Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 141, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 27, 1948 Page: 4 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 21 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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THE NATION TODAY
).
I
•oon
5
You don’t
£
k
I.
all
HOLLYWOOD
Will the Third Time Prove the Charm?
Capitol Police Captain Stresses Courtess
By JANE EADS
ANALYZING THE NEWS
Pakistan, India Resume
Talks to Avert Viar
least
Major lloop'e
By J R. Williams
Our Botrdinz House
with . .
average
Denton Record Chkomoj
n
; t
Com pan*
rubii*h:zx<
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of
As Iona as the fighting
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EX MRS POWER WINS
KLIMON Y 07 $50,000
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WF TALKS (ROUGH,
< BUT 1 DOUBT IF
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Ba WOULD GIT '
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■di THIS FAST £
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here to-
Publiarx d
Riles Cross
Bv DEWITT MACKENZIE
AP Foreign Affairs Analyst
YOU GOTTA ?
WTMUTNINK
COUNT P YOU
BVKT MITO
TNtl 900*
MRMPOtf
MPCKWTMBM .
L KLU! /
Ju. can
accord
police ge' an aver-
with over-
brtng-
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has
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to
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£6AD 8OV&.* NOU JR.'
ARE SEASONED
iN THE Mill OP
MfXTftiAAOMY---
HOvJ VJOUlD YOU GO
about discouraging]
AM ELDERLY AtAN Z
WiMOSE HEAD itjlMJ
A FOG OycC A
PRETTY PETTlVOAT *)
aPv
Continuance of Mellinger Company
Assured bv Humphrey Bogart
Coming Up To Date On
The Marshall.Plan
f*'
a week who seem to have a grudge
against the government
’■They come to the.Capitol
get even
BOYLE’S NOTEBOOK
The Season of Male Madness - -
Clearance Sales Get Hal, Too
>y HAL BOYLE
house
_________ she will
them to the store the next
before
Capitol
on
all
SitWi thuubly utmt Man a noa X nem«
PMOY < FIFlS BFSKHlSIBLE SlUCt, “Z “
NMM WENT TO THAI MTEKWEW M AM I MME »•'<
gVtOKT W LOCATE * CMRl FOR. HIM*
MOT A WORD YET, CMOL. » WE COULD
BLY FMO THAT GMUI...ME KNOWS BBM
L JNINB M0UT 1MI*' BUT THOUSANDS HT 1
k«SCRiFTiON I MS ABLE TO OVE POUCf!
WEM A HORS&.
I 6REAH.S A •£
LEG TM€Y fj
L SfIOOT H>n\, B
But you D
ff CASH DO V
n AtUCA FOR
\ A MAM BUT/ '
\ \ LET MiSA <
) ( taUFPeR?
/'v)
Mtxvwr. ms *»»
AN AFt, M >« NO
LCM mKfonohc
. THAN USUAL."
The Cap.to!
age of I-' 000 base pa1,
time and other allowances
Florida law bans the posse■.sien,
transport*’:nr. .u vending a..l-
gators less ’.nan tour lee: long.
—rain-
socks
and a
dosen neckties resembling the stai-
boaid side of a tattoed lady
I have learned I have to smug-
gle these goodies into the
If Frances detects them
return L—. — --
day. -1
■ -lie u.
he.r p.<’
»:si
<1 .d.
Pow-
111 .YG KHAT 'C_''
*>■ Coke w
fnAt cOlC-
XM UTTf
.fK" ».*•
KOTICf TO I HI
Vc* •nvte u refWcUQQ uj>.ja
tatiOD lundinj of ini t'rrr.
aiioci will t* gladly <orre<i«d upon being ouxd to
’‘la pubiiAb^ra actecUor.
Pl MI.IC
tie cnarwcur re pa*
individual or cuepo-
Entrred
13 192'.
Pennsylvania
19 years
lob on
Delayed
er The
TRA;isL
CLEVER
■pRA’L
CUvER^e,
RED
RYDER’S
PO56E
StUF’S
Tt^.
FildMlZ
ah
n k
1 d
in a
1
'JU' i
IB
SBV
kAl
ft '•
^v!
^1
”b* publisher* ar* not rmpotgs’.o.e tor copy uml*
•ns irp.js-'aphlcal error* or any unintentional
.r» that occur other than to esg-rect in nett ia*u*
r it u brouaht to their attention All adrertiaUM
-• »re accepted on thl> baaj only
IFzjLr / like to \
■ brag abcut I j"
m y fo/^s, ) ' J
Wj
have increased th*
men They are all
s picked for their servi e
Armv. and their
is about 23 vears
W6$UP
HM1K0L9
KQ
INlBEiaXN?
MZ W ,
Di TY.e Deaton
Pu bl uber
‘W
' YM
81 was bad enough whan Van D«r
Flank told ma he'd Named who I wm,
but adling ma’jtopid* wade me sore.
( JOMKXff mbt\
/ HAVE TOLD THAT <
MABP1E WHAT TmE
EAMEMS.CAAU0N?
. NO. THAT DOI MCT /
MAM SENSE./
was: '.
to take
Capt Broderick says the hardest
job his men have u. handling an
average of three or four persons
Out Our Way-
Elevator operators in a Kansas town
struck. We can think of other uplifters
we’d rather s*e walk out.
WASHINGTON — iP' — Courtesy
always pavs off says big. hand-
some William J Broderick who
is rounding out his first year as
captain of the Capitol Police Force
Capt
f TOO BAD Mt)
r A MT CRA~Y G
[ SOstf OTYE R I
) W AY YOU -A
1 GOT A CAAYLc
OF CURING |j
THCKt if TMly y
I uOT SOstL
V AMtD
PefcL* ' / FORM UkL
( P&RPETl'Al 1/
ll’' .: MOTiOM' ’
\\
A it
men must be at least
seven inches in heigh’
and must weigh at least 145
pounds They must be free of color
blindness deafness or impediment
of speech
The men are now getting their
first training in Washing-on »
metropolitan police rookie school
Later. Capt Broderick hopes they
can go to the Police Academy
Ava G.tidnr:
Ariicn and <1 •
On*
\) JrTuTFlOOR WAIKER, GRAYLAW.'
w..............
01 _______
she’e got a house'
\ like that worvAH
\0J1lAR RODE .SHE’S
IvJORTH ib)vE«TiaATih)'r
■rr-x’nd
8 a m to 4 p m
to midnight, midnight to
HEKKH1 IT# EOT Ag 5IMF1F Ac
nu>. NR tube# mam HFUfsvoue
IV WATCH MOufc
COMING MONTHS'
sport
sale last Jan-
Been looking
Got it half
: al
the
Freni h actress tes’ified that
Power often refused to talk to her
deserted par'ie- in their hon-e and
went to his room to sulk ai ver cd
par s elsewhere and lorcer her to
drive home alone
The settlement, made a par
the record, gives Anna be .a
minimum of 150 000 but pior ij>-s
that if his screen earnings ev - d
1310 000 in any one year .‘lie w. i
receive 17 per cent of
Additionally, she won
tlai Bren'wood home pl.;>
monthly for support of h»*
Annie, by a former busbar d
er subsequently adopted the ^irl
Broderick, who had been
a member of the
State PoliFt for
taking over
HUI.
By JAMES MARLOW
WASHINGTON. Jan 27—UF Thls will bring
you up to date on the Marshall Plan if the argu-
ments about it are making you foggy
The arguments will go on for months while
Congress is working on the plan
The Marshall Plan called tor this
Sixteen European nations agreed to help
themselves and one another try to recover We
would give them the extra help they need
The cost to us? Billions ot dollars: In loans,
and gifts like food, fertiliser, machinery, fusl.
The reason: To help those countries and to
stop the spread of Communism in Europe
The Democrats and most of the top Repub-
licans seem agreed we ll have to help Europe,
with the Marshall Plan or some form of it.
Any such plan snd the money to be spent
on it. will have to be okayed by Congress
The Republicans want to cut income taxes.
That means a cut ui the amount ot money the
government can collect and spend. So they’ll
try to cut help tor Europe •
You've been hearing a lot of arguments about
the plan, but the mam ones so far center around
these three points
1. How much do we spend on tbe help we
give Europe?
The Marshall Plan calls for spending about
117.000.000,000 dollars over four years, with M> -
800,000.000 to be spent in the first 15 months
The Republicans questioned that total Some
'of the lop ones also think that M.800.000.000 for
tbe first 15 months should be cut down.
2 For how many years — we give that help1
The Marshal! Plan calls for helping Europe
for tour years
But a lot of Republicans think we should not
get tied up with promises of four years of help
A number of them are talking of giving help
for only one year at a time
3 Who s going to be in charge of the plan
approved by Congress?
The Marshall Plan calls for an adminis-
trator who U handle the plan but take orders
from the Secretary of State
The reason given The Marshall Plan al-
though its purpose is to help Europe, involves WASHINGTON
this country’s foreign policy (
• But Republicans are talking of making the
Marshall Plan boss independent of the Secretary
of State or putting the plan under some kind of
joint board of Democrats and Republicans.
SORRY. MIVIR,
<THI$ 1$ EtfNMAr/
NEW YORK —OF)- ThU th*
month whois an annua) madness
comes upon men
Illis Is the month the lady of
the house greets me with a sigh
of relief each night I come home
without a bundle under my arms.
This la the month of January
sales tn gents' furnishings
In thousands of men's stores
sc roes the land about now the pro-
prietor goes to his head saleeman
and says, "Well. Joe, it's time to
get ready for the craay ones ”
"What, already again so
it's time?’* groans Joe.
So he goes into the basement and
begins to haul out merchandise.
He brings out pre - Civil War
shirts and the pearl button shoes
popular when people wore "Vote
for McKinley" buttons. He fetches
up two pants suits with five but-
ton coats, .and the lovely old dust-
covered neckties Illustrated with
daring pictures of the Eiffel Tower
They pile up this wonderful his-
torical men’s wear waist deep on
the counters. They put sds In the
papers and hand big signs In the
w indows announcing
Big annual sale tn gents’ war
One-third to one-half off Bargains,
bargains, bargains!"
By now the "craay ones" are
milling around outside, eyes pop-
ping. hands full of dollar bills, wait-
ing for the door to open In this
town Joe Is likely as not to turn
tp the proprietor and sigh
"Boss, look who's out there
again—that fat guy who needs his
JONESBORD Tenn Jar. 27- ?A
— Nobody will ge< in the Washing-
ton County jail for 14 days-and
nobody *’W get out
The reason
A 14 • day quarantine was im-
posed after a prisoner s illness »ax
diagnosed as smallpox.
Bv BOB THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD. Jan 27. —<iF>--
Continuance of the Mark Hellinger
Film Company, which has been in
doubt since the producer s death
Dec 21. is assured by Humphrey
Bogart Plans for the new company
are expected to Jell this week the
actor says
The outfit is looking for a new
man to head production, and. says
Hogan. "Such a man is not easy
to nnd '* The company’s assets in-
clude commitments with Bogart
Burt Lancaster. Director Jules
Dassin, Cameraman Billy Daniels,
plus a sheaf of Ernest Hemlngwav
stories and two other properties
Knock on Any Door ’ and "Act ot
Violence "
Uzabeth Scott claims she didn t
save a cent of her earnings last
year So she hired a buslnbM man-
ager. who allows her *12 spending
money per week . . Warners is
reported holding ita serious pic-
tures including some made a vear
ago until 1949 release The studio
figures the market isn t ripe tor
heasy stuff ....
tng it up to *2.909 Tuev are
divided into three shifts of eight
hours each — 8 a m to 4 p
4 p m i
8am
Ail the
five feet.
William Powell, now tn
Peabody and the Mermaid '
onlv two more pictures to do
MOM And he has four tears
do them in He savs he amtneed
the deal because M c I r o
making enough pictures
care of all Its stars
Robert Walker
Dick Haynies, Ete
ga San Juan sha[>e up as the
Touch of Venus’’ cast
Quotes from the lots
Powell on "The Pitiall se:
give *1 000 to be able to
picture again Greer Ga
who does bubble-bath
mmg and rainstorm > it r.e s in
Julia Misbeheaves FY r: nw
on. just call me E<'her Garson ' .
mimhh oe thi AEKOCiATtn ruaaa
CT.» As.-seated Prem u entit.ed esclwiwly to tb»
tor repubjicauoa ot all tbe local news n u>ted
a tbi* tw»»paper as we., m ad \P aew* dupaicbe*
at ifm uirriox kail*
st courier arid aewstaa'la 5c per copy
Sr Carrar 20< per aeek
Bi Ma.: i la Advance i One >e»r *7 SC »ix
»s 00 tbre* m<-nths *1 25 okx month 8S<
tflJiloria/} and Jeaturei
^DKNTON (Tea.) RECORD - 4. HRONICLli— Tueaday. Jan. S7. IM«
Strategy of the Bloodless
Battle
In his statement on the Marshall Plan,
Bernard M. Baruch spike to the Senate
Foreigm Relations Committee of "the
incredible follies of mankind which des-
troyed earlier civilizations." The greatest
of these follies is war. Yet war seems to
be the only thing that will make Ameri-
cans work together as Mr. Baruch says
they now must work together to assure
world peace.
Id wartime, common danger liegets com-
mon, all-out effort. The government func-
tions, not perfectly—for that is impossible
—but with reasonable speed. People are
willing, as Mr. Baruch says they must
again be willing, to "contribute what is re-
quired in moderation, self-restraint and.
if necessary, sacrifice”
War wastes money and material and
property, as well as lives. Its prosecution
demands a more authoritarian head of
government than a democratic jieople
would tolerate in time o1 peace. Yet war
calls forth in all <>f us some commendable
traits of unity, industry, charity and
straight thinking.
Those traits would be particularly wel-
come in the collective mind of Congress
today. The members are now called upon
to decide whether there is to be a bloodless
liattle for peace in Europe and. if there is
to be one. to plan its strategy. This task
needs statesmanship that resembles our
wartime generalship.
Planning, integration and production—
those were the three problems that had
to l>e solved at home l>efore our troops
could win battles on distant fields. Those
are the three problems which must be
solved at home again before the bloodless
liattle can l>e won in Europe.
Mr. Baruch did the Foreign Relations
Committee and the Congress and the coun-
try a great service when he presented
those problems in their proper perspec-
tive. We do not say that his plan is per-
fect. or that his recommendations should
be carried out without quesion. We domay
that a program of European aid cannot
l>e carried out successfully without some
counterpart of his wisdom, vision and
objectives.
“Bv itself this legislation cannot bring
peace." Mr Baruch told the committee.
"It is a beginning, not the end. if its ob-
jectives are to Ive realized, it must l>e ac-
companied by two further actions—we
must stabilize America tor peace; we must
develop a glol»al strategy for American
peacemaking.”
The problems of the liattle for peace
are varied and complex, but they are in-
separable. As our military strategists
couni not put off fighting .Japan until
Germany was disposed of. so our peace-
time strategists cannot conduct their cam-
paicns one at a time.
Just as there were two great theatres
of World Wai1 II. so there are tw«> great
divisions of the present battle for peace.
At home, we must check inflation. In
Europe, we must help to revive an ex-
hausted economy in time to save it from
the advance of communism.
It is a pity that, thus far. so many in
Washington who are activelv concerned
with this Hattie’ strategv have shown
themselves to le more intent on Novem-
l>er'’ votes than on an integrated attack
upon today's problems
Tbe Dominions of India .Hindui and Pakis-
tan 'Moslem, are resuming negotiations under
auspices of the United Nations m an effort to
settle their dangerous differences after a warn-
ing in’ the Security Council bv Philip J Noel-
Baker British minister of state for common-
wealth relations, that the alternative to agree-
ment may oe war
T1 war happens " declared the minister, "it
may be the most terrible conflict ui the history
of mankind
You have to know the Indian subcontinent
to get tbe full significance of such a prediction.
Your correspondent can testify that Mr Noel-
Baker not only isn t drawing tbe long bow but
that he could have stated the case tn much
stronger Language without exaggeration
The immediate difficulty is the bloody quar-
rel over the princely s'ate of Kashmir — one of
the world s dream lands When tbe two domin-
ions were formed, the many ruling princes were
given their choice of joining their states to either
domuuon or of remaining independent The Ma
bara.iah of Kashmir. Sir Han Singh, is a Hindu
while the great majority of bis subjects are
Moslems — a bad combination, since these two
religions hate beer, warring throughout the In
dian peninsula for centuries
The Maharajah tried to remain independent
but Moslem tribesmen from neighboring Pakis
tar. territory invaded the state with fire and
sword Thereupon Sir Harl cast his lot provision
with Hindu India and called tor militart
help which he received
The result has been strife within the state
com.pbcaied bv religious fanaticism which has
filled that lovely Land of flowers with nightmar-
ish borror Thus we find Noel-Baker telling the
U. N Security Council:
’’This Kashmir business brought these gov-
ernments. <the Dominions of Pakistan and India.
_____ goes
is danger that the parties may drift
"You poor thing you she said
•This is a night shirt You don’t
wear night shirts
Now clerks at the stores where T
am known refuse to take the price
tags off sales haberdasherv I
buv
"What's the use1 ' thev
"The stuff ll all be back
morrow
Anyway once a tear ue gti'S
get the fun of buying it and ‘ arrv-
Ing It heme Women shoppers
ercise that delirious pleasure
year round
»t tbe poat office at Denton I eta*
as mall Blatter of the aeccnd claaa
■•ng to the A< ts of CobgreM March i 1879
Pob kal.-1 each afternoon except Saturdar and Bun
Say morning at *14 E Hickory St Bbnna ITRO
This custom began after Fiances
burrowed into my closet one sum-
mer and came out with a strange
fancy garment with long tails She
held it up with the mute query
wives get in their eyes Jus! be-
fore the verbal disdain pours out
"It’s an English style sport
shirt I got at that
uary.” I explained
for it everywhere
price "
skull reforested ’
He means me Because the only
thing that has kept me away from
January sales in the last 11 years
was the second world war
And I end up »>' hour late by
staggering out with a Santa Claus
slse pack of male drapery
bow-hued skirts, Tibetan
with individual toe spaces
to
any wav they can.’' he
says. ' and they have to be hand-
died with care Sometimes it takes
three or four men to handle a
single case "
Their worst trouble ui the past
vear was occasioned bv the shoot-
ing of Senator Bricker by a man
who claimed some sort of injus-
tice had been done him
Capt Broderick came to Wash-
ington to head the force after
four years m the Armv . which in-
cluded 20 months in the Aleutians.
He is a modest man and says hts
19 years’ police service is is not
long ui this game "
very near to war
on there
into war
Weil, now when we talk ot such a war we
aren’t dealing with any ordinary conflict As the
minister indicated, there would be communal
strife That would mean wild butchery and de-
struction which has marked religious battles for
generations
We had * preview of this when the Dornin
ions were first formed The communal slaughter ----------
in «>me cases was remin-cent of the Dark Ages A|| pniioners ln Jail
Likely tn "Break Out'
f.LvuR
kMOWS
r of p •
f Abt oc
'■'[ r-I'c
/ j Hl vt t r>
\ \ I-U'c'l D
n A r-A A
I'Ll
\ '.'I N’t Net
I
LOS ANGELES Jan 27 — -T -
Annabella divorced Tyrone Power
todav and a on approval ot a;L
mom totaling at least *50 aK) an-
nuaLiv, less her earnings
Their romance came to i t
end .n superior court when
te< ified
V9HCW ’IRMtZApg J am V
o«a»«r a.* ’ag x. A
<«8A^' A KAA UKT
OR «*• -N- . A »* A
MOMorre Age ■ /"™S
:=2E« '
Lauren Bacall asked Y'.< I!
make films with other leading men
besides her husband III l.ave to
— I’ve still got a four-year -'.lenh
to serve at Warners
Some bin& have coal—others haven’t.
For once its the has bin that’g sitting
pretty.
the
started out by insisting
fine manners tn his men at
times
Among other things, he told his
men it had to be Yes sir no str.
yes ma m no ma m" all the time
and no wise cracks ever that
drinking on the job would not be
tolerated that uniforms must al-
wavs be neat
The result he says, has been a
"number of nice comments from
visitors, and from Senators and
Congressmen themselves
A batch of 15 new long-aimers
just sworn m.
force to 157
veterans
m the .
age
<
-
I
f
-XL.:.
V
;.A.
lor all
c
S?*»»0UR*
hmi?
ANO «TH.l
NO Mwt
Of WA«H
Listenin
i
I V
On
One L
One L
One b
I
One L
• • Jacke
Wool
Co
«
All
4
»
r
4
8
) J
4
J*
F
4*V
4—-
Of Loca
l\es Sc
Ever
Has
z IhM 1
Great te I
FEMI
Are you trem
male functu
ancee? Iktre
from pain. 1
bitf h-etrunft-
dq Uy Lydia 1
Compound 1
tom a’ In a n
prvnrd rrmai
an troublad t
HYDWLF
* A
The annual
by the Dentor
Btale College
dents is ache<
Feb 14. when
< ommemoratini
founders day
« atalion WFFA,
Members of
meet at 3:30
Swarts Rose '
household aril
for a social I
broadcast, whl
P m.
/ Speakers on
President L H
M rs Herbert
of T8CW Ex t
Adele Austin,
student body.
• Dr John Lr
department of
present the 4(
in three sel«
Dr W E Jo
smg "To Mus:
log Allee Mill!
tus'' (Buck >
rart. Fifty n
^ege s symphe
ducted by E.
play several
• "’Woodland 81
J Clark W»
ot n-remonlri
After the
ttiese on the I
plunented wit
las Chapter o
Dallas Woma
Over 10 000
ed last nmnll
7 SCW E'x-f
expansion dri
near In 1941
placed on a
f>. rted organl
membership i
sis
All TSCW «
guets are in
list— 'inir par
\.i
The rasp
PRETTY CULP
SHCVVER BATH
AIN’T IT,
sens? oh
> TH SOAP--
YEH RI3HT
L HE.AH.'
i 11J«;•
iff
fl'
I?
I
z
J"‘_*
2
111 '
-...t c_ - --- >- -.. » **
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 141, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 27, 1948, newspaper, January 27, 1948; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1370593/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.