Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 114, Ed. 1 Friday, December 23, 1949 Page: 4 of 10
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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HENRY WADSWORTH
LONGFELLOW
Three Kingk came riding from far away,
Melchior and Gaspar and Balthasar;
Three Wise Men out of the East were they,
And they traveled by night and they slept by d
For their guide was a beautiful, wonderful star.
WASHINGTON
DEWEY WOVT
"Godmother Of 50,000.000 U.S. Kids
By JANE EADS
HtKl
this
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HOLLYWOOD
bc< a use
THOMAS
BOB
By
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D . Air Base
Out Our Way
By .1. R. Williams
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(hie Third R-36s
Readied Only For
R econn a issance
KI V; HE S.4YS
THAT’S FINAL
has
aides
been
for
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supposed Iv
was
hunt
may
area
flow
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A HOLE A LIT fl L )
OI F AND THE \
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IT LOOK LIKE IT /
WAS SUCH A Bio X
blunder that th
HULL SHOP KNOWS
IT IN FIVL MINUTES.'
RB 36
respects
Ml
il/p
il is CJ'F'a.uvoa,.-,
RX 11
r’- A < ♦
in
that
Makes Anniversary As Bureau Head
j
officers from China. Indian, Po-
land. Venezuela and Canada come
for facts about child-health work
Last year the bureau
courses of study for 200 visiting er
source of
personal
Q What is the biggest Protestant
body in the U. S.f
A Ten years ago. the biggest
merger in Protestant history creat-
ed the biggest Protestant body in
the U. 8—the Methodist Church.
me.
she does
to do
around. ”
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Y WELL .THEY’RE. A
) GET Tin MORE
\ INTELLECTUAL--
I THEV USED X>
) THINK IT VMAS
/ HILARIOUSLY
\ FUNNY TO PUT
\cup greasf on
• | TH' SWEEPER'S
i.'l WHTELBARROW
HANDLES.'
Ms
I
Q—Where Is Port Radium'*
A On Great Bear Lake tn Can-
ada’s Northwest Territories, rapid-
ly hoom'ng area of high erode
uranium ore mining.
Q- What causes winds?
A—Cold, dry air is always heav-
ier than warm air. so wherever it
be it builds up a pressure
ThH pressure forces air to
toward low-pressure areas
The flowing air is the "wind "
says the child
wanted was to see
Capsule Review "Cinderella"
'RKO' i Valt Disney at his best
That means delight for the kids
of the world and their worried par-
ents. too The cartoon wizard has
left his newfangled tricks to re-
turn to a good old fairy talc, told
as only he and his artists can It
ranks with "Snow White Best
performers A group of wonderful-
ly wacky mice
of children now pour into the Bu-
reau' each year, and over 2.000,-
ference on Children and Youth, to
be held next year. The President
also appointed her as the U S
member of the executive board of
the UN Intematfonal Children's
Emergency fund
Quiet voiced, unassuming Miss
Lenroot lives in a large home
she bought In suburban Washing-
a
young she
partridges
z AS YOU GO X
BY. TAKE A 1
LOOK AT THAT )
PIECE TMERF. \
ON TH' FLUOR- )
ITS KINDA /
. UNIOUE ’ I .
PORTLAND Ore . Dec . ♦-
(>P>—A'statement from a letter
by Gov Thomas E Dewey in-
dicated today that the New
Yorker 111 NOT again seek
the presidency .
The 1H48 Repuolican canui
dale for the White House wrote
his Oregon campaign manager
John C Hlggius. Portland, on
the .subject
"Nothing lias occurred or will
or can occur to < liange what I
said the day after election last
year
' Nothing could arise now oi
in the future that would lead
me to be a nominee oi our
party In 1952 My ueclsion on
this matter Is as certain and
final as death and the stagger-
ing New Deal t^xes '
professional students from around
the world Besides gathering the
facts workers want about child
care, the bureau administers $22 -
000.000 in grants to sattes to help
tliem do a better job of looking
after children.
Miss Lenroot—tall, white-hair-
ed. neat-—looks back over her
years with the 'bureau, finds satis-
faction in such progress as tbe
dramatic drop In maternal and In-
fant mortality rates the war-time
emergency maternity and Infant
care program, the extension of
proection to children in labor,
the increased knowledge and
WASHINGTON—<*— The nation s
50.000,000 kids probably didn't
know that their "godmother" had
an anniversary the other dav She
is Miss Katharine F Lenroot —
"godmother'' by her 15th year In
that post
Miss Lenroot joined the Chil-
dren's Bureau in 1915 three years
after Its establishment. She got a
salary of $1,200 a year. In 1922 she
was made assistant chief In
1934 President Roosevelt appoint-
ed her chief.
More than 200.000 requests for the increased knowledge and tin-
information on how to take care demanding of the growth and de-
velopment of children
President Truman recently ap-
000 copiea of bureau publications pointed Miss Lenroot secretary of
move out to parents, professional the Mid-century White House Con-
woikers and all kinds of children's
agencies in this country
abroad
Vlsltora by the hundreds come
calling—a woman from Java wants
to know what this country doe.
In child welfare: a former judge
of a juvenile court in Warsaw want*
help In studying services for de-
linquent children, a group of health ton. with a friend, raises roses and
Indian, Po- chrysanthemums, likes to bake
cake When she
used to like to
planned with her father on the Brule Rlv-
in Wisconsin
Margaret O’Brien s Mother Says
Daughter Didn t Force Divorce
breaking up her mother's mar
rn«» to Bandleader Don Sylvio
The criticism has even been de-
livered m person.
"In the first place," Mrs O'Brien
explained to me. "Margaret is
my daughter she does not ad-
vise me what to do It is the
other way
Q What la a coronary throm-
bosis?
A- It is the plugging of a branch
of one of the two arteries supply-
ing blood to the heart. It la the
commonest cause of death from
heart trouble in middle age and
beyond
HOLLYWOOD. —A*l Little Mar
garet O'Brien finds herself cast by
aome people tn the unwanted role
as the vllllan in her mother's
marital troubles.
"It's not true."
lUr "All I
my mother happy."
"That's right," agrees her moth-
er. Mrs Gladys O'Brien
garet had nothing to do with the
divorce "
MaFgaret
from all
Q How important a
government income are
taxes'*
A Roughly, almost one-third of
our government revenue is now de-
rived from income tax payments
of individuals
WASHINGTON. De- 23- F—A
stuoy of Air Force orders for B-3*
type planes shows more than one
third of the 10-eng<ne giants will be
equipped only for reconnaissance.
This emphasis on target intelli-
gence appears to come from two
major factors
1 Hie Importance of placing each
atoi’i bomb where it will be most
effective be< auae of the coat of
the bomb and the expense of de-
lls cring it
2 Realization of the dificulty of
searching out targets in the one
pinbable enemy Russia b«cauae
of the distance, vast area, rugged
terrain, weather and scarcity of
information
I tie re< onnaissaiK e version of the
B 36 is the RB 36 It is alike
nearly all respects except
it is not equipped Ui bomb
Thus far the Air Force lias an-
nounced orders for l"0 B-36 plane*
and is expected to announce short-
ly orders for at least 34 more.
Of those, nearly 60 either were
ordered as RB-36's or as B-3fl’s to
be i onverted to the reochnaisaance
vers'ion
rhe Air Force now has two B-36
groups 7th and 11th — operating
out of Carswell Air Base at Fort
Worth, Tex . and is sending planes
to tlie 28th wing being organized
st Rapid Cltv. 8
NOT1CB TO TUB FtBLIC:
„ Aar arroMOua reflection «pea> tbe character, repu-
tation or standing of aay firm, individual or oorpe
e ratios will be gladly oomotod upon being called to
i - the pabiiaMW attaattoa.
Tbe pnbUMMM are not reeponaitiie for copy oatue>
anm ar any damaaaonai
Mr -dber tbaa to oorrect la seat laooa
ngbt to tbelr attention All adverttataa
iptod as tola basto only.
r or tu AadfM-iATdn prmr
I Prato la entitled esciuMeaiy to the
Ucatlon of all the local new» printed .
par, aa wed ao au AP bows diopetcbae
I
Bi
li
Pv p'1.
nr.vroN Rfcohi) Chrovtcie
PtUHMhed every afternoon < except Baturday) ano
•oaday by: Denton Publishing Co toe> 814 g
Hlctory at
■iierea aa second daae man matte* st tbe pmtornee
at Denton. Teaas. Jaauarv 18. 1881. according to Act
of Uonerraa. March 8. 1818
HLIMH KiPTION UTH AND INFOMMATION
Mhgte ooptaa: Ao tor woeAdaya; lOe for Sunday
OMg Uarrter: a»o per week
•y mall in Denton and adjoining oouattoe: 81-80
per roar, six montha. MOO: three mantha 88M:
Outetdo thia oountyi gio per years ais aoontha, M:
<hrae aacntha 8840; ana month 81A
TRUPH0801 8000
•tana, typog
erram that a
after M lo nr
ordeeo are aa
88RAM
The Aanocsati
ana foe raw
la intonwap
Police arrented a Connecticut woman
for refueinp to leave a phone booth after
two houra. Why break up the dencription
of a new hat?
Ik
A Tennessee gas station attendant
laughed and walked away from an armed
handit. What, not even oil and polish
for the bandit’ii run?
A question mother often has to an-
awer after leaving department gtorea:
“Mommy, in Santa Claus quintuplets ?” ..
k'-
THE NATION TODAY
I
The
IXX)K1NG BACK
J
Denton Yestervear
.
ANALYZING THE NEWS
Stalin Praise Called
'Soviet Deification'
—a—-, A''' v
IS - - <
r
J
n
•>
• 4
War News Hangs Over
Spirit Of Christmas
By JAMES MARLOW
WASHINGTON — OP) — If ihoppers hurryr.ig
home Hi the past 34 hours to get ready for the
peace of Christmas looked at the newspaper
headlines they must have felt a chill of uneasi-
ness.
For. aide by aide with tales of a jolly yuletide
were stories that told of a reality which la here
now and will be here lor a long time after this
Christmas and its merry bells are forgotten.
These stories, gathered from the corners of the
earth, explain each In Its on way. and coldly,
simply by being factual reports of events, bow
the world this Christmas Is divided tnto two
armed camps.
Any one of those stories, if told alone, might
seem a gloomy Item. Bunched together, the
stories make a picture of a world where any
Banta Claus has to be looked at against a dark
cloud.
Washington — The Urfted Slates has reached
“subatantlally complete agreement" with its
Western European allies on the exact weapons
each of them will receive under the 81,000.000.000
American arms aid program
Paris—French Communists were busy with a
campaign to sabotage American arms aid to
France and the North Atlantic Pact.
China—Rod China’s armies were nearing the
end of a year In which they have all but blown
the Nationalists oft the mainland.
Moscow—At the celebration of Joseph Stalin's
70lh birthday. V. M Molotov, former foreign
minister and a powerful member of the polltburo,
lashed out at Premier Marshal Tito and his aides
in Yugoslavia as a "gang of hired murderers and
spies in the service of foreign imperialists ”
Yugoslavia—Yugoslavia a year ago displayed
pictures of Stalin as big as any, but yesterday
that country accused Russian leaders of counter-
revolutionary” propaganda
Washington—Without mentioning Russia. Pres-
ident Truman said "in an age where peace must
be protected, we must resort to our own strength
to hold aggieaalon at bay.”
By DEWHT MACKENZIE
AP Foreign Affairs Analyst
A new and startling viewpoint of Marshal
Stalin's amazing birthday is being discussed edi-
torially by newspapers on both sides of the At-
lantic—an angle which is summed up by the New
York Herald Tribune under the heading of "the
Soviet deification "
This theme Is developed in general along the
line that mankind needs a spiritual anchor, and
that atheistic Communism therefore is deifying
Stalin That theory has s special interest tor thia
column, which many times pointed out that vir-
tually all peoples .Including primitive savages, be-
lieve in some kind of God
But let the editorials tell their story
Herald Tribune says in part:
"Karl Marx would be more than asltsilshed.
ne would be atupifled If he could witness the
scenes today being enacted around one-half the
globe in idolatrous adulation of a creed supposed
to be his and of Its principal present representa-
tive on earth. . . the Iconoclast scholar who
gruffly announced that 'Religion Is the opium of
the people’ could not have conceived that the un-
predictable and unfathomable human spirit would
have constructed out of his own writings, a bare
hundred years later, an amazing parody of all the
great religious Ideas, appointing Marx himself as
a kind of ftmote god. with the child of a humble
cobbler as hLs son on earth and even with a
Lenin to complete the materialistic trinity
•The celebration of DJugaahvill-Stelln s 70th
birthday is surely one of the most a mazing phe-
nomena of our times . 'Glory to Stalin'
arises tn a Hosannah from ths brazen ihroats of
the loudspeakers and the propaganda machines
such as no living man has ever been accorded.
'The Kremlin has Impressively deified Stalin ”
The London Times also speaks of "the Com-
munist cult of Btalin worship have coming near
to deification at this stage ’ The Manchester
Guardian, ^nother outstanding English news-
paper, refers to the "devotional note" and says
that never before has this religious side of Com-
munism been so plainly tn view
f1/ . / / ^7
^tutorial ana features
[-< UKNWN (ESM MitXMMMBUUMtMXW- "____ FtMay. Dm. U. IMS
Modern Education Does
Not Mean Parents Obey
Many months ago a British author,
commenting on America after a visit
here, declared: “1 think parents in the
United States obey their children very
When he said that, the Bnton touched
a sensitive nerve. There’s little doubt that
this acid remark comes pretty close to
describing the fact in many an American
household.
In countless homes Junior is king not
because the family wants him to be but
because home life is too disorganized for
sound discipline. Always a mobile people,
Americans during and since the war
reached a new peak in tfceir restless migra-
tions, their shifts from job to job. There s
a transient air alxiut much American
living today. In the big cities society often
seems almost without root.
This “here today and gone tomorrow*
existence doesn’t make it easy to raise
children. Last year’s patterns may not
hold for this year. Rules and standards
are hard to maintain against a shifting
acene. The kids break away easily, tend-
ing to fix their own rules.
On the other hand, a lot of parents
want their children largely free of con-
trols. This is. of course, the philosophy
of progressive education, and it embraces
child development both at home and in
school.
The idea here is to let the kid be
natural. Let him do the things he’s in-
terested in, say what he wants to say, and
ao on. He’ll be much happier following his
own bent, the theory goes, than knuckling
under to some know-it-all parent or.
teacher. And he won’t grow up as a tight
little bundle of frustrations and inhibi-
tions. .. .
Sounds fine, and probably is—up to a
point. But this notion, even though it’a
been kicking around for quite a time, is
still being carried to pretty foolish ex-
tremes in many families.
Mrs. Evelyn Bai kins, a doctor’s wife
and the mother of three, feels strongly
about this and she most likely echoes the
sentiments of a lot of people.
Talking about children raised under
the fr^e-wheeling system, she says:
“They're given everything thev ask
for. They do everything they feel like.
They monopolize the conversation. They’re
vicious and destructive:
“But the parents are so accustomed to
it they just sit and say, ‘Don’t do that,
dear’ in a weak voice. The children pay
no attehtion.”
Kids brought up on the “don’t inhibit
the little darling” gospel found in many
child psychology books are ruining social
life and making their parents miserable
hermits, says Mrs. Barkins, who happens
to be an author herself. \
No one really would want to condemn
wholesale the progressive approach to
child growth and education, for it has
contributed richly toward modernizing our
thinking about the subject. But anyone
exposed to a few hours’ contact with a
“progressive” child may be inclined to
second Mrs. Barkins’ remarks. -
To be sure, children are not brought
into the world for the enjoyment and con-
venience of adults. They have a right to
their own life.
But if that life is to be balanced and
well-rounded, they must learn at an early
age that not having, not doing and not
saying are as important as getting their
way. The world is a place of competing
interests and desires. The children who
are not taught soon that theis will can-
not always prevail are not equipped for
living.
liiey will enter adulthood immature
and ill-adjusted. The conflict, disappoint-
ment. frustration and defeat they will
come to know will in most instances be far
more damaging to them than the ehecks
they suffer while undergoing good dis-
cipline as children.
TEN YEARS AG/
Th* Ritteout TV Ina of North 'T'ex«s State Teach-
er* lead the Eagiee to Sugar Bowl today.
V W Elrod, a medical patient In the Denton
Hoapital. was reported critically ill Tuesday aft-
ernoon
Born to Mr and Mra O W Ashley of Sanger.
Dec 24. at the Medical and Surgical Clinic, a
girl.
Mra David Neff of Shawnee. Okla is the guest
Of her parents, Mr and Mrs. L H. Ligon
Mr. and Mrs. Parvln Richardson of Dallas are
nailing Mra. 8 M. Richardson and Mrs. Lee
Poole
FIVE YEARS AGO
D. L. Lindsay, Harvey Russell. Mrs Waller
Taliaferro, Edith Faye Cockrill and A. O Cole-
man celebrate birthday anniversaries Dei 27.
Born To Mr and Mrs John Snyder, 1117 Gregg
Street, Chrlatmas Day tn Sanger, a boy
Word has been received here of the birth of a
son to Mr. and Mrs. John Dudley King tn a Gal-
veston hospital on Christmas Day. He is a son
of Mrs. O M. King and Mrs. King is a niece of
Mrs. R J. Edwards
Miss Kay Collins, who teaches In the Forney
public schools, is at home for the holidays with
her mother, Mrs Katie Collins. 1110 Fannin
Mrs. J. F Storms. 706 East McKinney Street, is
receiving medical attention at the Denton Hos-
pital.
TWENTY YEARS AGO
"I do not think the oata or wheat are seriously
damaged, but that cold «nap certainly made
them look sick,” said Ous Egan. Jr
That cold snap has damaged nothing up our
way. except the wood pile.” said Hub Clark of
the Friendship Community, who was in Denton
today. ,
Omin Peterson of Roanoke said the grain crop
would come out In good shape with some warm
weather.
Mr and Mra. Arthur Sullivan and son. Arthur.
Jr., left Saturday for Ban 8 ba. wherJk they
win visit hla parents
Clark OWsley of Oklahoma City is here to visit
his parent*;. Judee and Mrs Alvin C Owsiev
Born to Mr. and Mrs Bert Everett RD Havnes
Street • girl. Dotothy Anne, at the Denton Hos-
pital, Dec 23.
Santa Bar-
ON 70TH BIRTHDAY
I
By ED CREAGH
Lon Morris (rets
Grant Of $27,350
Answer to Previous Puzzle
Music-Maker
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17
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20
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Our Boarding Houbb
□am
I “iMMWCI
M
LL
II
25 Strong and
dark
men k>
to see me,"
HORIZONTAL
1,5 Depicted
musical
Initrument
10 .Report
12 Hydrophobi*
14 Poem
15 Knob-like
17 Rodent
18 Parent
It Treat*
21 Preposition
22 Voleano in
Sicily
33 Herons
35 Flavor*
36 Revises
41 Possess
42 Fruit drink*
45 Accomplish
44 Morsel
45 Cry
48 Brazilian
macaw
50 Pole
52---- i> large
54 Negath e replj
VERTICAL
1 Having feet
2 Chill
3 Italian nver
4 Sea eagle
T—
gk.
With Major Hoople
L
15
I-
Top Astrologers Look At Stars
Of Stalin, Forecast Successes
-
iGARDEO
HOE ™
5 Verbal
6 Cheat rattle
7 Great Bn ain
fab.)
I Ventilate
• Tidier
10 Strong cor •
II Canine
13 Rock
18 District
attorney (ab.) 32 Footwear
19 Shine*
20 Piece* of
embroidery
24 Prayer ending 23 Closer
26 Sow J
27 Female hor»e
28 Three-toed
sloth
20 Paid (ab.)
30 Sun god
31 Lutecium
(ab )
3! Vegetable
34 Gaelic
37 Monster
38 Thoroughfare
30 Correlative of
either
40Clouda
46 Mixed type
47 Beverage
48 Worahip
50 Decay
51 Endeavor
83 Singing voice*
55 Cloy*
58 Seed vowel*
appear miraculously
a lot of cuties.-
sunburn, acattered
boasting that he was the first man
to fly a horse In an airplane He
seemed more proud of that lact
than hla achievement* of directing
auch film clasaica aa King of
lUngs.” "OI patra and hla new-
eat one. "Samson and Delilah "
Sitting In hla apartment over-
extensive effects on his health
and position. He will be too old to
recover entirely
TTien the rest of the world can
stop fretting'’
"By no means.” said Lynn
Wells "This setback applies to
Stalin personally—not to Russia.
JACKSONVILLE Dec 23 —
Alterations to Smith Halt men s
dc-mitory at Lon Morris College
• nd construction of a dean's home
will be financed partly by a $27.-
350 grant to the Me'hodist school
Other money will be raised to
complete the financing Work is
expected to start nearly next yeai
Dr C. E. Peeples, president ot
Lon Morns announced the gran'
was raised bv H F Banker ot Por;
Arthur. T? W Fair of Tyler, Mar-
cus Wood and the Rev W R.
Swal-.i of Longview. V.' A. Phillips,
the Rev Jack Ppaillng. T E
Acker, the Rev Clyde Woodttaru
and Dr Peeples, all ot Jackson,
vtllc: W. E Sl'v au of Tyler. ancR
Madison Farnsworth, E C. Scur-
lock. and Latimer Murfee. all of
Houston
BROADWAY
DeMille Proud That He Was First
Man To Fly A Horse In Aik Airplane’
anxiety than we did ’’
DeMille 1* not the pontifical fig-
ure I had Imagined hlin to be
pictures He U an authority on
the King ar. - version ol the
Bible and says his main problem
is sticking closely to the text o(
the Bible while picturing It for
modern vewpolnt*. When he was
casting Samson he ran Into a bit
of trouble
"All the
I T
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i:1Mbit) saBMaBHi r iMbai i
Ul JAM 1
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i^i uno i mi Ji«
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ciL.il iMmFjsBWFjr-nsimj
0(211-) ' *"
By MARK BARRON
NEW YORK—(it—Cecil B De-
Mule, who has been a delightful
visitor around tYe Broadway area,
destroyed m* re than several Illu-
sions among »e stage wise folks.
He doesn’t have *uken bathing pool*
with i cslmlle Claopatras lolling
As a matter of fact, be is a
gentle talking, learned man who
dropped the subject of Hedy Lam- “ah the muscle men M the
*rr alrena vary quickly and began wor]d came out to see me,” he
said. "I needed a spiritual qual-
ity for the part, not a physical
instructor So I chose Victor Ma-
ture I had seen Hedy LaMarr in
"Tortilla Flat” and there was
where I became Interested In her,
as Dalllah '*
______________ DeMille said he sacrificed a bit
looking Central Park, DeMille told of facts in "8amson and Delilah
me about that horse. “It happenad because he had > get one of
in Oalifcmla a 181g whai I organ- hla traditional bathing scenes into
isad the Mercury Aviation Oom- ths picture. 8o he had a flowing
pany. the first commercial air line stream suddenly apepar in the ;d-
to fly between Los Angeles. San die of the completely dry Pgle.'.t ne
Diego. Fresno and San Francisco,” desert, placed a s arm of sultry
ha aald. "In those days we had bathing beauties along its palm
to build our own fields as our tree banks and it made a delight-
line progressed We got an order fyi spectr.de
to fly a horse to the
bars race track. The
we had was that the
However. I'll wager DeMille still
only ruling takes greater pride in having be‘-n
... ____ ____ ____ Society for the first man to fly a horse in
Prevention of Cruelty to Animal* the air than that he could mate
ordered us to put cotton In the a river appear miraculously in
horse's ears. The horse didn't the desert with
cause the slightest bit of trouble immune to i
He stood the trip with much less hither and you
NEW YORK — iP — Some of
America's top astrologers lock a
70th birthday look at Joe Stalin's
stars and told the western world
Watch your step
Or. as they say in Siberia, watch
your steppe
It seems that the aun and the
planet Mercury are in th esign of
Sagittarius, among other heaven-
ly golnga-on. and Uncle Joe’s Red
star was never brighter—for the
first part of 10M. at least.
Hellene Paul. "Confidential ad-
user to executives.” says Stalin'*
star* show:
"He will be more successful in
1050 He is going to get more ter-
ritory. He will get more coopera-
tion. especially from the old coun-
tries And Isn't China about the
oldest country that there is?
Lynn Well*, another New York
astrologer. I* convinced he 1* in
for trouble
"Since 1944 there has been a
chain of transitory disturbance
from Uranus. Stalin undoubted!"
made mistakes of judgment from
1844 to 1946 and mistakes of action
in 1948 and 18*9
"The start of a major Saturn
repression 1* indicated from the
late fall of 1950 on *1711., can have
4 f
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 114, Ed. 1 Friday, December 23, 1949, newspaper, December 23, 1949; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1314337/m1/4/?q=WAR+DEPARTMENT: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.