Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 88, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 25, 1947 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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medical supplies and cotton.
SING TO PROTECT INCOMES
Tin Pan Alley Rush Is On to Beat Petrillo Record Ban
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Out Our Way
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Denton Record.Chronicle
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essential to our national defense and
peacetime economy.
S' I know A!
'Ho did it test
summer when
we went on >
^vacation! /
WELL, IND
SMI
Stff HIM ?
tl
I
The bland look of my first high
school date when I nervously sug-
gested we sit on a park bench for
a moment on the way home and
look at the moon . . . "What for?"
she asked, and I couldn't give her
'Wt CAN
PRiTEND
. Wf 0O.
HE HAD A YOTi\)£,
I ALL RIGHT ’I DONI
| Hi HOU) MTSOOT
k\7
FI CAN'T HELP 5
Il WC.1 KNOW AUNT
i AHf »*....
PERHAPS
WE D MTTEH
GET BACK. TO
. BED. BOVS’
they need.
They’ve done a number of things to get hold
of as many dollars aa they could rake together
France, for Instance, got some Frenchmen
oc
•MW
GOOD
SUFFERIN’
GAXNSH?
A HALF V
MINUTE VET/
You Really
THINK 8111’5
SUILTY-
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ZNEW YORK — (F) —The past is
a mirror of many faces, and these
are coming back ....
The old Arab guide at the Egypt-
ian pyramids who said. "Money is
nothing, but a good name shines all
the time like the full moon" . . . .
The numbing terror of the first
man I ever saw hanged, a cop-
killer whose eyes reflected the hell
he dropjted into seconds later ....
The cautious re 1 i e f my father
showed when my mother let me
quit taking piano lessons after three
noisy months .... The resigna-
tion of an overworked horse that
fell in the street one day aa I was
going to school ... He lay there
and knew he would never get up
again, and was too old and tired
to care .... The puzzled look of
our bulldog pup. polio ned by a
neighbor, as death seeped up his
useless limbs ....
The expression of the druggist I
worked for as a delivery boy the
snowy night a man phoned up and
asked him to send over a three-
cent stamp, a two-cent newspaper
— and change for a »5 bill ....
The terror of a schoolmate caught
stealing from another boy’s locker
I
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Therm no creek
\*roune'here'
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'THF DYING rOWBOV
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•PEAK ONLY
WMM MOU’KE
SFOKIM TO*/
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TBACB
rOKAYH,INT/ SO WE CAN 1
«TOV» THAT BOTH JANUS ANO
UKREIU WADHAM WERE MUN-
OCWO. NOW
PUOVE
FmwwoA
wrrpnf ________ ________________
COUDUCTO*. I KFOM TKYINd TO MSnugUTE HIS
THROWOUT *
ML THOM
kOHQW^
m Ml«WMt TUAT, YOUUS FELLS’ SOU*’
•RANOFA WILL THINK TMCt MfXT TIME,
P£YLI*^.7 COULD DduDT
< He KILLKD
UMIBRZ,
Bill naaud tj set
Rid C* DUSTIER- HE
WOULDN'T HAS* POINTED
SUSPICION AY
. HIMSELF'
YOU'RE AN 1
LUCRETIA WAS EVA, ACTRESS AND A
BUT NO ONE OU®rr/TRO0PH?,ANITA.
k IO DIE THAT
WAY. M
He shoves me in the
creek—so I ^et sent
THAT? OH, SODAS.
TRYIKJ TO QUIT
SMOKIM’ AN'
HE’S oOT CURLY <
HOLDIN' TH’ PACK
AN' ONLY ALLOWIN’
HIM ONE CLjARET
] EVERY TWO _
\ HOURS' i 'T
BOYLE’S NOTEBOOK t 'A
Some Faces, Some Events Stick Id
Memory To Return Years Later
By HAL BOYLE
You AND I f£C
EYE-ld-EYE •'
LFI'B GET
A ROPC-'.
Zand this show
4jn't OVER YEL'TO-
MORROW MORNING
.AT EXACTLY 10 4
S'AOtlOCK I WANT
-T'W YOU TOTEIE-
*foi PHONE CHIMES.
WHOEVER 010 rr 1
THINKS ANITA IS ’
DEAD TOO.' AND HE
IW/*«S SHE DIDN’T
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LU W B. FAL Qff
ft «M> M«ywt *w
THK NATION TODAY
Europe Has Money But
Not Enough Dollars
By JAME8 MARLOW
WASHINGTON, Nov. 3#—LB—Why do France.
Italy and Austria need (107,000,000 (millions; in
help from ua?
Don’t they have any money at all to buy what
they need? Are they that broke? The answer Is
aimpie:
They have their own money but they don’t
have enough dollars to buy what they need from
ua.
If the three countries were turning out enough
goods to export to us they could sell those goods
to us for doUars.
In that way, they'd lay In a supply of dollars
By JACK O’BRIAN
NEW YORK — Bert Wheeler
wants to bring in "The Bench-
warmer,’’ the Paul Gerard Smith
comedy which folded on the road.
He has been assured he can get it
ready for a Broadway first night
for less than (17.000, and he'll go
ahead If he can get Frank Fay to
help rewrite It . . . Sammy Kaye’s
popularity permitted the New York-
er hotel to drop its ice shows dur-
ing his date there . . . Allen B Du-
mont, the television tycoon, says
the video Industry w i 11 expand
about seven times by 1949.
Frank Sinatra in the Copacabana
says he has 80 tunes recorded and
should have more than 100 by the
time the Petrillo recordl ng ban
falls. "Makes me all set for five
years," says The Voice . . Every
Tin Pan Alley song writer is pres-
suring the recording firms to have
their ditties waxed before the ban
takes away that end of their in-
comes . . . Hey, Lana! Don Cor-
nell. Sammy Kaye’s be-ltone, has
been chosen "FavoiW- Sweater
Boy” by Syracuse co-eds . . . Jack-
ie Kelk. the radio comic, dropped a
bundle last season in "Tenting To-
night” but hopes to recoup with
more of his dough in "Medea "
Jean Platt has a job I don’t envy:
General un d er s t u dy for "Tl.e
Heiress,” which means she must
be ready at a stage manager s
call to step in for Wendy Hiller,
Patricia Colllnge. Katharine Rsht.
Betty Linley, Fl o n a O’Shlel or
Augustr Roeland Meaning, too.
naturally, that she must learn nil
the various roles letter perfec' s
considerable task, since the ditfer-
&
and Jea tares
4 MBfiTON (Tex.) MOORD-CmtONICIX-_____________________T—day, Nov. M, 1947
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NRW ru. M SONS
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Hunters Wife Stays
Home, Bag* Possum
By THB ASSOCIATED PRESS
Carl Jaggers of Henderson went
all the way to Montana to hunt
bear. But Mrs Jaggers, who stayed
home, had more excitement
Neighbors head a terrific din In
the Jaggers garage about 2 a m
and investigation revealed that
dogs had cornered an o possum
The animal had climbed up on
fruit Jars, knocking many to the
concrete floor Dogs-tried tn climb
up. too. and knocked down more.
The possum finally was killed.
The Indian* man who chewed 112 sticks
of <um at one time should get a prize for
something or other—maybe stick-to-it-ive-
ness.
The three countries — to the value of (587 -
000,000 — will need food, fuel, fertiliser, seeds.
Get into the habit of pleasing where you
go and you can go where you please.
I DO Wf
WHO (Mf
r MEWgto J
BUT TWH’5
60VSAM A
MMEUL LOTT*
•AMFttTED
rwnf MTS’
PIWEREOa j
L BWMtl*9T!j
what 1 had
on my mind.
Then I re-
turned to
Libby Langt.
ii,
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5AV.
BOSSl
DiZEAAALAAJD and puts HIM. on
uia feet-m-but we will. >
Brother, When th is. oobs \
OFF TOMORROW at 5 A.M./ )
HOLLYWOOD
Movie Audiences Too Critical Of
Little Things, Says Cary Grant
By BOB THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD, Nov 35 — l/T —
Film audiences are too critical,
says Cary Grant.
"They spend 65 cents,” Cary said
between takes of ’Blandlnga,’
"and expect perfection. If they
bought a gadget foe 65 cents, they
wouldn't expect as much from it.
’’And it s the little things about
a movie that upset people.’’ he con-
tinued "For example, if Hiere’s a
scene in w’hich an article is men-
tioned as having been manufac-
tured in 1904, there’s eure to be
some guy in the audience who U
say "Heck, that wasn't till 1906.’
After that the picture is ruined for
him "
Cary notes that pe o p 1 e lately
seem to think English films are
truer to life than the Hollywood
product. But he scoffs at that idea.
“They think the characters are
real.” he said, "because they are
new faces ’’
Things I’ve enjoyed lately:
watching Jimmy Durante unveil his
plaque in the Grauman s Egyptain
A Judge suggests that all cars be taken
from careless drivers. How strange it
would seem with our streets almost de-
serted. *
Published by The Deaton Publishing Company
Riley Oom. Publish*.
Wnimii at the poetotnoe at Denton. Tnas. January
IS, MBL as tn*U matt* of the eeoond eiaaa. award-
ing to the Acte Ot Congress. March 3. 1879.
Published each afternoon except Saturday and Bun-
day morning at 814 K. Hickory St. Phone 3090.
MF.MBBB OF THB ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Aaaoclated Praam U entitled exclusively to the
use for republication of all the local news printed
In this newspaper, aa weU aa aU AP news diapatches.
BVBSCBirnON MATES
At counter and newetanda: So per copy.
By Carrier: 30c per week.
By Mall (In Advance): One year 88.38. ata months
88*0: three months (1*0; one month 786.
NOTICE TO THB PUBLIC
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, repu-
tation er standing of any firm. Individual or corpo-
ration wUl be gladly corrected upon being called to
the publishers’ attention.
The publishers are not reepcneiblo lor copy omis-
etane. typographical snore or any unintentional
anon that occur other than to correct in next leeue
after it 1s brought to their attention. AU advertising
orders are accepted on this basis only.
Denton subscribers who fau to receive their paper
by 8 p. m. on weeBdye er by TjSB a. bl Sundays
will be delivered by •pooial M
Mon department to open until . —
lye end 0*0 a. m. Bundays, and special do*
position —.......................I. II .1, ■■ ,r-l Il,
—--------
the other it is San Angelo Woman’s
Songs Published
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Mrs Wood Butler Br„ of San An-
gelo, the former Blanche Redwine
of Osceola, Hill county, has signed
a royalty contract with a music
publishing company to sell her
sheet music and recordings.
Two of her numbers to
handled by the New York firm are
“Dld-Ja?” and "I Can Depend On
You.” One of her latest is ’Trav-
olta’ Blues.’’
Speaking of songs — and women
— the theme song for Upshur coun-
ty could well be "Can't You Hear
Me Calling, Carolyn.”
Of girl babies bom in that coun-
ty in October, nearly one third
were named Carolyn
Wf
teU I
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iJliT
BK
A fellow in a cowboy outfit is an ’
ignored refugee from Madison
Square Garden, a fellow in a Dan-
iel Boone outfit who chalks the
streets regularly is thought to have
some daffy advertising tieup. even
though he only tries to make a few
friends for democracy.
On Broadway folks won't even
pay attention to anyone who faints
and 'falls down. They think it's a
gag or a racket ... I asked an at-
tendant in garage one four a m
to call the cops to look after a man
who'd been lying for some time in
what might have been a drunken
stupor, or worse . . . "How do I
know if it’s a racket or not," he
said walking away.
ent "business for each role is a
chore in itself.
New Yorkers can’t be surprised
unless it is something completely
outlandish, Basil Rathbone learned
. . . On Monday nights he has to
ruah from the radio studios to the
Biltmore Theater where he is play-
ing in "The Heiress." and at first
he Uiought he would be causing con-
siderable ructions wearing his full
fake beard and 1850 suit, for he had
only minutes to make the hop
cross-town and get on stage "I was
surprised to find no one paid the
slightest attention to me,” he said,
a little disconsolately.
New Yorkers won't stop to see a
man In any sort of dizzy style . . .
an answer .... Th* htetory pro-
fessor who broke down and cried
on Armistice Day as he told us ot
thtrgj he had seen in France during
the war that then wasn t yet known
aa "The First World War.” ... He
was the first of many grown men
I was to see in tears ....
The sick loneliness of the boy in
the assault boat nearing the Moroc-
can coast. Just before he vomited
. . The cheerful way Gen. George
8. Patton said, "B a t tl e wounds
aren’t painful except liver wounds,
and If thev get you in the liver,
you won’t live long anyway” . . .
And the day his own blue eyes
overflowed with sorrow a f te r a
bomb killed his young a id e in
Tunisia ....
The amazement of a captured
general when Maj Gen Ernie Har-
mon o v t r ru 1 ed his objections
against riding to the rear in a
truckful of Nazi enllster prisoners
with the blunt command: "Climb
In or I’ll kick you in” ... . The
Kentucky rifleman drinking coffee
mads with cold rainwater scooped
from Tunisian hill rocks and sav-
ing. ’Don’t’ write about how we
have to live — It’ll just worry our
folks back home, and they can’t
help it none" ....
The happy hysteria in every face
when war ended, and each soldier
through! of the heaven of home
and felt no worry for the days that
lay ahead . . . Peaceful days, he
was sure, and happy days he
hoped
1
orders art accepted on this baste .daly.
subscribe wbo Hall to jwoaivs ttteto paper
1 tba BeoM-oiroatoto.'Tataptoaaa^Kiirimd'a
----- near. Ths
p. m. on
Mvary wfll ba~imde tf n^aMl^"&o^hC^r~
' Y Nonsense, Prisa He !\ (
the recommendations incorporated in the
Merchant ^Marine Act of 1986. This act
Mt up a shipbuilding program—thrown With which they could buy from us the things
entirely out of gear By the war—on the
scarcely disputable basis that a modern,
first-rate merchant marine and an ade-
quate, progressive shipbuilding industry to aaU to the French government, for francs, their
are essential to our national defense and hold^g'government w«s >hl.
.. ; in mis way me French government was able
-----. - - • to convert those holdings l^ere into dollars with
The Presidents advisory committee has which to do buying here.
i*“~ . . put to make things worse, the higher prices
rose in the United States, the less could be bought
with the dollars the French scrapped together.
Another thing — and this was true pretty gen-
w„.i erally In Europe — a lot of grata was lost last
would include two 50,000-ton liners te * and in the summer by a dry
8o France has to Import more grata than she
would have had to if the crops had been better.
By next March 31, here’s the story for the
throe countries:
France — She’ll need to spend (556.000.000:
-Lt— «««, MtuUr eAn th,’u have »»•.«»,000 in dollars to spend;
8h}P?,P xW U v 5 °* 8be’1’ n**<5 W28.000.000 help from us
Italy — She’ll need to spend (386.000,000;
she’ll have only (1M.000.000 in dollars to spend-
and ahe’U need (337,000,000 in help from us.
Auatria — She’ll need to spend (73,000,000;
She’D have only (31,000,000 in dollars to spend;
and ahe’U need (43.000,000 In help from us
Major Hoople
IT’S KiNDA Risky
LEANDER / THE OLD V.
GENT GETS NIGHTMARES
—- THINKS INDIANS ARE
TRYING To SCALP HIM '
WHAT IF HE THiKSKS
THEY’RE AFTER Him AMO
STARTS YELLING FOR
. HIS Rifled ,-if—
Arfse. ins SHttvFf iNvesnoATit
has no ups or Pus it*
YbU’RI UNDER. 1Z&ILL CAN'T B£
ARREif, ©ill I Guilty, sheriff/
■jv
1
Time to Get Going
Last spring President Truman ordered
ship construction curtailed sharply for
reasons of economy and because of ma-
terial shortages. Shortly afterward he ap-
pointed a five-man committee of “prac-
tical-minded businessmen/' to um their
own phrase, who were to make a study
of the country's merchant marine and ship-
building problems. Their report is now
in, and the President has passed it along
to Congress and the appropriate depart- "
ments "in the hope that it will prove help- h
Essentially the committee has repeated
».
I i
also urged a four-year program, costing
>600,000,000, for the construction of 46
passenger vessels and a number of high-
speedcargo ships and tankers. The first
group would include two
for North Atlantic service.
There are 32 ocean-going vessels being
built in nine private yards. Half of them
are for foreign owners.
Britain reportedly has 125 passenger
and patuumger-cargo ships now under con-
struction. *The United States has two.
1 France, Spain, Sweden and Italy all are
building more than we are. ,
There should be, in the committees opin-
ion, not less than 60,000 workers engaged
in shipbuilding in this country in any
peacetime year. There are now less than
half that number engaged in ship con-
struction.
The committee wants to see eight pas- ANALYZING THE NEWS
France May Have To
Swing More to Right
By DEWITT MACKENZIE ,
AP Foreign Affairs Analyst
—. . . . t Thls n° tee to rock the boat, but
said to be ready to should recognise that the situation in strike-
riddw France is tacreeslngly grave.
I a*n reliably informed that the French au-
thorities, both governmental and military, are
with deepest anxiety the potentialities
------------------„ u million work-
ore betoagtag to Communist dominated unions.
WHATTK KOO 6’POSE
COULD* HamwED TO
Ml N0EK.5*
SHOES N CAR 54 f
Hall of Fame Afterwards Jimmy
went in to see the show, some-
thing called "This Time for Keep ’
The Ovilla DeHavilland-
George Cukor reception for Mrs
Elizabeth,Gray Vining, t ut o r to
Japan’s crown prince . Mrs Vining,
a Quaker, discussed conditions in
Japan and it was refreshing to se-
a Hollywood party dedicated to ser-
ious matters
Our Boarding House ’ with . . .
weNe gotta keep This a secret,
LIKE FOOTBALL SIGNALS,ALYIN/
SRFVJDPA HOOPLE DOESNT KNoN jH*
A9OUT UNCLE NULfoY’S TRICK
BED THAT YANKS A GUY OCT OF a
fl
States at present is
or 1~~~, — -
mercial shipping, it can and should attain
a position more in keeping with its place
in world affair*. It also appears that
it is high time a start was made toward
that position.
It has been said repeatedly and truly to ^cuve ^tv ZTd H
that* it in unsafe to dissipate our ship- *•
building industry to a point where critical etrength. These forces
skills necessary to national defense are *
scattered and toat. It also has been said
that it is ridiculous and inconsistent for
this great nation to lag so far behind the
smaller powers in ship construction and
operation. .. A .
The President’s Committee has repeated
these observations and added a sensible,
current program for action. The money,
the skills and the heed for a beginning
are at hand. All that remains now is to
get going. _________
Vi
senger ships started immediately—three
21,00Qrton vessels fo rthe New York-Medi-
terranean run and five of 13,600 tons each
for round-the-world service. These are
among the ships whose construction was
postponed last spring. Designs are com-
pleted and bids are in. The Maritime
Commission has $84,000,000 previously
appropriated, and the lines, that would
operate them are d!/ tc r_ —
match that sum.
Thus it appears that while the United
__ r J a fifth-rate power, viic
less, in the field of transoceanic com- of the nation-wide strike involving a
Offlclato reMgnlte that, m elder statesmen Leon
Blum warned last week, international Commun-
lam has declared war on French Democracy
They are preparing for the worst, with the
hope that it won’t eventuate.
French military reserves have been called
•ack to acUve duty and it la said that very
'te. army W’ill be close to active war
—— --——i are scattered throughout
the country.
The new cabinet under Premier Robert Schu-
man has got into action with a promise of ener-
getic measures. This assurance came as the
strike movement spread across the country and
threatened disaster to the already chaotic econ-
omy. Schuman's task waa to win back those mil-
lion strikers and at the same time try to prevent
other workers from leaving their Jobs
There were few bright spots in the gloomy
picture, but one ray of light came from a vastly
Important — though perhaps wholly unexpected
— quarter. General Charles De Oeulle, leader of
the powerful New Right-Wing People’s Rally
cancelled a speech scheduled for Thursday to
keep from embarrassing the government in its
conflict with the Communist-dominated Confed-
eration of Labor. The general la the pet hate of
the Bolshevists, having captured a majority of
votes in the recent country-wide municipal elec-
t,on4 on a violently antl-Communlst platform.
That la a highly interesting development and
supports the suggestion of this column yesterday
that Premier Schuman had chosen to adopt a
course further to the right, rather than try to
maintain a hopeless middle-of-the-road position
between Communism on the one hand and De
Gaulle’s extreme rightists on t... ..
further significant that Schuman gave the port-
folio of the ministry of economics to Rene Mayer
who U an open supporter of De Gaulle
The whole situation is suggestive of the lull
before a gathering storm.
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 88, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 25, 1947, newspaper, November 25, 1947; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1315832/m1/4/?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.