to have
been well received. But when I
saw the final scrip, they were all
removed
"On the first day of rushes I
looked at my*elt on the screen
•nd I thought I looked good. But
on the next day I looked awful.
They lied taken all my diffusio®
ten years ago
W T Evers returned Wednesday from Shreve-
port. La., where he attended a pecan demonstia-
tlon on a Federal Government Demonstration
Farm.
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Woods of Bartonville visit-
ed Mr. and Mrs. B F. Pockrus at Lane
Born: To Mr. and Mrs. E M Bounds of Co-
rinth Tuesday, a boy.
Mr*. M. 8. Stout has returned from a three
"dontha* visit with her son, Myron Stout. In
ionolulu.
Dr. and Mra. J. Edwin Taylor will attend the
orof®a*9Dial and social meeting* of the North
Pexa* Chiropodist Society in Fort Worth
Mr. and Mr*. Bob Orogen. Mr* Richard Tal-
l*y *nd Jaznaa Ooaby of Denton visited Mr. and
Mr*. W. A. Cosby at LewiavUle.
i
a: e
Iv^'.tliiiiuc
rctrea'i'i
streets .In
thrillers
entrance
if a show’s u Int the
storm its doors wherever
be Consequently Broaawnv
with the guadv lactides
run nrivie houses.
the pictur"
these houses show
tewn also, there isn't t»:iv
about seeing
BEIXEB ON THEIR TOES, by
Frank B. Oilbreth. Jr., and Ernes-
tine Gilbreth Carey (Crowell: *3i
In "Cheaper by the Dozen." as
you must remember, there were
12 children, plus the parents. In
the second book, with the father
and one child dead, its an even
dozen The mother, the authors,
and Anne. Martha. BUI. Lillian.
Fred. Dan. Jack, Bob and Jane.
Perhaps they would want to
make it a baker's dozen .which
used to be called a devil's dozen
. . .by adding Tom He was the
handymun, jack of all trades and
master oi none, succeeding only
at the most difficult of *11 tasks,
that of being a credible and lik-
able character in a book But
whether 12 or 13. it was a merry
dozen, and though they’ miss the
father, and though the reader, too,
misses him a bit, they still have
the same funny times
Being born into this monster
Montclair household was being
born into a family, to be sure
but with an efficiency expert for
J i
I |
II I
P
that makes the glamor girls gin
morous >
"Mv only consolation." she add
ed. "Is that the picture won t be
out for two or three rear
I asked Gloria what she intends
to d<> after her contract is up in
about four weeks.
"1 would like to sign picture
deals at other studio," she said,
"but never, never would I sign
another exclusive contract
A spokesman said the studio had
no comment to make on Miss
Grahame s ten arl's
But 1
on t n ,v i
n! a time like this. So I
walled "Until breakfast and then 1
took off ”
When the truck halted to lit
him oil. he climbed slowly down
He gripped hts chest, bent over
and coughed and spat.
, ________ Then he straightened.
The two soon fell to talking The long" and walked oft
private was nervous and kept his unit
clutching hia sides with both arms
as he spoke. He said lie was one
of the engineers whose job had
been to steer the assault boats that
carried the doughboys across the
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 39, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 26, 1950, newspaper, September 26, 1950; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1315936/m1/4/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.