Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 237, Ed. 1 Sunday, May 6, 1956 Page: 4 of 52
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SUNDAY, MAY 6, 1956
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64
clerK
inves-
l tin
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“FAVORITE SON’
E-Bonds Get Competition
#
As Banks Hike Interest
day:
Works Gummed
Routt 2, Denton.
Ei '
PUBLIC ENEMY
By Bud Blake
■ •
What a »alea talk! It was made - Under the Smith Act, which was
ft’
r
all day?
6
/
6,
\
$
(
course.
thia here;rour newspaper has
I. But this sert of article
)
irrational and ignorant fears, for no
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name.
I
n
nudist and made her
to nudist
Denton Record-Chronicle
5§
had started
the
dte, Ine. World ciphes merved
the downtown section. For a good
11
trying to use the 1954 act, while
TELEPHONE CENTRAL-2551
tag the com.
THERE OUGHTA BE A LAWI
Co.
"missing and
on a secret
N
a visit with relatives in
-
per year tmust be
wm be gladly correeted upon being
othet man to correct la
to
a
2
=-=
.2
4 •4,
01
Aal
II
school cafeteria lunch
cause of their turn ch
•V CARRIER: Delivered to
on same day of publication.
i be-
hab-
rernment has
INO law for
SINCE GENERAL GRANT!!
WHOSENTYAHERE? 3
KEEPING TH
customer .
down to sue ‘
won't register. That would be to
admit they are Russian agents.
that
ing
to sound Mg. It was described at
the time as an act to outlaw the
Communist party. It did no such
British Frogman
May Have Been
Nabbed By Reds
LONDON - London Newspa-
1
l
ty‘s basic argument
UN law is that it is
tors than it did horse players 10
years ago.
Action Against Communist
Party Mostly Big Noise
They will change the pai
and start another court
Publidhed
Denton P
I
Mr and Mrs. Bryan Graham.
414 Fry Street, have returned from
Joe l. Normile and Mrs. Stanley
A. Munson are toay observing
their birthday anniversaries.
munist
against
/ WHAZZAT BENT BRASS
7 nobopy Bur
I A JUNAYARD WOULD CAW/
‘EM!. haven't even MADE ‘EM
go underground.
At any rate the
been fighting out
ol
MRS. REX REEVES,,
Room Mother of Lee School.
Denton.
. •
k
"33a
By SAM DAWSON
NEW YORK i* - Ui. savings
bonds face new competition as
Series E starts its 16th year.
Thrift is commanding higher re-
turns these days. The savings
banks and the commercial banks
are raising the interest rates they
pay the savers. The yields on cor-
THE WORLD TODAY
-advances this aim
The desegrega
fanned into a viol
-
JwrnS
CHOPPING J
FOR DN4
FRNTke:
Mas w enuuee enalunivei, to the «a see publentton at
a *HMa* ta p M*eu* M wen MW AP MM eti-
HAL BOYLE SAYS
Stock Shares Becoming
Social Prestige Matter
m* oubitsber
error or any
east mus arts
WEN ney BOUGHT TER NEW MousE
TEY LEfetBE OWN THEY WERE .
REFURNISHING COMPLETL!
BEAuTiFUL
DINING-^
26,
COMBINATION MAIL AND CARRIER: Delivere6 to your home by
mail on weekdays and Sunday Morning Delivery by Motor Route where
its. Seems gum left on cafeteria
plates was gumming up the dish-
washing machines.
Sir
Recreation facilities for the youth of Denton, both white and
colored, are certainly needed, and there are many illustrations
of the need that could be cited and several effective- approaches
that could be used to arouse people to the need But surely the
overall aim is the most widespread community well-being; and it
seem* to us that the approach chosen for the first part of your
article in today's paper (May 1) to one that defeats rather than
which may affect the
? the Parent-Teacher-----
and sufficient reasons why we feel
Letters From Readers
The Rocprd-Chronicle welcomes and will publish totters from
its teaders. However, each totter must be signed by the author.
The Record-Chronicle reserves the right to print excerpts U the
latter is too long for publicatiomn.
doing one another in their anti-
communism.
The government didn't welcome
this law. It already had weapons
for cracking down on the Commu-
nist party as a whole (the Internal
Security Act of 1050’ and on Com-
munist leaders Individually (the
Smith Act of 1940.)
Woman Says Husband
Drove Her To Drink
DALLAS u_A husband com-
plained in a divorce trial that his
wife drank too much. The wife
countered that her husband was a
six years. A nd it is by no means
certain the court will uphold any
law which directly or indirectly
Dr. and Mrs. W. N. Rowell are
in Portales. New Mexico, where
they are guests of their daughter,
Mrs Lorene Pope, who to Li-
brarian for The East University of
8
group who has come
Trade Square should
Several years ago, Mark Heath
was seen ground the business sec-
tions of the city and on the streets,
but in recent j
MEADVILLE, Pa. u—Pupils in
Meadville High School have been
told they face an increase ’in
your home by city carrien or motor route
50c per week, UN per month.
BY MAIL ONLY: la Denton. Wise. Collin and Cooke counties. $1.00
the barnstorming Kremlin chiefs.
The Admiralty announced last
week that Crabb , *
presumed drown _ ______
underwater experiment off Ports-
mouth, but his body has not been
reasons against any tut
should bn fully eired.-
Ln School have given
"We received a fine rain, the
best in years," said Mrs. Alex
Deussen of the Ponder community,
who was to Denton. "Altogether,
seven inches of rain fell in our
neighborhood,; but" even- with that
much our lake didn't near fill. ’
6
: ■ ‘
apris-
i when
•SUBSCRIPTION BATES AND INFORMATION ' '
Stuie Coples se tor weekdaye: 10c tor Sunday
HOM* DELIVEAY RATES FOR DAILT AND SUNDAY
h nh
harm ar
but N
‘‘4
ON repunsble tor copr omistona trpographical
mtiona arren thatt
Yesteryear
Looking Baek Through
Record-Chronicle Files
just how necessary the Trade
failed to discover any one Individuallor any
, forward with a really good reason why the
remdhorder to be fair and just. I believe all reanona for and all
“ -7-*- general public
Ad,doc Mm of
j ma2hhue---
. ‘ .7 ''
giver. She also
the year after
nshyzeercohe
We think the idea of the series admirable, the technique of
the opening paragraphs regrettable.
ISABEL MOUNT MILLER, Denton
TOM POLK MILLER, Denton
wallflower. ... .2,
The average business office to-
day—from boss to shipping
—has more stock market
(except Satarday) and Sunday morning by.
e.. 314 E Hickory St.
Mrs. A. B. Crout of Lewisville,
former Denton resident, was here
for a short business visit Friday.
"Lewisville is growing pretty fast
and there are some very handsome
homes going up in the ‘city." Dr
and Mrs. Crout lived in Denton
when they owned and operated the
LaBlair Hotel.
inflames peopie: to exploit
matter what purpose, to irresponsible and dangerous
then being used, the government
has sent 102 of the party's top
and second-rank leaders to jail for
involvement in conspiracy against
the United States
And at that time, 1934, the gov-
ernment waa up to It* neck, as
it still to, in a court fight to have
the 1950 law held constitutional by
the Supreme Court. Only this week
the court put off a decision until
at least 1957.
The government, under that 1950
law, argues the Communist party
is not really an American politi-
cal party but a Russian agent. If
the court upholds this view, the
party will have to register as such.
ROUND
ABOUT
TOWN
By R. J. (Bob EDWARDS
Then David said. This is the
house of the Lord God, and this is
the altar of the burnt offering
for Israel- 1 Chronicles 22:1.
The church stands as a symbol
of the finest aims and aspirations
of the human heart. It has outlived
persecution from without and open
disloyalty from within.— Edgar
Guest.
da better aa the ponies."
The insider-"I‘ve got a Up
from my oouain who works for
Laminated Steel "
The hermit crab—He holds his
stock close to his chest. won't talk
about the market at all.
The dreamer—He puts his last
IBM in Skyblue Uranium (two
shares for a penny) ard goes
around the office in a dase. mur-
muring, "One million...two million
...three million..," *
The hamlet investor—He con-
sults astrology charts, comic
books and ouija boards.
4
porate bonds and on nontaxable
state and municipal bonds have
been rising. Eyen worse, some
other forms of U.S. Treasury
bonds are now yieldin* more than
do the nonmarketable savings
bonds.
Series E, which started life May
1, 1941, as a form of the nation's
financial preparation for defense.
*\
•A
Clyde Carpenter has been under
treatment and examination in Bay-
lor Hospital for the past week. His
brother, Coit Carpenter, said
"Clyde to In no serious way and
he to much improved since he has
been in the hospital.”
The Communists,
No doubt you like your dog and
want to keep it, and there are
certain thing* you should do about
that. The dog should be vaccinated
and it should wear a collar with
a tag on it showing the date of
vaccination. That to not only a
protection for the dog, but it is
also a protection for people, as
the animal might have rabies.
Without the tag, it might bo pick-
ed up as a stray and impounded.
---
be abolished. We are not attempt-
__any one person or any group of
_________of approximately Ml children between
the ages of six and twelve, we strongly feel that the situation
aa it exista at Abe Trade Square to harmful to our children not
from a physical standpoint but from a moral standpoint as
: to to erbught t their attention. An advertiang oraen
QU* acai* only. .
MEMnEn or rue ABBOCIATED rnESs
Farmer Sings Blues.
‘Cause Cow’s in Rut
SHELBY, N. C. dn - 1 you
know how to get a cow to have
a helfer ‘calf, farmer Charles Peel,
er wihes you’d pass along your
secret.
ONE YEAR LATER:. NOTIcE THE
CHANGE? THEY GOT A NEW PLUG
IM THE BATHtUB:
Science Center Used
As Church On Sunday
SHREWSBURY, Mass u-The.
Worcester Foundation for Experi-
mental Biology. a scientific re-
search organization, undergoes an
unusual change each Sunday morn-
ing—for two hours it becomes a
church.
The Trinity Episcopal Church,
whose congregation was organised
11 months ago, could find no room -
to hold services. The Foundation
offered the use of its admjnistra-
tion pullding and since then three
services have been held every Sun-
1
t
ini EDITORIALS AND FEATURES ttn THE DENTON RECORDCHRONICLE tin
By JAMES MARLOW
A *e triate* Prose News Analyst
WASHINGTON u—I was like
putting rollerskats an a cop try-
ing to surprise prowlers in a bot-
tle factory when Congress passed
the Communist Control Act of
and handed ft to the government
to use.
has had its ups and downs In pop-
uarlity. -
in the early months of the bull
market In stocks. Investors tend-
ed to shun the plodding E bonds,
seeking the higher returns they
could foresee from buying com-
mon stocks. In recent months, as
stock prices climbed faster than
dividends, and the yields on stocks
sank closer to the yield on cor-
porate and government bonds, the
E bond bounced back into fvor.
It still yields almost as much as
many of the highly priced blue
chip stocks. But the yield on sav-
ing* bonds doesn't change. It
comes to 1 per cent if they are
held I years and S months, and
3 per cent thereafter up to 10
years of extended life.
Some eight million employes of
42,000 business firms buy them on
a payroll savings plan, accounting
tor about IN million dollars a
month. -
In aU some 40 million persons
own E bonds today with a total
value of N billion dollars.
The E bonds are a sure and con-
stant thing. Their yield doesn't go
down, as can the yields on mar-
ketable U. S Bonds, corporate
bonds and common stock. And
their maturity vaue to stable, ft
contrast to Uto ally fluctuations
la the market value At common
stocks.
A year ago U. S. savings bonds
yielded more than most other gov-
ernment bonds, and now they
don't. They once yielded consid-
erably more than tax free state
and municipal bonds, and now'
they yield only a little more and
are subject to tax.
In that sense the 19th birthday
to a trying occasion for the old
faithful E bond.
wad on International Popcorn.
When it falls after a wook to de-
clare a M per cent dividend, ho
In the game ream of her host,
little Marjorie gazed fascinated at
the huge stag's hand on the wall.
•’Mother." She said finally,
"may I go in the next room and
look at the rest of him?"—
Jerome Saxon. Cormet.
the 1MO law waa being fought in
court, the Communiats would go
to court over that one too. The
two laws might wind up wrecking
the government’s case altogether
For instance, the 1954 act says
the j^arty would
ant upon legal bodies." The Com-
_ Raymond
villeand Texas City, and while on
the Gulf Coast. Bryan did a bit of
NEW YORK U—Nearly eight
million Americans are in the
stock market now.
-A stockholder is known as "a
partner in industry,” and when
you meet a guy who owns a share
in the same company you do, you
give Mm the greeting cry of the
old West, "Howdy, pardner."
The New York Stock Exchange
hopefully prodicta that eventually
40 to 50 million stockholders will
roam this country.
It’s becoming a matter of social
prestige. In some circles if you
don't own at least a few shares
of stock you're regarded as a
BUSINESS MIRROR
' I
, . ___________ ____ :
‛ We met J. 3. Skidmore as he
walked, near ran, down East Hick-
ory Street, Ho sald, "I come down
this street a lots faster than I
walk up it. The hill, though ‘t
doesn't seem steep stows me down
quite » bit.” But J. B. to naturally
a fast stepper as compared with
most of us.
found.
The Admiralty confirmed * had
hired Orabb, a retired member of
the naval service, but declined to
say what kind of work he waa
doing.
The Daily Telepraph suggested
that Crabb. whohM Ibeen work-
ing aa a akin diver with Beat Am
and an oxygen tank, was “poo-
on the asdic ap-
• , >
' A 35
"I can sit on our porch and see
two oil teats going down,"' said
Arnold Marsch of the Slidell com-
munity "And when I think of the
pssibility. maybe probability, of
that country having a big oil field.
It makes me wish that I had bought
the farm when I had an oppor-
tunity.”
It sailed off last week.
Crabb. < disappeared April 19.
That wm the day after the cruiser
arrived la Portsmouth Harbor with
ly and on the street*, ners todav that a miss,
years he rarely seer mg British frogman may lave
TEN YEARS AGO
National music week will be
commemorated by the Denton Ki-
wants Club Tuesday noon with an
all-music program at a luncheon
meeting in the special dining room
at TSCW.
LL (jg) Carroll K. Wilson, now
on terminal leave, will be released
to inactive duty in the U. S. Naval
Reserve on expiration of his ter
minal leave June 14, Wilson saw
34 months of navy service, in-
cjuding 11 months of sea duty. He
Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Lemuel
A. Wilson, 927 Highland.
-cc,
New Mexicp. Mrs. Pope willleaye thing. The at’a preamble said the
befornee "depahtureld " "RcTtseirdidni provide for doing
■e;.........
r .
And whatha bust! For days after
it was passed government lawyers
shook their heads over it, trying
to figure out what U meant and
how it could be used, if at all.
And very little use has been made
of it.
This was one law which was
pasted together in a windstorm
on the floors of Congress, whose
members soon had to face the
voters in the 1954 elections. It was
a time when politicians were out-
--FIVE YEARSAGO _
John Ben Shepperd, Texas Sec-
— rotary of State, will deliver the
commencement address for the
spring graduation iexercises of
NTSC, Sunday, June 9 at 1 p.m.
to the new men's gymnasium.
Leo Murray of Roanoke, the first
cowboy to be crowned world all-
around ehampion for two years in
succession, has been added as a
judge tor the National all-college
rodeo championship opening Wed-
nesday in WiD Rogers Coliseum
at Fort Worth for five nights.
w
May I command you on your recent editorial not only be-
cause of the vlews expressed in behalf of our children but your
interest as a natter of civic pride.
"F5" * MRS. MARVIN T. MCDONALD
Sir:
It would be moot enlightening if a general concensus of the
farm population would express their views on the subject of
- ------ "-a- ----is to them. yet, I have
a legal political party.
And what rights, privileges and
immunities? That's one of the
queattoca whkh had goverament
Did it mean the party’s newspaper
the Daily Workr, should he de
nied mailing privileges?
TWENTY YEARS AGO
Seventeen Teachers Col-
lege Eagles, rested and polished
but not ranking favorites, will
journey to San Marcos this week-
end with Coach Choe Sportsman
to defend their Lone Star Confer-
ence crown.
Carnival Specials at Penny’s:
wash frocks, 98 cento: site 81x99
sheets, 59 cents;- men's rayon
socks, 19 cento per paid; men's
polo shirts. 39 cents; men s hank-
erchiefs, three for W cento; and
men’s wash suite. MM
Sir:
I am writing this letter, In the interest of the children of the
Robert E. Lee School. We have a health hazard and can't seem
to get anything done about it. We have been to all the officials
who could do anything but so far all we have la the promise
that the old barn on the Trade Square would be donned up
We don t want to pick a fight with anyone and we don t hold
any grudge against anyone, but we surely would like to have
something done about the barn. The flies are terrible and the
odor is worse.
Since our schools in Denton are not air conditioned they must
open the windows. Do you think you could study with flies crawling
all over you and a sickening odor from a barnyard to breathe
Evena M eecond elam suu matte st tn* postotnce ss Denton. Tuas
Dr. W. H. Hawley, who practic-
ed dentistry in Denton and Pilot
Point for a good many years be-
fore his retirement, is a guest of
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Gray. Upon
retirement Dr. Hawley moved to
Chicago, where he would be near
his daughter and family. He came
to Fort Worth to attend the Texas
Dental Convention
many years he was associated with
Texaco products, but for some
■ time has been in the employ of
TSCW.
h . i
“I guess I just don't know when
to plant,” said Goble F. Bryant.
Denton, Route 2 "I spent a lot of
money, time and work last year in
trying to plant grass of various
kinds on my pasture. It wm so
dry that none of it came up, so I
wish I had waited untif this last
rain.".
issue, m all' the papers attest, is easily
producing one We have so far avoided
72m. T•
; pulls out his money,
"I want some real a
fishing. He: said, "Fishing was
good, a* he showed a picture of
himself with a fine string of Gulf
trout. - "
"The recent rains will help a
lot, as it was thought, prior to the
rain, that there would be no grain
crop,” said Fred Hopkins of the
Krum community. "Of course,
there won't be anything like a
normal yield of grain, but there
may be about a half crop thre-
shed. The other day, as we drove
to town, the lake on our place was
dry and when we came back that
afternoon it was running around
the spillway."
been caught by Russian sailors
while engaged in underwater spy-
ing the diver—Cmd*. Lionel (Bus
Soviet Premier Bulganin and par
ty boss Khrushchev to London.
The Daily Sketch quoted an un-
named Royal Navy officer as say-
inghthe diver—Cmdr. Lionel (Bus-
"When a man gets to 79
years, he isn't running any races,
hardly a walking race,” said W.
T Neely, as he walked along the
south side very slowly. "And, to,
make it worse. I lost my gold
rimmed bi-focal spectacles. The
loss is quite a handicap and I hope
someone finds them for me."
efe 103
They break down into several "
common types:
The wandering investor.-Hke
an impatient prospector, he al-
ways is looking for gold over the
next hill. Today he buys Du Pont, '
tomorrow he sells and goes in for
General Motors. ‘ ? .
The form sheet player —.He. .
spend* 130 a 'month buying stock
market advisory services on how
he can best place the BIS a month
ho. pan actually invest, .ce
-The big operator—This fellow
hints mysteriously of his tremen-
dous ventures. At least once a
week he borrows lunch money
from you.
The name-dropper—in the old
days he used to brag ho once had
shaken hands with Marilyn Mon-
roe. Now he brags. "Guess who I
sat next to on th* subway this
morning—the chairman of Cosmic
Glue, we.” ,‛f
The in-and-outer-This to the
22560
5(933.
per month. NN per year (must be Mid in aitvancel. Elsewhere in
the United States $i N per month; $1560 per year
It’s a thousan to one bet that you’d never be able
40 guess the source P the followingeguotatonith
by dhe"AtPLcomerger andois predcatedsonthe a
gment that this would deprive union members of the
right of withdrawal. It says: “W* shall never, sub-
scribe to any movement such as the ‘Oro Big Union
movement which must inevitably deprive the individ-
ual working man of his right of free choice and make
Mm the servant rather than the master of his union.”
No, that didn’t emanate from an employer’s organiza-
tion or anything of the sort. It appeared in a news-
paper advertisement published by an independent
Chicago union of truck drivers which has some 12,000
2 a members. It is quoted in an article by Madelyn Vieth.
id National Republic, which describes the policies and
[ p«rsonalitios which make this union unususl.
To show just how unusual it is, another quotation is
r " in order. It is Uken from an announcement by the
| union’s executive director, and concerns the Taft-
Hartley law — a measure which most union spokes-
men regard in th* same manner as the devil regard*
holy water. The director said: "The legitimate activi-
n * ties of a legitimate union aren't hampered by this
legislation, and we see no necessity for amending it.”
. From this evidence alone, the unknowing might
guess that the union is a union in name only—that it
is no fighter for labor gains. Nothing could be more
wrongIn the 12 yean since the present executive di-
rector took office, dramatic progress in that direc-
------tion has been made. "Protection’’ payments to gang-
stan—a hangover from the Capone days — were end-
ed. A now constitution was drawn up and every one
of the union'a members signed statements of approval.
New contracts were won from the cartage companies,
providing higher waps, shorter work-weeks, and many
fringe betiefits: According to Miss Vieth, these con-
tracts now include "some of the most advanced pro-
visions" in existence. .
here Are Many Good
nions Little Publicized
k re a*
any tirm. individuAl or corpot
ter Crabb.-may have
oner an tha Ordsbon
0mwg.E* At, •
ddutrmumk
22 5
/€
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 237, Ed. 1 Sunday, May 6, 1956, newspaper, May 6, 1956; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1453122/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.