The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 45, Ed. 1 Friday, April 26, 1957 Page: 2 of 6
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TEXAS
FRIDA*, APRIL 26, 1957
: I
fcONTE|Tsl
roci^
HEDITORIAL
Union made goods in Denison
Local members ot unions, headed by the local typographical
Union No. 333, are pushing a campaign for members of the
various unions in the city, to demand union made goods as they
are advertised in newspapers displaying the union label. The
Press has been waited on by representatives of the local union,
which body is composed of some 40 unions with a total member-
ship of above 3,000. With the advent of numerous members of
the Katy family coming to Denison the total is expected to be
increased by several score.
One of the delegations waiting on the Press stated: We
are visiting local merchants to get them to push their union-
made goods in newspapers in the city which carry the union
label in each issue. We feel that union men should support union-
made goods, and logically union-made goods should be adver-
tised in a union newspaper.'
The Press has been in the union since it was established
29 years ago, and the publisher has been a member of the local
typographical union since 1905, and is the only charter member
so far as is known who can claim a like tenure of membership.
The Press has from time to time urged that union-made
goods be demqnded. The value of such a policy will inure to
the good for both the seller and the buyer. The merchandise made
by union hands can always be depended on to be the very best
in every way, as only journeymen tailors and apprentices do the
work and always their trade label is on the garments. Mer-
chandise thus sold stands all the tests the trade demands and
the merchant can rest assured the house stands back of the
goods sold him. The merchant in turn passes on this assurance
to the customer. The union man is willing, if he is loyal to the
union to pay the union price for his goods because he receives
Denison wn-ages. Always the trades union is dedicated to a higher
standard of living, a higher standard of citizenship, and a high-
er standard of merchandise as it is represented in the union made
goods.
The local campaign, which has been silently going on to
push union-made goods, is believed by the members of the
local unions, to be the best way to introduce better days in ev-
ery way in Denison by pushing the principles of unionism as ap-
plied to union-made goods from employer to employee and
from the local merchant's angle as to stocking such goods and
pushing the sale through union newspapers where possible.
It may be said that because an employer pays the union
scale is not the whole answer, as the union idea is to have such
loyalty toward union men and their unions, that the merchants,
the union organizations, whether clerks, boiler makers, barbers
or any other of the crafts, will display the union label in a well
located spot in the places of business where union men are sup-
posed to be employed. The union member thinks more of his
union membership than a card in his pocket and a salary which
has been agreed on between employer and employee. The test,
union men make is, to have all business concerns, newspapers,
printers, stores, who are entitled to union membership cards dis-
play the union label, the union card or other visible evidence
that the men in that institution are working under the protection
of a management that is not ashamed to display the fact that
such a concern is affiliated with the real aristocracy of today—
the laborer who not only creates the tools of prosperity but also
maintains value through his steady employment. Value is a spir-
itual thing and does not inhere in goods on the shelf. Labor has
long since been recognized as the one who holds together the
markets of the world because labor earns by the sweat of its
brow, and after creating a tool, he takes the money earned as
a salary and the goes straightway and purchases that tool for
his own use, thus providing incomes that make for the financial
welfare of us all.
This is the circle of our economy and prosperity is in pro-
portion to the wage scale in a community.
THE DENISON PRESS
“Entered as second class matter May„_15, 1947, ..at the Post Office
at Denison, Texas, under the act of March 3, 1879.”
Telephone HO 5-3223 Office of Publication, 205 W. Main
Issued Each Friday
Dedicated to clean and responsive government, to individual and civic
integrity; to individual and civic commercial progress.
LeRoy M. Anderson, Sr.................................. Editor and Publisher
LeRoy M. Anderson, Jr..... ...................... Plant Superintendent
Carey L, Anderson ............................................ Auditor-Buyer
Mary Lou Cox ................................................................ Society Editor
Raymond Martin ............................................. Intertype Operator
linn Pescaia ..................... .............................................. Apprentice
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By the year .................................................................................. $2.60
One year in advance ........... ...................................... $2.00
Six months in advance ................................................................... $1.00
_________(Outside county add 25c each six months)
Liar
iM’CAPITOL
DENISON and GRAYSON COUNTY
Grayson county, accredited by Texas Almanac 1955
of having the "most diversified economy of any Texas
county, with income from crops, livestock, manufacturing
and trade, oil, tourists and recreation seekers."
Blackland soils and terrain in the southeast, grand
prairies characteristics in the southwest, gray lands on
divide in central section; sandy lands and hilly topo-
graphy in north part along Red River. Drains to Red
River on north, Trinity on south. Post oak, walnut, hickory,
pecan, elm, bois d arc. Oil, brick clay, cemenf material,
silica.
Lake Texoma has six million acre feet capacity, many
bays for fishing, boating on large scale, lake 1300 miles
around perimeter, and declared the ninth ranking in
capacity among the world's reservoirs. Lake four miles
north of Denison.
County has population of 70,000; 53.4 per cent urban;
90.9 per cent Anglo-Americans; 8.7 per cent negro; .04
per cent Latin American. Annual rainfall 37.55 inches;
temperature averages Jan. 43 deg., July 84 deg., mean
annually 65 deg.
AUSTIN — Reorganization of
the Insurance Commission is a
supercharged issue again.
More than a month ago the
Senate passed a bill that would
sweep out present commissi.ners
and allow the governor to name
a new board. But the House State
Afiairs Committ e shunt d it oif
to an unfriendly subcommittee.
Some thought it would die
ihe.e. Then a verbal battle broke
out between John Osorio, chair-
man of tlie commission, and Gov.
Price Daniel.
Osorio, who was appointed by
Former Gov. Allan Shivers, will
lose his job if Governor Daniel’s
reorganization plan goes through.
In answer to questions from
Rep. Jerry Sadler, Osorio said
that Daniel bad offered to help
him find another job if he would
support reorganization. Osorio
replied that he felt such a “deal”
would violate his oath of office.
Osorio also said, in answer to
Sadler’s questions, that the gov-
ernor apparently did not oppose
his confirmation by the Senate
after the Commission had closed
down the ICT Insurance Co.
Governor Daniel called the
charges false. He said he had ex
pected personal attacks to result
from his efforts for reform. Then
he declared he would fight “even
harder for cleanup and reorgan
ization,”
In reply to the governor’s ac-
cusation of a “false” charge,
Osorio’ offered to take a lie de-
tector test, if Daniel would.
House committee members,
meanwhile, took new looks at the
reorganization bill, admitted to
being in a tight spot. Sentiment
is reportedly very evenly divided
Annua] Sessions Favored
With time running out on this
session, the prospect of annual
sessions in the future is gaining
favor.
Senate gave preliminary ap-
proval to a measure for annual
sessions and $7,500-a-year salar-
ies for legislators. House passed
a similar version with only $4,800
a year pay.
Sessions on odd - numbered
years would be as now. On even-
numbered years a short budget
appropriation session would be
held.
Measure is a constitutional
amendment which would require
approval of the voters in Novem-
ber, 1958.
Slum Bd] Moves
Texas cities would be able to
bet federal aid for cleaning up
blighted areas under a bill given
final House passage.
Senate State Affairs Commit-
tee blackballed the same bill 9
to 8. But supporters gained an
unusual victory when the Senate
voted 23-6 to accept the report
of the committee minority.
Opponents attacked as uncon-
stitutional the provision allowing
a city to condemn property for
sale to private parties. Backers
said the bill had safeguards to
prevent abuse of condemnation
powers.
Segregation Up to Senate
Enactment of 8 bills designed
to preserve school segregation is
in the hands of the Senate.
Sponsors predicted an easy ma-
jority in the upper house. How-
ever, two South Texans whose
constituencies are already integ-
rated promised opposition. Sen.
Abraham Kazen Jr. of Laredo and
Sen. Henry B. Gonzales of San
Antonio indicated they might try
to talk the bills to death in an
end-of-session filabuster.
Measures already given House
approval would (1) allow school
boards to assign pupils to schools,
(2) exempt children from compul-
sory attendance at integrated
schools, (3) authorize state to pay
tuition for pupils to segregated
non-sectarian schods where no
segregated publi • : chool is avai -
able, (4) authorize school boards
to designate schools as “White,”
“Negro” or “integrated,” (5) dir-
ect the attorney general to de-
fend anti-segregation suits r gainst
the state, (6) requiie registration
of persons paid to work for integ-
ration, (7) prohibit public em-
ployment of NAACP members
and (8) ban future integration
without a local school district
vote.
Teacher Money Sought
Two bills aimed at gaining
lunds for teacher pay raises prob-
ably will be debated this week.
Each has gained committee ap-
proval in both houses.
One would double tuition at
state colleges for an estimated
$10,000,000 more in revenue.
Another would make one per cent
of the permanent school fund
available for current spending. It
would bring in $7,000,000 to
$11,000,000.
Added to a predicted $27,000,-
000 surplus in the general fund,
passage of the two bills would
bring to about $47,000,000 the
amount available for teacher
raises.
Teachers originally asked a
$399-a-year boost, plus improve-
ment in the schedule of increases
for experience. This would cost
a total of $67,000,000.
Governor Daniel suggested a
compromise whereby teachers
ABOUT YOUR HEALTH
A w**kly public ••rvic« (••fur* from
tk« T**o» Stot* D*portm*nt of HNltH.
HEN9Y A. NOLLE, M.D., CemmiasUrwr
DENISON
81-71-54
YEARS AGO
EDITOR’S NOTE—The fol-
lowing accounts of incidents in
the city were taken from :he
files of the old Denison News by
Miss Dulce Murray, whose fa-
ther, the late B. C. Murray,
established the first newspaper
in Denison.
GCI CONTROLLERS—Without the expert control given on the
ground by Perrin radar directors it would be impossible
to land as many aircraft by instrument under adverse wea-
ther conditions. On left, CAA director Mr. William Golds-
berry gives a pilot his approach instructions while 1st Lt.
J. L. Wilson plots the course of another aircraft. (USAF Photo)
Record number new
landing approaches
PAFB Jan 1 - Mar 31
A record number of instrument
landing approaches were made
this year during the period from
January 1 to March 31 when over
3500 Instrument Flight Rule
(IFR) approaches were made at
Perrin. Two thousand of these j requested to make available my
Denison Press
Denison, Texas
Dear Sir:
In response to the general feel-
ing that today’s boys are in need
of better training in the funda-
mentals of baseball, I have been
were made when weather restrict-
ed the ceiling to less than 3000
feet.
This phenomenal number is
made possible by rigid schedul-
ing and hard work by the local
CAA, GCI (ground controlled in-
tercept) named “Base Hit” for
pilot identification and approach
control.
During a period of IFR condi-
tions the pilot is given a take off
and landing time which he must
would get the basic raise, but not | strictly obey. Every five minutes
the experience increase. Teacher
spokesmen have indicated prob-
able acceptance.
Women Gain Ground
Women’s clubs won a modified
victory with Senate passage of a
much-patched separate property
bill. It would give married wom-
en authority to manage their own
estates without husband’s con-
sent.
A number of restrictive amend-
ments were put in before passage.
One would require a woman be
21 before assuming estate man-
agement “to prevent a 14-year-
old girl from getting married and
throwing away her inheritance.”
REA Compromise Okayed
A bill designed to smooth over
the squabble between private and
cooperative utilities has been vot-
ed out of committee in both
houses.
Bill stems from a recent Su-
preme Court decision limiting ac-
tivities of REA co-ops.
Proposed changes in law would
allow a co-op to continue to serve
old customers in an area after it
is annexed by a city and add new
customers where private power is
not available.
Short Snorts
After two months delay the
Senate okayed the House-passed
Pool bill requiring a runoff in
special elections for U.S. senator
and congressman - at - large , . .
Legal Security Life Insurance
Company won the right to con-
tinue business after a show cause
Hearing before the Board of In-
surance Commissioners. Board
called some of the company as-
sets overvalued, but did not find
the one-third impairment of cap-
ital required by statute for dissol-
ution . . . Friends of Speaker
Waggoner Carr are pushing him
for a second term. His only com-
ment is that he’s too busy now
advance^ T°WN 0RDERS for classified ads are strictly payable in
ERRORS: The Denison Press will not be responsible for more than
one incorrect insertion.
a plane is scheduled to land and
take off.
If a pilot “goofs” on his ap-
proach time the aircraft just five
minutes behind him will create a
“pile up” and the system will
break down. Training Group Op-
erations officer said this record
is made possible only through
teamwork of all concerned.
A.n indication of how traffic
at Perrin has increased this year
is seen in comparing the year of
1956 figures with the first three
months of 1957. In ’56 only 6033
IFR departures were recorded
and if the first three months fig-
ures are projected throughout
1957, over 12,000 IFR departures
will be recorded. Of course, with
good weather IFR flying is re-
duced.
How busy is Perrin compared
to other bases? One large metro-
politan airport in the area had 4,-
431 IFR approaches in one year;
another only 2,476. Perrin had
more IFR approaches in a three
months period than these “busy”
airports had in a whole year.
experience ami training as a ma-
jor-leaguer.
The Mort Cooper Baseball
Camp will open June 16 at Kerr-
ville, Texas, where we have been
able to secure the ideal facilities
of Schreiner Institute.
There will be three sessions, of
three weeks each, beginning on
June 16, July 7 and July 28, re-
spectively, for boys 9 through 18
years.
I will personally instruct each
boy attending these sessions in
the fundamentals of baseball.
We know your readers will be
interested in this opportunity. De-
tails may be obtained by writing
to Mort Cooper Baseball Camp
at either Post Office Box 428,
Kerrville, Texas, or Post Office
Box, 9309, Houston, Texas.
Sincerely,
-Mort Cooper
April 5, 1878
Major McGaughey, who live,
on Iron Ore, said two wagon
sheets, with which he covers his
hot house at night, weie stolen
a few nights ago. He says the coun-
try is full of petty thieves and
they will steal anything they can
get their hands on and carry
away.
Phil Ledriek of this city sold
a large bill of furniture and
crockery to folks living in Wi.ii.e-
wright.
1 he City Council, seven mem-
bers present, voted five to two
to put the Chambers Patent Light-
ning Rod and Insulators on the
Public School building, for one
hundred dollars, the bid of the
American Lightning Rod Co., at
sixty-five dollars being rejected
by the same vote.
Fifteen carloads of lumber
were shipped to Whitewright
from this city.
The farmers southwest of town
have organized a vigilance com-
mittee for mutual protection
against tramps, who they say are
committing many petty thefts.
The vigilantes are provided with
double barrel shotguns and pro-
pose to do their duty. It will not
be very healthy for tramps
around that neighborhood.
Economic
Highlights
4ny erroneous statement reflecting upon the character or reputation
of any Persons will be gladly corrected if brought to the attention
of the publisher. The Denison Press assumes no responsibility for
srror in advertising insertions beyond the price of the advertisement
B.OX NUMBERS, Care Denison Press, will be given advertisers de-
siring blind addresses.
ACCOUNTS are acceptable from persons having telephone
listed in their own name and upon agreeing to remit when bill is
presented. 10 per cent will be added on unpaid accounts after 30
days from date of first insertion.
4ATIONM stvttTMMt MMHMMMW
NATIONAL EDITORIAL
I as'TocITatloln
y J o
REGULAR MEMBER
ernam
NM VMM
TEXAS (aPBESS»
ASSOCIATION
7957
There is no doubt that the bur-
den of taxation has become the
over-riding domestic problem in
this country—and that this prob-
lem is dominating the thinking of
the American people. Bulging
Congressional mail-bags testify to
that fact.
The reason is found in the
opening sentence of an unusual
article on taxation by Dr. F. A.
Harper, which appears in the Ap-
ril issue of The Freeman: “Taxes
are now taking your earnings for
almost twenty minutes out of
each hour of work, if you are a
typical United States citizen.”
Then Dr. Harper goes into some
deeper aspects of the significance
of taxes-—aspects which have to
do with their influence on the
liberty of the people.
He provides this definition:
“Taxes are the economic burden
we impose upon one another by
means of force through govern-
ment, in attempting to deal with
those human differences which
we refuse to tolerate. They are
the expenses incurred when some
persons try to control or change
the conduct of other persons by
means of the government as a
monopoly agent of force.” This
matter of human differences 13
at the heart of that definition, tf
for politicking . . . U.S. Dept..
of Agriculture has approved con-
tinuance of emergency feed pro-
gram in 119 Texas counties . . .
The Thanksgiving snafu whereby
Texas celebrates the last Thurs-
day in November and the rest of
the country the fourth Thursday
is apparently to be cleared up. A
J Bill making the Texas holiday
conform passed both houses.
all people were alike, there would
hardly he any need for govern-
ment at all—-everyone then would
instinctively, voluntarily and co-
operatively do what everyone
else approved. But no two peo-
ple are exactly alike, either phy-
sically or mentally, and in a
great many instances, as we all
know, the differences are enor-
mous. Hence government — and
Hence taxes.
The problem, as Dr. Harper
puts it, is to “. , . learn how to
deal with these human differ-
ences so that they fructify rath-
er than sterilize attainment.”
That goal illustrates a danger that
is inherent in the institution of
government—and in the tax sy-
stems that government must have.
For, to quote him again, “In a
completely governed society . . .
everything that is not compulsory
is forbidden.” In other words, a
completely authoritarian govern-
ment knows no limit on its pow-
ers whatsoever. These restraints
are felt everywhere, and they ap-
ply to what is good in society
and the individual as well as to
what is bad.
Dr. Harper, of course, does not
believe that we have that kind of
government. But he does believe
We have been moving in that dir-
ection — primarily because we
have gone farther and farther,
through the agency of govern-
ment, to attempt to rid society of
many basic human differences,
and the cost, which is paid in
taxes, lias risen correspondingly.
He traces the trend of taxation
in this country over many years.
His analysis shows that the pro-
portion of our productive effort
which has been absorbed in the
attempt to control the actions of
one another “. . . has grown fab-
ulously and dangerously. . And
that is why taxes today take
about twenty minutes out of each
hour of work.
Dr. Harper comes to his point
with two simple but far-reaching
questions: “Has the average per-
son in the United States become
so much more corrupt and evil
over the years that we must
spend one-third of our time in
controlling each other? Does the
present generation require six
times as much governing as their
grandparents and great-grand-
parents did?” It is obvious that
he feels the answers to these
questions are No—and that our
failure to provide the right an-
swers is a primary reason for our
current tax problem.
The Boston Latin School, es-
tablished in 1635, was the first
public school in America.
April 5, 1890
A wonderful chick was hatched
out Hy a hen belonging to Dr. El-
lis. It was about the same size
as the rest of the brood, but had
growing from the back, close to
the tail, an excrescense which in
appearance bore a marked re-
semblance to a human hand, or
more nearly that of a monkey.
The hand was attached to a wrist
about an inch long which grew
naturally out of the body near
the tail and consisted of a clear-
ly defined palm and five fingers
united between the palm and sec-
ond joints by a web like tissue
similar to that which unites the
toes of a duck. The chick was, in
other respects, of normal struc-
ture except that it had four toes
on each of its feet in place of
five. The bird was of course of
great curiosity to those who were
collected to look at it, and as the
doctor was anxious to have it live
he took so much care of it that
it died. It lived five days, how-
ever, and is now preserved, hand
and all, in alcohol.
T. J. Calhoun of the MK&T
freight department, who was re-
turned at Tuesday’s election as
alderman of the fourth ward, is
the first railway employee ever
to be elected to the city council
in Denison.
Reclining chairs are among the
possible accomodations of the
MK&T passenger service out of
this city, in the near future.
Their introduction on the road
this spring is talked of.
April 5, 1905
President Theodore Roosevelt,
who arived here this afternoon,
must have been particularly im-
pressed at his reception in the
first city visited in Texas. The
crowd began to gather in the
Katy yards and on the depot plat-
form long before tile arrival of
the presidential train. Every van-
tage ground occupied. Along the
transfer platform of the freight
depot the colored population con-
gregated. The top of the ice
works, the windows of the depot
hotel, the compress platform were
packed with spectators. The after
noon was virtually declared a hol-
iday. The postoffice closed down
and the clerks of the business
houses went down to take a look
at the “big man.” The crowd at
the yards was estimated at 5000.
The MKT offices were decorated
with bunting and a large banner
was swung across the tracks. A
number of private conveyances
were covered with bunting and
flags. The train arrived on sche-
dule and there was a great rush
to see the president who appear-
ed the moment the train stopped.
very pretty feature of the
presidential reception was the
presentation of a beautiful floral
Texas flag by the school children.
The flag was presented by little
Miss Pauline Everett, who on be-
AUSTIN — Between now and
fall, insecticides in hack yard
gardens will fog the air like
smoke as the annual battle be-
tween gardener and garden pests
is joined in earnest. Farmers will
fight with spray planes and aero-
sol mists as a summer sun brings
maturity to insect - vulnerable
field crops.
Inevitably, the insect will lose.
A single breath of lethal spray, a
sing e drop on his t'ny body, a
single bite of spray-covered g.een
and his 'loom is sealed. He has a
single consolation—a grim, but
sutisiying one: his executioner,
biing human, is liable to the hu-
man disease of carelessness.
Which could mean that the man
behind the spray gun stands a fair
chance of being himself a victim
of the very weapon he employs
against the insects.
So it is that the executioner
becomes the executed. Modern
insecticides and miticides — in-
cluding the deadly “organic phos- Aj
phates”—allow slight margin for
error, linproycrly used, they have
a high toxicity for waim-blooded
nimals — including humans — as
hey have for insects.
Does their danger restrict their
use? Yes, but only to a certain
extent. Skilled doctors and chem-
ical engineers in the State Health
Department’s Division of Occupa-
tional Health, while acknowledg
ing the dangers of careless use,
say: “Any poison, however toxic,
can be used with safety when
proper precautions are taken.”
It is for this reason that the
State Department of Health, in
cooperation with the Texas Med-
ical Association and Texas Agri-
cultural Extension Service, has
undertaken to acquaint as many
persons as possible with exactly
what those precautions are. The
project has taken this form:
Kits of material on every con-
ceivable phase of insecticide us-
age, including the composition of
poisons and their relative tox-
icity, and a description of insects
and mites each is effective
against, have been made available
for physicians, veterinarians, and
county agents. Also contained in
the kits are guide sheets listing
laboratories prepared to perform
highly complicated blood tests for
cholinestrerase activity, how spec-
imens should be prepared, and
the limits of exposure to potent
insecticides.
All the information is the lat-
est obtainable, condensed to bare
essentials for quick reading and
reference. The intention is to
make the office of every doctor
and every county agent an infor- #£1
mation center in the safe use of
economic poisons.
Still, the burden of safe use
will always be on the person be-
hind the spray gun. He is the one
who must follow the instructions
on the manufacturers’ label. He
is the one who must guard other
people and livestock against wind
drifts containing spray. He is the
one who must make sure he is
gloved and masked and properly
clothed before using the poisons.
He is the one who must be alert
to spillage or inhalation.
He is the one who stands to be
executed by his own weapon.
former times the children strew-
ed with flowers the path of Wash-
ington and Lafayette, while the
band played Hail to the Chief.
Today the children of Denison,
led by the scholars of the first
free graded school in Texas, sing
in their hearts ‘Hail to the Chief’
and offer you this floral emblem
of Texas representing honor, loy-
alty and integrity.” The president
leaned over the railing of the car
and graciously accepted the pro-
ferred gift with hearty thanks:
^°u cannot know how much I
appreciate your gift,” he said.
Fire unknown origin
hits trailer camp
Supreme, Bonham
BONHAM — Fire of undeter-
mined origin completely destroy-
ed the building housing the trans-
portation department of the Su-
preme Trailer Co., at Jones Field
shortly after 9 o’clock Monday
morning.
Three trucks and all garage
equipment were destroyed in the
file that sent columns of black
smoke visible for miles billowing
into the sky,
Bob Franks, general manager
of the Supreme Trailer Co., said
that he was unable to give an
accurate estimate on the loss
Monday morning but added that
it would run in to “several thou-
sands dollars.”
“We will have to check what
equipment and supplies we had in
the building and other losses be-
, ------------------„ii uc- foie we can be able to give an
half of the Denison Public school | accurate estimate of the damage,"
children spoke as follows: "In Franks said.
■ MMH
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Anderson, LeRoy M., Sr. The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 45, Ed. 1 Friday, April 26, 1957, newspaper, April 26, 1957; Denison, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth737573/m1/2/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.