Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 47, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 26, 1956 Page: 4 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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d
Freedom Routes Other
<y
Than Suez
note:
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ee
da
quentiyes-eexteplele—ononee
every 3,212,800,000 times that the
T
Z4CAER
BIG GAME HUNT
!
F
THE WORLD TODAY
I,
U.S. ‘Wonderful’ For House wife
b
putting a halt to air smuggling.
TWENTY YEARS AGO
presi-
Texas
2,):
8
7
Published every
Denton Publishing Co.
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THERE OUGHTA BE A LAW!
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upon being
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Errors Of Red Leaders in
U.S. Are Acknowledged
Mrs, R. J. Turrentine,
dent of District Two of the
test-
thou-
Federation of Women’s Clubs, ex-
pects 100 women to attend the dis-
trict meeting tomorrow in Denton.
A'
1
Smuggling
By Airplane
Falls Behind
b
--
X
Yesteryear
Looking Baek Through
Record Chronicle Files
n ,
t t
) < • h
2 b i'
Entered m second class man matter at the postotnc at Denton. Texas
Janunn IS. 1ML nccording to Act of Congresa, March 3. 1872.
That twins
crimes.
pc
17
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•. Mir
MaranTH
Thinning Out Of Casbah’s
Population Now Underway
i
pens naturally—which many doubt
—probably occurs about as fre-
. g___._______^_JUon.
Yen—the United States is a "wonderful place for
tha hnucnwif.i ■.jS-w "
TEN YEARS AGO
After several months of deliber-
ation, planning and talking, the
city commission last night plung-
ed into the biggest city develop- .
ment program undertaken in Den-
ton. They unanimously agreed to
submit six separate bond issue pro-
posals totaling $2,270,000 to a vote
on Oct. 15.
Customer Taken Name
Of Firm Literally
NAUGATUCK. Conn, un - "Sure'
agreed the used car tot salesman
when the prospective customer ask-
ed if he could road test the con-
vertible.
When, after several hours, the
customer hadn’t returned from the
"road test," police guessed he
took the firm name too literally.
It was Free Motors, Inc.
lead Of
gcntnfncxsep"ESaturdoy) snd Sunday morning D:
iu"aaAAlLN
That virgin births now have
been induced in rabbits, cats, fer-
rets and turkeys. The offspring
are invariably female, as no male
cells are involved.
That scientists estimate virgin
births in humans, if it ever hap-
i
i
stork calls.
That Screech owls have an extra
pair of eylids that operate like
windshield wipers to clear their
vision.
That it is no more necessary
to slit a pet crow’s tongue to
teach it to speak than it is for
you to slit your throat in order
to breath deeply.
That tiny Switzerland has about
95 per cent of the world's watch
business. (But betcha we lead in
timeclocks!
That wine sales in America in-
creased from 1260-million dollars
ButNOWGHEs BACK AT SCHOOL - AND
"evue5U2544 STAN024
SUBSCRIPTION RATES AND INFORMATION
Single Copies: Sc for weekdays; 10c for Sunday
HOME DELIVERY RATES FOR DAILY AND SUNDAY
BY CARRIER: Delivered to your home by city carrier or motor route
on same day of publication, 35c per week.
BY MAIL ONLY: In Denton, Wise. Collin and Cooke counties, $1.00
1 be paid in arfvance). Elsewhere in
th, $15.60 per year.
y speaking, retail stores which
American standards are found
One alm. both from a security
and a health standpoint, is to thin
out the Casbah’s population.
High in the hills west of the
Casbah, over a wide valley known
as "Climat de France." the city
government is currently building
a housing project of 4,500 units
which. it is estimated, can house
roughly 30,000 persons in condi-
tions of comfort and hygiene.
The plan is to move families
from crumbling, overcrowd-
ed houses in the Casbah to "Clim-
at de France," thus eventually
cutting the Casbah population
down to a manageable 23,000.
Buildings which are demolished
will be replaced with Moorish or
Turkish type houses, built along
the old lines but equipped inside
with modern sanitation. Old struc-
tures in relatively good shape will
be repaired and remodeled.
As landlord of general supervi-
sor, the city administration will
control the persons who live there
and will assure upkeep as a tour-
ist attraction.
By JAMES MARLOW
Associated Press News Analyst
WASHINGTON « - American
i
K'
Si
Swing said the U.S. immigration
officials knew of a number of
small Mexican fields within 75 or
100 miles of the border to which
light planes were flying at night,
staying until the next night, then
flying back to the United States
in the darkness when they couldn't
be caught. L __
- !
/FPRyep
/Gov
memeea.
per month, $9.50 per year (must
the United States 11M per month
Communist leaders have now1 pub-
licly acknowledged errors in a
document which is sickening
imony to the wasted lives of
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left-handed? I don't.) . .
That if you happen to be in th*’
Panama Canal Zone you can call
from the Pacific to the Atlantic,
coast for one little old nickel...
hardly seems worth the trip
though, does it?
That the Egyptians invented the
first true fishing pole about 2,000
B.C.
That bandtender Sammy Kaye
notes these are the days when the
GOP tries to pin elephant tales
on the donkey.
That girls wear engagement
rings on the fourth finger because
it used to be believed the "venis -
amoris" or vein of love, ran from
this finger directly to the heart.
Now it runs to the pocketbook.
That Tony Hofford of the Nar-
ragansett (R.I.) Times reports
finding this definition inscribed on
a cocktail napkin: "A good sales-
man is a fellow who can convince -
his wife she looks fat in a fur
coat."
Mexico Halts
Near Nudism
Of Americans
CUERNAVACA, Mexico w -
Near nudism of some American
tourists visiting this resort center
has stirred a bit of cautious criti-
cism in Mexican newspapers.
For one thing, a Mexico City
paper said, the habit seems con-
tagious and Mexican women are
beginning, to undress in bublie-
A newspaper here said things
once got so bad on the Isthmus
of Tehuantepec that men and
women began bathing naked to-
gether but the government finally
stepped in with heavy fines.
Women tourists can be seen on
downtown streets here dressed in
bathing suits or shorts and skimpy
blouses. One native said he had
seen near-naked women tourists
enter the famed Catholic
Cathedral
to the Kremlin leadership in the
belief it knew what it was doing.
The list of errors is in a resolu-
tion drafted by the party’s nation-
al committee for submission to
the party's convention next Feb-
ruary. Many of these errors, in
one form or another, were ad-
mitted publicly earlier this year
YOU’LL BE LOSING’ BY THIS FEUDIN’ •
5
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WEMOLDVOUDIRECTLN
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essary.
The U.S. Communist party, ac-
cording to the committee docu-
ment, will now try to work with
other groups more than in the
past Thus the admission of er-
rors is a part of a general face-
lifting job.
But the U.S. Communist party,
which for more than a quarter
of a century has held itself up as
the one organisation fit to run the
country, makes itself ludicrous by
its admissions of stupidity, blind-
ness and utter lack of 'an ele-
mentary understanding of the
forces in American life.
Here are some of the mistakes
the leaders concede they made:
They expected the United States
to start World War III; they re-
duced their own membership too
much deliberately and then lost
additional thousands needlessly by
their tactics and bad judgment;
they predicted, planned for, ma-
jor depressions In this country in
IMS, 1949 and 1954; they misun-
derstood and underestimated this
country's economic strength; they
misunderstood the American la-
bor movement; they misunder-
stood American Negroes by think-
ing their struggle for equality was
some kind of subconscious anti-
capitalism- .
i i
in various party publications.
While the leadership of the
American Communist party
claims it is not a Russian agent,
it to a fact these errors were ad-
mitted only after Nikita Khrush-
chev, Russian Communist party
boss, last February confessed mis-
takes in Russia and suggested
other Communist parties become
self-critical
The self-criticism was not sim.
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Denton Record Chronicle
\ TELEPHONE CENTRAL2551
in most of the other countries of the world.
The point is that the American system of mass dis-
tribution—lika the American system of mass produc-
tion which it coplements has no counterpart else-
to. Even in the most advanced Euro-
FIVE YEAR AGO
A total of 1105,900 in road Im-
provements over Denton County
was approved by the State High-
way Commission it was announc-
ed today.
1(4
JOE;FOR \
GOODNESS’SAKES,
DON’TTRN IT
ANY MORE-THE
PICTORES COMING
IN FINE NOW! J
W y
COMBINATION MAIL AND CARRIER: Delivered to gour home by
paid in advance*
MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
cit you get caught winn pea wshaotersinoFKg Harbor
days in jail. An ordinance adopted by the city coun-
cil prohibits use of any device through which one can
project projectiles. The measure actually was adopt-
ed with guns, rifles and the like in mind. But the
pea-shooter also happens to fit the case.
5
2
WASHINGTON, un — Immigra-
tion Commissioner Joseph Swing
says a lot of smuggling by plane
across the Mexican border has
been "pretty well closed down"—
and the Mexicans have acquired
an air patrol in the process-
Swing gave this testimony in
closed session to*a House Govern-
ment Operations subcommittee
questioning him about alleged use
of government equipment for hunt-
ing forays in Mexico. The testi-
mony was made public today.
The House group beaded by Rep.
Mollohan (D-WVa) later said it
thought Swing improperly used the
equipment—trailers, jeeps, planes
—despite Swing's sworn statement
that his hunting was done only in-
cidentally while on -official trips.
Swing said during one trip into
Mexico last fall—"it was a meet-
ing at which the Mexicans asked
-ANPSME CAMB HOME %
CRINQ BECAUSE ONE
5
(5
"The United States must be a wonderful place for
the housewife!"
That, according to the president of an American .
food chain company, was the comment most frequent*
ly made by Italian housewives who visited a complete
"American Way" supermarket which was an outstand-
ing exhibit at a recent international food congress in
Rome.
There’s no doubt that those same Italian housewiv-
es, if they’d had a chance to visit an “American Way"
variety store, department store, specialty shop, or any
I other modern U.S. retail outlet, would have made sim-
ilar comment. And that would be true of housewives
i .
1 ■ , rom
. M <
Next Monday the gates of West Berlin’s Spandau
Prison will swing open to free a man many people
would prefer to see remain locked up — indefinitely.
He’s Grand Admiral of the German Fleet Karl Do-
Carl Clendenin had trudged the city streets for three
years as a mailcarrier. His last day on the job before •
resigning, he was bitten by a dog for the first time.
tenced to 10 years in prison. Several appeals for a
shortened term failed and his full 10 years will have
been served when he’s released Monday.
Does Doenits stil harbor his war-time convictions?
The neo-Nazi parties, and certainly they are in the
minority in West Germany today, look to him as titu-
lar head of the Reich. Doenitz himself says he has
plans for a quiet life, operating a kindergarten.
But whether it turns out to be a kindergarten or
not, certainly the eyes of the free world will be close-
ly focused on his activities. For next year West Ger-
many wil be holding its most critical elections since
1938, and in a probably close finish between Dr. Kon-
rad Adenauer and the Socialists, the Nazis could pos-
sibly hold the balance, especially should Doenitz op-
erate a kindergarten for party followers.
The world hopes it’s just a plain, ordinary, down-
to-earth kindergarten and that Doenitz is so prosper-
ous that he will have little time to think along politi-
cal lines.
But one question is unanswered: Who will send
their children to his kindergarten?
p
5
Spelling Miscue
SPOKANE, Wash. o - When
the Odd Fellows and their ladies
came to town for their state con-
vention, a big banner across a
downtown street greeted them:
"Welcome, Odd Fellows and
Rebeccas!"
Only one thing wrong. They
were .(and are) Rebekahs.
By SAM DAWSQN
NEW YORK un-The Suez Canal
dispute moves to the United Na-
tions today, but American busi-
nessmen are already making
plana to free themselves from de-
pendente on the big ditch.
Thelr worst handicap to time.
To build the giant tankers and
freighters, the oil pipe lines, or
even possibly another canal near-
by, will take time. Until this can
Eheagnarmg“codtdzztopan
and trade
These higher costs would be
passed along in time to the Amer-
ican consumer of finished pro-
ducts mad from materials that
now move more cheaply and
swiftly through the canal. But
American business to taking the
canal dispute much more calmly
now than a few weeks back.
What business does worry about
now to just bow long the Egyptian.
Soviet and other pilots can keep
the boats moving without mishap.
The view becoming more popu-
lar among American businessmen
is that shipping must be built up
to take care of any future trouble.
Giant oil tankers are already on
order and some new ones will
shortly join the fleets. But Amer-
ican shipyards complain that
shortages of steel are slowing
down work on the big tankers de-
signed to carry oil more cheaply
than smaller ones that now slide
through the Sues. The giants are
too big to go through but could
make the long run around Africa
or from American oil fields to
Europe handily. ‘
They were planned before the
Suex 'crisis and the thinking then
was, that European demand for
oil would increase so much In
coming years that the smaller
tankers that ply the canal would
not be adequate to the task.
Until enough new tankers and
freighters can be built. Nasser
would appear to be holding the
top cards.
ply for breastbeating. Khrush-
chev suggested it is part of a
shangnintanticsbut noiin goals; hunt" - plans were aid for
S, “k. ovrmwhlerePttyescai.........hal.........
peacefully, if that's possible, by
working with other groups until
they gain power; violently if nec-
enitz, who may become the most dangerous political
figure in Germany.
.' It’s not unheard of that this feeling exists, especial-
ly among the peoples of Western Civilization. Doen-
itz was the mastermind of the submarine campaign
that destroyed about 15 million tons of Alied and
neutral shipping with a loss of tens, of thousands of
Allied lives in World War II. He did such a magnifi-
cent job for the German cause that Hitler, before
committing suicide in his Berlin bunker, named Do- .
-eiflU iib iueceMui As a trtmbined result uf thlsrBy—
enitz was tried and convicted of a war crime and sen-
Letters To The Editor
EDITOR’S NOTE: The Record-Chronicle has received several
interesting letters recently, but has withheld publication because
the letters were unsigned or the writer requested that hie name
be withheld. It is the policy of this paper to publish only letters
that have the writer a signature and address attached. The let-
ter will be published on the condition that the names and ad-
— dresses can be used. -.............——---—
ORIALS AND FE
“ A
B.
■ .afc
1.0- NOTICL TO PVBLIC:
Any erroneous reflection apon the character, reputation or auruMne of
mim maeyyoe " - enaly corrseta
ars:rsEtt-1
• “* -- An —
case with the average European family-
siderable part to intense-retail competit
Yes—the United States is a “wonde
the housewife!1'
sands who were, or still are, party
members giving blind obedience
y* 1 mm or tn associatri ruEss
wrtetfi .Frees a entiued exclusivel to the uno tot publcatton ot
•N ■••• brinted in this newepaper, as well aa all AF news ata-
*
That left-handed women usually
marry right-handed men. (This
________ _ _ _ seems so e, lous as to sound silly,
tuplete-- -or Jonee But ihiabi De yeu kasw a ring!*
" “ ) married couple, both of whom are
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Tr A WONDER BRATINELLA CAME
TuoQi THE UMER ALN FOR AU.
PAP AND MAMA KNEW OR CARBO •
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AUSiNESS-m—
US. Seeks.
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2-24,.,
By JOSEPH E. DYNAN
ALGIERS, Algeria (A—A whole
generation still throbs to the
words in that throaty accent:
"Como with me to the Casbah . ."
That generaton should be
aware, however, there probably
won't be any Boyer-Lamarr type
Casbah much longer.
Instead, Algiers may have
something like the "Algerian Vil-
lage" at the last World's Fair if
the city fathers have their way.
As part of the modernization of
the Algerian capital, city archi-
tecta have prepared a plan to
clean up thia hillside complex ot
narrow alleys and shrouded pas-
sageways sheltering about 55.000
persons. , : -
The Arab nationalist rebellion
against French rule has given the
project almost an emergency ata-
tus. The labyrinth Is too conveni-
ent as an escapeway for rebel
gunmen or grenade throwers.
There also are considerations of
public health, sanitation, housing
facilities and the tourist attrac-
tion. /
many people still make dandelion
wine? Haven’t seen any in years.)
That the Intersection of Piccadil-
ly Circus and Shaftesbury Avenue,
London’s equivalent of Times
Square, to called "the moat photo-
graphed corner in the world.’* it
was the favorite rendezvous point
for U. S. servicemen in the last
war.
I ' 175
MS
7272* -
" • z/w •97 2 7 K! { MCake
1454, Knn SotuMt SynAtMt, Inc ., Wwl4 nyhn mmri. * < । * j
HOME, SWEET HOME By Bud Blake
where on the glol
pean countries, g
a .' even fairly appro
only in the large cities, and are few in number. Here
in the United States the people in the small towns get
the same kinds of goods, at about the same prices,
> t along with the same standards of service and sanita-
tion, as do the people in any metropolis. And the
L take-home pay of the average American family will
buy far more of the necessities and luxuries than is the
case with the average European family—due in con-
E' k
2u'
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 47, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 26, 1956, newspaper, September 26, 1956; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1453245/m1/4/?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.