Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 284, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 14, 1946 Page: 3 of 32
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PHONE <28
201-208 McClurkan Bldg. - Denton
SUCCESSORS TO GROVER 8. CAMPBELL
*
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"Lifeguards are stiH Dot available for ail who want and need them. But
we will be happy to take your order and make delivery as soon as possible.*
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BE SURE your Insurance is adequate today!
Elbert N. Woodrum Co.
«=E2!2
rsrt Field near Newbu**.
ton, Vk. the MM
J. Hertot. N. M
Road> AleUrMts.
gw.
The plane had not
from einee U:U a- m.
terday when it was in
WHEN YOU insure with this Hartford agency you can
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settle your loss. At all times, we welcome the oppor-
tunity to advise you on any insurance matters.
■ J
Swnday, Jaly 14, IMS-OKNTOM <<TM>
50 PLAMES JOIN HUNT
FOR MISSING TRAINER
nywburcjh, ny, July ij-tav-
Betwean 40 and to planes have
joined ground partlee tn a search
of the Ellenville. N. Y. area tor
an Army training plane with two
officers aboard which has been mis-
sing atnoe yemerdaqp, the BteWart
Field public relations office uaM
today.
The plane was en route from
Bolling yield, at Washington, D. O,
■
Booth Dotm Boom Meed) MN
* “ — —
'(CT.'S
•T1
M» hoard
'BtewotWd.
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Paraguay achieved independence
to till
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1
$
I
Tom worry to the winds this
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family when you have these
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TEXAS POLITICS
Smith Steals The
I
ing plane. (AP Wirephoto).
Communist Force
Outer Defenses
u
cub-
leadership, training
was
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WE ARE PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE
THE
of our newly redecorated Mexican Room
Our foods are fresh -prepared dally under the most sanitary conditions
Catering to special parties We can please the moat discriminating.
Our menu consists of 17 various delicious d ishes and dinners for you to choose from.
PHONE 147
V
Ll
British See Loan
As Pump Primer
For World Trade
•W Boy Scout
Leaders Attend
Second Session
Bond Posted By
Sanger Man In
Assault Case
BLAZING CONSTELLATION WRECKAGE—The huge TWA Constellation training
plane shortly after it caught fire and crashed into an alfalfa field near Reading. Pa.
Firemen (left foreground) brave ht*at as thev play a stream of water on the flam-
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Texas Quality
four
AMARILLO RENT BOARD
HAS NO COMPLAINTS
JAIL MAY HELP SOLVE
HOUSING SHORTAGE
Wheat wl’.h low protein coirent
is the result of excessive ramUJi
in the latter petlod of growth.
SIX TROOPSHIPS DUE
AT TWO PORTS TODAY
the announcement said
Meanwhile. Trieste itself remaln-
Ships arriving:
At New York
Antioch Victory from Le Havre,
With 844 troops
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the
EAGLE CAFE
WEST SIDE SQUARE
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R
More than 40 scoutmasters,
masters, and den mothers attend-
ed r
Scout
the stage
Smith.
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Six troopships carrying more
titan 5,100 servicemen are ached-
■led to arrive today at New York
and San Francisco
First, he said he had found the
and its
Dallas,
was dear
He made
At Ban Franciseo
Lillian Walk from Brisbane, five
Army, nine Navy.
At San Francisco
Marine Fox from Manila, 9-141,
Army: Lubbock from Noumea,
1.831 Navy. 342 Marines; LOT No.
815 from Pearl Harbor. 114 Navy;
Quapaw. 40 Navy; William H. Point
from Pearl Harbor 11 Army.
Ships which arrived yesterday:
At New York
Lewiston Victory from Bremen.
1.378 troops.
t*-”'1’
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Americans Kill
Yugoslav Troops
In Trieste Area
P Rainey lost his job as president
of the University of Texas "
He declared the book “USA" was
the reason Rainey was fired and
that the rumor Rainey is being
mistreated made the book an issue
in the governor’s race.
Sellers declared in an open meet-
ing on the Wood county court
house lawn that the book was an
issue that couldn't be discussed in
mixed crowds but that he would
hold a men only meeting if one was
desired After he finished speaking
125 men filed Into the district
court room
Beauford Jester took his guberna-
torial candidacy into West Texas,
declaring ’Tin winning I can. and
will, defeat any of my opponents
in the run-off."
Jester dwelt chiefly with his pro-
gram for an invigorated agriculture
for Texas which, lie said, "must be
elevated to economic status com-
parable to that of industry."
He declined to recognize attacks
by opponents except to’say: "Mud
slinging is the sure sign that an
opponent knows he is slipping.
Taxes are a wltole lot more im-
poitan than political wisecracks and
I propose to keep my campaign
clean, and discuss with you the
business of the people of Texaa."
All our Mexican foods ore prepared the original Mexican way by Mr. E. M.
Elrod, who studied Mexican cooking under Maria Alonzo, who was chef
at the Hotel Imperial, Mexico City, for 20 years.
Bond of <750 was made by Lock-
ett Cherry of Sanger Friday after-
noon pending hearing before the ;
next grand jury of * complaint
charging him with assault to mur- <
der in connection with a fight with
E D. Chestnut of Sanger Thursday
The complaint was filed by
Chestnut's son. Oien B Cheatnut.
after an affray in Sanger Thursday
afternoon in which the older Chest-
nut was allegedly knocked down
and beaten on the head
An English memory expert sold i
his head for <5000 so that scientists
might study it after his death.
Show at Hearing
By JACK RUTLEDGE
Associated Press Staff
John Lee Smith, candidate for
governor, stole the political spot-
light at Homer P Rainey’s federal
communication commission hearing
in Dallas yesterday.
Smith made an unexpected and
dramatic appearance. Not only that,
but he was the only one to appear
at the widely publicized hearing
on its closing day.
He made his statement, and
then in a brief clash with attorneys,
field his own with the Washington
experts.
Rainey Nut Present
Rainey, himself was not present.
He had requested the hearing to
protest what he called discrimina-
tion by tile Texas Quality Network
in allotting radfo time to political
candidates.
Rainey testified for hours Friday,
but obtained permission from the
FCC examiner yesterday to leave
and continue his campaign
Grover Sellers and Caso March,
candidates for governor who also
appeared Friday, were not present
Saturday They were campaigning
elsewhere.
In short,
for John Lee
the mast of it.
. t".
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LONDON, July 13—(*>— BritUii
official* regard the <3,750.000,000
United States loan a* a pump pri-
mer which will start trade flowing
all over the globe and return Brit-
ain to it* prewar position a*
"middleman to the world "
The approval helps Britain to
dodge some drastic belt-tightening,
because, as one government source
put it, Britain Was "already •crap-
ing tlie bottom of the barrel' of
its dollar resource*.
Trade was trickling across Che
Atlantic in advance One of the
first payment* from the loan will
be fur u still-undetermined amount
ol goods already In lire pipeline
To John Bull-ln-the-street. the
outward effect of the loan will bare-
ly be visible
His wife may notice it in the I
grocery stores, for part of the
money will be spent on American
dried eggs, canned milk, canned
fruit and fruit juice. But there
will not be enough of these things
for a splurge on the table. just
enough to knock a little of the
monotony out of the austere Brit-
ish diet, which now I* even below
wartime l« vei».
Officials at 10 Downing Street
said Prhne Minister Clement At-
tlee would not comment immediate-
ly and that the government's offi-
cial statement would come from
Hugh Dalton, chancellor of the
exchequer.
Early press and public reaction
to the granting of the loan in-
cluded some resentment of criti-
cisms of Great Britain voiced in the
United States during tjw last six
months. Some British feared also
that rising American prices would
cut the value of the <3,750,000.000
loan
WWF'
K... .,
ABC Bookkeeping Service
2311 Warner Road Fort Worth. Texas
T a'*-
AMARILLO. July 13 —The
Amarillo real estate board prepared
for a flash flood of landlord-ten-
ant disputes with last week’s term-
ination of OPA but they haven’t
had even a trickle
The board set up a rental arbi-
tration committee geared to handle
300 complaints
After one week ,it has not received
a tingle communication from the
city's 12,000 residential tenants or
owners
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13 iAP> —
Chinese com-
attacked the
works
ENON VALLEY. Pa.. July 13
—<A*>—This tiny Lawrence coun-
ty immunity of 375 popula-
tion did its bit toward solving
the housing shortage today—by
offering its sturdy, two-cell Jail
tor sale an an unannounced
price.
"People are so law-abiding
here we don't need a jail any-
h o w," commented Burgess
George Andrews, adding the
clink hadn’t had a "guest" in
10 years. The oaken calaboose
is in a good neighborhood
flanked by a church and a
lodge hall.
Network
stations — V.’FAA, ______
WBAP Fort Worth, KPRC Houston
and WOAI San Antonio—very a-
greeable
But. he said, he thought they
should lower their rates.
If yuu can compel (hese power-
ful groups to lower their rates it
will aid in freedom of speech."
Smith said
Getting 5<uney Big Trouble
He said his main trouble had not
been in getting sufficient time on
the air—as Rainey has charged—
but in getting friends to finance
his talks on the air.
He said if the FCC found that
the network had erred in its policy,
then he thought it should be “rep-
rimanded ’’ Further, he said if it
was found he had more time com-
ing to him, he wanted it.
Then he left He had a speech
to make at Waco.
Joe Ed Wlnfree, Harris county,
candidate for lieutenant governor,
■said h« had found one dominant
"Acting on Instructions to fire
j only when fired upon, the United
States patrol returned the fire.
After a brief exchange of firing,
one of the Yugoslav soldiers was
found dead.
"The United States petrol con-
tinued to advance until another
Yugoslav patrol was encountered
which apparently was Intent on
ambushing the United States pa-
trol.
"Another brief fire-fight follow-
I ed. after which the Yugoslavs re-
tired
’Later reports, confirmed by 88th
Division headquarters, slate lhal a
second Yugoslav soldier was killed
in the latter part of the action."
The Catholic newspaper Yu Shih
Pal in Peiping said 1.000 other
communists had struck at Lutal,
30 miles northeasat of Tientsin on
the Uleping-Mikden railroad, over-
land government lifeline to Man-
churia.
New Mail-Order Bookkeeping Service
Only $5.00 Weekly
Mall your receipts and paid bills Monday Morning
We will summarize your Income. Expense and PREPARE AU,
TAX RETURNS.
For Information and appointment to organize synte mto suit your
personal requirements
Address:
TRIESTE. July 13 —'API Two
Yugoslav soldiers were killed by an
I American patrol last night in brief
[ skirmishes near ttie Morgan Line,
and today American troops In the -
I area of the Zonal boundary were
placed on the alert.
The U. S. 88tli Division announc-
ed that two separate Yugoslav pa-
trols opened fire on the American
patrol investigating a Yugoslav
violation of the Morgan Line. The
line divides, Yugoslav and Ameri-
can-British zones of occupation in
disputed Venezia Giulia.
One Yugoslav soldier was killed
tn the first exchange of fire. The
other was slain later when another
Yugoslav patrol ’’which apparently
was Intent on ambushing the Unit-
ed States patrol." was encountered,
Che second sessions of the Boy
~leadership, training course ed quiet as the general strike which
held at the North Texas State Col- fOr 12 days paralysed most of the
. industry in occupation zone "A,"
the British-American bone, ended
at midnight However, notice was
served by labor spokesmen that the
Area ■ threatened arrest of the U-man
strike committee might precipitate
' a new walkout
1 The 88th Division, commanded
by Maj. Gen Bryant E. Moore, is-
sued this account of the exchange
of shots near Aurlslna:
"At approximately 1600 hours
GMT on July 12 a Yugoslav patrol
which crossed the Morgan Line
neard Aurisina, southeast of Capo-
etto, was sighted by a United States
outpost.
"An American-officered patrol
which immediately investigated the
violation of the line was fired on
by the Yugoslavs at a point
proximately 300 yards from
Morgan Line in Zone A
"Acting on Instructions to
lege recreational field Friday night
according U> L. W. Fleming, local
field executive.
Jerry Fulkerson, chief scout ex-
ecutive of the Fort Worth 1____
Council, conducted a course in pa-
trol organization for the scout-
masters. while Field Executive Bob
Cox presented a session in cub
meeting organization
The group will meet Wednesday.
July 17, at 7:45 p m . according to
Fleming, at which time Chief Ful-
kerson will present a course .n
"How to Organize and Conduct a
Scout Meeting." Cox will offer in-
formation on how to "Gain Advent-
age from the Arts and Crafts Pro-
gram In Cubbing."
Scout officials said that the
turn i>ut was very good, but that
they hoped that even more would
attend the coming sessions
note during his tour of Texas
The people Just want to be left
alone, he said
The people of Texas are fed
up with filling out forms and ap-
pllcaUonu and answeritw yard-long
questionnaires.” he said tn Rich-
mond.
Weary «f Regulations
The average Texan has become
weary of regulations concerning his
personal life and habits He wants
to be left alone to work and make
a living without organized inter-
ference.”
He said he had covered thous-
and* of miles during his campaign
“They want security, but they
want the freedom to earn it their
own way," he sakt "Texans always
have been free men and the spirit
of freedom is still dominant in
them."
He said the greatest fear he had I
found was fear of rising costs of I
living
Grover Sellers carried his cam- I
paign for the gubernatorial nom- 1
Ination to Quitman where he de-
clared “it was no wonder Hutner
NANKING. July
'Iwenty thousand
munisl troops have
government’s outer defense
near Tientsin and are fighting 10
miles from that U. 8 Marine base
tn North China, Peiping dispatches 1
said today. }
The initial assault was liaised by |
10,000 troops operating near Plet-
saHg. eight miles east of Tientsin,
the independent newspaper Hsin
Min Pao declared.
Simultaneously a second force of |
10,000 communists began pushing
toward Tientsin from the south-
east. the newspaper added, and
reached Tungtitou and Setltou,
two towns 10 miles from the city.
Other government - communist
clashes were reported erupting
nortli of Tientsin and one dispatch
reported suspension of week end
evening train service to Pieping,
also a U. 8 Marine zone 1 No Ma-
rine participation was reported
anywhere >
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 284, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 14, 1946, newspaper, July 14, 1946; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1336012/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.