Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 288, Ed. 1 Monday, July 8, 1963 Page: 4 of 14
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MONDAY, JULY 8, 1963
EDITORIALS AND FEATURES : : : THE DENTON RECORD^HROMCLE : :
PAGE FOUR
day. 3
nmyess
EDITORIALS -
)
By BILL MAULDIN
OTC Stocks
1
* •
P
I
8
Jd be
* f f r
a poten
e U S and had a revenue ef
300 t jts o line in
)
i
962 and at $7 274 260 470 .
63
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33e
H12
■ 2*4
477
i
DEAaj* w- NAPLES
J
5 i
EDIC4T\C)\
l nw anted Gift?
YESTERYEAR
Installment
Aht
1)
NEW YORE
st p
TR II El
Random Observations
—as
coromg to a recent Stas?
On Ranch Road Prowl
e no otber part ' c Teas and'
am
campizn for tunds 5 be beid
WORLD TODAY
textbock dwsoe n the State De- cargse. sales are mhadeby nezotia
partment ri Eacat
nich polices the mar-
scbdos
r 121
R
» Christendom
ed
Delton Record-Chronicle
mil Hir,
I
7.9 Million Households With 2 Cars
/C
PAIR IPPOI'TED
TO w 4R ( HI ^T
pt
N
The hert tM efter i it brout
vre •eat** en mi basis enby
h I
r"
ler
K.,"
,52
ust be wondering if
. being discriminated
kil
Ni
triy
kn
Cu
tri
in 1
Na
0m b
from
FOl MOTIlD l \IT
Cl TSCIT} SH4RE
az Eszed stock averages. ■
Stocks. lifted ed . the exchanges.
I
tie
Rail Dispute
Nears Crisis
A’t
B8S.
Jo*!
a se sod over tbe: cqumien.
mes c tbe business isinun-
dcie
P 7
5
LANGUAGES
in the SEWS
By Cherei F. Bortt
end Uw $nmp~Deire
COXGRESS
Voting Rights Would Affect
60 Congressional Districts
ass
< on
ero
des
11
Aril
hay
ing
der
Financing
C.
To Increase
JULY ». 1962
DavaLLdses and Dr L H
Hubbard have been named mem-
bers ' be board -i • re tors o
the Unted Wa Ches ri Texas
wtich . snciades aboct 20 ' mem-
bers Erom ue stane
f be corrected wee being celled * me puba seen anemton fhe
ob sren ere rar resporsbie tor coov omissiora typogreohice Mtim
market be- cDectve
9)
Collective Bargaining
(ailed American Mvth
h
n)
f
(
Z*'
1 348 tentrper ’ ohm erfor feigtt and 3 109 cents
per passenget iie
Tbe 1953 edbon ■ i Rai road Facts also shoued-
tha: the natidn > railroads had operating revenues
•- off)
pouered by as •- etercise discre- Some 4 $ x toen belone to the
doa in the number c books sent Nat ccal Aseo iaticn cSecuribes
gamed E ♦ per eea
wov-he equalqe the renditotis
e emy en imtentiona erron fhet oct- emher te orrect mem •
sel them the com-
EQIALIZATIOX
HEARING SET
JLLY t i ts
The ety ecua"zation
their, politcal subdivision is
2.
Eithes
05%
up ce tbe ercharzes wbere tol-}
MM > szabiy larger thar a year
ommended changes ' 'i hhe frK 4 . L.
baard’and iot whch tbe meetig -' "h e -arse a x
Mexco. The Tn m heze aze n be pext feu years
‘E
A E
told a Sn- ’.<C between bepker dealers
543 1961 a decrease
' \
E’ Marlow only about industries and un ons
Assneaied Press News Analst covered by the Taft Ha-t.c Act;
WASHNNGTON AF — Truly free not about railroads and railway
da requiston Dealers
Of $9 439 894
. 38 0-45 f . ■
a: $7,418,355
ampaizn uasted
medtamtne thou
WASHINGTON — Passage 01 the voting rights
section in the Administration's new civil rights bill
comM n appointment of federal voting ref-
erees to register Negroes in 261 counties, compris-
ing part or all of €C Congressional districts in 11
Southern states
These figures emerged from a Congressional
Quarterly study of all US counties in which less
than 15 percent of the Negroes of voting age are reg-
istered to vote
Under the terms of the ne* civil rights bill court
registration nachinery, including the use of referees,
could be put in motion in such counties immediately
upon the filing by the US Attorney General of a
complaint allegin a pattern or practice of discrim-
ination Registration would then proceed while the
voting rights suit was pending in the courts
The procedure would differ from the 1960 Civil
Rights Act under which a court case must be suc-
cessfully terminated before voting referees can be
.. - - . 2ard and pnger oubers renen- to be abounzpercem
“Tch compese f3 %K>-bem shouid pay' bo atientaom to,. k
■ morming set -u} 24 25 and wbem-u-asstzed Beanse c 360" 3820
ocreasng mam- 3 as tbe danes fcr meeang 2 tuo membets of thar board not The -a-cea R-0P0 Busaa
-- ---t- o-c - - t--5 en a hnzn sazsams "2 -
hoe vs Wwir-.es Do art pit always 8ay that they are D0 Backus ton, a woman wbo's whatever Coccress may do abou to the publc interest nedy namea an emergencv board .
Me ar more cans themselves when tempted by an- sax? a bad cook that her butted stricter federal pocing This meamt the committee was which modified the previous
Roya test Qeen Isabela c ger into betraying what they rest- eats the after dinmer mints be Wa” Street ml wacch the saying—in view of what it M recommendation suggesting anl
Sp20 is sad ia have bragged Ma h are -Ed Hoge - fore tbe meal course at pncn mi voter over gested—that a a union or man -40,000 jobs be eliminated grdual.
had 0 tup hachs mherke— Does fear of the dearth penaity k yas Ma Buchan wh ob- the counter as ome sign rf the re agemem isnt responsive to the b The unions stin woakdt yield,
wben she "as tan and when she keep tbe Manter at mur- verved. "An atheist is man «m turn at tbe Lttie tote to stock general uelfare a must be made The railgads wer. determined ’
. , Sociologists gy the bas r means w FP- buymg *y his. burmtanger dal- responsive to mu throyuh with the layofts.
i - yn jm “ pat ted. Pre rate rm a at hieber ■ *ates port bigotesdeies 6 This committee was talking The strike was to bogin Thrsday
-g,
3
u<.
a tasaa and ascicatanz coumrs saiclonizerm deep East Tetas Tutios Plan of New Hampshire
prevs year
ast year the atetrate number of employees was
that the department, was Dot emm- sdfferen parts A the count}
nan thes. : 500 individials wbose proessom
B: HARRY CROZIER
Reeurd-Chremick Bureaz
STN—Pandom observat ons
2gans ’ Wash ngtoh That Texas county was noti-
fed by ' Sen Ralph Yarborough that it-
h • d been granted S 18.675 in federal funds for urban
r annihe assistnte
for the and nobody has
thiat the federalmoneyis eve*
.. 1 last year as compared to $9,189
1961 Operating expenses were listed
caedta land where you expiois iostered the Fredonian
ay they never
sses estimated as hizh
re Theleichnges.are
By SAM DAWSON
AP Bustmess Ness Ite
NEw YORX AP-The biggest
sock market at &tts. aS has
taken 2s MI share c kmps 3 the
ast year hat toas fads at east
er* reasce to crou The Natiocal
Securty Traders Associznce says
leading stoeks M the merde-
coumer market bave been recos-
erng recently at a faster race
asm dhe peclar averages at
soncks Hsted n tbe exchanges
hvasthe OTC market that
saw some at the mes spectaciar
poremones than they khow
ey re determined to spread
e local level at any cost .
The Axees maled oct
so meth
enroll enough additional Negroes to bring the
figure up to 15 percent and thus preclude appoint-
ment of a federal voting referee who might quickly
register a far greeter percentage
Experience under the 1960 Act has shown that a
strong court injunction often has resulted in the
registration of substantial numbers of Negroes with-
out the necessity of referees or direct involvement
by federal judges
In Macon County, Ala for instance. Negro regis-
tration rose from 1.000 before filing of a voting rights
suit to about 3.300 by latest counts in Bullock
County Ala , the number of Negro registrants rose
from a pre-trial figure of 5 to about 1 100.
Even in the six counties where courts have found
a pattern or pra • .e of dis rimination as a result
of voting suits unde- the Civil Rights Acts, no voting
referees have been appointed In the two counties
where the courts actually felt thev must direct regis-
tration of individual Negroes, the judges have pre-
ferred to direct the operation personally rather than
appoint separate referees Both the 1960 legisla-
tion and the proposed new act leave the judges this
discretion
Since passace of the first modern-day civil rights
legislation in 1957. the Government has filed 41 vot.
ing rights suits in 34 counties, all in the South:
Twelve of the suits have alleged threats of coercion
gainst would be registrants, a practice specifically
forbidden by the 1957 Act Most of the others have
asked the courts to “find a pattern or a practice of
discrimination as a step toward registration of
Negroes unde- the I960 Act's provisions
nty ’ officials
a-yoearn basis this iaz as Tbe D4n2 “45 4 MeSse a00u te Cr ■C-r’-r-Mre ’jg ta AP-trabed over tbe rawer, szys ta
edaratoral fnancinz programs 2 " eeoE t Ms poom apeu bcard and the ponices eoer zveace m ia::
dversfy ted terate cpenimeic.tiseenwdmakneremm-istich wi be recenedromi.. Lui,,
. docrs iim othenaticn's eda-mendancdsfot,sachimhanzesascanz tbe eomnalueekaretheP Se,nrrin..
catcna insttutiors to tented ■ thouzh - be necessany - cbes that shocd.be obisented t The Do"-soes —du-a tei
ate. inrestiganng eoemttee today largeb ba tonra tebepocoe ten
Banks and hsurance beoa; revisjons of the Taft Han arkument going back over four
rt hm am we . Tn 52.323 N. . san,, -o , t* 1.9 Million Households With Z tars e eue greun aa.ee5 asbhebdimensoom'rpo The rallmuds argoe tha ne
DETON PUBLISMNG COMPANT -ehdv „ atine them Pos sertiemen terms cause the improvements in er
n law Wiauy B, HAL BOYLE parr nou to celebrate Me asa uhich hase cuzued catta po- Exehange oecais Mei that tbe Fedoegthavhatpmuernow sines they hav far ' many
wi*are uerrun-mEgegcngut nm--s."ees :."" • -- 5
—-s. am., .m---• 0" . w. uzazamzn 5 "
Home De eny r.. - bt'itetio b eity cerrer er b . „ , - ... A, Hg .. - y.. x—J c 2., , U- 5 om * appropnate This was , ' -man commission appointed
55. ‘Sr-* t "0 55 r i u_ --E 15 eUPi " — 6 00 - - - —“ ‛ g- - — ' E • . Wi. -- a _ --------- - government packed commit by Fresident Esenhower upbekd
-r,", se re:ga sege # m d a •m - - * 8- ss w S
fred eusvely « the use tor pubncetion ctesioca neez printet Mos deaf peooie art immue rise - — “
in mi me-speper e1 wel », •l AP news dacetshes
enteusm ce recommendatons
the sx
Rarcad oerating uniocs see 31 determined to
battle dews to the fimish to save jobs for thousands
or members the ralnoads maintain must be elmin-
ated 4 they are to $tay in compettioo uith other
trazspcctaton faciltes
Ncbods Lkes to coctemplate putting tbousands
at persces ameeg the unempiojed bet where is
thebne it demarcatioa to be drawn wben the sur-
vval ef an emphoger may be threatened i certain
jobs are act erased
Laci mg a the facts in the railroad-union dispute
b an utsder Bat there car be 0o doubts that a
general -12 stutdoms wold be harmful to tbe
coantr znd its ecooom.
The Presadent has intmated he will make recom-
mendatocs to Comgress for some sort of intenven-
tion halt the strike threatened for Thursday if
a settlement as not reached'by Wednesday
Althoazh the, railroads are not nearly as poaer-
mt, to
Sue fnancialy strapped
moodhis and Standard k Peer»
saa sted stock average rose 9 $2
per cent
The says 2s CT’S price
averages Lke tbosefor Ested
socks are based prmary oe rep
resentatve b ae chip issues , and
are therefnce eomhparable t head-
Are Making
Recoven
sudyrg cm a ' paj • be te Pfest a -* ga04e5 havang
ihthe fal
."The doe tozrd hpher eda-‛
catine spurred - tbe - re peed
c basibess bdustr gorernment
MEd science ht cegetraiped
persocpe $ br spec w te col-
ege campus more stadects wbose
Experience had shown that protracted litigation
can substantially delay any action to get Negroes
‘ registered in many Southern counties even with fed-
eral suits filed
The states with the highest ratio of counties with
less than 15 percent of voting age Negroes register-
ed are Mississippi 76 of 82 . South Carolina 26 of
46. Alabama 33 of 671. Louisiana (23 of 64) Geor-
pa 36 of 1591, Virginia <13 of 97 and Texas (22 of
254 Scattered counties with similarly low Negro
registration are located in Arkansas, Florida, Ten-
nessee and Ncrth Carolina
In terms of Congressional district politics, the
greatest impact might be felt in Mississippi and
South Carolina, where many districts are composed
completely or principally of districts where less
than 15 percent of eligible Negroes are registered.
Almost all of the Congressmen involved are con-
servatively - oriented Southern Democrats. Four
however, are Republicans: heps Joel T. Broyhill
Va Charles Raper Jonas (N C . Ed Foreman -Tex-
as and Howard H Baker (Tenn.)
The new legislation seeks to prevent slowdowns
in registering Negroes in affected areas by declar-
ing that individuals' applications be heard within
10 days and "determined expeditiously ”
An ironic byproduct of the legislation might be a
rush by white voting officials in some counties to
2 4 per cent So possibly natural attrition already
:s at wrk Total pay to. the'workers was $4 662 -
3396 kast wv and $4623 982332 1961
Thezterage bourly wage was $2 7 9 last year
- i- incteasof per cent The average yearly
te #2s $6,639 as compared to $6 444 for'1962
c -"‘ZZZr:* the railroads are waging with organ-
d abor 5 comparable to that going on in many
date vas tbe comez Moodas, large tar hu recrds rf tradtg
Tuesdzy and Wedhesda are void seme Beding Errs esc-
Ine Ker sad
"As te' babes «" the post
Kairat War I years reach col
h
This eptess oa zas a ■ sped2]
stnes and businesse where automation
eater return for capital and a lessening
k force :■ /
can be aroused for both-sides
made any request
stated pub li, y yet
wanted The case
iederalispenders t
what to dowth
federa largesse in
n ‘ 2 has bees ca"ed Keir president c Tbe
9 ph prsts a southernmos tx* ■, at ’ an —c ■ the Pponger ahc Ati PesidmtKmpe-rchsstettet
0 te Grea Pains and an exten-estfme the fed HsoGisanpwasderedmas
* p-‛‛ an -r-anzsce scm o the Emestone underpin- oher fashes benind the »• atr Jwnge (deh: YOONpbeh.*e
- ' 136 -a~ E--a-9s Pa neas ot thar zreat uurid o create ■ the -s ri- dhsta-mem Tomg 0ne,‛ » compared 16 Ade
sme - ae-meee=-
— -n. a -dnc ac . ia- keszn. Pan f ^^77 Pa -tch has (CoomelteFeder’pamske teW pgrpnses tertapdreta "
-r-r k tbe cod at ite a— bated for Ite—M hsksmesbeduzhsspeh Frem Auskin
ta Ta a- . has and ■ ■ X stadezs CK» ts foundine 25 am at clag‛- H A Cass, drecte, n the OTsanegcated ane De
— —a - Coocho cozr,. ALm the zeograpbers aod 2eo- rears ago abd cutent works Cciogoe dale-5 rLngbeCo-
. - ... -gse fa. tow caJed the platea “xh more than « schoois and logbe" c, heals, "Colozne
E., a- —2 2-. an .ww'kltaiRwewAeK.ate receoth diershed dtslac"
" - 2" Comanchean ntatOM beds operatins throozh tbe fooding >t ■ L:. . _
217*2 HReuCe -aele tha >■ adcma s- Pa *Hamgsere KOLLE ALAAV}
hdin, k6 «tha rarit amoeg Laods -bere Hcabavd o.CopejH
rA.. p. .. ... _ the eow the sbeep and the enat T2s p2.2 92 3067104
* * -2 w rour smnt -om ter1 -iproniding instalmert finaocingd-
r- wd- -r* -v -t- - " ' - "" - 2" - -g-v .nmg- . emc -stie
t. E.c.. , ■< . . as « comparabktty from tbe T- 1 P S 0 e C
1 n 3 " 965 c.—. a .. ..Sal and rejated costs in‘any aporon-i
' •-57 ... ... . edschoni a the Unned Stzces
.. ... __.... 'r r• human E.nC at dinz there . , . ■. .
“ " fa ...... "Undetthasde= plan.. f the.
Cecran . e-ard Came: the hame the area selected schocj does pi already
e- and . - • a- arcar - 3 comes from a member oBtt o ertabliebed TutmePlan.. 660 = E25.3 —e
'O' - "a Eewards famiy one Haden throqdh ats catake paredts may bas 2nd • aT-scci.eerui
« cau o.-a -i FAua-d. aho -as a coctrener- make drect apobcatioin to the acewoamCeoepeCag
-i‛ 9l, Ct M ar— Gtas Ca-e- FaN P-
art. Ia Germ 2 k derses roe toe
old Mdle High German wort,
rertirkene—literally, "ass
poring (drek)". This does act.
—a pane -euas a -ana credns aw name at te me financieg e educatsce costs xrkteureedxthrkdhadmak
p-3n: Eas sout and Wee piatea area to Euards County 1 exPeeed to e'pand tremmen- 2-ndie
f-rm a poor no-- c B-at K a par the hee land c meedtaPedetxelgt
Coun marked oe the The Cou-ty was.Amenansboroned ** to "4+-
Tew Hgh*ay Map as geo- erated in 1854 and ozamizedi m 00 5e D0 . Pfe - piip* ,c — 11 , .
capkca center ti Trut is zanz Peze expenses the 132- 40 4 _ spendin mnee tine a ar cot-17 o more stockbodera ~ M- managemedt have agreed be Its different with the threat-
________ 5 academi ar accordng - • " " - *■ coed srres and ■ coo thea the same discinsure sbouldrt ened railway strike All the pm-
rum ____________________________. prmy and msder-tradinz rules 2 May 1*- President Ken-cedures possible under the Rail-
that appiy to eomnpanies listed c bec ’ labor " management ad way Labor Act for settling a dis-
exchahzes visor committee recommended pule haw been exhausted in an
70-
Schoois art permrted to crder ket ender SEC superv isiod About
rises i the speculative sock
sprees of 191—aod seme at tbe
- ne disastrors and some times
scandakous Spa to the first half
of in: The fastest dmbs and
drzes dros tiita came a fedg
Eng issves the kimd that rest
Ested ce exchanges bat are tried
ot toer the courter.
E was tbe OTC that dre- mach
c the fre o the Securtbes a Ex
change Cocmissna ubent asked
Crog-oas Mt moot for meu pou-
ers orer srxk tadnz the per-
s coantry as they coie were they remain
force. Last vear ’ they operated over 215 -
■ - any «ter Fretch reguresome form of 5-
ape anyutere nanc al assiscance," und Robert
hargaining between a unions • hich icome under a dif-
try EropThewjon and management is an tent taw the Railway Labor
Traders Assoca American myth The railroad Labor Act
•2 find it out if they Rut the principle—pse need for
peu rues asked ty thety to strake Thursday responsiveness to the general sel-
JULY A 291. aould compei al securtes Evem in an ihdustry not greatly fare—is the same, for it boils
Denton Count tvpazers • " firms .- be -cj te NASD or someaffectint the geperal welfare un- down to. ne thing the
pay E‘X‘ ess - *5 mpuard ..... self-pe -z ann zhtez re- io-management dea nes aren't ment must not sit by helplessly
tv state « — nmam fouodaice qurements foe emtering tbe bus- qute free They are covered by while a strike jeopardizes the na-
schocl procram that they dd a hess and zne SEC stncter con- vanus government regulations tion.
1952 Axma by the State Board trois oer dhe concerns and ter inc odinz the Taft-Hanley Act of So far Kennedy hasni followed
of Edacaton x" a neuoundatacd empizyes 1947 up is committee's suggestion
pn gram budett e S= “& The SEC aliso uants some 1600 But "hen a vttal industry shut- with proposals at his oun to Con-
peaduced the ta andustria and ui ty companses dow threatens to be a national sress Rui so far he hasn't faced
F^^xt the St-K 2953 shzie u tanks and insurance ompanies emercenc —as a rad strike would a situation under the Taft-Hart-
more thae t maerc .xt det ; uhlszed socks are traded be-00 ptesident would sit hack ley law which would require him
u“ aod bquds Shoppers are over tbe coutter hose Erms wnh acd bet * happen Lapor and to seek that new power
serve, -toch repods w *3ek». am
» coccrmer
Tranng st' » se“. orer 'toe
entter compared uzh toe pock-
MEMBE AvDn BUREAU OF cucuaTONS
NOTKCE TO PUBLX - Amy erroneou refecnem uoce the charecter
reputefios at standing of em ’ re, individuei or corporafon arA
pares ivobed, and especialy
toe pew issoes
And a toe last ha e INI
when toe soek exchanges were
-at stroeg remneries Ercmn the
ous reached nlune 192 tradnz
•ter toe eoumter azzed aed s
prices at ha stocks re' aver-
a;« -
Rh
rp A ee
,3
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 288, Ed. 1 Monday, July 8, 1963, newspaper, July 8, 1963; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1517639/m1/4/: accessed July 2, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.