Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 44, Ed. 1 Monday, October 2, 1950 Page: 4 of 8
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Mist
Ton
an
Monday. Ock 1. 1954
... 4
WHAT IT MEANS
the
Bv CLARKF BEACH
at
op'.n;
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FTCMK
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— Sta
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! CssAFito1 l
There* *Vo 'Neiwtpaper JT eefc' hi Russia
BROADWAY
YOl AND THE
SERVICE-
By MARK BARRON
I
i
Nc
By BOB PRICE
<1 \
By DOUGLAS LARSEN
fi-
lo
h.*
unofficial
L
Answer to Previous Puzzlw
State Flag
I
ANALYZING THE NEWS
Korean Reconstruction
.Max Be I \ Blueprint
i
IS
if
HOLLYWOOD
ET
2
»
i6
n
A
H
■C
i»
Across
K“
ET
?
55
Does
X
A
|
I
%
accept
LOOKING RO k
pearance
Denton Westen ear
Out Our Way
By J. R. Williania
..............J
or.
you
[ij
Howard Duff
Neither
or
any
<*
“2r
TODAYS
X
BIRTHDAY
Vi
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• ^'»e
f»* ■
T
T-
i,
fl
7
f Jyuiorafi
MWl» )
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o
4MMK«
Higher Im[>ort Duties
Due On Mexican Goods
■
ea tares
Patience
!•
K4TH1 |M«aHA
If i»(la
onto
th-
By DON WHITEHEAD
(For Hal Boyle>
and in other parts of Korea and
"it has been a big lilt
(.'.e > t
I ml ■ i
I The
< him-
Walls
i^kue Hailil
•mhi •*»»•
ml r*w
IMHtf J
r’fil.F
-
FT
45 Peak
44 Home of a
bird
49 Immerse
51 Misdeed
53 'Old
Dominion
State" (ab )
55 Telhn turn
(symbol)
I
A
* ho
« a«
for
VMMH*
tool*
IM I 1
lor tr
simp!
in<l
c
Up
a- b-
' l<>
h»» <!
time .
Th<
th
I
Editorials
S) ANION (I**., EEUOKD-C'MKONIULA-
El
Go
a
L j 11 Qi ill in
With Major Hoopla
the
le 5
U
-
how
things
In a
Xavier Cugat Prepares For First
Trip To His Birthplace In Spain
HOUZONTAL 4 Anent
1 Depicted state ® LTL**
flag of----
• Resort city in
this state
13 Alter screen
14 Ire
15 Consume
IS Open
H British i
of account .
19 Half an en»
50 Absolved
32 HypoUu-Ucsl
force
23 Naught
25 Mature
17 Ireland
28 leverage.;
29 Niton
(symbol)
30 Depart
31 Diminutive
of Susan
32 Diphthong
33 Female rabbits
35 Jug
38 Gaelic
19 Midday
40 Note of scale
41 Medicine tnen
47 Magnesium
(symbol)
48 Finish
M Run away
to wed
51 The sun
52 Pointed arcb 1
54 Foreordain
M Kingdom In
Asia
57 Lengthens I
vnncAL
1 Turn to tee
2 Thinner
3 Table scrap I
Our Boarding Houm
Behind other
Spade
a.ret aft
W hen
>4 The stale
flower is the
---bkxeom
M Lake in
S< otland
was JJaj L
Broadway,
rett shot 1
enemy
wus starting
for intantry
Gan ell
leans
in a
looking for
Reds opened inc <
the fire with his ’
tol. He killed one
"yYs?-.
4 Bird
TBewildeiec
8 Partner
• Preposition
WPart
11 One of the
Pleiades
<7 Railroad (kb)
20 Bruises
21 Browbeats
34 Cleans
35 City in Pinny 37 Fishes
33 Thia state wag42 Foot part
F’—► 1 ■■ V
VMM* kSCVTHre* ART CMtH
sen ■■>
hi« tempts
s ud.ence*
He studied unner ('< t.rgie >
Conductor Walter Dall'.icu li
he conducted the Ici Angeles Pin.
harmonic Orchestrs
rlw
(Pact is, pl
«ITGOOJD<,
glumey*
==^ z== VJenoa'u learn its j
~ SSE value if we reflect
== ==^' nctln™
^ch tyrants fo
jJwticn dread.**
it t-
si rich u.t
’J
I
77
b-. DEwrrr Mackenzie
AP Foreign Affairs Analys
Mr a
of Piloi
the eng
inarriag
Joyce 8
er, son
Snider,
The w
place O
'tl.-i Ch
J I. Cl
Mia* I
, v. ill att<
honor. 1
J uanell
enschni
Snidei
Sauls, J
Curl an
I he I
Pilot Pc
ploved
Milling
Lridegrc
ton HIr
State C
fil-.ut the I X
they get <>nX
to jret.
...
privilege, the very
foul of democratic
institutions, the **’•'
safeguard of all
other right’s^ *l==
BQV* E’S NOTEBOOK
Texas Marines Show Good Shooting
Eve - and Map For Buried hiskey
E Garrett of 2020
Beaumont, Tex Gar-
in self defense when the
opened fire on him as he
an assembly uteu
tro<>p*.
was told by South Ko.
that two Reds were hiding
rice paddy neat by
them and .
THAT, 3ASO3, TH*
• KMOlAlZIT ALL "
ExiCYCLOPeDiA-—
FlXie BRILL I AMT
eeoc ayiokial volume gf
-^eeAof vql> might /
PuPCHASe A %BT-- I
Tell Nik OF THE FUN) /
■v. mod And topaz /.
\ COULD HAMt <
I 5?8ADiNG ON) 1
0.4 VdtMTeR
WM f ME MINGS
s
I
Dottie I^aniour Sticks Bv Sarong
^hilr (.asting %arv Eye At T\
dying Army, hu careleieneM in
administrative detail could not pre-
serie army unit and efficiency
when he had Independent com-
mand
Dyer re.ognited these faults, and
does not try to gloss over them He
l'*s produced a careful, honeet Stu-
rt' Lf one of the greatest personal
tiag-d’es to emerge from the Civil
War luelf a tragedy of national
aimenaions
••Mr left Thnruisv fur Italy. ,
• poeiuoa M imUmt m
c !!<• went
out' ot ttie
GiirreU letmned
4-> automatic pi--
■ Ri d in the e>
change of fire- and then grabbed
bn M l rille to finish oft ttie other
Air Fmce Sgt Howard Jack-
son of San Antonio. Tex . has op-
ened the door wide for Hollywood
to dome to the Korean front with-
out leaving California
The idea is ■ so simple someone
should have had it when this war
started
Re*#1!?
Bdlv Grav ’o a heckler at th»
Band Box I m glad I don t know
yot.r name-id rather hate you
inrognito."
THE LITERARY GVIDEPOST
Biography Of General Hood Traces
Tragic End Of Brilliant Soldier
14L._
_ .. . _____— tlfall
( HI I 4f?>klliIR5IJljAt
than working with
The only difference
Truth Has Hani Time
Passing ’Iron Curtain
V
].n', secret. ll>-gelitTh! (T
m. t lie ft i 1 f o’hfti
Oct. 1-s. declared
NEW YORK
of the Rhumba
SEOUL. Korea— (Ab —A Marine
patrol was lucky that Tech Sgt
F G Ezell of 2814 Ktyg Street
Greenviue. Tex . was bringing up
Glepn Ford now knowa the phi-
losophy of tournament golf play
Ben Hogan has been a stern rnxa-
Harctd f*r ** perfects Ford a golf game
tor hts role aa Ben in "Follow the
Sun "
■ Golf."
discovered by 44 Boy a
Ponc< ». i. na kname
---- 44 Style
tele'. ;sn r.
a bi.axaig ybu've got
laxed '
=-r-j: Freedom of opinion,
— of fp^ech of JVWS
-------f it our molt valuable
KF
U N
& com-
i TRUTH TO A
1 free people
' Rf-STAYtMEMT OF FACT
Dver. associate professor ot his-
tory at Tulane University, has giv-
en us a searching, scholarly stu-
He has been handicapped ine-
vitably bv the lack of intimate per-
sonal material so that some of the
shadings m the portrait are mias-
mg, but he still has provided a pic-
ture ot mor* breadth anrt depth
than we have yet enioyed Un-
deniable Hood la a fascinating aub-
lect He was an exponent, of of-
fense His rise was rockeUika. He
was a leader of men. and a ha nd-
some gur.t who attracted women
He had terrific personal stamina
and endurance, arxl was absolute?,,
lea lies’
Yet he ended in utter failure
TYiere w as a limit beyond which
H xxt'i dynamic impetouaness for
attack would not avail. Hu view of
st-ategy could not encompass tac-
Ui m ox Record (jiroxtcie
Fub.utiro every arurneon <exeapt Saturday) ana
Bunaay Oy Deaton PuhiUb-ng Co, Uie 11* a
Hkl n Bv
Cww-rrc u xw-ona ctNM n.afl tralter at to* poatoftire
at Onton. Texas. January 13. 1921. according to act
•4 Ooogrvaa. Marrb 3. ,Vr79
•lt»M KIPIIOX KAIL* **r» INFOKMatlON
BtBgM oopie* Sc tor wresdaya; 10a tot Sunday.
< it, Carrier 3S« per eeet *•
By mau in Dent -n and adjoining ecmntlee; g7 so
per year ail itcntha, *4 00. ttiraa months. S3 2*.
"oe month.
OUtMde this eoun’y: Sib per year, all months. SS.
three months. t3M one month 91 M
TTLKPHONB 30M
XUTICk THE FLBUC:
hay erwier.ua renecUou upon the character, repu-
tuuoe nr elanding ot any firm individual or eorpw
ration ariu be gladly enrracted tspoa betng re tied M
too pubUabera attentSdh.
The pubnib'ra are not rwrponslbls for eopy b»H-
•Mda. typtwraphlcai orrora or aay uaiatentiunai
•Mbba «ho« •sew cMaor «M» ba eaeyaoe ib MM Moua
after N la brought to their attention All advertiaing
sebm are accessed on thu baeia only.
MKMMK OT THS 4»«IMI*T1O tlMI
n»e AM» Aten riye* ta'ehtiueg eiciuaivv.y to U.V
MS for tepeNiieauoa of all ^a local new* pr.ntcd
tb bhii newspaper, as neU aa *5 AT aewo oupatcMa
THE GALLANT HOOD, by John
P D'er Bobbs-MemU; 50
There had beep ar. empty space
on the Civil War bookshelf for
manv year*, awaiting an adequate
biography of John B Hood, lead-
er <f the famed Texas Brigade and
ope cf the more eminent beaux sa-
breurs of the Southern Confeder-
y I am 24 years old. a leteran
and in the reserve*. I also aota
in an aircraft plant Can I get a
determent 11 1 get a call to active
duty?
A Some employe* of
plan’s are being deterred
you get your order* you ass for a
deferment through regular chan-
ir.llITOKS NOTE: Here*
ene o( a quextionand-.vnsM er
aeries that tells how the Korean
war affects reservist*, veter-
ans. dratCage men. and any-
•ne likely to be called to serv-
ice. The author, a member of
the Washington *>aH ol MA
Service, conducted a widely-
read column on "lour Gl
Right* ' in the month* tollow-
ing World War 11. He will
answer gaeaUon* only in this
apace, not by mail.)
HA I Al ARS AGO
Dr Waltet S Muler s- i. of Mr >"d Mr* W .*
Miller, who ha* been with the U b F >rce*. h.«
opened hi* olfhea *t *J7 we*t Oak Street
«>. . PC. F’-d. Mrs. Ggurgn Evan* uf Aximgi-ni
mer Denton reaidrmts were here Tuesdav
bur :ne*s, .They live m Dentcn now •
T H Carrico ha* returtyed from a vt«” t .
old N ine alate, Kentucky.
COLONEL RUTH CHENEY
BTREETER boro Det. 3. 1895
in arookUne. Mam First com- |
mander of the Marine Corps '
Women's Reserve. Mr» Btreer-
er ia the mother of four chil-
dren Bhe la a Bryn1* Mawr i >
alumna and was reared bv a
■arvard profeapor atepfwthne.
Ronald Reagan generally a Mr
ahpu' hl* fellow-actor’,
muttering under hia breath on
the "BecMitne fbr Bonzo" set
reason A acene-’na’ohlng <
pa..zee who playa Benzo
*M*aa
■ It's worse
Errol Flynn
between thia monkey and Flynn 1*
that if you have a good line In
“ a Fly nn picture. Fl', nn goes to the
front office and lake* the line
away from you. The monk doesr t.
Tm* monk la tno good an actor "
Q
tinn
will I get a deferment’
A Th* reserves aren't
Ing men who have had notices to
report from tbclr draft board*
Ni w within the space of a few-
month'- we have two candidates
for that vacant space First th*re
was ' Hood. Cavalier General " by
Richard O Conner Now . there is
The Gallant Hood," bv Dver
This is not the first coincidence
of the kind. Civil War students long
have felt the ne»d of a good biogra-
phical stud, of George H Tho-
mas. the "Rock of Chicucnauga
And two came m November. 1948
"Rock of Chickamauga bv FYee-
man Cleaves, and "Thomas. Rock
cf Ch.cxama iga by the O Connor
Who was first to write cf Hood
The double coincide: e becomes
doubly ani.wng when '.ou realize
that the war careers cf Thoma’
end Hod were in term .ngled: that
it was The mas who brm.ght Hood »
flaming < areer to its final bluer
ashes a: Na-hM.> the patile which
am.nsned Hood ’ army beyond re-
Th»t maestro
Xavier Cugat. is
Stopping briefly on Broadway while
coiitmuing more travels than most
explorers have ever Imagined Hav-
ing toured Central America and
bo util America he u beg. lining on
October 15 a tour of siity cities in
the United State* which will in-
clude Washington. Detroit Phila-
delphia. Atlanta New Orleans,
Houston and Dallas
"And when those travels are fin-
ished." Cugat said the other morn-
ing as he was having breakfast
with his three diminutive chlhua
hua dogs "I will take mv orches-
tra and go back to play for the
first tone In n y own home town,
rhat will be tn Barcelona. Spam,
which he t»**n t aeen since he was
a baby His family took him to
Cuba when he was less than a vear
old so be doean t really have
Ezell of 2814 Kft)g
ihe. Tex., was brin
the rear when a four-man squad
went looking for two Reds hiding
m a rice paddy
Three men in
passed by the
sensed scunethllig was wrong
one
agents
public "Golf." Hogan told him. "is
I 1! give basically • very contradictory
gam* You have to strain every
nerve to win but at the same time
m be completely re-
LIST6N V)MUT IT SAN y ’AM
BKAMPLC OF BRACTS l£» TUe \
^0*CALLED CHAFF OB vJHf AT. /
£°X**J!*T6 C*U Y^CAXYXtli
OF CERTAIN) GRASSES GLUMeS?"
*A3C)R,Digestin' ,
FACKB 08 THAT CALI BE R '
; DONYT SA.GGe^T N)p JOLLY
XhOMT TO Me7
Q My
lt'4J his
school
the patrol had
Red* when Exell
He
turned Just as one of the enemy
raised up with a tommy gun point-
ed at the backs of the Marines
"When he raised up to fire he
was looking down the muzzle of
my gun, Ezell said "He didn't
have a chance "
Tiie aecond Red was shot by
Tech Sgt Leslie Cox of Troutdale,
Ore Pte Benny Day of Phoenix.
Artz . said "I guess 1 wouldn't
have been here today If Esell had
not turned around when that Red
caine out of the rice paddy "
Sergeant Ezell also had a spe-
cial neasoiv for getting Into Seoul
- there’s a buried case ot whisky
there
Esell's brother. Jack, who Is
fighting with the combat engineers
In Korea, was with U 8 occupa-
tion forces in Korea before the
war started. Jack and some ot his
friends managed to scrounge a
case ot whiskey from the officers'
ciub—and thev buried it In a se-
place when the Communist
HOLLYWOOD — NEA Behind other star will be playing Ram
the Screen Spade on th* screen Warner*
Bring on the flowered-print yard- claim* 8am belong* to them ^a nd
age and wrap it around Dorothy
Lanwur's chassis
Dorothy's readv to give
movie-goers the same blushing pink
show she put on for London a i-
diences at the Palladium
"The story that I was through
with sarongs forever »n press
agent stuff." she told me »■ the
big party she tossed f .
"You know how press
dream up things If the
wants me In a sarong,
them what they want "
Dorothy i.» looking at
the way a puppy eyes
bee Her verdict
"I m scared of 1’ I want to *e*
what happens Tv* already turned
down eight top shows One of them
offered me 17500 for » single *p
I think Ill wait
WASHINGTON -- NEA) —
Q I am a membej of the New
York National Guard and would
Uae to leave at ths end of my en-
Ustment period in Novemoer I am
38 years old and have main d*
pendents. Can I apply to leave be-
cause of my age’
A You can apply through ilia:.-
tics to huabsnd th* strength of a - nejs t0 t;le adjutant general,
although th* pr*a*nt policy i* not
to dlsiharg* National Guard mem-
bers in view of in* fad that tn*y
are volunt**r*.
TryE'ti
I nited Nati<>n>.
Newgparer Wv< k,
«au*.xt‘.sa.
"An informed pi:'1!;
the foundations upon
Nations restc. ’
American citizens who tiate complete
and im|iartial reports ot the I N proceed-
ings laid before them through their doily
newspajH-'i’s, find it hard to realize how
little of this new's manages to get through
the Iron Curtain.
UN officials recently had occasion
check up on what Russia Im- letii tt.;
its own t>eople after the Soviets hail
charged that United Nation*' attempts to
halt the North Korean aggressi-'ii lowered
U.N. prestige m the Soviet. Inion. Ihe
check revealed it is hard to find out just
how popular the U.N. has l»een there.
' U N headquarters itself doesn t have a
clear idea It has some reports from the
U.N. information center in Moscow. The
reports show that a veriain amount of
U.N. document* have !>een distributed
there and that the center has Had visitors
■ —KO0 last vear Hut the U.N. doesn't
' know how the documents got distributed.
These fragmentary reports reveal only
that the U N message has never been
carried to Russia * million* on the same
large scale as it is done in the United
States, bv schools, colleges, civic club*,
newspajvers. radio, and voluntary orgam-
tations that Work for support of United
Nations effort*.
A rem nt. U N document, entitled
"Teaching :i’>out the United X,ati"t'.s and
the Specialized Agencies," carries T’’
page* of report* bow the I’ N. i« brought
home to the jveople in the western '.'01111-
tries It i* a nqyort to the economic and
social council meeting in Geneva, signed
by Lie. and Jaime Torres Bodet. director-
general of Unesco.
One paragraph says "Information on
the publication of materials tm the United
Nations has been received from White
Russia. Czechoslovakia. Roland and the
Soviet Union. No details have l»een given
a* to the administrative machinery
through which these are being distributed,
but it is assumed that responsibility lies
with the Ministry* of Education in each
country."
Also the rejtort does not list any activi-
ty during 19IP in any iron curtain coun-
try. except Czechoslovakia. There it
makes a fleeting reference to U.N. reports
forming a piart of history and civics les-
bions in the schools.
Some uj'-t /-date unofficial figures,
however, indicate that about 33.000 U.N
• ooklet.* and other literature and several
dozen documentary films were given some
distribution in Russia through the U.N.
information center in Moscow.
One former Moscow correspondent (Jo-
seph Newman, of the New Y’ork Herald
Tribune I now stationed in Berlin reported
last June that few Russians know the
office exists. Lie denied that alter he
came iiack from M oscow on his save-the-
1 N. tour of Europe. He said Muscovites
saw the blue and white U N flag flyihg
over the center at l.’> Hohb v sk: Pereu'oK.
Mo-kow, and that UN. official* used the
•offices on their visit.*.
Lie did not say then, however, how
much the Russian ji^ople themselves used
the center. New information from Moscow
assert* that ordinary citizens were among
the S>hi visitors to the center during 1949
and said that thev saw U.N. material
there without any prior censorship.
I be 3(>o visitors in Moscow compare
with 1.100 reported during 1949 to the
center in Prague, another iron curtain
area; and with 1.700 at the Pari* center
and LOGO at the Copenhagen center.
A mere 800 visitors at th4 Moscow-
office could provide the Russians only
with "window dressing." One ha* only
F' en be; re tb.e collapt.iqj Norm Korean am ---
ac’.ual.i a** capitulated, the United 8>at«s ha*
ir.oed ssiltly to lay before ’be United Nation*
a p*An for rehaoiUlkUon o! Korea
This projevwhich is be-r-K ilven right of
»av is r.o routin* reconstruct) ?n program In its
e*sence it strikes me as betr-K a blueprint for the
handling of future raaes and as a declaration of
international poliej
Moreover it is in effect a disavowal of imperial-
lauc ambitions on the part of the United States
And it is « warning against unto* a rd ambitions
by other powers
TtUa American plan isn't to be mistaken tor
’ p*a< e terms" Those will be the fruits of the
' military decision" and m U N commander
in chief MacArthur's department. The rehabili-
tation project takes on where MacArthur leaves
off
Under the U S proposals, that 38th Parallel
wftkh has ’*>en aeparatirjr the country Into two
nation* will be eliminated North and Aouth
Korea once more uill be united into a free and
independent nation It will elect its own sovereign
government And it will" be put beck on Its feet
•conomkallv bv the combined resources' of the
United Nations
Th;.* rehabilitation naturally call* for
■upervwror. on the grounds That mesm,
mission in Korea to safeguard this great trans-
formation
Highly l.T.pcrtar.t is the .art that the United
Ptate* favor* a A«ian repsesentation on
the c-orr.mt’sion The sigYilfleance ot th.* of cour’»
I* that tt is calculated 'o reasrur* 'h* Orient
regarding Uie intent ions ol the We’tern world
toward* th* East"
The ’.h' ie tone of the American proposal is 'hat
It ncit:.*r desires sperial ptiviiese’ f >r itself in
K -"a ■.- 0'-e* r want to see any other countries
have spe<i»l privileges.
17"
has tied up the character through
litigation . Republic is tacking
a Korean sequence onto "Wings
' Across the Pacific," th* studio a
saga of the B 29 s
with "window drosaing " One has only
to read ti-;iii*!ation* of the government-
controlled new sparx r* in Russia tn realize
fh.it the popple there are ra t learning the
<r arvthinu e!*e—
.;.* S’.-lin vac’s them
19 year-old son ;* finish-
second -.ear of pre med
How will this effect hi*
call to active duty’
A The- are letting student*
finish out the academic year
Q Today my husband got a
form to fill out from the draft
board asking him hi* age and all
sorts of personal questions
this mean that they are going to
draft him right away’
It means that they are get-
ting dose But they aren't taking
men with 'dependent* yet
If I Join a reserve organ;w
just before thev draft me
WASHINGTON 4’ Termination of the trade
agree me;.i betw een the United Stales and Mex
n o on Dec 31 w ill affect trade: s all over the
wor.d and :ai.*e import duties on manv things
Pm-'to bv American consumers—such as gaso-
line ami kmiatoes.
When any trade agreement lapses, all of the
American import dirties which had been lowered
bv that agreement go back up to the rate estab-
lished m agreements wiUi other countries If the
rate on a particular import has not been set bv
some international agreement, the rate which
will then i oiifrol is that one eatabliahed hi the U.
S Tarut Act of 1930.
When the U S Mexican agreement was
signed in 1942. the U S lowered its rate on about
40 classes ot items on which Mexioo sought con-
sess.oi.s When the rates went down, all countries
m the world got the benefit of the new low duties.
That > a part of the "most-favoted nation" policy,
unde: which tariff reductions are made 4o apply
to all nations.
When Mexico found that its dollar balance was
dwindling it decided it needed higher tariff* to
-protect home industries Mexico and the U S.
tried for two years to work out sortie new trade
agreement which would be mutually satisfactory,
but thev finally gave up and announced a joint de-
nunciation of the treaty on June 23
Then the U S Trane Commission went to work
revising upward all of the dutv rates which had
been lowered by the ’.942 Mexica: agreement
The c/uef items in the United State.' 3231 (XXJ •
OJO-k-year import trad* with Mexico arc lead,
petroleum, tine cocoa, fibers for cordage and
tomatoes and other fresh vegetables These were
the pr.r.cipal items tn which Mexico was interested
when it negotiated the treaty in 1942. Other r.a
Lons however exported to the U. S or more of
a<une cf these items And they toe cot the oenefit
of the taruf reduction
The Item creating the most excitement now
among foreign traders L* petroleum Under the
Mexican acreeme-.it. the import tax was only 1-4
cent per gallon on a quantity of petroleum equal
to 5 per cent of the total U S reftnerv produc-
tion for the previous year This amounted to about
9" 000 aoo barrels in 1949 The remaining import
of about 1U9 OOO.JUO barrels, was taxed 1-2 cent
per gallon Now’ all petroleum imports will be tax
exi At the 1-2 cent rate This rate ea* established
tr. the next most liberal trade agteement—that
with Venezuela tn 1939
Harcest hit will oe Veneiuela which tn 1949
sent to the U 8 51 08 per cent of ali U. 8 petrol-
eum imports O’-Ler cul importers, in the order
of their" importance m the U S market, are the
Netherlands West Indie.-. Kuwai’. Saudi Aisbia
Cclonwu. Mexico #nd Iran Mexico accounted for
only 3 68 per <e:.t cf the total
On the o’her b.g item ;ftad. the import dutj »: .
raise loo per cent Lead oeatmg o:es. for tn
stance w..l ';-e Ircm 3-4 cent per pound to 1 1-2
cents per pound Canada contends w-.th Mex-.cn
for fits', place among lead exporters to the U 8
So Canada i* greatly concerned about this.
More w.d ce heard of these import duties when
the leaning t-aumts of the western world gather a:
Torqua: . England, m September to spend the
winter writing new trade treaties The net effect
or. the termmation of the U. 8 -Mexican agree-
ment w.L be to strengthen the bargaining position
of the t’ S a: T. rquu<T sun e several natch-,
such a- the i u and lead importers, will be eagtr t.>
sign new ag.e*;r.ei.j. a.th the U S which will a
leas’, rest -re the outy rates in efte< t nunng the
life cl the Mex.can agreement-
Tl N Il ARb AGO
A E F«’es left wedneaday foi Wichita Fail*
. to attend U>e annual entertainment of the pioneer*
of Riat aectiMi
Bmllin’ Dx Pttuer" L« of the opinion that he
, eor’l mwnatre the ba*et>*!’ team next year
Mias Ltorethy Stone and MUa Modlne Griffith
■ ■__1^4 returned frown a suit in Ftort Worth
Ml*. Joa Johnson baa reLuroed Iran San Fran-
<dare. Oaitfosada where ahe vtalted her aor. Joe
JotaaokL who va« amptoyed at the Golder Gate
>- — - a*. tear* ago
L A*ieto'« take World* SertM
E •Rtowe. I to 1 ftom (he St LmMa Ordinal*
BrtSK W.IHI - 4a W a* her
k ■ ISAM* * l***,|y to* son At Pdol
K ,c . MMb '
Q I am amgle. 22 and Just came
bot from Central Athene.' I .’,ij ■
port two brother* Do I have to
register <r Just wait until thev
call me’ Can I be deferred it I get
a call’
A You must reguter If you < an
prove that you suppeut two broth-
er* you will be eligible for a defer-
ment
shows on tape to be
played frontline -or rear eche-
lon troops
In the last war the U S O stag-
ed elaborate shows tor the troops
But li. this wnr the only Holly •
wood figure to show up on the
front has been Al Jolson. who has
since returned t > the United States.
But even Jolson couldn’t be spread
over an *Hm.v fighting on two
fronts.
Jackson said it Hollywood star*
would record brief skits on tape,
these tapes could be played up
cret place when the Communist forward as far as regimental com-
invasion started inund posts and played to th*
"Jack gave me a map showing troops
where he hid the case,” Ezell Jackson caught Jolson at Tae-
sald "That is the first place I m g'l and recorded one of his reyu-
going to when we get to Seoul " lai show* He has played that re
The first man in the Seventh cording on the Inchon Beachhead
Infantry Division to get official
credit for shooting a North Korean
much claim on his native Spa'n M
a background However. Cue.it ;
n man with ron-.an'l :<e.;: >
by the time he arrives in S; i
with hl* orchestra you mav be
sured that he has cclivlia td fUiil-
self that Bardeh h * b.r'.hpl.;. '•
Is the dearest spot in l’ie : .1 m
his.memories Fxeepti: * •: ■
such one meh: *ta: .’.-
way Rio de Jara:,
and a tew (”.nt’. -
ha* none the m.i*r > f h;
and classical numbei*.
In the orchestra wo,rid
rather extraordlnarv bec«.. e
ha* established himself a - S’, h
tliority not cu.h, c>n Latm Arne:
can musu. but al
music and on im>.
ib
i’ll
C51M (I IfRBl
(.11 (IMI-JMIJI
r.'all ( (2JI-K-
ur i nr?t9u
Illi 4yiR
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 44, Ed. 1 Monday, October 2, 1950, newspaper, October 2, 1950; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1348443/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.