Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 274, Ed. 1 Monday, June 18, 1956 Page: 3 of 10
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Monday. June 18, UH
THE DINTON RECORD-CH RONICLE
AFTER SUP-OF-TONGVE
• . i
party movement.
merman of South Carolina
“If there arise differences be-
AN
of the Demo-
tween, the
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3
Show of Value!
LUCERNE
SNOW STM KE CREAM
Prices Effective Monday, Tuesdey and Wednesday, June 18-19-20 in
Asorted Flavors
Aasorted Flavor*
WP- 250
Meats
$489
Del Monte
4-Lb.
I
754
Lb.
$100
T
69*
Lb.
t
LIBBY
Produce
3
Strained Meats
Strained Foods
Fruit Cocktail
I
Fruit Salad
Junior Baby Foods
. Teething Biscuits
LIBBY JUICES
Swanson Frozen Dinners
Tomato Juice
1
Tomato Juice
Lava Soap
Chicken Pie
Pepsodent Tooth Past
1K
Mod. Bar
Boraxo
Gian Tube Plain
Armours
W<
Giant Tube Chlorophyll
8-Oz. Can
Vienna Sausage
Ivory Laundry Soap
6-Oz. Bar
Swift
Ivory Laundry Soap
10-Oz. Ber
LIBBY MEATS
FIG Laundry Soap
Large Bora
Krey
WesteSide Sq.
e
GENERAL
52
71,
Corned Beef
22-Oz. Can
534
LIBBY FISH
Swift’ning
12 Oi. Jear
Rod Salmon
Shortening
&' 83,
Red Salmon
American Typewriter &
>
134
*
Office Supply Co.
Lustre Creme Shampoo
,12-Ol Cm
x 1
27(
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X
.p
Personal Bor
Cashmere Bouquet
IogtSoap
Puss ’N Boots Cut Food
242 404
Blue Label
-Dog Food
-15<
; ■ Ma. Cen ~
Brown Label
Kraft Cheot Whiz
Only $148.00
Ford
etc.
l
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Canned Products
LIBBY FRUITS
35<
23<
334
594
474
47<
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sot
69<
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356
59<
37<
35<
21 <
23<
Bartlett Pears
Spiced Beans
Oyster Slew
2
2
Parade Detergent
Parade Detergent
/ Brown Gravy
Brown Gravy
•03
36du3-
534
51
15Oz
Cen
1—-OL
Caa
C-6423
ELECTRIC
3-Lb.
Cello Pkg.
Homo Milk
Buttermilk
Whipping Cream
, Regular Bar
Bath Bar
Quiz Decision
To Be Reviewed
USED IN:
Banks
Offices
Seles Work
Ike Gets Bike____________
From Boys Club
ORLANDO, Fla, on - The Or-
lando Boys Club sent President
Eisenhower a bicycle yesterday
and urged him to take up bike-
riding as advised by his heart
specialist, Dr. Paul Dudley White.
The club said in a telegram it
“wishes to contribute to your
speedy recovery in the hope your
health will permit you to accept
our invitation” to attend the na-
tional amateur bicycle races here
July 14-15.
And Slieed
Beet
And Sliced
Fonk
TY HOME
YOU NO 1
-Twice as many people are ill
during March as during July.
O"§
STEAM od
DRY IRON
1.
. 154
= 16«
Bartlett Pears
Sliced Pineapple
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REMINGTON RAND
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1
14”
Powdered Milk MaMis danb
KING'S
Radio & Electric Co.
| EASY BUDGET TERMS [
LIBBY
VEGETABLES
forced a television quiz show to
review a decision today on who
won its $64,000 jackpot.
Actor Vincent Price and Jockey
Bill Pearson tied again last night
in answering art questions on
CBSTV’s The $64,000 Challenge.
The two were awarded $32,000
each.
Egg Yolks’
-Or
Jar
no*.
Jar
.oz
Bot.
’ l ib.
Box
SOt.
Poly 1m
MOl
Loef
Japanese Munitions
Executives On Tour
MANILA. June 10 «_Two Jap-
anese munitions executives have
arrived Iron. Tokyo on the first
leg of a swing to sell Japanese
ammunition to Southeast Asian
governments. They hope to sell
small arms ammunition to the
Philippine army.
274
Joy Detergent
Liquid
Vd Beauty Bar
Regular Bar
“We certainly cannot expect to
have a persuasive voice in the
party if we withdraw therefrom or
continually pose the threat of with-
drawal. Such a course seems to
OFFICE RITER
emmariaa-
Copacityet Standard
Modern and Streemlined .......
-
: ■ •
Limo Beans Erzdn"
1'.
• .
Colgate Tooth Paste
Brisk
rVOri0e
Purex Beads O' Bleach
Powdered
Steam-iron half
your lgundry
without sprin-
kling,- lastant
steady steam
makes your ron-
ingensy.
WASHINGTON u-Sen. George
(D-Ga) said today it would be
“suicidal” for Southern Demo-
crats to start a splinter or third
U ,
Large Tube
Giant Tube
Economy Tube
Paquin Skin Cream
Purple Label. Tax Inel.
2%2-0.Jar
Rad Label. Tax Ind.
2,..
Sirloin Steaks
■' .i " ,
N “h..a.
Asparagus allar
Green Beans
Present wages for 650,000 steel-
workers average $2.48 an hour.
McDonald termed it “too little
and too late“ and made plans to
begin individual negotiations with
the Big Three companies and with ' .
tur"n
Jones & Laughlin, Youngstown.
Inland, Great Lakes. Wheeling,
Alleghany-Ludlum, Pittsburgh and
Armco.
FORMER PATTERN
In the past the union has nego-
tiated separately with each of the
companies, but its contract with
U.S. Steel usually set the pattern
for the entire industry. /
Stephens Mid the union had re-
quested the joint talks in hopes
of finding a more efficient meth-
od of negotiating a contract. He
said he saw nothing unusual in
the union's return to individual
bargaining. It remains to be seen,
he added, which method is better.
More than BO per cent of U. S.
farms have electricity compared
with 11 per cent in 1935.
cm'' until after Iba national cod-
vention.
The resolution suggested that
after the convention the state or-
ganizations could meet agam‛"t
consider such further programs as
may be necessary in maintaining
unity and solidarity of purpose."
“Some saw in the resolution an
implication that .Southern Demo
cratic organizations might choose
— i,"—■ '■ ——cours , I, .
Beef Steaki,
.1
past."
George wrote in reply to a let-
ter from Timmerman who last
week asked Southern party lead-
ers to support a resolution by
South Carolina Democrats which
would have Southern state Demo-
cratic conventions “stand in re-
Mortons Macaroni adiCi
Frankfurters at
NEW
Attempt To
Solve Steel
Woes Renewed
- e
NEW YORK U_The United
Steelworkers of America today
returned to its' old method of
negotiating with individual com- ,
panies after abruptly halting joint ,
negotiations with the Big Three 1
steel companies..
Union President David J. Me- 1
Donald aaid the joint talks with 1
Bethlehem, Republic and U.S. ]
teel, first ever held in the basic
steel industry, “have gotten no-
McDonald and U.S. Steel Vice
President John A. Stephens said,
however, that the decision to hold
talks with 11 individual steel com-
panies did not mean the Big Three
negotiations were dissolved.
TALKS STALEMATED
"We shaft be in communication
with each other,” Mid McDonald,
after a 90-minute meeting Sun-
day ended in a stalemate. Both
sides said the situation has not
altered since the union rejected
Big Three’s offer of a five-year
contract. This called for package
wage and fringe benefits which
the companies said amounted to
about 65 cents an hour over the 1
length of the contract.
The companies Mid this would
mean 17% cents the first year,
but the union Mid the take-home
pay would be “about a nickel."
master of ceremonies’ mistake.
“In fairness to all concerned,
the program's producers will
study a kinescope (film) of the
program tomorrow to arrive at
a decision as to what disposition
shall be made of tonight's Pear-
son-Price contest.”
| Bell Peppers Sweet
n
Pork Chops Center Cut
-22.2 39
30-
George Warns South Against
Suicidal Third Party Move
Canned Hams Hama
Cucumbers Good in Salads
2194
Lunch Box Sandwich Spread
Lunch Box Sandwich Spread
Blu Hill Indian Grill Dressing
Graham Crackers MoW Gola
H i Am -H---- Fluffiest
marsnmauowS Miniatur
White Bread
2 234
cratic party and those who rep-
resent our Southern states at ths
national convention and on the na-
tional committee, we must look
there for a remedy within the
party.
Pascal Celery Crisp and r.
For 17(
NEW YORK -( - An apparent signature to have noticed the
slip-of-the-tongue hint from an
excited master of ceremonies
Pineapple la teal
888
Fruit Drops RabuZa
Root Beer Balls
Butterscotch Balls
Forty Mints tasbumy
All Mints Mix Roxour,
Wmwhsk
.....—-
Lux Toilet Soap
0204
But after the show went off the •
air, CBS Mid master of cere-
monies Sonny Fox “apparently*'
dropped a hint to Pearson. Lis-
teners also reported hearing a
voice give the answer before
Pearson answered.
Pearson previously won $64,000
with his knowledge of art. Price
challenged him for the champion-
ship in the Great Art and Artists
category. •
The two tied last week for the
title. They returned last night for
a playoff round. Under rules of
the show another tie meant divid-
ing the mopey' equally.
The Pasadena. Calif., Jockey
and Price were each shown and
asked to identify eight replicas of
famous artists' signatures and
monograms.
Price and then Pearson cor-
rectly identified the signatures as
belonging to Toulouse-Lautrec,
Rembrandt, Daumier, Durer, Gau-
guin. Whistler, Hals anef Michel-
angelo.
Both had a tough time identify-
ing Michelangelo's monogram,
which resembled Chinese writing.
Both eventually came up with the
answer.
But CBS Mid later:
“After the program went off the
air, however, it came to the at-
tention of the producers that"
Sonny Fox appeared inadvertent-
ly to have indicated the name
'Michelangelo' to Pearson, who,
from all appearances, was too
preoccupied with examining the
iLU.M-EL
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The
ae. 274
He wrote Gov. George Bell Tim- me unwise and even suiidal as
------ .. —— has been demonstrated in the
Zee Toilet Tissue whit. -
. Canterbury Tea Bags 2
Early German
Unity Seen
By Adenauer
BONN, Germany Uh—Chancellor
Konrad Adenauer predicts divided
Germany will soon be one.
Back from high-level talks in
the United States, Adenauer de-
clared yesterday the whole free
world supports the German peo-
ple’s desire for reunification. He
led his countrymen in observing
the third anniversary of the anti-
communist uprising in East Ger-
many. June 17 is now a national
holiday in West Germany, the Day
of German Unity.
Speaking at ceremonies in Bonn,
Adenauer Mid he was “firmly
convinced” the day of reunifica-
tion was near.
Similar views were expressed in
Washington over the weekend.
President Eisenhower, in an an-
niversary message to the Ger-
mans. reaffirmed "the steadfast
conviction of my country that the
unjust division of Germany will
surely come to an end.”
George Meany, president of the
- AFL-CIO,called on Eisenhower to
appeal directly to the German
people for a plebiscite which he
Mid could lead to reunification.
I Public rallies were staged
throughout West Germany in trib-
ute to the millions of East Ger-
mans who rebelled against Red
rule June 17, 1953. Bonfires were
lit along the West German border
from the Baltic Sea to Czechoslo-
vakia. Communist - surrounded
West Berlin was ringed with flam-
ing torches.
Communist authorities in East
Germany sought to divert atten-
tion from the occasion with public
entertainments and sports events.
No disturbances were reported.
37,
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Vienna Sausage
Roast Beef
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 274, Ed. 1 Monday, June 18, 1956, newspaper, June 18, 1956; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1453159/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.