Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 262, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 16, 1945 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Denton Record-Chronicle and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Denton Public Library.
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analyzing the news
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^dditoriaf ^deatureS
DATELINE: PACIFIC
Denton Record-Chronicle
Sal
<;i
Saturday, June 16, 1945
1
Four
Six of (hie, Half Dozen of I he Other
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the uae for re-publlcatlon of all
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WASHINGTON LN WARTIME
Controversy Rrviv <‘<l
On National Anthem
■
Men’s Two-Tone
Cut Flower*
SLACK SUITS
POTTED PLANTS
< iml
comfortable,
ami
for Summer wear.
•r* w-at
We Telegraph Flowers
TEXANS IN WASHINGTON
Home Folks Around the Capital
bring us
OLDSMOBILE
G. M. C.
TRUCKS
RAY DICKSON
1
y
A NEW WORLD
Of Love and Fellowship
Is Coming!
RADIO REPAIRS
hands with President Tru-
Ph. 573
Broncho Bill
Tommy's Discovery
By Harry F. O’Neill
estine
LS YEARS AGO
7a
In The Record-Chronicle
7
STRANGE OCCEPATION JOB
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Covered!
Red Ryder
By Fred Harman
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A Good Guess
Alley Oop
By V. T. Hamlin
A
f'
~nomi
are you aware of the varied line of
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Infantry Day Parade
Silences Noisy Crowd
Complete and Widely
Assorted Selections
MADISON
According to
»a,25
3 60
1 80
.60
her
son
Well, there you hate It
go to it
k<; <4 '
LELA FOSTER
FLOWERS
MOTOR CO.
Phone 1577
Fl NOING Hit. SADDLE AAG5
OPEN, THE BOV FEEL'S >N-
L___ - ■aipe-t-
PITTMAN ELECTRIC
COMPANY
121H W. Hickory
Phone 175
ifc
his parents
1 Mr*. Justin Derryberrv of
25-
of
He
THEY CAME UP
FROM PRE-
HISTORIC
TIMES 70-
GETHEI?'-
MANY ADDED ATTRACTIONS AT
RODEO
this Saturday night. Burk Robert-
son of Oklahoma City, calf roping,
saddle bronc. other specialty acts.
Adm. 80c and 50c. Arena Eaat of
Fair Grounds. 8:30. 261
The mah who hao also
taken refuge. under,
THE POCK NOV TXKg.1
Suopew leave
R. L. Selby & Son*
Florists and Nurserymen
Phone 374 and 375
UN’
(,HI«TER?
jV-IFl'l
) ft
FRESH
FLOWERS
for
Weddings - Graduations
• Boutonnieres
• Bouquets
• Corsages
• Decorations
I
I
' NOT A TRACE* AMD
THERE would have been
TOO. if HE HAD BEEN
HERE ... AS SOFT AS /<.
I THIS EARTH IS*
Z CVCN U
/ DOESN'T
1 OOP COL _ _
V BEEN HERE'
I
I
I]
If
WfST SIDE OF SQUARE PHONE 2
I
Sporting Goods
and Camping
equipment carried in our stock?
Drop by for your needs.
your lamps, irons, radios
and other appliances for .
repair, also fans cleaned
and oiled.
m ino poaionice av uenvon. ivxas.
January 13. 1931. aa mall matter of the second clasa,
•oaordiag to the Act o? Congrees, March 3. 1879.
Published each afternoon except Bunday at 314
West Hickory Btraet. Telephonea 64 and 184.
in settlement of claims for injuries
incurred by Black when struck by
an army truck May 24. 1943 at Jas-
l>er
iruT.T^T"
'rtE 5CACED
AuNn
DjchessI
»3E.1-LJ'N 1
I Tomn’V
ABANDONS
' the 3HEU-
; TER OF AN
k OVER.-
, HANGING
B ROCK ANO
, HIS PO1NY,
I TO SAVE
A CALF
CAUGHT Fl
A SWOLLEN
MOUNTAIN
STREAM '
nonsense, Lin if 1
PEAVER — I’LL GET J
1h’ DROP ON ◄
lPUSiCK. AN' SOONER'
twC-1
Ju
7 feuSlCK. \
^AN’ &OQMERJ
(From Record-Chronicle, June 16, 1926)
Beeman Fisher of Dallas, advertising manager
Of the Texas Power A Light Co. was here Tues-
day on a "business and pleasure" trip
An onion "that is an onion" was brought to
the Record-Chronicle office by W T Daniel, who
lives on the Fort Worth highway south of Den-
ton. The onion weighed one pound, 13 'i ounces
* Maximum temperature yesterday, 100; low to-
Jlay. 76
. Mrs. J. T. Hughes sustained a gash over the
Jeft eye from flying glass from the windshield
when the auto, in which she and her husband
Were returning from Dallas, sideswiped the ridl-
ing of a culvert between Carrollton and Lewisville.
• Miss Vera LOU LeGear h-as returned to Banger
Xrom Sherman where she was a guest of Miss
Theda Mae Brewer
Mr. and Mrs Walter Ewan and children and
Mr and Mrs J. w Brown of Pilot Point have
gone on a tour of South Texas and Mexico.
BIBLE THOUGHT FOR TODAY Life
would be dull if it were not filled with continu-
ous discoveries. Spiritual life Is no exception:
It is the glory of Oral to conceal a thing —
Prov 25 :2
V
Your Dad will emit only words of
praise when you present him with a
Father's Day gift from the WE87TRN
AUTO ASSOCIATE STORE A few
suggestions tools for his tool chest,
parts or accessories for his car. or
sporting equipment for his favorite
•port
Ik1-
W>- give complete satisfaction,
home or auto types BUI Gil-
lespie at
MACK MASSEY MOTOR CO.
222 B Elin Phone 620
the newly comrnis-
Bruce Barnard of
a
) idomt\
/ THINK.
~ NOLTLL FIND h
YOU PIP YOUR WORK WELL?
MY PEAR... HOW MANY OF >
ALLEY’S FOOTPRINTS <
DIP YOU DESTROY ?>—<
)
that the most frequent ob-
Aineraa as tiie national
’ Riell’, wau w’V
‘ '<01^0 COMPETITOR-J
M to Oreetey, Cbtondo. to do graduate study
the Colorado State Teacnrra college.
b * two-day engagement In
with Lawrence Grady her
EASILY1
AND IN MAN*?
CASES, HAVE BtXN TAUGHT TO
SPEAK SEVERAL WORDS
’'^4
*
I
Two Texas newspaper men re-
cently in Washington and on hand
it a White HotLse press conference
Walter R Humphrey of the Temple
Daily Telgram and David Butter of
the Dallas Morning News. They
shook
man
Texas lawyers recently admitted
to practice before the United States
Supreme Court include Michael
Joseph Kefne, Jr , Alexander H
Fraser and William E Remy. Jr ,
all of San Antonio; Lewis O Ors-
born. Canton; Jewel Davis ix-mens,
and Willard K White, both of
Dallas, and Robert Proctor and
Charles O Patterson, botti of Fort
Worth.
and flowers will play a
bigger role than ever be-
fore.
If you must go vacationing this year, do
it with reservations-—but not on a rail-
road train.
PubtUhed each afternoon excepl
Wwt Hickory Street. Telephone 64
Riley CroeB, Owner and Publisher.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
On* year (Ln advance) ..............
(In advance)
ill (In advance)
J TVWUl.. am rvvi
' /"SATISFIED* IM
/ &O1NG OUT AND
( LOOK FOR ,
FOOT PRINT?.'
News by 'Leaks'
FPHE alleged acts of the Navy officer,
* two State Department employes and
three writers arrested on espionage
charges may be indefensible, but they
scarcely can be called unusual.
Dissemination of news through “leaks”
is a standard Washington practice. Prob-
ably there isn’t a recognized correspond-
ent of a reputable publication in the na-
tion’s capital who has not had access to
some sort of restricted or secret informa-
tion at some time since the war began.
This does not mean that there is always
an actual transfer of documents, as it is
charged took place in the State Depart-
ment case. But it is quite usual for Wash-
ington reporters to be told confidential,
ofi-the-record news or be shown docu-
ments that cannot be published.
There are two basic reasons for this
practice. In the military field, it is because
correspondents and their publishers have
earned and maintained a reputation for
trustworthiness.
: Since censorship is sometimes overly
qputious, military and other departmental
officers often indulge in private and en-
tirely discreet confidences which add to a
writer’s background knowledge and help
him to evaluate the news released for pub-
lication. Until now, there have been no
governmental charges that these confi-
□eh’es have been abused.
’ There is nothing either secret or con-
fidential in the news that personal and po-
litical differences exist among members
of various departments of government.
And in those differences is found the
other source of “leaks.” These are pass-
ed along by officials seeking to expose or
discredit a colleague or a policy, either
through malice or a sense of duty. In some
instances these "leaks” have performed a
distinct public service.
-As for the case in question, it is not
dear that any military security was in-
vohred. The New York Times story of the
investigation leading up to the arrests
makes this interesting observation:
2®t was learned that had not the text of
*-*ecret document been printed verbatim,
the six arrested persons might have es
caped detection. ... If the wording had
been changed, it might have been impos-
sible to sav whether an illegal disclosure
had been committed.”
-*«ividently it was the carelessness of the
Accused, and not the information they dis-
ojjped. that got them into trouble.
---------o---------
ncur it
so that
mow run xuong ]
LITTLE re luerTI ■
ANO FINO YER
MAYDOY — ,—> //
WHAY.NE FLORISTS
800 N. Locust
Six monttui by mail
Thrw montlui by mal
One month delivered
The Amoclaird Press U exclusively entitled to
th» uae for re-publlcatlon of all news dispatcher
credited to It or not otherwise credited In this
and also the local news published herein.
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
,___Any erroneous reflection upon the character,
reputation or standing of any firm, individual or
corporation will be gladly corrected upon being call-
ed to the publishers' attention.
The publlahers are not responsible for copy
omiialona. typographical errors or any unintentional
errors that may occur other than to correct In next
lasue after it la brought to their attention All ad-
vertising orders are accepted on thia basis only.
Roderick, to I
sioned 2nd Lt
Shiprock. N M
/SHE SHOULD KNOW./ WELL. I’M NOT
, r *x TuEu ztiir i in / r ATirrirni T* i
/EVEN OOOLA X I
, THINK \
I OOP COULD HAVE J
ft
A
While in Europe recently Rep
Ewing Thomason met Maj Dor-
rance Roderick, publisher of the El
Paso Times The other day at
West Point, following graduation
exercises, the congressman fulfilled
a special request of his El Paso
friend He gave away In marriage
the officer's daughter. Miss Frances
Witness of the ceremony, one of
70 that took place among the 837
Military Academy graduates, in-
cluded the bride’s mother, Mrs
Roderick, and Mrs Thomason; Mrs
Hester Dunkle of Marfa; Mr and
Mrs Chris Fox and Mr and Mrs.
Vai Lawrence, all of El Paso.
i/ *1
Shorts on
out
sharp clean ty|>e and
makeup, it had its
couple of old Italian presses
Of Mias Leona Payne, assistant county superin-
tendent. who is ill
1 Ben Ivey, who recently underwent an opera-
tion at the Denton Hospital, is reported as doing
JUIMUF.
t‘ Mt*. H. K. Sloan of Pilfct Point is at the Buck-
«er Hoepital for treatment
Roger Rainey, son of Mr and Mrs. M. L. Ramey
■of Denton, who has competed his second year at
the West Point Military Academy, arrived here
Tuesday to spend a three-months’ furlough with
By ROBB1N COONS
0-29 BASE. Tinian - <A>- They
■* laugh about dangers later,
these gallant lads of the Supertorts
who make the long hazardous flight
to Japan
The crew of the B-29 “T-N-Tee-
ny" laugh about their long, terrify-
ing journey home from a strike at
Nagoya It was no laughing mutter
at the time. Over the target this
plane commanded by Cept Fred-
erick B. Scheaffer of <409 Carol St.),
New Cumberland, Pa look a direct
flak lilt in its No 4 engine, and
smoke streamed from the dead na-
celle
"We couldn't feattier." said Sche-
affer, "and there was danger the
prop might fly ofl. And I figured
where there was smoke there iiad
to be fire—and I knew we’d have
to ditch,”
The crew began dumping equip-
ment, losing altitude, preparing for
the perilous water crash Meanwhile
the engine had stopjied smoking
Tliat gave them hope they would
try Io make it in!
Rnd all the wuy they flew that
giant, heavy ship, at a ditching al-
titude of five to ten feel off the wa-
ter, to make a landing at I wo Jlma!
The other day they were kidding
Lt Varge L Frick of San Antonio,
Texas, about hLs actions during the
long, suspense-tilled ride Frick, the
bombardier, recited Ills Rosary all
the wuy in "And my beads got so
hot," he said, "1 had to drop them
In my canteen to cool them off!"
Other members of the crew who
made thLs weirdest of B-29 trips
Included. Gunnery Sgt Rayford D
Watson of Sanatorium, Texas
“Think of all that equipment
dumped! Thousands of dollars ol
war bonds went to buy it Taxpay-
ers’ money—gone like that'" one
of them said
Well," said Lt William G Hawe .
of Dallas, Texas, I was thinking
Trooj )s Entertained Bv
Captured 3-Ring Circus
Bv CHARLES CHAMHERJ.AIN
'Substituting for Hal Boyle)
IfAMBURG, Germany-Lt. Colin Johnson,
year-old British artillery officer has one
the strangest jobs in the army of ix-cupation
Ls in charge of a three-rlng circus, a bomb-dazed
outfit of artists and animals captured by Field
Marshal Montgomery's troops
He volunteered for the task a month ago and
now has the circus ready to open business solely
for Allied troops under a big top which rises from
the ruins of Hamburg, one-time circus capital
of continental Europe.
To get the show Into operation again after an
RAF strafing plane mistook it for an enemy con-
voy. Colin has had to call forth all hLs knowledge
of the circus business.
This was gained from carrying a pall of water
to an elephant when ft circus put up in his home
town of Nottingham, England, 10 years ago
Among the things he has had to dig up are
1,000 electric light bulbs, a tent which will ac-
commodate 3,000 troops, 30 pounds of meat a
day for the only remaining lion, and food for
50 horses, two elephants, one monkey, a dozen
sheep and goats and 30 men and women artists.
The big top was about the only thing left of
the internationally famous Hagen beck circus. Ulis
was promptly requisitioned
Then Colin found a supply of meat unfit for
human consumption He is rationing it out to
Bruno, the mangy Hon i|flio Ls ravenously hursing
himself bock to health after shell splinters were
removed from his hide
Extra rations of fodder also were obtained for
the horst's and the two elephants which have been
tugging at their chains ever since Elvira, a fe-
male eleplianty*topped a stray machinegun slug
in the strafing/attack and died.
Colin is worried about Busan, a sorrowful-eyed
monkey that won’t eat but just sits and stares
•ince her mate was killed.
. Emory Dunham of Roanoke underwent an op-
eration at the Buckner Hospital Wednesday
Bob Cade of Aubrey underwent an operation
■t the Buckner Hospital Wednesday morning
. Sam Wilks, son of Mr and Mrs C. C Wilks,
has been elected teacher of manual training in
the Austin High School He was notified during
* recent visit to Austin and San Antonio with
■hi* parents. <■.
• Miss Jessie Belle Fenwick is taking the place
a man too 111 to go it alone
printed the names of buttles
Saipan, Okinawa, le, Aiu hen Leyte ol (.'liei liourg
and of Attu
There was little color to this parade The khaki
of the Army, the white of the bandages, here and
there a splash of red from bouquets of roses
brought by some girls just before the parade stall-
ed, a few streaks of lipstick left on pule laces
There was a smattering of polite applause as they
passed the reviewing stand But there was little if
any cheering ft was more like church
In Sun Francisco the small nations lost their
prolonged fight to provide, within ten years tor
even a review of the veto power over world secur-
ity now reserved to the Big Five,
In Germany the Krupps, master forgers of the
material* yf war, have walked blithely up to re-
quest [X'rmLsslon fot resuming operstlons, not say-
ing wilt for. except to help rebuild Germany
Tile Assoi lated Dress reports trolli <;.;ain till,
morning begins ' Ameiican soldiers and Marines
fought forward behind llumethiuwing tanks on
the southern Okinawa plateau today
Up Fifth Avenue with the whining jeeps yes-
terday rode a guard of honor two battalions ol
men for whom the war is just beginning, paiadmg
on the eve of their departure for the Daeltlc
I t Col George Dickey, on leave
as dean at N T A C in Arlington,
came up from Tampa. Fla . air-
base where he is stationed to see his
son. George, Jr , graduate ut the
U S Naval Academy at nearby
Annapolis 4*
The former Betsy Joe Jameson of
Sherman and husband. Lt Jimmy
Larson, are proud parents of a 6
ixiund 12 ounce boy, Jimmy, Jr
Mrs Larson, formerly a secretary
for Rep Paul Kilday of San An-
tonio. is living here while her pilot
husband Ls overseas
V. is . June 16 i,pi
the boys al the Ilie-
ta Chi iralernitv hodse. the use ol
profanity can be both objection-
able and pattiotic Tile Greek let-
ter chapter on the University of
Wisconsin campus has purchased iLs
second war bond from fines levied
against members who engage in
rivalry <u mu-cllve ut the dining
I ible-
Il! putting the matter up to Congressman Lud-
ow Mr DLssette says In part
“ The Star Spangled Banner’ is not an anthem
It centralizes and extols a critical situation In
the war of 1812 The remoteness of tliat situa-
tion. the mellowing Influence of time, and the
overshadowing importance of even more critical
situations In subsequent wars have all tended
to relegate this happening of the war of 1812 U>
its proper place in tiie records of our early his-
tory and there it should Le allowed to rest
Mr Dlssette think, the song falls to strike a
responsive chord in the hearts of its hearers. He
believes few people can recite even the first stanza
lean you?) and that most have never even heard
the remaining three
"Just the contrary Is true of America’,’ he
says. "The words of that beautiful hymn are
comprehensive In scope, embracing our whole na-
tion and domain; It has dignity and majesty in
its structure, simpicity in its expression of senti-
ment
"It never grows old, applying today with greater
force than when first made public more than liJO
years ago >18321
Mr Dlssette reiterates an often-used objection
— that the air of "Tiie Stair Bjmngled Banner ’ Ls
beyond the lange of the average untrained voice
He doesn t think
Jection to adopting
tliat the air is the same as the British
"God Save the King"—is a
d > 7//
By J M ROBERTS, JR
AB Foreign Affairs Analyst
MIIJ.ION ordinarily noisy New Yorkers stood
mute along the broiling sidewalks of Fifth
Avenue at noon yesterday. Up from the lower
reaches of the broad street came only one sound,
the whine of 200 Army jeeps geared down to two
miles an hour
It was Infantry day, and the men with Purple
Hearts were on parade
Crutches stui k up from some ol the machines
like pins in a cushion Bandaged heads, and arms,
and faces Here and there a nurse accompanied
On the jeeps were
ol Casslno, Burma,
THE »AA1U% GONE »
THAT 4AAN STOLE IT*
mv rr
o, / /// ,
anthem
national anthein,
valid one
"In a discussion of the matter several years
ago,’’ he says, "the assertion was made and never
refuted that the air originated ns the folk-song
of a disappeared and forgotten |>eople; that Eng-
land (merely' rescued it from passing Into ob-
livion
"The air is also claimed bv Germany and Swit-
zerland. and Russia formerly used the air as her
national anthem Apparently the air belongs to
the world.
’ Woud it not be peculiarly appropriate for
Congress to rescind its action of 1931 and sub-
stitute as our national anthem America ’ an an-
them in which our whole nation heartily Joins
in singing praise to almighty God for our great
blessing of freedom and for our preservation?"
Choose your side and
A prominent New York tax law-
yer whose father served as an East
Texas congressman from 1900 to
1919 visited friends in the capitol
He is Will Gregg, formerly of Pal-
Hls deceased lather was A
W Gregg, a member of the family
East Texas county
IF'ASHINGTON, June 18-The
House Foreign Affairs Com-
mittee has divided Itself into five
subcommittees, each with a chair-
man and each with a geographical
region of the world In which it will
specialize. Rep Luther A Johnson
of Corsicana heads the group which
will concentrate on problems and
relationships with Eastern Europe,
the Near Fest and the Balkans
for which an
was named
From Sgt Bill Quinn, former
editor of the Grand Saline Sun.
comes a copy o' the Beachhead
News, "a newspaper on wheels, roll-
ing with its renders from Anzlo to
the Brenner Pass the hard way "
Now put out on slick pa|>er with
tyix- and attractive
had Its start on a
Gallant Superfort Lads \\ ho Bomb
Japan Laugh About Dangers LaltT
about that too but I was trying ti
save Uncle Sum that $10,000 life
insurance poll< y he carries on met'
But sometimes there Ls no laugh
ter -only giief and admiration.
That, and a laisthumous Silver Star,
was tiie lot of Maj John C. Conly
(widow 2019 Guerrero, Laredo.
Tex I, w hose heroism as commander 1
of a Tokyo-striking Bk29 is a legend
now Conly took charge of the pre-
cision-instrument bombing after one
run over the target He did Trojan
service through a heavy snowstorm,
attempting to repair the inoperative
navigational uidese When it was
yvidcnt that the plane was lost and
ditching inevitable, Conly and the
navigator undertook to Jettison
equipment through the bomb bay
doors Some of the equipment
caught on the lower part of the
buy and the doors would not close
and Conly lowered himself by his
hands into the o|x n bay and wig-
gled the obstacles loose with his
feet' Then he repaiied the naviga-
tional equipment, located an island
nearby, and directed the "ditching"
only a quarter-mile away
the nine survivors easily
reached safety.
But Conly was not among them
Thy plane broke In two on the
crash and Conly was not seen again
' I
■L
ET
Entered at the peatofflee at Denton. Texaa.
Little Elm
daughter, Mn. Anna Splawn and the latter’a
of^Biaton, an visiting relative! and friends in
f Mha Maria OQWtey, 1203 North Elm Street, has
2Fr:_________
•Gloria Bwamson
"The Untamed Ll_, ..............
I >adtag nan. at the Palace Theater.
I J. Newton Rayxor, eon of Mr and Mrx J N
jRayair of Denton, haa been elected to the faculty
•of the South Texas School of Law at Houston.
By JACK STINNETT
IF'ASHINOTON-If you want to get in on th.
ground floor of what may be a revival of u
rckkI scrap, take sides now on whether you would
like to see Congress drop The Star Spangled
Banner" as our national anthem and substitute
"America
The controversy Is an old one but Rep Louis
Ludlow. Indiana newspaper man and author, has
brought it into the open a>nin He has called
the attention of Congress to tiie arguments for
the change put forward by a couple of his In-
diana constituents. James I Dlssette and the
Rev Charles Fillmore
The Star 8|»nglcd Banner” was adopted as
our national anthem by act of Congress in 1931.
but the arguments that preceded that action nev-
er have died down completely
A bill for the payment of $7,146
to Boyd B Black of Jasper has
been signed by the president It Is
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 262, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 16, 1945, newspaper, June 16, 1945; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1370507/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.