Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 49, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 10, 1945 Page: 10 of 12
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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DENNON “RECRD.CHRONiCI.E
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Buy War Bonds
NOW!
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Build With Them
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WASHINGTON DAYBOOK
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President Truman Is
Funny Business
Lover of Good Music
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Red Ryder
He Was Framed
By Fred Harmar
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ADDING
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FOB SERVICE A EEPAIRS
if he can
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for thetr labor that
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NEW LABOR FOR BATTERED KUROBE
Last 400.000 European POWsto Quit L. S. by Spring
Now Taking Orders For
New Sundstrand
THE NATION TODAY
PAC. W riter Appeals
To the Working Man
nutrition was
death, he said.
guards
women
Let American Cleaners do your
e lro.nl ny. pressing. 221 W. Oak.
SIRANGE NO
ONE ELSE HAS
FOUND IT: /
E ITZWEL$
QUAL’TY
‘CLOTHES -
MACHINE
Pace Your Order Now
once played Juzz
Of inch stuff
the principal of Central R
There to another apocry
Rare your cnothes dennea ana
pressed at Camp Cleaners. Ph. 1212.
HIM WRONO
HE’S A GOOD
RUBBER
FLOOR
E:
F
1 FIGURE 3 WA5 V
KILLED In' SAE WAY 4
An’ DLACK on DLAMED
IOuR BROT-ER , JOSE . 1
JUST LIKE ME PNNED
AGREw5 MURDER ud
h O~ TaEDSOE
I
$
I
i
L,Army estimnat-
0,000 in wages by
in camps
PAPA’ WHY
YOu CONE
EHEKE?
'■ i>
: ■ i,
school.
i stoty that bespec-
cannot get
extinction may BO*
#‘AGLEE"
TH' SuE T
PROMES OLEDSOE
00
BUSINESS
MAN, Ben
HORNS 1S
-Us Hi
x HORBY.'
ther unless they face
new. But it is shock-
tMMhWD
mg at wader m
Synthetic butter made from coal was one
ofermany's war secrets Might come un-
der the head of black market
DENTON TYPEWRITER
EXCHANGE
Phone 321
NATONA
it DEWN
peumuiairs
[1 SEE • W DLEDSOE HAp SHOT ■
I ACRC<3 THE TABLE, 1HS DLLLE1
I wouLD HAVE GONE THROUGH
•uN A NORTHWEST DRECTIONC
Lu—-u
____
l
I
wort.
• mine of his wort urging
a wage law:
Later!
Foxworth-Galbraith
Lumber Co.
HOYLE'S NOTEBOOK
Interned Doctor Found No Romance
On Pacific Isle With 100 Maidens
When he was 10, his mother decided that he
and his sister Mary Jane should hare music les.
sons. She sent them to Mrs K. C. White wife of
or the Next Ro und
< TSa ureater injustioe exists than the plight of
thom men and women who work hard. In our land
Ill additiou. th
ed U saved $152,00
using POW helv
Unused in Camps
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il£ y 3
74,) A
tetim
am wars a delight for thetr i
Gwer never warn a word of two
"All I said was. How would you like something in khaki color?'!"
r
6’ •
K- ■
7 —■
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1 6,1’L
MATS
—Cut to Fit-—
CHEVROLET TRUCKS
1941 and 1912
Chevrolet Cars
1911 and 1912 Ford
Also Universal Floor
Mats
Grace-Barrow
Chevrolet Co.
Most Complete Stock of
Genuine Chevrolet Parts
in North Texas
PHONES 99—479
5
1(O)R A WHWE
LLLBnN
E
MEAlM_E, Ar f
3036‘5.HICEOUL J
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By JACK srINErr
WASHTNOTON—When President Truman mov-
" ed into the White House a story went around
that he played the piano by ear and that he had
‘ a Kansas City cafe.
IS YEARS AGO
In The Record-Chronicle
O * Wua manager of the Denton Cham
gar Bl Oommeree and W E Smoot were in Sher-
man FWBw wtre Bmoot acted as Jadge of short-
tape** the 1MB Merer yaBey Pair
Or 3 L Hooper Ptday ehnted four bolls of
-wedi ddm-vnety’ that B praeticany un-
M— to MSB a bn n teaks and Mb »kv
A w. Gmy returena tram DaDag where he and
Mm Bag b*» tom ax the bedside of thetr small
I
^Jiloriafs an J ^J^aturei
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ri
2c
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AA H-HH
“QHANK$!
1
compounded.
On numerous social or public occasions since
coming to the national capital Truman had obliged
photographets by sitting at the piano and running
off a few chords
This may have given rise to the conclusion that
he was one of the*, ear-enddwed devotees of
boogie-woogie Nothing cotild be further from the
truth
The president, being aigbod fellow and enjoy-
ing Mght fun as wru gs the next ran rattie off
a barber-shop chord and even jot in the vocals
tf the tmhe and pinee rail tor I.
The truth is, hwever. thiat President Truman
loves to play and listen to good mtusic. It is in fact
Ma chief recreational delight and he got that way
through a training aa traditional aa that which
would be given your kid. mine or the one next
door
I
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[
Thete has always been a piano in the Truman
home and tn the present domicile there are sev-
era!, including one in the President's room and
one in Mary Margaret's.
The Presidents favorite composer in Chopin
and hts favorite composttions am said to be that
composers Waltz in A Flat. Beethoven's Sonata
i C Minor, and Mozarts Sonata IX for Piano.
At raw time or another the President has heard
• irtually all of the great pianists He is said to
consider the late Joseph Lhevine, a Russian. ofie
ot the greatest
So lets have no more stories that President
Truman is an ivory beater to delight the ear of
Tin Pau Alley
There are thousands of musiclans and music
lovers like Harry 8 Truman, but so far as I can
find out, he is the first in our times who has ever
lived at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave
UNWORTH 1
SERVANT
98249/
g .
4 m.s
The pabuaben are sot re if-r Hl i tar copy
omimmona, tpogrphicai errors or any untntenttomal
erom that asay auras other tnan to corect in sun
Maa after n M broght to thetr oiutaa. au ad-
mu mgM on t bn harm only.
%rd-
by JAMES MARLOW
NEW YORK, Oct 10—(ATI—An unusual man puts
‘ across ideas which the CIO Political Action
Committee wants told in language a working man
can understand.
He u Joneph Gaer, small. 48 years old with lively
black eyes He has a beautirul knowledge of oon-
temporary English utorature.
He was bom in Besafabia. and he speaks Ruman-
ian Russia, Oerman, French, Yiddish.
He has written books on the Bible and folklore
lor chudren He has written a novel poetry, short
straw* and has lectured on experimental writing
at the Untverstty ot Caltfornia
For the PAC he writes pamphiets on thins like
Why the PAC thinks Congtess ahould pass a full
employment law or raise wage* to a minimum of
63 cents an hour.
Kia pamphlets durinng the last year's political
campaign—on the issues invotved, aa the PAC saw
/g
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‛A$A
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the chief cause of
4
aviary to-to
W),Kj
caught trading with natives fur ,
roo, yet they had to do this to stay
alive Japanese rations would not
them; but Tizorous women
of over 45feared to risk the heat-
Inga and quietly starved to death
Women were forced to do all
heavy work about the camp. They
dug ditches, built roads and lugged
rice bags weighing 220 pounds
others built coffins of bamboo for
those who escaped Japanese cruel-
ty by dying.
One of the women, who lias a
sense of humor, said that all this
botled-up womanhood had gotten
along very well despite the lack of
privacy, thus giving .the lie to the
old legend that women can't toler-
ate each other’s company:
There really were only a few
quarrels" she said with a smile
And no murders!"
P"*
“zeet. Delephones 6 and IM
BMW Oram. rane.
sonscudrron NArES;
E=me.«.
MMs 4380, hree mmomtbe 01do one mont vac.
N«ncs TO vu ronuc
Abv erromegos redlection upon the amaw.
anadhon or standingot any hum, individaai or
Mbattaa win be giady cozrected upon being call-
m the publtshers atenuon.
the prisoners is paid to the Army
and deposited in the t rm,sun
Through 1944. sx2,w.Un whs de-
posited with the treasury rhe to-
tal ol such deposits whs $38,000,000
up to June 1. IMS
DRIVE TO
ELMER HULSE.
the errata of Washington
Wednesday, October 10, 1945
f
Getting Ready f
I
(
There nothing unusual about admiring
an elderty woman’s gray hair. It is per-
fectly natural._______________
Jap plants are turning to making pence
time goods. The best thing "Made in
however, was made on the mighty
battleship Missouri.
A
y2)2*,
k ‛0=
?X.l2
Ry Leskie Turner
—(wngu5pFHARA-GUFaaafudu
M. FMLY OF UKUHITO HAS AWAITED •
IF YOu x DAWN OF THIS pay; •am-
i hi m .
(
ped home, the POWs are moved
into a staginu area neur their port
of embarkation Then they are
loaded. In most cases, aboard Ar-
my transports headed for Europe
to bring Americans home
Together with other prisoners
taken after the capltulation of
Germany the POWs will be as-
signed to various types of recon-
struction work in Europe by the
manpower division of the Allied
control council.
The provost marshal's office said
that with increased shipping, les-
sened needs for POW labor in the
United State*. and better 'facilities
in the European theater to handle
them, the return of all POWs in
the United States will be material-
ly stepped up so as to have them
all returned by spring.
ing to have to make that discovery again.
Somehow, after the bitter battle to cleanse
the earth of the fascist scourge, everyone
hoped that perhaps the world might be-
come a better and happierplace. That
strane d to be the reason for fighting.
Yet, thoggh we made great scientific
strides during the war years, we did not
keep pace inhuman relations Though we
attained a high level of prosperity, we find
the continuation of that prosperity endan-
feted by dispates involving a few thons-
ands of our multi-million population.
"Though we sprend the doctrine of democ-
racy far, our destinies are still shaped in
the secret meetings of a few world states-
men.
As of today. there is precious tittle evi-
dence that this country or the world has
learned much from history's most terrible
war.
By J. R. William
DON’T GIr ' ( THAT'S THE )
Prisoners are housed in 160) camp
locajed on Anny bases, and at 300
branch camps set up wherever the
prisoners are working
The POWS housed Ht buses live
in compounds, usually an unused
soction of the camp's barracks
However the branch camps vary
from tents to abandoned schools or
buildings in the vicinity of their
work.
When they are ready to be ship-
By HAL BOYLE
AATAVIA, N. E L, Oct. 10.—(—
D Many men think It would be
highly romantic to be cast away on
a Pacific island with a hundred
maidens.
• Not so Dr. C. A. Dereede, who
was one of 12 men in Tjideng
camp here, where Japanese concen-
trated some 10,000 Dutch and Eng-
lish women and children.
The dctor Is happily married
and has two small daughters and
his wife was with him so being
surrounded by so many females
didn’t stir his pulse one bit. If any-
thing, it bored him, and he,loks
back upon the whole experience as
one lony nightmare.
"u was an awful life—being
among so many women," said the
tall, blond young Putch physician.
“But it wasn’t so bad for me as it
was for my wife. Many of the oth-
ersomen were jealous because they
didn’t have their Husbands with
them—and some made things diffi-
cult for my wife."
Dr Dereede estimated that 1,000
died in the camp in three years.
Most were older women, and mal-
lticcchiuud.uj
DNT KiD ME,GLAMOR Boy! )
> WHAT YOU Dib WAS GRAB
TH WONG BOTTLE AFTER
1 Discovered THAT GRAY
- HAIR ON YOUR GKULL <
NESTERDAY.’-. BUT YOU’D
BETTER FIND SOME SCREN
- PAIST 8EFORE SOMEBOUY
HALTERS YOu ASASTRA r
ALBINO HORSE.’ _
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beat unmercifully any
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PSi“t.SET •----“ L• _——F -—. Havolinn Motor QQs
nciteyondtonsoline
ANLYZNNGTHENEWS
Twenty Years Ago Today
U. S. Had Forgotten War
By J. M nOBkRTS, SR.
. AP Foreign Artairs Analyst
Twwmrr TEARB ago today America was prepar-
I ing to get rich quick, the wiashingtom disarma-
meat contefence had left us reeling that we didn't
even need the small defensive Navy agreed upon.
A re* volces rained in protest were drowned out by
the clamorous search for normalcy. The United
States Army was limited by law to 280,000 men, and
actual strength was 133,000 ,
To be sure, Oerman fallure to disarm under the
Versailles treaty had forced extension of the original
time limit for occupation of Cologne and the Rhine-
land
But the League of Nations agreed on the initial
steps of a further disarmament progrum. and signed
new proools covering "humane" warfare
Twenty years ago today, at Locarno, the nations
of Europe were in a conference which resulted in
numerous agreements to preserve them from the
scourge of war" and providing for "peaceful settle-
me n t of disputes of every nature which might event-
ually arrise between them "
Germany agreed to liquidate her general staff,
place a civilian at the head of her military estab-
itshment and to prevent military training of Oer-
man youth
The Untied States was intervsted in the trial of a
Tennosce school teacher for leaching evolution,
in telephone numbers of bootloggers. Clarence Dar-
row. and his two amociates in the defense of two
boys for th.- kimg of a third in Chicago, accepted
a 8130,000 fee when the boys fot off with life sent-
euces
Today (enerni Mrshall, after one of the most
calamgous wars in history, reminds America that
a rich nation which lays down its arms. In this ag»
of terrifying and fantastic new weapons, courts catas-
trophe
"The fact that we overtook Germany’s head start
on the atomic explosive is comforting." he says in
a neat bit of understatement, "but certainly should
not lull us again into a state'of complacent inertia
"These facts should be considered along with the
policy regarding the manutacture of explostves after
the last war ana the scientific development that
should or would have followed in the plants of the
great commercial manufacturers had they not been
subjected to bitter attacks as 'Merchants of Death'."
By RAYMOND J PETERSON
WASHINGTON ( All enemy
" prisoners of war, their work
rapidly nearing an end in the Unit-
ed States. are expected to be re-
turned to Europe by next spring,
providing a major source of labor
for reconstruction of the battered
contment.
Tile office ot the provost mar-
shal general of the Anny says the
number ot enemy prisoner* of war
in the United Stales as of Sept. 12
1945. was 362,170 Germans and 49-
7S4 Italians (There were also 5.-
080 Japanese.)
This does not include approxi-
mately 12,500 prisoners who have
been shipped back to Europe since
v-s day.
The provost marshal general's of-
fice expected 18,000 POWs to be re-
turned to Europe during Septem-
ber, including 49 Itallen service
units comprising 229 officers and
8,400 enlisted personnel.
Maj. Gen. Archer L. Lerch, pro-
vost marshal general said the pri-
soners of war in this country are
working at present but the need
for such labor U decreasing:
The release of men from the Ar-
my. cutbacks In government con-
tracts for war materials and lay-
offs of workers during reconversion
of War Industries have freed thou-
sands of Americans to replace pri-
soners of war in certain industries
Th the Sonth. the POWs plckrai
cotton, citrus and other fruits, cut
sugar cane, harvested peanuts, riee
and tobacco and cut pulpwood
in the West they harvested mil
ar beets, corn and grain, picked
and packed fruits and vegetables
while in the North and East they
cut pulp and chemical wood, har-
vested and packed fruits and vege-
tables.
In addition to this work, which
was mostly on a contract basis be-
tween tlw government and private
agencies, prisoners also worked for
the Army at bases and camp*
Although paid at the prevailing
wage level for civilian workers do-
ing the same type of labor, Uie pri-
soners working on private contracts
receive only 80 cents a day. They
are paid m coupons redeemable for
goods at camp canteens.
The remaining money earned by
\ SECRET OF (
A JUNK N
/SHOP. THERE'S
Our Boardirg House . .
LpK,NKetAAHEGAD! MN,
HhIR -ea ij URNED
WHITB (RNGHT / GREAT
CAEsAR /. CAN THiS r.
BE THE PBct I‛M )
PAYIN6 FOft. Det p 0-
ANpExdaSSIE )
t WERYINQ:
ducov.___
x2*
via rate "engle- raw made on the dirncult
mmher raw «a the Outaw Oountry Club
«MM» wes medde t Loren McCray this week
K-RATQN5, PAT
By Hershberger
poraggasgg-setgete
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faded young Harry was constantly getting into
nhts with boys who teased him about the musk
roll he carried under his arm on B—no days This
iant k because we have his mather's word for It
that Rarr”s youth was remarkably free of nisti-
cum, but the to9a would have been a strange
araartmint of un Nineties youth if they hadn't
yahyahea he music roll o occasion
Nevertheless Harty stuck to nis lessons until
well into Ma teens. Ke showed cot«iderable apti-
tode, but nothmg that resembled genius Accord-
h« to report, Mrs whie was a strict classical
diBotplinatan, even asserttHE herself with a little
toury merea opomotia yem, of tutort a
capable pianist, ptaxing strictly by reading the
notes, but he ame out with something more im-
portant • den* x>*e pt good musk which has
merensed with the yenis and which he has passed
on to danghter Marv Margaret
Wash Tube
gpvaac’
ILL GET
• Y EM - I LL
" 7 DIG EM OUT
• I OF THERE :
, HOW MUC H
' e WILI YOL
N TAKE for
2
PNimyhy ve
ms,--
Lu tr2A
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sit spfi’F —toy y'y- w we ar at.....--,--*69--* -GGe •
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N . BAD *OL ।
WANT II’/
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After the Deluge
READERS whose memory of the the-
A ater or movies spans IQ years or so
may recall a play called "The Deluge." It
was the story of a group of people, a small-
towt group toll of social, political and per-
sonal animosities, who took refuge from a
flood in a water-tight basement.
Though in temporary safety, all faced
death from suffocation in their unventi-
lated refuge And as breathing became
more difficult and death drew nearer,
their enmities seemed less and less im-
portant. Two by two they resolved their
differences, admitted the good points of
their opponents' views and characters, and
composed their souls to meet their immi-
nent fate.
At last the oxygen in the room was
Marty exhausted Preferring quick drown-
ing to suffocation, one of the characters
threw open the door in expectation of a
torrent of water. But the flood had re-
ceded. And, with peril past, the bad feel-
tat retared. AU departed tor home as
bitter as when they entered.
The point of that play is uncomfortably
applicable to the present state of this
country and of the world. The traffic death r
is that it takes the dire peril or war to
bring out the best in men. Only in the
midst of death and suffering, apparently,
can they learn the lesson of tolerance.
So in this war nations forgot ambition
and jealousy and ideological differences,
and pooled their strength to crush the
forces of tyranny. Here at home workers
and employers found a way to settle dis-
putes and work together in turning out
the arms that made victory possible.
But now that the flood of war has re-
ceded. the ditferences are with us again in
greater intensity. Selfishness and stub-
borness haw returned The domestic front
is threatened with economic wer. InHen-
don. the first postwar meeting of diplo-
-matic representatives of the great Allies
was a deadlock of opposing views which
general frus-
2
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 49, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 10, 1945, newspaper, October 10, 1945; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1430836/m1/10/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.