Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 149, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 5, 1946 Page: 4 of 8
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ANALYZING THE NI^VS
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Fage Foot
John Is Going to Be a Great Help
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THE NATION TODAY
(
Yamashita Decision And
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Other W ar Criminals
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9
Phone 468
718 S Elm
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•t A vwee, *•
RELIOION IS HIS BUSINESS
R
Desert Mission Is Monument to Cents Sense
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Bernard, Dr Salsbury has all the
By J. R. Williams
Out Our Way
Major Hoople
with
Our Boarding House
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HOLLYWOOD
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"Amber’ Discloses Her
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Middle Name-Hollvwood
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RADIO
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SERVICE!
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2-5
By FRED HARMAN
Free Room
RED RYDER
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YEP.O ACCOUNT
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By LESLIE TURNEJ
It’s Julkie
WASH TUBBS
22
Don't break your back trying to keep
come
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R-U -AWARE,2
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19 YEARS AGO
In The Record-Chronicle
visitors at ferry piers. In tramcars
and in public gathering places. You
deployed to tin- idewa
like undercover men. I
(15EE NOw) was
— RED RIDER
7 WHUT S TH' '
IDEA, SLIPPINJ’
TH' GROCERIES
IK) SI DE AND
SNEAKIN LIKE
THAT? ‘FRAID
O' BEINJ‘ kEPT
EvERyANT
#AS AT Lt AST ON1
Leaf DeFORE If
DREAKSTSEED.
WEARS A GUN.
hDUC-E95‘
wH1 DO OU Ie NR RED WENT \
10 Au Th- TROUDLE OKEEPIN’
TOU FROA ©EMBWINDLED:
" 1 WERENT FOR WOMEN, 1
\ “E~ WOLLD HAVE NOTHIN)
ever
as
JULKIE! BUT
THIS 16 THE
LAST TIME »
WE'VE GOT
TO GET OUT
OF HERE
k SOON?
IN ER PUT
TO WOEk
i
Business calls for us to keep the dollars
rolling. Most people prefer to stack them
up.
)
THEN GOON
I AFTER THE STOCK
MARKET CRASH HAO
RUINED THEM. JEROME
WAS KILLED.. MAYO€
THEY MATE FOR WF
TO SEE WHAT THIS
HAS DONE TO
THEM:
WHEN ARE
WE GOING
To WARM
ITUP?
can't say
JOU
With an
z e, /
%/A
WHY MOTHE PC. GET OR AV
wnvi NOTEBOOK
Wolfpack Attack System Adopted
By Young Pickpockets of Hong Kong
WESAFE STORE
WEST SIDE OF SQUARE PHONE 2
______
( '
J
' mi5i
"7 i
DENTON RECORDCANONfE
13
«
Gene (Fat Boy) Boyles is
the Service Man.
Tall, broad and friendly as a St. .. the years to roll by He wrote the
" " various publishers of medical books
3UST HERE,THREATENING ME
WITH PHYSICAL HARM UNLESS
1 FIND A 3OB IN 24 HOURS! 5
TAERES NO (IMETO BE
-
mguoohgaph
' 2g,, A, g ajd 3 • g
EK
I M
I
I
I
I
I
LOST,MAN! SOD MOST HNPNOT-
ITE HER AT ONCE TO THINJK .
I'M EMPLOYED POLL TIME J
ec
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$.
4
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5
.n
VHAT 1
V U NIGHT %
MARY AIKEN'S
THOUGHTS ARE
OF THE BLEEKE
FAMILY ..OF .
h.YEARS A6OA
ic y
"Carpet Is Still the Best Floor Cover-
ing”—advertisement. Well, it’s hard to
beat.
%,3
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4—7
4.3
A Michigan woman is seeking a divorce
because her husband allows three sax
players to practice in their kitchen.
Sounds like no harmony in that home.
LUcuv)
WATCH ’
k
(WHILE
W NOT
FAR AWAY
KEEP THAT IDEA IN
MOTH BALLS, MASOR,BUT
1 GUESS THIS IS IT! ----
WELL , T'LL WINJD UP
AMD MAKE THE PITCH,
6OT I‘M AERAID THAT
APTER THIS ONE XM
GOING TO BE OUT LIKE
A 8088Y-GOXERS ,,
SHIRT ‘ _____ .
the pubitahers’ attention.
The publtshers are not responaible for copy omt-
•Iona, typographic) error, or any unintentional
errom that occur other than to correct in nexs
issue after it la brought to their attention. All nd-
vertiaing orders are accepted on this basis only.
M
1
a shabby old floor kan
,)
I 1 v‘
ilk and street
BSsuming in-
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2:
,3
9"C
S/Asro og
I AA0
view since being gifted with the lead in ' For-
Amber. " Peggy Cummins disclosed such facts
OF SKUNKS
LIKE >‘
I l
uu“Ga WM MMMI ASBOCUn* ruusu
Every married man’s pay envelope
shows the effect of the feminine touch.
i
/1
^dilorid/i and Jealurei
Tuesday, February 5, 1946
2 *‘
7 4 m
t
He told them of the gift and said
he would like to use it to build
shelves tor the books he was sure
they would donate
Today the nurses' school has a li-
brary valued at more than $2 000
Food storage is a critical problem
■
946 By Nt A Ml VICI INC 7 M MG U $ PAT OFF
v)
the Blue Mound community, Saturday morning,
a giri; to Mr. and Mra Bill Harper, east of Au-
brey, Saturday a boy.
MIMM Minnie Jones and Mae Sanders of Lake
Dallas are week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. U C.
Traveistead.
Mr. and Mrs. H W. Cochran of Corinth were
called to Lubbock to attend the funeral of his
---------------------
Our New Garage
I BROUC+1T A LOAF O' \
BREAD THAT WA-NT CUT V
AN MY SIsTE E LL BELLOW
LIKE A BUOLF! —HE NEVER
CUT A LOAF O BRE AD INJ
HER LIFE •• MA AINT USED
TO IT, F ITHER, AKI' I >
m, At counter and newstands: Sc per copy.
- By arrier: 15c per week; 87.80 per year.
By Mail (In Advance): One year 88.25; efk months
2 0550; three months 01.80; one month 750.
the police didn't warn
uuoy Orosa, Publtsher.
m. . SUBSCRIPTION BA TBS I
iwda
is Ready for
Business
Fxperienerd mechanlc In
charge. Bring us your car for
repairs, washing and lubrica-
tian is our specialty.
Hodges Serv.
Station
i hit tie Majors)
NOTICE TO TUB PUBLIC
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, repu-
tation or standing of any firm. Individual or corpo-
ration will be gladly corrected upon being called to
Bill Madewell of Argyle entertain-
ty Monday night
I his wonder horse. "Tony" are fea-
the Dreamland Theater in "The
!L—
(-i
Daw. Jr
• >
J. .
, the illness and death of the 3-week old infant
of Mr. and Mrs. Sampley
Maximum temperature yesterday. 76; low to-
day, 61.
Marriage licenses were Issued to: Lowell F.
Wilson, Dallas, and Jency Keith. Kaufman; Er-
win Fourteen and Sallie Ranger. Pilot Point
A Clinton Whitmore of Lake Dallas entertained
■ few friends with a party Saturday night.
“Mrs. Alice Newton underwent a tonsil opera-
Men Saturday morning.
Born: To Mr. and Mrs A. H Lienschmidt of
eye to modernization.
ominous "beware of pickpock-
warning greets Hong Kong
received a gift of $50 000 from the
Sage Foundation legacy of Mar-
garet Olivia Slocum Sage, widow of
Russell Sage
One of Dr Salsbury's pet projects
is the nurses' school An extensive
library was required, but there were
no funds available
"I was about to scratch my head
bald," he says, when a nurse, Irene
Moran, donated $100 to start the
library, with the hope that others
who could would chip in as the
years went by."
But Dr Salsbury did not wait for
War-Ravaged France is
Big Contrast to Spain
By DEWITT MACKENZIE
AP World Traveler
PARIS, Feb. 5.—You get an unhappy comparison
" between the hard times in war ravaged France
and the relative well being of Spain if you make
the Journey from Madrid to Paris by train.
Mrs Mack and I crossed the frontier from a
Spain in which we had found—at a price—the
finest food we had seen since America entered
the war, to sit down in France to a potters meal
which was shockingly meager.
Here’s the dinner we had on one of France’s
crack trains A plate of thin soup, a small portion
of fish, with a few bit of boiled potato and string
beans on the side, an undersize apple, and a
demi-tasse of black ersatz coffee—and that in a
country whose chefs have put their hall mark
on the menu of every civilized nation in the world.
The tables of Spain's highclass hotels and res-
taurants, on the other hand, are groaning beneath
the weight of luxury. To be sure, the poor man's
table groans, too, but that s because he is pinched
by the high cost of food. Thus far on our world
tour we have encountered only one capital which
could compete in any way with Madrid, and that
is in Dublin, which is a modest runner-up.
When you take the night train from Madrid
for Paris, you awaken the next morning among
the gloriously rugged peaks of the Pyrenees which
form a barrier between Spain and France.
We came out of the mountains on to the Span-
ish coast at the famous watering place of San
Sebastian, much favored by the late King Alfonso
XIII. and a little later were across the border into
France and bowling along one of the world's most
famous seasides—the stretch including the resorts
of Hendaye, St. Jean de Luz and Biarritz.
to the WESTERN AUTO ASSOCIATE
STORE for Wescote noor enamel It'S
tough and long-lasting. easy to ap-
ply to interior floors of wood ot
cement, withstands hard wear. cleans
easily.
m—mg. /.2e a
.. — -- —2 o 3 bo ■' "
e-ud
Sr
By BOB THOMAS
OLLYWOOD. Feb 5—(API—In her first inter-
We repair all kinds and
specialize on auto sets.
THEY WERE ALWAYS SO
VERY PROUD, ESPECIALIY]
man. Of JEROME... ad
N
W
By JAMES MARLOW
WASHINGTON, Feb 5 —<AP)—What effect will
the supreme court's decision on General Yam-
ashita have on Germans and other Japanese tried
as war criminals?
Only an answer full of questions can be given
Nothing like this has ever happened before And
even the court's opinions raise questions
A U. S. military tribunal found Yamashita
guilty of war crimes and sentenced him to hang
Since the Philippines where he was tried is a U 8.
possession. Yamasilita appealed to the U. S. su-
preme court.
The majority of the court turned him down
But Justices Murphy and Rutledge disagreed
and in a minority opinion said Yamashita was
not justly tried They said:
He did not get the fair trial our constitution
and our laws command x x x the constitution fol-
lows the flag ' They said further that that part
of our constitution guaranteeing a person a fair
trial applies to:
"Any person who is accused of a crime by the
federal government or any of its agencies. No ex-
ception Ls made as to those who are accused of
war crimes or as to those who possess the status
of an enemy belligerent."
Right now top Nazis are being tried at Nuern-
berg in Germany as war criminals and in Japan
former Premier To Ju and other Japanese soon
will be tried on the same kind of charges.
Theres a difference between their trial and
that of Yamasilita, who went before a U. S mili-
tary tribunal
The Germans are being tried by an international
tribunal of four judges, one each from the four
powers occupying Germany—the United States.
Britain, France and Russia.
If they re convicted, the Nazis can appeal to
the allied control council in Berlin, which is made
up of the military chiefs from the same four oc-
cupying powers
Suppose that council upholds the verdict of the
four—Judge international tribunal. Could the con-
victed men appeal to the U 8 supreme court?
Remember They’re being tried on German soil,
not American, although Americans are occupying
some of it.
And they're being tried by an international
court, not by a U.S. military tribunal like the
one which convicted Yamashita
It might seem the majority of the court would
refuse to hear an appeal from the Nazis. But that
remains to be seen—when and if such an appeal
is made
No one can say what will happen All of this
is new. There is no precedent in legal history for
what is happening in these trials The Yamashita
verdict itself was a landmark in law.
By JAMES HUTCH ESON
(For Hal Boyle)
ONG KONG, Feb 5.—, An
Mrs. N. R Henry and daughters, Mmes H L.
Shimlett and R L Castel, have returned from
2.. Fort Worth, where they spent several days with
another daughter. Mrs M 8 Sampley, during
New Intelligence Agency
WJHETHER or not this country’s armed
W forces are placed under a unified
command, there is promise that the heads
of those armed forces will, in the near
future, have a unified foreign intelligence
at their disposal.
President Truman's creation of a Na-
tional Intelligence Authority should cor-
rect a long-standing weakness in our for-
eign service. In the past our collection
and correlation of foreign diplomatic,
military and economic information has
been admittedly haphazard. It has been
gathered on a sort of spare-time basis
and passed along without very much
scientific evaluation.
This may or may not have been done
through a delicate disinclination to of-
fend our neighbors by "spying” on them.
But it is rather certain that the major
powers, friendly and unfriendly, have felt
no such delicacy toward us, and have had
a much better idea of our doings than
we have had of theirs.
Now we have an agency which, if it
works out as well in practice as it looks
in print, will be a clearing house of in-
formation for the State, War and Navy
Departments, from which it gets its
funds and to whose secretaries it will be
responsible.
This setup is contrary to some of the
recommendations of Maj.-Gen. William J.
Donovan, who headed the wartime Office
of Strategic Services and who suggested
the new agency. General Donovan pre-
ferred that the agency lie responsible to
Congress for its finances and its findings.
The final organization within the Cabinet
may well be an improvement. There may
be less democracy in such an arrange-
ment. But probably there also will bi less
chance of the agency becoming a political
football.
The Presidential directive outlining the
agency's functions puts the accent on na-
tional security. How much this will in-
volve cloak-and-dagger methods remains
to be seen—though doubtless not by the
public. However, it certainly will involve
some secrecy. And that secrecy can be
maintained better and employed more ef-
fectively within the confines of the three
Cabinet posts than it could by passing
through Congress.
It may seem odd that this organization
is being set up at the same time our rep-
sentatives are meeting with other world
delegations in London to effectuate closer
co-operation among nations and to shift
the emphasis of international politics
from absolute sovereignty to collective se-
curity. But the coincidence, if odd, is also
realistic.
America’s leading place in the effort
to unite the nations for peace cannot be
denied, or our good faith questioned. At
• the same time, we live in a world of hard-
headed, not-too-squeamish nations. With
all of America's hope and trust in inter-
national unity, with all our striving to
make that unity a reality, we must face
the fact that it is not yet time to aban-
don military vigilance. That time will
come. But meanwhile we should put our
vigilance on a par with that of other
great powers.
A major factor in that vigilance is for-
eign intelligence. Pearl Harbor taught us
that. And perhaps the most valuable les-
son to be learned from the present Pearl
Harbor investigation is the great part
that inadequate foreign information, bad-
ly handled, played in contributing to a
full-scale military disaster.
1 •
k • <
k i
ac*
11’
>
L>S
around play and line plunge With
a sweep of his arms he sent “ pair
of them tottering in .surprise and
a quick sidestep let another walk
straight through the line—without
a score
He entered a store The gang
stuck Two squatted at the window
like jackals keeping their eye on
tile quarry inside A couple of oth-
ers sat on the curb trying t look
disinterested They ranged in age
irom about 12 to 48, all dressed in
Chinese jackets buttoned tight to
tlie throat a
As their prospect emerged. tNey
e?A/A*f44
(, 2 (
PROFESSORE
By RALPH DIGHTON
(AN ADO, Artz. -(P- Some great
U men make business their reli-
gion Dr Clarence Grant Salsbury
has reversed the process, putting
his keen business mand to work for
his religion.
As superintendent of the 200-
acre, 50-building Presbyterian mis-
sion here on the desert 56 miles
from the nearest railroad. Dr Sals-
bury seems almost out of place. He
ought to be, say his friends, a bank
president or a captain of industry.
nocent expressions They kept up
the pursuit even utter lie turned,
pointed at them with a grin and
told them to scram. Cheh la."
Unabashed, a couple of them just
grinned back impishly
They trailed until almost abreast
of the patrolman outside the ho-
tel They looked as though they
had lost an old friend as they
turned back Io look for another less
cagey prospect
.
e‘
TA32
- 322=-"K<sssmde-X(
typical physical attributes of at
least a vice-president in charge of
public relations instead. he is a
missionary and a surgeon.
He might have gone further in
some other field He doesn't deny
it But, he asys, "this is my work."
His work, since his assignment to
Ganado Mission in 1927, has been
the building of an institution in-
ventoried at nearly $1,000,000 and
which could not be duplicated for
$3,000,000.
There is an explanation for this,
but it does not lie in increased
costs of construction It lies in the
way Dr Salsbury approaches a fi-
nancial problem He never wheedles.
He works with finesse.
Ganado Mission's 150-bed. excel-
lently equipped hospital is a result
of Ills policy of encouraging influen-
tial visitors. One of these visitors
was so impressed with the area's
need and Dr Sa Ishim's ability to
administer to it that the mission
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By Hershberger
-
"eEMHE-ahMeEn-
2.
Hbbhohelehripvvmptenrmecmdncudbmmaevpph
"Rememmems — v . - --------- ■ - hn1s‛**------
Funny Business
o
here during the hot, desert sum-
tner To meet the needs of the hos-
pital’s increasing personnel and pa-
tients. Dr Salsbury began planning
for a huge deep-freeze unit. A ba-
zaar was selected as the medium of
collecting funds.
On the night it was held, 1,200
traders and Navajo came from as
far as 100 miles away Net proceeds
from the six-hour party were $4 100.
and the deep-freeze building is un-
der construction.
Like any other good businesman.
Dr Salsbury has the knack not only
of getting money but of stretching
it
The mission was allotted $15,000
to build a new church With the
aid of donated labor, a 300-seat
building was completed in 1941 at
a cost within the original allotment
It recently was appraised, says Dr.
Salsbury, at $40,000.
1\ •44
HEADLEE'S
I'll. 88 307 N. Locust St.
M we pomtotio et Dentom Tegaa, Janun
. M mat matter at the eoopd clana, mcoord-
to Act of Oongreea, March 6, 187.
d mA afternoon except Sunday at 214 wem
•tract. Telephones M and 184.
r„. WE CANNOT TAKE THE CHANCE.^ OKAY B
YOU WILL DO AS I GAY TONIGWT:/ PROFESSOR
tlie younger generation of snatch-
ers has adopted the wolfpack sys-
tem in its elemental form it has
brought to the pocket picking pro-
fession what the "T" fommatlon
brought to football—deception, a
hard-charging ofTensive and a quick
bi«akaway.
Hal Boyle. AP correspondent, who
iias coped with tlie most resource-
lul pickpockets from St. Louis to
Saigon, concedes with the eye of a
perfectionist that the boys are good
but holds to the theory that for ev-
ey oTense a de lense can be evolv-
ed. That's how he saved his wallet
tmiovgh three separate raids bv a
woltpact oi halt a dozen along one
crow aed ft i cel
Here’s a Voyeseye view of how a
pickpocket gang operates: »
There is a lul ling crowd around
tile meney i hanzer booth wlieii tin
costomer steps up to have a hun-
dred dollar hote changed into lo-
cal cunency. Tlie lookouts spot a
bulging roll. As he steps into the
jostling crowd on tnc sidewalk, the
snatch gang moves in. One bump,
hum on tlie i.ank Another jostles
him from the other side and a
third from behind Someone brushes
core in front, rna’s when a hand
darts for pen or wa.’et.
Put it didn i wu:k with Boyle His
pen was halt out of his pocket when
lie suddenly rerognr ed the tactics
and broke into tlie open with elbows
swinzing
in tlie congestion a half blok
further along tlie milling market
place they moved in again Tins
time it resembled a combined end
r
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ugcage A X ye
EGAD,! WAG 1 WAG HOPING t~Q
----------- n- AGAINST pope You’d
"Your honor I will now present the e idence '<> rove that the
defendant tried to make out his income tax teprt truthfully!"
40 ?)
F
g
Tlie (lull St i cam carries 3,000
times as much watei as tlie Missiue
sippi.
GV/
16UE55 IT'S A \ ("AN‛S WORLD.
NVAN’S WOKLD. 1 5— \ME‛E‛ )
. AFTER ALL’ -----y
1 Her mid/ile name is Hollywood.
2 She thinks Ambers first boy friend, Bruce
Carlton, was responsible for all Amber’s troubles
3 She doubts tf her grandmother would approvo
of her playing the role.
Unless the little Irish gal has already developed
the American art of kidding her second name is
really Hollywood She said it came from one of her
father’s ancestors who settled in Ireland at the time
of Cromwell and she resents any implication that
she might be kidding about it
Although tills was her first interview as Amber,
Peggy is by no means new at the business. In fact,
site took over and started interviewing the inter-
viewers She even Wanted to know my favorite color
We Contemplated the big things which wil hap-
pen to her in the next year, and sha expressed a
desire that they wouldn't change her
Hollywood expects at least one change to come
to Peggy in the next year. She has been going with
a photographer and may soon become forever Mrs.
Robert Landry.
Tlie divorces rate the headlines, but, there are also
some good family men in Hollywood. Chief among
them is Robert Young, who already han provided for
the educations of his four dau tillers Now between
scenes of "Tlie Searching Wind." he is planning a
wing to his home which will ve exclusively for tlie
girls •
Robert Taylor and Wally Beery have an agreement
—whichever gets first delivery on a plane has to take
thy other on a two-week hunting trip LAnda
Darnell gets a new seven-year contract at 201h-
Fox. . . .
Martha Stewart will record the Dinah Shore tunes
for Victor now that Dinah has left for Columbia
- F
m3al
Clark Gable has shelved 15 pounds Barbara
Btanwyck U passing up Tlie Look party tomorrow
night to celebrate her son. Dion's 14th birthday
voeend
P,2- >
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 149, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 5, 1946, newspaper, February 5, 1946; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1458633/m1/4/?rotate=90: accessed July 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.