Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 45, Ed. 1 Monday, September 24, 1956 Page: 3 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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On One Penny
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Ldhaccd-
Wise Show
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Mid.
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WAYNE E. SWICK
E. J. HEADLEE
a.m.
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310% N. LOCUST
PHONE C-7113
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SUPER
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And America is richer for it.
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More people can communicate ... do more busi-
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No Red Tope.
No Waiting
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* 210 AUSTIN
. DIAL C-7885
Over 22 Years of Service to Our Community
%
24
Ja Now!.
enrermi ahtar TLLIPMONI SYsm»s eceymo
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d. r.
Expansion Set
For Gas Lines
Make That Droam Come True
With Our Low Coit Home Loans
Jy
VA
Collin County Fair To Open
With Parade On Wednesday
gt
Ik .
125 Jerseys
Entered In
Israel now has 1,865 miles of
modern highways connecting mod-
ern towns with Biblical sites.
t
ATLANTA (—A wild exchange
of shots at a filling station near
downtown Atlanta turned out to
be an argument over one penny's
worth of gasoline.
Detectives gave this account
James Cotton, 19-year-old Ne-
gro, drove his car into the filling
•i
nest . . . maintain st
work where they will.
1
I
• THE FARMERS’ •
"FRIENDLY STORE"
We Invite You For
• Poultry Feeds
• Dairy Feeds
• .Custom Grinding
Now a Member of the
GENERAL TELEPHONE
M
. A
Home of
Your Own
JACK HODGIS
Beck of Post Office
Central-6224
I
I social Hec.. . Uve and
still be neighbor*. ___________
Every six minutes another pole goes up in General
Telephone’s growing areas, such as this one.
I
■ um---m-asm
219 W.NICKORY- PHONE 051
LET US
REFINANCE
• I
■ *1
I
When we became affiliated with General Telephone
System, our subscribers gained a distinct advantage.
A feature of the cattle club will
be a production contest which will
be conducted on Thursday, Sept.
27th. -
be field against’ other school of-
ficials in segregation cases, such
as Mansfield, has not been deter-
mined, Tate says.
But he adds there could be
grounds if any school officials took
part in any movement to bar Ne-
gro school children from attending
a school which had, been ordered
integrated.
In the Mansfield case, he says,
“there is a court order...declar-
ing that these (Negro) children
have the right to go to that school.
I think that anybody who Inter-
feres with that right is in con-
tempt of court, whether he is a
school officials or not."
"Our position is simply this: We
are going to use every. legal de-
vice at our disposal. We are not
prepared to say what we. will do
in any particular case."
DENTON FEDERAL
SAVINGS O LOAN ASSOCIATION
Wednesday with the poultry ex-
hibits and will continue with ag-
ricultural exhibits at 1 p.m., beef
at the same hour, and sheep at 7
p.m. Swine judging will start at 8
a.m. Thursday and dual purpose
cattle judging comes at 7 p.m.
Thursday. Dairy cattle take the
ring at 8:30 a.m. Friday.
The always popular horse show
is scheduled for 7 p.m. on Friday
and Saturday in the rodeo arena.
BARROW SHOW •
The big feature of the fair this
year is the Texas Barrow Show,
usually held at the State Fair in
Dallas. Sponsored by the Texas
Poland China Breeders Assn, and
the Texas Hampshire Breeders
Assn./ this show, to be held on
Friday and Saturday, is expected
to attract entries and visitors from
a large section of the state.
momdmimamy
Flows on freely, dries in 1 to 4
hours to a satiny surface like
baked enamel. Benutiful luntre
enamel for kitchens, bath-
rooms, all woodwork. 18 colors.
sevha=“
mm Up
stfoke
Bridgeport Tuesday. The yearlings will be shown
individually and as get-of-gire. (Record-Chronicle Staff
Photo)
»■■ ®
UNITED FINANCE CO.
AND REDUCE YOUR PAYMENTS
YOUR AUTOMOBILE
•Vvi .
SNOW'S
FEED STORE
Phone C-6431
. .. Planting wealth is A daily part of the job for General . ,
Telephone, the natio’s largest independent telephone
system. ; »
1. . . T..T
Christian Education
To Be Parley Topics
Superintendent of Church School
at St. David’s Episcopal Church,
Dr. Rufus K. Guthrie, said this
week that two diocesan-wide con-
ferences on Christian education will
be held in October for Sunday
school teachers, church school sup-
erintendents. directors of Christian
education and clergy.
The meetings will be concerned
with goals and resources in the
use of Sunday School lessons, fol-
lowed by question and answer per-
iods.
The first Christian education con-
ference will be held at the Church
of the Incarnation, Dallas, on Oct.
6 commencing with lunch at noon,
and terminating at 4 p.m. This
meeting will deal specifically with
the new Seabury series.
The Oct. 20 conference will con
vene at St. Matthew’s Cathedral,
Dallas, with the same schedule,
and will deal particularly with the
nature, merits and problems in the
use of church school lesson ma-
terials for teachers who are not
using the Seabury series.
- ---.
TEXAS TELEPHONE COMPANY
1" -!
Reenlistment
Policy Changed
Col. Walter Lytz, director of the
Rth Marine Corps Reserve and Re-
cruitment District, announced this
week that the Marine Corps has
adopted a new policy regarding
I - the re-enlistment of former Mar,
Ines who are married or have de-
pendents.
Under the new policy, privates
first class and corporals who are
married or have other dependents
i will be eligible for re-enlistment
in the regular Marine Corps after
• ‘ obtaining a waiver from the coma
mandant of the Marine Corps,
provided they are otherwise qual-
ified. • •
Prior to the change in policy
former Marines not having
1 achieved Vc rank of sergeant
could not be re-enlisted if they
had dependents. ~~
" • > I ■ aS
—*e.
(
Judging will start at 11
By H D. MOUZON
Special Correspondent
McKINNEY - "A Home Folks
Fair for Home Folks.’’
If the 1856 Collin County Fair
opening Wednesday were to have,
a slogan those words would about
describe it because this year’s
event will be just that — put on
by and for Collin County folks.
The fair , this fall will be unique
in that there will be something of
interest going on every minute
the gates are open, from the start
of the giant street parade Wed-
nesday afternoon until the last
light is put out Saturday night.
It will be different because there
will be no out-of-town carnival on
the grounds. Instead, there will be
rows of booths offering all the
games and entertainment usually
found at a carnival, but sponsor-
ed by and manned by local peo-
pie.
President Audie Turrentine and
hi* corps of workers have work-
ed long and hard in preparing for
the 1956 Fair. The event will open
Wednesday with a street parade
at 4:30. The parade will form at
the First Baptist Church and will
follow a line of march through
the business section and then on
to the fairgrounds. At the grounds.
State Sen. Ray Roberts will cut a
ribbon stretched across the en-
trance and the big event will be
under way.
NEW BUILDINGS
At 8 p.m. Wednesday officials
will officially dedicate the new ex-
hibit building, recently erected,
with appropriate ceremonies. An-
thony Geer of Anna, president ol
the Old Settlers Picnic Assn., will
present the key to the new build-
ing to Pat Simpson, representing
the building directors, and Lyman
D. Robinson, supervisor in’ County
Supt. W. H- Moseley’s office, win
make a short talk dedicating the
building.
On Thursday night the Fair
Assn, will present Minnie Pearl
and a number of outstanding acts
axall
^•W***^
■
694
The proposed plea in the segre- "
gation suit seeks to cite Stillwell
for advocating resistance. Bill
Williams, a college trustee, is ac-
cused of being a member of the
crowd that barred the two Negro-
es. .
Wheather contempt charges will
v By JERRY MARTIN
DALLAS (A - An anti-integra-
tion maneuver that could put
school officials who are against
Integration on a hot spot goes in-
to a courtroom Thursday.
zlt could mean this to local Au-
thorities: Integrate your schools
or go to jail.
What federal judge* will finally
rule is speculation. The National
Assn, for the Advancement of
Colored People is asking a Feder-
al Court to cite two school offi-
cials for contempt of court. Con-
tempt citations in other types of
oases have readied in. Jail terms
I
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.1
Get it at Hi best-with
MuellerClimatrol
JOE EVANS PLUMBING
EHEATING___
Center C-8922
Ider "Weakness’
urnini or Ttchtng yriation) M
-ommn
g
nce. a« how taat you ampiove.
planting wealth
JI •
Only Speculation Forecast Arzunep.Based
On NAACP Contempt Question
from the famed Big D Jamboree
in the rodeo arena. In case of
rain the show will be moved to
the high school auditorium, •
And daily promptly at 7, 8, 9
and 10 p.m. a big drawing will be
held on the grounds and valuable
prizes of merchandise will be
awarded winners Visitors can
register free on the grounds for
the drawings. Should holders of
lucky numbers not be present
other names will be called until
-five have been drawn out. Then
should the winner not be present
the prize will be held over until
the final drawing Saturday night,
making a giant jack pot.
NEW FEATURES
As visitors enter the grounds
this fall they will find many new
features. Over each of the two
streets entering the grounds will
be an arch, bearing the inscrip-
tion, “Welcome - Collin County
Fair". Inside the grounds, enter-
ing from the south, will be the
rows of concession booths put up
and manned by service clubs and
other organizations. At the end
of the row on the left will be the
new exhibit building where com-
mercial displays and those of
Home Demonstration Clubs. 4-H
and other organizations can be
found.
Across the midway. In the spa-
cious city barns. the livestock ex-
hibits will be housed and this
year, officials say, they will be
bigger and better than ever be-
fore. Attractive prize money has
been set aside for this feature.
Staff Special
BR GEPORT — A tola’. of 125
Jerseys have been entered in the
annual North Texaa Jersey Cat-
Ue Club show to be held here
during the annual Wise County
Fair and Horse Show, which op-
ens Tuesday.
Dairy Division Supt. 0. Ray
Brown said the show will repre-
sent cattle from leading Jersey
breeders throughout the region.
Actual judging of the Jersey
entries will begin at 8:30 a.m.
Friday by John Fawcett, approv-
ed American Jersey Cattle Club
judge, from the School of the Oz-
arks, Point Lookout. Mo.
On Wednesday, FFA and 4-H
, judging teams from counties rep-
-resented in the North Texas club
area, will participate in a junior
judging contest. Appropriate
trophies will be awarded the high
scoring team and individual, he
HOUSTON, Wi — A proposed 166
. million dollar expansion program
which would boost the Texas-to-
New England natural gas line's'
capacity to nearly 2% billion cubic
feet daily was announced by Ten-
nessee Gas Transmssiion Co.
) The firm filed application in
Washington seeking Federal Pw:
er Commission approval of a con-
struction program which would
link Louisiana tidelands gas re-
serves with the 2,200-mile trans-
mission system.
Included would be 1.085 miles
I of new pipeline, six new compres-
sor stations, expansion of seven
existing stations, and a new triple-
■ pipeline underwater crossing of
1 the Mississippi.
Gardiner Symonds, president of
Tennessee Gas Transmission, said
a 557-mile, 30-inch line would be-
! gin in the Mississippi Delta area
1 south of New Orleans and extend
through Louisiana, Mississippi,
‘ Alabama and Tennessee to the
; company’s main system at Port-
‘ land. Tenn.
b
-__________________________________________________________________________________________________
AT BRIDGEPORT FAIR, JERSEY SHOW ‘
These four yearling Jerseys owned by Oak Grove Jer-
sey Farm, Vineyard, will be among the 125 entries in
the annual North Texas Jersey Cattle Club Show
scheduled to open with the wise County Fair at
if you ever ha” the experi-
en' of a fl '-« adjustment
on your dwelling and cnt:nts
you will find the adjustment
on the d' t'ling will be sim-
ple. You and your insurance
company azree on reputable
cortractor to re’ aild the dam-
age. But. to establish the
amount of lor on contents,
the company . zecs a list and -
the value of items destroyed.-
Vou would remember the .
costly items, but, how many
shirts do' you 22- :, towels,
linens, cookware, books, ifts,
hundreds of items. costing
L-m $1.00 to *25.00. If you
have never taken inventory,
what a surprise you will get
to " 1 ou h«w muc. money
you have tied up inside your
home. |
-
Oil Men Hope
For Atomic Aid
HOUSTON, UR - Oil men hope
atomic radiation can be used
to find new and improved petro-
leum products and processes.
Continental Oil Co. told today
of plans to build a 8500,000 atomic
radiation laboratory at Ponca
City, Okla.
Uranium cylinders from the
Arco. Idaho, atomic energy plant
will be available under plans of
the Atomic Energy Commission
to release materials for Industrial
experiments.
and fines.
The man who brought the action
is directly under. the gun in one
of the hottest integration trouble
areas in the South."
He is Simpson Tate, regional
NAACP. lawyer. He is calm at
most times amid the uproar over
seating Negro and white students
side-by-side in-the same schools.
Developments yesterday on
state court level will not affect
the federal court hearing, Tale
Mid.
The state district court at Tyler
issued a temporary restraining or-
der yesterday In effect putting the
NAACP out of business in Texas.
A hearing Friday — one day after
the contempt hearing — will be
held on the order.
The state court action will be
handled for the NAACP by W. j.
Durham. Texas attorney for the
organization.
Atty. Gen. John Ben Shepperd
Mid the restraining order was ask-
ed because, he alleged, “The NA-
ACP has exceeded the bounds of
propriety and law."
Tate, a tall middle-aged Negro,
haa filed a motion seeking to. inter-
vene in the Texarkana Junior Col-
lege segregation ease. If he’s given
permission, his pleading says, he
will seek to cite the college pre-
sident and a trustee for con-
tempt.
At Texarkana, Tex , angry de-
monstrators blocked Negroes from
entering the junior college. Cross
burnings and angry outcries by
white Citizens Councils are almost
a daily occurance in Tate's region.
The intervention plea is in the
case of Wilma Whitemore vs. H.
W. Stilwell. the college president;
This federal' case resulted in a
ruling that the college cannot bar
Negroes. •
Tat is acting for Steve Poster,
17, and Jessalyn Gray, 18, the
Negroes prevented by demon-
strators from attending Texarka-
na Junior College this fall.
Stilwell says he was “not in con-
tempt of court at any time and
did not advocate violence at any
time."
"L.said the South should resist
integration, and' I still think it
should," he Mid.
‛u.
.. Why not be pre, .red to make
an accurate settlement with
your insurance company in
case you have a fire. An in-
ventory gue -tees that noth-
ing will be overlooked. You
can get a Household Goods
Invento. / Booklet free, no
st 'os attrehed. It's a prhlic
service offered by Hardware
Mutuals to home owners, the
npany advertised in Better
Homes It Gardens.
To get a cony, fust write
“Inventory" and mailing ad-
dres: on a card. Send to Hard-
ware Mutuals local represen
te"
R. J. (Dick) Ferguson
Box 642 or
I Phone c-an21, Denton
T ,
e . t
(Easy Ways
----y
to Beauty
L. F. McCollum, Continental
president, Mid the laboratory will
use atomic radiation as a source
of energy in conducting chemical
experiments to help develop new
products and Improve refining
processes and petrochemical man-
ufacturing methods.
Construction will begin within a
few weeks. Completion is expect-
ed in March.
McCollum said Continental has
been supporting an exploratory
program in radiation at the Uni-
versity of Michigan for two years
but that the use of atomic radia-
tion is one of the latest advance-
ments in oil. He said the new
facility will be among the first
in the nation to use atomic radia-
tion.
The laboratory will use a closed-
circuit television camera, robot-
like mechanical hands, and two
periscopes. Radiation reMarch
will be conducted by remote con-
trols in a “hot cell" within the
concrete laboratory. The cell’s
walls will be five and a half feet
thick and will be built of specially
prepared concrete.
I
Collin County Fair Board offi-
cers are headed by Turrentine as
president with Joe Snapp as vice
president and E. G. (Pat) Simp-
son as secretary.
Purebred Livestock Assn, 'offi-
cer* include George W. Moore of
Melissa, president; L. N. Cox,
Celina, and George Dalton,
Princton, vice presidents, and
Paul Hardin, McKinney, secre-
tary-treasurer.
Collin County Saddle Assn, offi-
cers are Spencer Smith, president;
Jim Alfred Lewis and Julius G.
Smith, vice presidents, and Mrs.
Karl Talkington, secretary-treas-
urer.
1,
I- - ,1
DENTON RECORD CMBON ICLB
".it
HEATING I
AIR I
CONDITIONING
' .n"T0a
_
Emg
su. —a _.......
AU THROUGH
YOUR HOME
SaKmzhe
Even if you have novar paint- •
od, you can give walla and
woodwork a uniform coat of
• color ... with this velvet-
- smooth paint.
(Deep Clers Slighily Migher)
mraw
■
. -8- v,,.
■
■ PAGE__
Young Operator
ASHEVILLE, N.C. un - Charles
Lambright, 17, has received his
commercial radio-telephone Op-
erator's license, first class, from
nca
Lambright is a freshman in elec-
trical engineering at North Caro-
lina State College in Raloigb.
station and asked for 46 cents
worth of gas. The ’attendant. C.D.
Dalton, put in 41 cents worth.
Cotton refused to pay the extra
cent, left the station after an ar-
gument and returned with a pis-
tol.
Dalton fired. Cotton returned the
fire. Dalton shot again, and Cot-
ton took to his heels.
Both men showed up in City
Court yesterday to answer charges
of disorderly conduct. The trial
' was postponed io’ nw"attormeys,
to'seek additional'evidence.
.............—— —
n . . ’ -
in".
How Many Shirts Do
You Hove To Lose?
1 4
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 45, Ed. 1 Monday, September 24, 1956, newspaper, September 24, 1956; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1453243/m1/3/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.