Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 236, Ed. 1 Friday, May 17, 1946 Page: 10 of 12
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Out Our Way
avoiding a division of India
THE NATION TODAY
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CALL
Birthdays, Anniversaries,
Special Events
5c to 25c
FULTZ NEWS AGENCY
Southwest Corner Square
GREETING
CARDS
Use Long Lasting,
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Complete Satisfaction
TEMPLE LUMBER
COMPANY
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Tiff
throughout the Life of our nation.
Chief Justice Hughes handed down
dectaions in clear and forceful
words that all within his hearing
could understand
It is Interesting to note that with
the death of Chief Justice Stoni-
the hut of that original "Nine Old
Men" had gone from the court.
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RED RYDER
WHIP AND lUGS WE*€ CW '
pein sides of me .eo>ts-'
1 COUIV*XT COVER 'EtA ©ow
Al 1H' SAME llME, 50
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provision for group legislatures, the Moslems can
combine and so ■ safeguard their interests, thus
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pauqi
'HauVWS' r
By EDGAR MARTL
QOW1 .VAA.VAWV 1 wF ewcKxv) Vil
ASSOUAN WA1H VVOWY WbO GT
OWM JUW \AWV_ n,
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Probably in no other period of the
tribunal’s history was there a com-
plete turnover in membership in
such a short period of time Death
and age truly had done far more to
change the complexion of the court
than probably would have been ac-
complished in enlarging its mem-
bership to 15.
yelled for "Quiet!"
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0NEHUR1J
By FRED HARMAJI
"N6.MI5S nADGE ; BU1
N0»4E OF U5 WILL BE _
SAFE Illi WE CA1CH '
-.THOSE OUlLAWS.'
> “ft is exactly the same." he said "Exactly."
.—:---------------------
Denton Record-Chkonicle
LBABBD WIBB MBMBBB ABBOCIATKD PBBAB
Setting h Trap
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can’t be arranged without a great deal of
uofairnens, it hardly aeema appropriate
far the UN people to assume the role of
" , the man who came to dinner.
Mljor Hoopla
VMELL.TMfeV SOUND {
PiRST CA&A5, MAJOR,
BUT TUiS W1OMDERF0L
WJORtO IS SO PULL OP
QUMtOT CREATORES
THAT 0MB MEMER. CAM
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AMCESTORS.LlRE OURS
) PICKED COCONUTS <
. WITH TVAEIR PEET. I
on the grounds that they fear the Hindus, who
outnumber them three tn one It was this insist-
ence by the Moslems on an independent state out-
side any federal government that caused the col-
lapse of the round-table conference, since the
Hindus want a feueral government Under the
provision for group legislatures, the Moslems can
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By OOPJWBY ANDERSON
< For H<M Boyle)
LUDWIGSBURG. Germany. May
17- (AV-Several hundred former
Nasis are having time to reflect on
the departed glories of their regime
atop the hump of democracy, which
rises 270 feet above the plain of
Wurtemberg near here
The grim dd fortress-citadel of
Hohenasperg. which houses them
snugly ipsldp 5Q-foot walls girdled
by a deep dry moat, got its name
Demokratenbuckel (hump of de-
mocracy) Just about a century ago
wtven leaders of the German liberal
revolution of 1848 first filled its
white-wushed cells IXxiay. run by
Americans and guarded by Poles,
It is known by the less picturesque
name of Interment Canfp No 76
Hohenasperg trad a long and
checkered history both before and
since it got its local name. An-
other dictator Naooleon Bonaparte
once scaled the hili to gaze with
admiration on the cannon which
aligned its mighty walls German
students, sentenced for Illegal duel-
ling. strolled across its tree-lined
yard, which the American call
Central Park" todav
Chained with great links to lire
clammy wall of a dungeon in <aie
of the towers, tiie German poet
ANALYZING THE NEWS
India at Last Ls Given
Chance at Independence
By DeWITT MacKENZIE
AP Foreign Affairs Analyst
India at tong last has independence within her
grasp—and this time it is being handed to her
or. a silver platter
That’s the meaning of the British project of
forming a federal union for self-government in
India The great Indian political parties having
failed to settle their Utter differences in the re-
eeqt roupd-Uble conference at Simla, Britain now
is arbitrarily moving to set up a government and
is inviting the Indians to come along and run
it—to make what they will out of it, even to the
extent of severing all relations with the molhei
counry.
There arc Indications of strong opposition to the
plan among Moslems, who desire a wholly Inde-
izendent state (Pakistan for themselves. But Ma-
hatma Gandhi, most powerful political figure in
the country and guiding light of the All-India
Congress (mainly Hindu» has advised careful
study of the proposals, saying:
"Whether people like the announcement or not.
it is going to be the most momentous one in this
history of India.”
That puts the thing in a nut-irtiel) Ever since
iny last visit to India in 1943 this column has been
Insisting that such a procedure seemed the most
likely one to break the deadlock
Britain’s new Socialist Prime Minister Atlee and
his government have moved with great courage
and vast daring, for India is among England's
most cherished |xk»sesslon.s
TEierc are Imperialists who will charge Attlee
with having thrown away one of the moat price-
less of the Crown Jewels Still, somebody had to
make the move, for the Indian problem has been
a menace to world peace.
The British plan on thumbnail is this: The
federal union will comprise the provinces (called
British India i and the some 600 Indian states
which are ruled by princes and lesser potentates
There will be a central government which will
control foreign affairs, defense and communica-
tions. All other matters will be dealt with by
the governments of the principalities and the
provinces.
There is a vital deviation In the matter of the
provincial governments The provinces will be per-
mitted to form regional groups which will have
their own legislatures and executive branches
These group legislatures will be intermediate be-
'ween those of the provinces at tiie bottom and
the federal government at the top Now the point
of these group legislatures A tills
The Moslems have been demanding Pakistan
IP HE AN UrilA I* PKAPFfiAMP
i ANA6. rRAMMB WOULP RN0W
\ rr WAS THEM TWAT ROMEO TMM
lAOMTIW AN’ I
3 an*/ features
<» —oiW HWilWKM i
More Housing Trophies
We father from some recent requ*rks
r Secretary General Trygve Ue that one
! the minor difficulties besetting the
nited Nations representatives is h slight
infusion of intellectual and physical
entities. p
“ ‘ __they are citizens of the
arid. (At least we hope that, in spite of
casional backslidings, they consider
uemselves as such.) But physically, they
ate i residents of New fork City, subject
to the hazards and inconveniences inci-
dent upon residence in that metropolis or,
for that matter, almost any big city in the
world today.-
From the intellectual viewpoint, almost
any community would be honored to wel-
come them to its corporate bosom. Their
purpose is high and their work is of emi-
nent importance. Where these delegates
sit is, in effect, the capital of the. world.
But their physical presence, along with
the presence of a considerable entourage
of jMcretariee, clerks and other assistants,
imposes some practical difficulties.
Now Mr. Lie and hia assooiates are un-
doubtedly conscious of the importance of
the task entrusted to them, as well they
should be. And we can imagine that Mr.
Lie feels a little piqued at the almost
hysterical unwelcome accorded him and
his associates by the country squires of
Westchester and Greenwich when it was
suggested that the UN might pitch camp
permanently in those exclusive and ex-
pensive rural fastnesses.
But it does seem that Mr. Lie is lieing
a bit petulant in his complaints about
temporary accommodations, as he report-
ed them to the UN Headquarters Commis-
sion. Mr. Lie said, smong other things,
thBt “it was possible to obtain, after ne-
gotiation ,an allotment of 1 per cent by
hotels of their space, and although some
of the rooms were poor, some too expen-
sive, and although often two people must
share one room, the Secretariat is housed.”
/Well, Mr. Lie, that’s life in America
today. The housing of thousands is im-
perfect at present and indefinite in the
future. Many whose business takes them
to New York and other cities can't get an
allotment of one hotel room, not even a
poor or too-expensive or doubled-up room,
after any amount of negotiation. Their
business isn’t as'important as yours, but,
since it’s their living, it seems important
fathefri.
The. UN representatives have inherited
a world that is restless, uncomfortable
and disorderly. It is tbo bad that, in their
daily Aife, they must partake of some of
those’ conditions even as they strive to
remedy them. But at least some of them
can Mve in places like the Waldorf-Astoria.
All of them can eat bountifully. Their
discomfort might l>e the envy of a lot of
.Americans, and undoubtedly it is a dream
of heaven to some of the less fortunate
countrymen of delegates from other lands.
It is safe to assume that most New
Yorkers wish that the delegates’ accom-
modations could be more on a par with
the dignity of their work. But since that
■<3
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1
Hj . •VSw Q.
BOYLES NOTEBOOK
Former Nazis Jailed In Grim < H<l
Fort Called ‘Hump of Democracy'
Ohrirtlan Schubait hsd plenty of
time to reflect that the year G77
was no time for free speech, after
he had criticized the luxurious life
led by Karl Eugen. Duke of Wurt-
emberg, and his mistress, the Ian
Francesca Von Hohenheim. Fried-
rich List, the economist, suffered
a similar late m 1834 because he
attacked government deficiencies in
the stale assembly.
After the revolution of '48. all
Hohenasperg’s cells were filled The
Hump of Democracy had other
names too-Traenenbergj Mountain
of Tears und Hocllenberg (Moun-
tain of Hell >
'/*>*• J'‘1
F'1
1 WAS MO - &T ]
I WOULDN'T HAME |
, BEEki MUCH . -J
. HELP-' J
H0LLYW(X)D
‘ France Furnishes New
Star in Louis Jourdan
By ROB THOMAH
BOLLYWOOD. May 17 —<AV—France, which has
glwn-us Lafayette. Charles Boyer and crepes su-
>eUr.' how contributes Louis Jourdan
Jmrrdan has been brought to Hollywood by Da-
vid Belmick. who will probably itar him in "The
Paradlm Case." The Frenchman is a combination
ef Tyrone Power, Cary Grant and Cornel Wilde,
if you can Imagine that. He is six feet Uli. slim
and has a cleancut, handsome profile. HU moat
ttriklnR feature is his dark brown eyes, which are
piercing and yet with a far-away look. Sorry, girls,
he’s married.
The actor started hU movie carter in Paris in
IBM- W escaped to the Riviera wt»en France tali
tn tbe'RcxU. and Joined the underground He
■peaks English with a pleasant accent, under tu-
telage of hU close friend/ Jean Pierre Aiunont.
Jourdan reported the French film industry is
m poor shape "Now we make only 35 pictures a
year instead of the usual 160," he said "Most of
our squipmsnl has been stolen or destroyed What
we hare 4r. vary old."
__lie contor t report. <>n ho* French Alm making
eompeied io Amnicaii. because he had never seen
> movie aet here. So we walked him to a sound
•ta«e and gave him his introduction to the Hol-
lywood industry Ha observed for a while and
how the director and hU many assistants
BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES
*r ' *-(
> MEUER M\KT> 1
7 VEY YQkfa MS' I
FOOL:i 5_2
• J
71
.-r*-"’----
IT S A COMF1 IKTLNT,
VOt) FOOL .' THEY
USCC TO CALL U^>
ORiA&t
till they lot
IKJ'I'C’ IT - MOW/ \
I LET ’EM ALONI .' J
Kahn.
■■■* warn naam iMdarvant an opaafeiaa fer
« the removal of tonsils Tueeday.
19 YEARS AGO
bi Record-Chronicle
R. t. Cameron, the man who owned the first
automobile in Denton. U dead al Dallas, where hr
has been prominently Identified 'With the automo-
bile business ever since he left Den0n
Frank R Sutton, 74, a native of Denton coun-
ty, died at his home. Ills Fannin St.. Monday
after an illneea of over a year.
Mantas licensee were issued to: Harvey Chown-
inC 'and Mowlle Edgmon; G R Parks and Willie
Moron
Born. To Mr. and Mrs. U A. Monschkr. Krum.
Ma«day. • bdy; to Mr. and Mrs M. D. Penry,
Taaeday. a Mrt, moral Betty Ruth: to Rev. and
MMr, Sunday, a girl.
»n of Mexico City U a guest In
■L-st
(M
1
OUR NEW LOCATION
With « larger and modern
plant to serve your needs.
Corner S. Elm
and Prairie
»• aw i m « ^a,H4 fr. * * Mt, u IM' V •
Our Boarding House with
E.fcA0,ME6,TWIGGS.' H'6 AM IDEAL
ASSGMMEeiT-*— A DELIGHTFUL K.1
PLAME TRIP TO A DIFFERENT >
CITY EMERY WEEK .TRAMGPORlieiG
BTCUlK(G>S.'--~MY CLIENTS A12.B y
HIGH-TONiED PEOPLEROLLO J /
HEkAIMGWAY \
GRosmemor blue Book ) -s'
MA6AES.EH, WMACr ? / ’ '
* ••
-i4;'*■ .
emd aS Me Mtaiftoe at praten, Taaaa. Jaauary
1M1. ae mail matter of the second eiaaa. aaoord-
te Me AM at congrass. March ». UW.
•Mwd each afternoon eaeapt Saturday, end Bun
Swnuns at Ml W. Bfckory Bt. PMnae « and LM
ff >CMR Publisher.
•VBSCBlPTfON BATBSt
Nmntee-and newetandm de par eopr.
S umm'lMlng ’iltoT’to
Coal Dispute Growing
More and More Tangled
By JAMES MARIOW
WASHINGTON. May 17.—(Ah—-Now I hr coal dis-
pute be*ween John L. Lewis and the mine owners
is more tangled than ever
Lewis and the owners have turned down Presl-
dtnt Truman pn his proposal that they submit
their two-months’ old argument to arbitration.
Had they accepted they would have had
accept as final the decision of one man, the
bltrator They refused
They seem to have obviously logical
for refusing.
Lewis' No 1 demand is for the owners to con-
tribute seven per cent of their payroll to establish
a health and welfare fund for the miners.
The miners would contribute nothing but would
run the fund without any supervision by the own-
ers.
The owners flatly rejected this demand They
said such a fund was so far-reaching, socially. It
called for legislation
That is the very thing Congress is talking about.
Congress in an angry inood at Lewis, is talk-
Nation s Highlit Tribuna I lias Never Had a Texan
By TEX EASLEY
AP Special Washington Service
WASHINGTON May 17 -(47-
The selection of a successor to tiie
late Chief Justice Harlan Stone
brings to mind the fact that even
though Texas has roupded out a
cenUiry in the Union it has never
supplied a member on the nation’s
highest tribunal
Notwithstanding the fact that
Texas has long been powerful in
the Democratic party and the Dem-
ocrats have controlled the White
House for a good portion of the
past 100 years, no President has
seen fit to turn to the Lone Star
State for a Supreme Court ap-
pointment.
While most of the speculation as
to whom President Truman would
choose to fill Stone's place centered
around Associate Justices Robert
Jackson and William O Douglas,
the names of at least three Texans
are understood to have been given
more than passing consideration by
the Chief Executive and his close
adtiaors.
One of the trio, obviously, was
Attorney General Tom Clark By
vitrue of his cabinet post his name
would almost automatically come
to mind, because many a Supreme
Court Justice in the past. Including
three on the bench at present, have
reached the pinnacle of a lawyer's
success ladder via the Justice'De-
partment's top Job
Another is Fifth Circuit Court of
Appeals Judge Joseph Hutcheson,
Jr., of Houston Several years ago
wheu a vacancy came up on the
Supreme Court. Senator Tom Con-
nally of Texas made a determined
but unsuccessful drive to get him
elevated While the late President
Franklin I> Roosevelt had several
opportunities to select a Texan, it
was the feeling of those around him
that he considered the members of
the Texas bar by and large were
a little too much on the conserv-
ative side to jMss final Judgment
on Ute numerous social and econ-
omic measures Congress had enact-
ed at his behest
The third Texan and the one
who probably came in for the mosl
serious consideration, despite the
fact the matter did not come to the
public's attention, is Judge Marvin
Jones of the U 8 Court of Claims,
former War Food administrator
Still as modest and unassuming
as he was during a score of years
in Congress as the Texas Panhandle
representative. tt)c former Amaril-
loan quietly has been making a
name for himself as a Jurist His
opinions are said to be master-
pieces of clarity, gelling to tiv
point with brevity and In language
Hint laymen can understand
He doesn't like for one to even
mention the fact that he was even
considered in the least for the Su-
preme Court post, either as Stone's
direct succeaw or indirectly as an
associate Justice in the event the
Chief Justice was selected from sit-
ting members.
Retired Chief Justice Charles Ev-
ans Hughes recently visited the
White House, presumably tn dis-
cuss the appointment with the
President It is an indisputable fact
that Hughes is looked upon by most
officialdom here as probably the
greatest Jurist since John Marshall
presided as the chief Justice during
the first three decades of the last
century. His slightest suggestion as
to the fltneas or otherwise of n
man undoubtedly would influence
greatly any President, whether
Democrat or Republican.
One of those impressive and un-
forgettable sights your correspond-
ent has been privileged to see here
was a session of the Supreme Court
shortly after the bitter and futile
struggle of the late President Roose-
velt to get the membership of the
tribunal lagreaaed Hiat waa back
In 1937. Tito ’Nine Old Men" still
reigned supreme Solemn but con-
nt BBmi * I
which the court haa maintained
contribute to an employes' fund
Such legislation—if Congress passed It and Mr
Truman didn't veto it—would block Lewis and cut
the welfare fund right out. of his demands
But the welfare fund is only one of lewis' de-
mands. He alzo wants a raise for the miners, but
he hasn’t said how much.
If the owners agreed to arbitration v.“: ;
knowing what Lewis wants tn wages, they'd be
writing a blank check for the arbitrator simply
because l4?wis hadn't been willing to say what
he wants
But Lewit. too. would have been taking a chance
in accepting an arbitrator as the one who would
decide what he and hte miners could get after
their 42-day strike.
In rejecting arbitration on the welfare fund
and other non-wage isaueg, the operators expressed
willingness to submit the wage question to an ar-
bitrator
The owners already have offered Lewis, without
knowing what he wante. a raise of approximately
18 12 cent* an hour, which is the kind of raise
the government has allowed in other large indus-
tries.
If that's all the arbitrator decided to let Lewis
have—and at the same time knocked out hi*
ether demand*-Lewis might have an unpleasant
time trying to explain this to bls miners
Why he hadn't settled for tiiat 18 I 2-cent raise
before the strike Mar ted-the owners offered it
before the strike Uistead of letting them lose
910 a day. their daily pay. for 42 days of strike?
Levis is playing for higher stakes His long si-
lence on what he wants was a psychological at-
tempt to beat the owners into line
It also crippled the nation
It would therefore be a strange sight to see
lewis, who always acts the strong man making
his own way in the world, suddenly totting some
arbitrator decide what Lewis could, or could not.
have.
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 236, Ed. 1 Friday, May 17, 1946, newspaper, May 17, 1946; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1335955/m1/10/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.