Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 80, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 16, 1947 Page: 1 of 28
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♦
DENTON, TEXAS, SUNDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 16, 1947
VOL. XLV
NO. SO
Sentiment Grows To
Italy, France Spread
I
About
♦
Town
f
u
.!
de-
Dems Ask
Compulsory Inspection of auto-
fc'i
La
i r
4
1
j
FRIENDSHIP TRAIN
•■full
Texans Generous
I
Ion of one ,
Children s Home
I
of
J
1
KE
i
his
40.000
high as *100.000.
Texas
*
1 in the hunt.
Laughs
Commission Hires
i;
by
Uo.
L
Boyce House
I
Christmas Parade
WEATHER
•e
T VtOlllfl ui viua IU1 A Mi IU|JC . • ----- — • —---
across the newly opened section of called to mind many of the utter-
vxr—-x ... eta. a «_ aa_ _ a.t a. ’ anrax tha /»nwhnv httmnriaf and
f
TODAY
121
*
33
in'Oklahoma, being: born
pwxtar**, A
w
i a man I didn't like.**
J
«
AV'
I
<
I
Five Reported
Killed by Mob
Aid Proposal To
Congress Monday
By R. J. (BOBi EDWARDS
Repent therefore of thy wicked-
ness. and pray God, if perhaps the
thought of thine heart may be for-
given thee -Acts 8-22.
The dream is short, repentance
long.- Schiller.
_> ot tidelands by the states.
The California delegation split on
the proposal, which was strongly
•P-
t h e
new
for
or
|f>
'll
I
2090
Call Record-Chron.,
At Thia New Number
Add reais: 314 E. Hickory
and
re-
■tert
tha
-4’.
last <
r
|
Vl
ears"
196J
The
■fl. and
be pro-
wp
ta”
■!
Denton Record-Chronicle
Round
1
r - 4P
■____t ?> Bar*
risen. Jaa W. Nichols. Harwell
Shenard, L. A. Dungan, Hack
RIcncy. George Btirber, John Mor-
rlaoa. WUJ WiBuurJ. JK*u' Mfc X.
■
Europe Voted
1948 Meeting
Site of U.N.
I
1
Roberts Escapes
In jury as Car
Hits tractor
Cold Front Blows Out;
It’ll Be Warmer Today
Other Developments
Other U N developments:
1 Meeting at Lake Success, the
Specify Items of Aid
n I • • a ta* F "'t il ruman to Take
Political Disorders In
* mobiles in England has been pro-
posed by the British government's
2 The Security Council, meeting
ir the first time in two weeks, 1
| federal legislation retaining owner-1
I ship ot tidelands by the states.
'TTip Califnrnin drlruht Ion SDilt On
alter Arthur Haftaltn Minneapolis
delegate to the meeting of
Young Democratic Clubs of Amer-
ica. insisted on an amendment in-
cluding the repeal provision:
Delegates, after a heated verbal
hattie, turned down another reso-
'ution which would have endorsed
PROBE CONTINUES IN
DARING BANK HOLDUP
ROSEBUD. Tex . Nov. 15 —I*'-
Federal, state and county officers
continued an investigation tonight
of the daring night robbery of safe-
ty deposit boxes in the First Na-
I tional Bank here early Friday.
Bank President V. D Nicholson
said today that bank officials had |
elected
Hansen.
ai- __ ' tpr Palestine, complete With soft-
welcome in West Texas.” said J. Rested methods
H Lanford, who has returned from
Floydada"”"It started raining a lit- eration will be a counter proposal
_ ... 4 a A — *—— 4..— .a __ _
arid I was driving in the rain all i independent Arab nation lo fttplace
,_____ F_ W I &»i4ia»ka aa>a«l4.l.. TT-l —
rain in several months, but! Land.
real-
narrow-
an
In Food Donations
leave Fort'Worth
Fe Railway, and
Oklahoma
Young Democrats of the nation at
the closing meeting of then annual
convention
A labor resolution favoring that
, stand was passed by a voice vote
discrimination against Indians but !
operatives, elimination of
slums ' and "financial assistance
to farmers.
Traffic Cop saya:
Watch out tor the Sunday School j
children today — drive carefully.
"The recent rain that covered
most parts o< the stale was most
Meet Set Monday
until • a. m on Nov. te.
parade will begin at 4 p.
special entertainment will . .
vided on Um aquare from 1 p. m.
until • p tn. ' *■
Scheduled to attend the
meeting are: Monroe, J.
Texas Sta'e Legislature
Carr had served as
j to have fought off an attack
I Komotlne in Thrace and to 1
j occupied five villages near
vena.
thst the
affair
or-
•-----!--- Wd
Fraud Challenge
. •.
family. Mrs Krutzsch had not been
in Denton in near forty years and
was much impressed with the vast
changes that have taken place here
since she was a resident of Den-
ton Prior to het marriage, she was
Miss Prairie Thurman, a mighty
pretty girl that nfliny of the old-
timers will remember.
fraud and t orruption in the mil-
planemaker's wartime
NEW YORK, Nov. 15—(AP)—The United Nations As-
sembly voted today to hold its 1948 meeting somewhere in
Europe but the discussion was subject to final review when
next year’s budget is considered.
The vote was 32 to 17 with Russia, the United States and
France supporting the temporary move across the Atlantic.
SAFE IN MAMA’S ARMS—Mrs. Carmella Beck clutches
her children, Rose Marie, left, and Louis, Jr., after push-
ing Rose Marie to safety and grabbing Ixiuis from the
crushed carriage as a truck bore down upon them in
New York City. The accident occurred at Sixth Avenue
and President St., Brooklyn. (AP Wirephoto).
The name of grand, old Will
Ro rs in the news the other
day when a monument, the gift of
■' ------■*. Amon Carter, was un-
veiled in Fort Worth by Gen. Ike
1 Eisenhower after a song by Miss
Margaret Truman. And this event
Section One:
Markets
Sports
Society, Women’s News
Section Two:
Editorial
Colleges
Churches
Amusements
Farm News
Business News
Classified Ads
_ J
r' ‘ * ' ^3
Of tlw hundred and hundreds of
ex-students of North Texas State
who are heie for the horhe-coming.
Roundabout met one <5f 'em that.
See ROUND ABOUT. Page 2
about 6:20 p m Saturday.
Two middle-aged men
Jailed by State Highway
man H P Berkley one
Hughes Demands
I c
Retraction On
Committee members will attend a
breakfast meeting at the Yacht
Cafe at 7:30 a. m Monday to
map final plana for a Christmas
parade which will open tlw Christ-
mas stripping season here on Nov.
28 Stsnley Monroe, chairman, has
announced.
The parade, sponsored by the re-
tailers division of the cbtmVer cf . , -----
c .nmArcc. will feature the Jesn rlaon. WIU WiHiAitJ. JK
Grog Balloon Peraz a cf I
cbaractera. Ineluding a 15 - *oo.
Santa Claus.
Merchants will decorate
fronts and Interiors for
Christmas ser.san and retail stores
are being urged to hold open house
Move Develops To
Designate Quantities
Rather Than Money
WASHINGTON, Nov. 15 —
(AP)—A move developed on
Capitol Hill today to specify
quantities of aid rather than
sums of money in any foreign
stopgap aid plan.
AM, downtown, diplomatic au-
IbortUm (Worted that the admin-
istrattae ta presently planning to
ask Congress to appropriate SS.SM,-
OOO.SOO for spending oa Latin-Amer-
ican and Canadian commodities to
go into the longer-range proposal
ot a four-year European aid effort.
President Truman will lay his
MS7.ooo.ooo procram for stop-gap
aid for France. Italy and Austria
before the opening aeesion of Con-
gress Monday, along with a sug-
gested means of halting the rise
in the cost of living at home.
Redace Drala oa Reaoarces
The diplomatic authorities, who
asked not to be quoted by name,
said that the use of U. 8 dollars
tn buying Latin American and Can-
adian products would be designed
to reduce the drain on U. 8 re-
sources.
They said the major products in-
volved in the idea, in the order of
their importance, are bread grains,
coarse grains, meals, fate and oils,
coffee, cotton and timber.
Secretary of State Marshall has
already said the administration
will aak Congress for authority un-
der which O. S. funds could be
span* In foreign countries for com-
modities not readily syllable hare
ta large quantities.
The President will sppear before
the joint session ot the Senate and
House Monday in person, accom-
panied by hto cabinet. His mea-
sage, on which be worked today,
will be broadcast to the nation
(1:30 p. m. EBT>.
Loag-Raag* Recovery
Mr. Truman in his stopgap aid
message also ta expected to out-
line at least the broad aspects of
a long-range European recovery
program that Secretary of State
Marshall has estlmaled will east
from *14,000,000,000. to •30.000.000,-
000 in the next four years.
Details on this are expected to
be forthcoming in a separate mas-
sage to be submitted later to the
special session, although the ad-
ministration apparently has no
hope of action on the long range
program until next year.
Several lawmakers have gulped
at the also of Marshairs figures
and some from both parties said
they think it may be much wiser
for the United States to let Eu-
rope know in terms of specific com-
modities. such as wheat, coal, oil,
fertiliser and machinery w h a t it
reasonably can expect to receive.
Senator Edwin C. Johnson <D-
Oolo) told a reporter he hopes that
Congress w 111 be furnished with
concrete figures on the available
supply of such commodities before
it makes any specific promises of
aid.
Missing Child
Found in Miami
I
r l‘
■'Ll
out for a visit with friends and I
relatives in several parts of Okla- |
horna and it was a most pleasant
trip Since we not so active in!
business these days, we plan to
take more outings. At Elmore City,
we met Elmore Taliaferro, former
resident of Denton. >
mighty well as he owns much ot
t..v ................ ..."
t, that section ” Elmore Taliaferro is
a son of the late W A. Taliaferro,
former Denton resident, and the
first of the* "Taliaferro Clan” to
move from Tennessee to Denton.
Export Controls
On Atom Energy
Goods Imposed
WASHINGTON. Nov. 15 a- pF) —
The United States is imposing new
controls to govern the export of
equipment which might be used la
atomic energy experiments.
The Atomic Energy Commission
which has been relying on the ex-
port licensing authority of the
Department of Commerce and the
State Department, is supplement-
ing them with its own regulations.
A license from the Atomic En-
ergy Commission will be required
for the export of any equipment
capable of producing any ftoekm-
able material, cyclotrons designed
for "atom smashing" and similar
devices.
Licenses also will be required for
the export of such Items as radia-
tion detection equipment, high va-
cuum apparatus and other items
which might be used in the bssio
atomic experimental mechanisms.
•stations While no compulsory in-
spections are demanded in this
country, the State Highway Patrol
has. from time to time, offered free
tests to automobile owners. 1
have taken the test and found that
there were several slight defects in |
their automobiles which they did
not know about. The safe thing to 1
do is to have the old bus inspected
by your favorite garageman from
time to time. A little checking be-
fore actual trouble may be a time
and money saver, but even more
might stay off a serious accident
noon followed the recommenda-
tions of the city planning board and
employed the firm of Myers and
Noyss, city plan engineers of Dal-
las. to revise the city plan of Den-
ton at a cost of *2.500.
E. L. Myers told the commission
that work would be started Im-
mediately on the plan and that { jn
consultations would be held with
city officials concerned to deter-
mine general policies
To be included in the plan are
reports and recommendations on:
routing of federal and state high-
ways through and around Denton;
opening and widening of streets;
improvements to street crossings
at railroads: control of two main
creeks In the northwest part of
the city; a complete aontng map
Of the city with recommendations
for future roning.
Some parts of a city plan drawn
■ -
(A
Price 10 Crate . - ‘
gw
Amociatad Ptcm Loamd Wire TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES* *
..
MON AR( HIST PAPERS BURNED — A crowd.'(back-
ground) stands in a Naples street watching the biirning .
of monarchist office papers after leftist group wrecked
the office. In right foreground is a torn monarchist sign.
Italy’s powerful left was openly and admittedly on war-
path, sounding warnings yf “oivjl war." (AP Wirephoto
via radio frojn Rome). " s).
Duck hunters report Rood luck
the past few days on Lake Dallas,
many of the bag being the big
ducks — Mollards and Red Heads.
But. boys, if you are going out
after duck or geese, remember
that you need a Duck Stamp, which
can be bought at the post office.
Too. if you hunt outside your own
county you will need a hunting
licence.
City Plan Engineers
The city commission Friday after- up here In 1931 but not used com- |
------------- .u- ----------- pietely aan be used as a basis for his friend.
the new plan. I *
The commission also authorized
advertising of blds for s bridge
■ -4. yjffKMpiCTMN
Mrs. Hugh Krutzsch of Monrovia, i
California, was a recent guest ot j
!»«•- hrnthm tProd Thiirmon anri
were
Pat rol-
to be
I charged w ith driving while Intox-
who has done 'ta,cd an<i the other with intoxica-
her hair.
It will be fair and warmer
A feeble cold front that limped
across the state Saturday to give
gridiron fans a sample of perfect I reappeared
football weather blew itself out in notified and later the FBI Joined
South Texas during the night.
w ater-
from the
killing of a Communist Wednesday
night spread to Nice In Paris.
Communists called tor ' action on
the popular masses' and promised
"active support" of gas and trans-
port workers against a rise in
Utility rates
* The cabinet raised the
Thursday after the
be boon Jong*. Flojtl GrahanJ, JMarthail
KoG-J. Jakg Cratea. Jr.. Kay
GtiApmAn CI* S2. *T^ijFlolr* VITllford
I aunt of the child. Bernice Henrj’
Sh" hn-
The FBI described the case as
one of "kldnapm1 within a tamily.”
In a
in Mia m 1, the
11 ( ine proposal, wriicii was Riiuugi; ,
of backed by Texas and several otb- i
ng ; er states
rrhe convention elected Roy G
*taker. 33. a Sherman. Tex . law-
'ar. to succeed Joe C. Carr.
Tennessee secretary
"rural
i honaire
, contracts.
Evidence still locked within the
files of the senate war investiga-
tion committee. Hughes said will
prove he "was telling the truth"
in denying he took part in any-
thing crooked.
His outburst came as the com-
mittee ended its public hearings on
the *40 000,000 Hughes contracts.
| Ferguson, chairman of a war in-
■ not 'been able to determine the vestigating subcommittee which
! amount of loot taken. Estimates of | has been looking into Hughes’ con-
valuables taken by j tracts for photo planes for the Air
Force and for a huge flying boat. |
quickly denied that he or other I
senators had reached any conclu-
sions in the case.
The senator also promised
Hughes that all evidence in the
committee’s files will get a public
airing next week.
Hughes declared that he and his
company officials had "been I
forced" by Ferguson to testify
about what they described as at-
tempts of Maj.-Gen. Be nnettE.
Meyers, retired Air Forces pur-
chasing officials, to get jobs and
borrow thousands of dollars from
Hughes during plane contract ne-
gotiations.
Asserting that his testimony
‘was diametrically opposed" to
that of Meyers — who said Hughes
offered loans and a Job — Hughes
charged at the hearing that Fer-
guson had kept the public “in the
dark” as to the truth.
CLEVELAND, Nov 15 —(4A— Im- <
I "Tim -i, i . niediate repeal ot the Taft Hartley !
Jim Crowism charges against . . L . u. . 1
a/-* Z-* i , * I labor law wa.s advocated today by
! South Africa One proposal would 1
' have India, South Africa enter di- 4
rect negotiations and these failed,
to refer the Issue to the Interna-
tional Court of Justice India
charged South Africa last year with
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Old Man Texas can wash the
car Sunday and his wife can wash [
West Mulberry Street In the block I
between Bernard and Center streets.
A resolution was passed placing !
i the business and fire zones
considerable non-conforming prop-
erty near the North Texas State
College campus The action in- i
eludes in business and fire tones;
the east side of Fry Street between j
West Oak and Wert Hickory streets:
the east side of Avenue A between
West Hickory and West Mulberry
streets; the north side of W —t
Hickory from the Joe Normile
Service Station through the Cun- 1
ningham Studio, inclusive; the south 1
side of Wert Hickory from t‘-e I
t h e
U
The cabinet rai-ed the rates
Thursday after the government
had cut off subsidization of coal
mining, thereby increasing expens-
es of gas and electricity produc-
tion and railroading.
In Greece, troops were reported
to have taken the offensive against
leftist guerrillas north of Salonika
on
have
Ore-
” North Hickory Creek Is com-
pletely dry through my place.” said
Charlie Wdlfe. west of Denton. "It
has boen dry for more thana
month and none of the water from
the recent rains went Into the
^.tream-bed. About the last running-
rain wa had was tn the fall of
1946 "
Mtae Nora Mae
iraoM Millllpe
1'*• ‘ , .
Bailey WlriiM
Floyd Brook*
Pierce and C
■>.
Just a Reminder mat
ChrHtthM Time
Is Drawing Near!
In fact there are only
shopping days left. But the wise
man will do his gift shopping
now. while stocks are full and
crowd* are light. Watch the
Classified Page for a'Chopping
guide that will make your gift
buying easy and satisfactory.
Mr and Mrs. Charlie Woods have
returned from an automobile trip
to Oklahoma. Charlie said. ' ...
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Disorders spread Saturday ui
Italy and Fiance, tom by a strug-
gle between left an dright, and In
one Italian city five were re-
ported killed as a mob seized the
public square.
The deaths occurred in Cerigno-
la. southeast Italy. Italy's interior
ministry quoted reports that de-
monstrators with machineguns and
hand grenades had attacked the
police barracks, wounding three
defenders.
The Cerignola fatalities brought
to 10 the number killed in Italy
in the last week The Communist-
led Italian General Confederation
j of Labor, reporting public concern
over a rebirth of fascism. Satur-
| day night demanded suppression
Is scheduled to
over the Santa
travel North through
and Kansas, picking up donations
from those areas.
It will proceed to Chicago, and
then be moved by the Chesapeake
and Ohio Railroad to Washington
A complete Hat of towns contri-
buting b*s not been compiled, but
includes Dallas. Lubbock. B 1 g
Spring, Columbus. Galveston, Car-
rizo Springs, Amarillo, Lufkin,
Longview, Port Arthur, Andrews,
Crane. Taylor, Goose Ore*k. Mid-
land. Childress. Brownfteld, Brown
wood, Victoria, Wichita Falls.
Brownsville, Houston. Beaumont.
San Antonio. Uvalde, Odessa, Den-
ton. Corpus Christi, La Grange,
Rosenberg. Fort Worth, Garrison.
Liberty, Seguin. Georgetown. Los
Freacws, Conroe. Galena Park
Humble and Wado.
Gov. Beauford H. Jester contri-
buted a case of blackeyed peas,
which will be sent with state em-
ployes' donations.
At Houston, loading began Fri-
day. Chairman Paul Burton listed
among food gifts there 200 barrels
of rice from "a Houston citizen,"
half a car canned of pineapple
juice from Victoria, a solid car of
dried beans from Liberty.
Austin met its quota of
pounds of dried foods Friday.
A carload of condensed milk
was given by Odessa. Andrews.
Crane and other cities of the
Permian Basin oilfields.
A carload of rice and.canned
food was collected in BeaUmont
Fort Worth's share was to be
three box cars —one of wheat, one
of powered milk and one of mixed
dried foods. Waco gathered dried
foods.
A Friendship section which will
be made up in Amarillo will join
the train Tuesday morning. It
will include a car of wheat and a
car of flour from Amarillo.
bomb
A long-range agricultural pro-
gram Including price support for
basic farm commodities, a con-
trol program on such commodities J
'Die child was taken by the aunt | legislation to promote tarmet < <>■ ,
I t om its home to Galveston pre
the, sumably on a shopping tour in!
June, the FBI said.
Tile aunt went to Key West. Fla .
alt It the child and worked as a
Britain spearheaded the opposition
Today’s ballot came on a Joint
French-Swedish resolution that the
session be held at a city in Europe
to be selected by a ntne-nption
committee and required only a
simple majority for passage.
Geneva, Paris and Brussels have
been' mentioned as possibilities.
However. Britain made it clear
that she would continue the fight
against the move when the budget
comes up for decision next week.
Under U. N roles, budgetary mat-
ters require a two-thirds vote for
approval and the proposal would
be defeated later unless It gained
additional support. Under tocfly’s
vote, the plan was Just short of
the necessary two-thirds.
Most of the debate
around increased costs
N officials estimated would be ap-
proximately *1,000,000 more. The1
figures were *961,679 for New York,
- ... *1.863,554 for Geneva, and *2.-
road-safety committee Inspections, tor c
would be made at public testing ( rope
of enforcement,
H Laniord, who has returned from w»’ expected to be ready early
a business trip to Plainview and ne«t week Also ready for consid
Floydada. "It started raining a lit- eratlon will be a counter-------‘
tie when I started from Plainview *9r cre«J(
Ik I IM A wau> UAAVAAI* aaa SMV a s*aaa 1 A -------------
the way home. That country hadn’t j tne British mandate in the Holy
been a raui in bcvcibi miviiww, uui
now Che grain-men there feel they
♦ will have time to get the crop in I
the ground with assurance ot al
fair yield.”
I i'onal director of Che Young Demo-
crats, is a former member of the
. T'ss v u c Ct a ’ a T An I c. 1 a t 11 rrt
president I °f Fascist groups and publications
since 1941. the year of the last Streetcar and bus workers in
convention no meetings were held
during the war
Other officers elected were:
Mrs. Ttieodora Hansen. Long
t h c 1 Beach Calif , vice president: Mias
, Angela R Parisi, assistant corpora-
! tion counsel of New York City,
j secretary; and Hoover Taft.
Greenville. N C . who said he was
distantly related to both Republic-
ans bearing those names, treasur-
er.
A convention resolution also en-1
dorsed Mr Trumans statement,
asserting that "no person can be
condemned for disloyalty because
of rumor, goaafp or suspicion
XXX” and declaring that
; YDCA stands '’firmly" for
I proteetjuu ol civil rtgUl* *(kd Mer-
Mashville, Tennessee secretary of
state as president of the YDCA
Hie Texan, who Is associate na-
Streetc.ar and bus workers
Rome struck to protest arrest of
a Communist rioter, but the labor j
confederation called them back to !
work at midnight. Demonstrators!
were reported to have wrecked
I headquarters of rightist groups in
I Padua. Parma. Perugia and else-
| where, and in Perugia a bomb was
said to have been thrown at Com-
munist headquarters.
In France, a Marseille
front strike stemming
By THE ASSOCIATED PRE88
Warm hearted Texans responded
I generously to pleas for food
hungry Europe and Monday
Tuesday the Southwest Friendship
Train will leave Fort Worth bulg-
ing with dried and canned edibles
Scores of towns contributed, and
It has been predicted the total Tex-
as donations might fill 20 freight
cars. Railroads are moving them
free of charge.
Included in the contributions are
canned milk, rice, dried beans.
: wheat, citrus and pineapple juice,
i blackeyed peas and other easily-
shlpped non-perishable items.
The Southwest Friendship Train
_____ ____ 4 ,V'zM|
DOrrON AMD VICINITY: »W»
ranwr Bunday; partly
etoudy wra rtai>« lnn ir I tiwri
Monday.
v.
KART TEXAS: Bunday fair, wamra
in northwest portion durtnc after-
- OMn; Monday partly atoudy wtth
rtrtiw temparateroa: yrtMa vart* d
able wind* oa tha eoart baeoBkic . .
south to aoutheart late today
« j
WEST TDM today fair, vannar
dtirtas tha aftamto; Mtototey
partly cloudy *Mh iteinc
t 01
l».
I the cash and
! the two bandits after they tied up
I the nightwatchman have ranged
I as high as *100,000.
MIAMI Fla.. Nov 15
child who disappeared last June
10 from a tourist < ourt at Galves- |
j ton. Tex . has been located
1 children’s home
FBI said today.
C H Carson, agent tn charge of
ties "
Other resolutions passed by the
convention favored:
Endorsement of the Truman
administration and asking that the]
President be continued in office.
Continuation of "an active and
far-sighted planning program” for
reclamation and conversion
the maintenance ot current
clamation projects.
Passage of a general housing
bill, a "coordinated drive” to bring
down housing costs and continuance I —
of federal rent controls, extension :
of public housing legislation and
federal funds for low rental hous-
ing for veterans.
Universal military training and
’ a high state of preparedness" for
the armed tones, together with
the United States retaining "com-
rant charging kidnaping had been I pletc control" of the atomic
ances of the cowboy humorist and
philosopher.
Will was proud of his Indian an-
cestry and he once remarked. ”My
ancestors didn’t come over on the
i Mayflower — but they were on
hand to greet the folks who did."
And when he wanted to go abroad
and was getting his passport. Will
was called on to produce a birth
certificate. He explained, "Back
-rn.t.1---- w-1----j M B
sort of private matter. And if a
I fellow is here, we just sorter took
that as proof that he had been
born "
(He got the passport, ail right.)
The most often-quoted of all
corner of Avenue A through prop- Will's remarks was, "I never met
erly owned by E. C. Brodie. | a man I didn't like*
WASHINGTON. Nov. 15 — IjP—]
Howard Hughes demanded today j
! t h a t Senator Ferguson iR Michi I
! withdraw what Hughes called an]
"implied challenge" that there was i
H ornan Lirpior
Clerk Paid Third
I isit by liandit
HOUSTON. Nov. 15 — OP) —Mrs.
Thelma May, 36 - ytar-gld Houston
liquor clerk, today received her
third visit, within a week from a
I red-haired bandit.
The man appeared at the store
Tuesday and, after brandishing a
gun. took *91 A day later.
Visit netted him *34.
Today it was *36—even though
Mrs. May had had her hours
changed in a hope she would not
be on duty should the naan return.
Mrs. May told police the man.
who needed a haircut the first two
times he visited the store,
parently had used some of
money for a haircut and
clothes. He had a much neater ap-
pearance today, she »aid.
She quoted the man as saying:
"Well, I'm back again. This is
the last time I’ll bother you for
I’m leaving for California tonight
and won’t be back."
As he departed he wished her
"good luck."
South Africa contended
situation was an internal
and the U. N had no right to
. dcr negotiations.
tier brother, Fred Thurman, and! « — -
for the
rh(erred to its committee of experts
the question of determining the re-
ports to be requested from the Unit-
ed States in connection with Ameri-
can trusteeship over a group <
former Japanese islands including
the Carolinas, Marshalls and Mar-
ianas.
3 The long-awaited partition plan
1
- ■' ; z*L_
tion Neither was injured in
the business and farm (Sropertv of ] mishap
.. .. —.---------1„ I Berkley said that the Roberts]
tractor was headed north and wa.s.wnn m<- imm vunni-u nc „
starting to make a left turn across'waitress. She abandoned the child
the highway when struck by the I in a rooming house there and came
northbound car. The tractor
adequately lighted, he added
Damage to the tractor w a s
slight, but the car. an old model,
was badly damaged
was to Miami, the FBI said
' The child was turned over to the
Miami home on July 11 and reg-
i istered under the name of Virginia
| Delacruz
Th« family of Mr and Mrs
Leonard Henry came to Galveston |
from Westfield, Mass . on a vacation
and was living on the beach Henry
and an uncle of the child went to
California to get an Automobile
Mrs Henry told Galveston police
and later the FBI that the child's
( aunt. Mrs. Ashllna, took the child i
' with her last June 10 on a shopping |
tour in Galveston. When neither
at camn police were
of
centered
which U.
Young
Labor Law Repeal
Many i assembly’s 57-nation Political Com- |
d that I mittee continued debate on India’s
Crowism’’ charges against
Africa One proposal would
Dr H E Roberts. Denton
..... —- ,or l,nfl retired osteopath,
Ohi.-'lte ' said. "We Jv escaped serious injury when
hitched up the trailer and started i automobile crashed into his light [ the Miami FBI office, said a war-
■farm tractor on Highway 377 one r-n' '
and one-half miles south of Denton i Hied against Mrs. Mildred Ashline. I
nkzsiit «• on r* Untiirrtnu 1 aunt nf thp child Roi nirr Hnnrv '
not been arrr^tod
described the
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 80, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 16, 1947, newspaper, November 16, 1947; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1315824/m1/1/?q=denton+history: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.