Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 274, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 9, 1952 Page: 3 of 10
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Foxworth-Gdlbraith
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MRS. INDIA BOWARDS
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BUS CENTER
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ALLEN BUTANE GAS AND*
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EQUIPMENT COMPANY
Dial C-2531
South Side Square
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The New
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CONTINENTAL
TRAILWAYS
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201 S. Elm
Degree Awarded
To Mina Darden
SEE THE AMAZING
AMANA TOMORROW
I the
him
den
loll-
ops
to the Gulf of Mexico.
The group visited the Davey our trips. It was a vacation as
Crockett National Forest, at Crock- well as an education."
DR. NORWOOD F. MOORE
OPTOMETRIST
THE OPENING OF NEW OFFICES
AT 205 NORTH ELM ST. .
(Ground Floor)
Office Hours
9-12 and 1-5 except Thursday 9.12
Telephone C-7214
UP
TO
U.S. CHOICE
BEEF
By SAM DAWSON
NEW
speare Studies at Stratford-on-the-
Avon.
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NEW YORK up — Dr. Doctor?
Yes, that’s right. Dr. Daniel Wal-
lace Doctor has just graduated
from the New York Medical Col-
lege.
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JACK HODGES
■ack of Post Office
Central 6224
Japan has three
of mountains.
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CONTINENTAL TRAILWAYS
SILVERLINER SERVICE
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YOU ALSO RECEIVE A REGISTERED CARD WITH EACH
AMANA THAT ENTITLES YOU TO PURCHASE ALL OF
YOUR FROZEN FOODS
AT WHOLSALE PRICES.
One of the most widely-traveled
classes of its type in the history
of North Texas State College will
end a 3,000 mile "course" Thurs-
day with a tour of the State Fish
Hatchery below the Lake Dallas
dam.
The class is labeled as a field
laboratory in conservation educa
tion and is taught by Dr. Robert
Sherman of the NT Department of
Biology. All except one of its 15
members are graduate students
working on masters degrees.
The semi-final trip on the sched-
ule was made today, as the class
toured the Agriculture Experiment
Sub-Station, five miles northwest
of Denton.
longest trip of the six weeks
course was an 11-day trip that took
End Roving Course
ett; the Southland Paper Mills at
Lufkin, the East Texas Salt Water
Disposal Co. at Kilgore and the
Magnolia Gas Refinery at Kilgore;
studied stream pollution and wa-
■ .
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returned last fall
2. Checking accounts for Mother's convenience
3. Loans to Dad for all purposes.
First State Bank
Of Denton
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
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‘Footloose’ Students
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CroM-sectioa at left shows inner diaphragm with
safety valve, lllostratioa at right draws how safety
valve doses if tire Nows oat, retaining a large
volume of air.
OawitfM. ,WS1. Iks nsmsee She S BeMar <A
Sts
Close sectina e» WR thee
■sag tsiiiHcsi, Bms
if a nail MMtme dbe a
tire samenB Xasanss
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Wednesday, July t, IM]
I - ------------------------
the Magnolia Oil Refinery
Beaumont, and went aboard
shrimp trawler as guests of the
Marine Biological Station, Texas
Game and Fish Commission, at
Rockport.!.
Among other places visited dur-
ing the course were the Grapevine
Dam and Reservoir project, the
Ixxtis Bromfield Ranch near Wich-
ita Falls, the Soil Conservation
Service’s land ultilization project
in Wise County and the Texas Re
search Foundation at Renner.
“We’ve had a great six weeks,"
the group through East Texas and commented Dr. Sherman. “Every-
body in the class seemed to enjoy
Edwards left her typewriter to
battle for peace. She joined the
Democratic women’s division in
1944 and is now its > - -
director. Her husband, Herbert T.Jsaid his campaign is based largely
— ■ ~ on ‘ repudiation" of President Tru-
man.
“The national Democratic Party
has been seized by a ruthless and
corrupt gang of political spoilsmen
who have nothing in common with
the true principles of democracy,"
Smith declared.
‘The Truman, Boyles, McGraths,
3 and McKinneys,
i their swarms of influence peddlers,
4 Mow AvailoW® j
Sidewatts
Miss Frances K Darden, assist- I
ant professor of English at Texas
State College for Women, has re-
“ D degree from the
University of Birmingham, Eng-1
land.
Miss Darden
" ’ id,
WHERE NOMINEES WILL BE PICKED—Eyes of the nation are focused this week
on Chicagd’s International Amphitheater, above, where Republican national conven-
tion opened Monday. The Democrats also will meet here.
5
AT. a.
White
fOorid’s First and Oily
Blowout-Safe, Puncture-Seating
Tubeless Tire!
Skin Dry? Itchy?
Oil-rich* Resinol softens
and soothes. Relief lasts
'Contoans LanoAh
RESINOL01"™"
if the squsd-
. May Jr , of
619 Pearl St.; Lt. Jack L. Thur-
man, son of Mr. and Mrs L. J.
Thurman, of 800 W Hickory St.;
Richard E. Allen of 902 W. Hick-
ory; James R Westbrook, of 215
Stroud; John E Tabor, of 1130
Fraige; Raymond H. Smith, of
Route 2, and Floyd E. Pennell, of I
631 Texas, all all-man ipptehtices. f
Also at Seattle, with Fleet Air •
Service Squadron 705, are Pay
Clerk Herbert J. Nelles, 928 S.
Ixicuet and Aviation Storekeeper!
Clyde Wood, Box 271, Denton.
Both squadrons are based at
the Naval Air Station, Grand
Prairie. I
v '-I
___
today
“cruise'
If.
The Lake Dallas men—Airman ;
Ivan C. Bounds and Aviation
Machinist 3rd Cl. William T.
Coulter, are members of Patrol
Squadron 701.
Denton members pl
ron are Lt. Robert T.
C. E. MILLER
(20th Anniversary)
Writing all types of insurance. Specialising in
Automobile Liability Coverage.
PHONE C-2215 104 McCRARY BLDG.
hove always wonted ogebset fte1
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Lady Veep?
Ex-Reporter
Wins Backing,
CHICAGO OB—Mrs. India Ed
wards queen bee of the women
in the Democratic party, may score
another “first" for women in the
nation's political history.
She has been proposed for nom-
ination for vice-president of the
United States by Mary Norton,
who served in the House from New
Jersey for more than 30 years.
Mrs. Norton, now retired, has held
a greater variety of party jobs
than any other woman Democrat
Mrs. Edwards has something of i w t w t
the same brown-eyed fire that!! Iaqw] I wa w IhW
Mrs Norton had in her hey day j VJlVClll V/ vlfvv
15 years ago. Mrs. Edwards was I B '
a well known Midwestern news /AC
paper woman for 20 years, work- j VI ViHIlulUdlC
ing for the ultra-Repubucan Chi-
cago Tribune.
Her aon, John Holbrook Moffett,'
was killed serving with the Air
I “Tennessee has 12 -12 billion tons
of coal reserves
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j 1<J IllllllOil /Xilltfi lC aI13 nllU LU
some 22,000 of them annually.
I The political shindigs this month
in Chicago are spectacular, but
only a drop in the bucket to what
goes on around the country.
Trade, professional, civic, social
and other organizational get-togeth-
ers this year will cost around 216
million dollars in hotel rooms,
meals, entertainment, cabs, tips— ceived a Ph D
land the little woman’s shopping. -----
I Railroads and buses will take in
some 45 million dollars more. And
the airlines are out to get 15 mil-, from England, where she studied
lion dollars in convention travel, for two years at Birmingham Uni-
Gasoline stations sell an unestimat-1 vwsity and, the Institute of Shake-
ed number of gallons to convention
goers in their cars.
. Big conventions like the Shrinera
I and the American Legion draw
I around 10O;0C0 persons But the av-
i erage convention is much smaller—
" around 350, the World Convention
! Dates, trade publication in the field,
I estimates. And about 4.500 of the
| meetings have less than 100 in at-
| tendance
What to do with the women—
I about one-third of the men now
bring their wives along—is a chief
1 problem, according to the Manual
I on Conventions and Meetings by
| George Dahl. He says the best
1 thing is to get them out of the ho-
; tel during the session hours—cer-
tainly the first day. and on trips j
as far from the convention site
as possible.
Smith, i fo mer county judge
was ■
OB — Ameri- chairman of the 1910 Democratic
state convention and a state sen-
ator from 1940 to 1942.
He served as lieutenant governor
from 1942 to 1946.
Washington needs ■ elean-up, not
o a “cover-up,” says John Lee Smith,
Force in World War II, and Mrs. former lieutenant governo oi Tex-
as who is running for the office of
congressman at large,
Campaigning in Denton Tuesday,
. ....
wuixs owg,
UIRI Is e Hre ee cemgletely safe
that it marks the beghMiiag off
« now ere la highway aafaty. Awy
tire, even of the tub slim, pun stare
sealing typo, wiN Mew oat If the
body le torn opeq by a large sharp
object. But the new Fireetoae Sa*
1__ preaM hue a patented ceaotnrtMaa
that gives yea the protoctiea yea
See fo Per
Cook's Paints
Builder's Hardware
_____~
SPACE THREE
-■
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THE DENTON RE CO R D *~C'HtR O N 1 C U~B ----
,r=*r"' Air Reservists
Training At
Seattle Base
' Il
■
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Navsl sir reservists from D«n
ton snd Lake Dallas sre in Seattle
on a summer training
’’ that will last until July |
Entertainers
Give Kiwanians
Change Of Pace
Kiwanians put aside politics snd
war for awhile Tuesday and turned
their attention to music and
laughter.
Four North Texas State College
students provided the amusements
I under the direction of the Kiwanis
Classification Committee. They
ter sanitation in Houston; toured were Miss Barbara Lewis, vocal-
the Dow Chemical^Co.^at Freeport, I ist; Jack Chambliss, vocalist, and
st1 Dick Schiebel, juggler. They were «
■ G.“.T“ied ‘,y p‘”“'Jota M" Planning Is
Floyd Graham was in charge of #
the program. Brent Jackson was |„l
chairman of the day 111106316 JOB
Dr. George Wham of the Texas
Stat* College for Women faculty
was introduced as a new member. „ „
Kiwanians will have their mid- ! NEW YORK
month board meeting next Tues- I cans *ove conventions. And the ho-
day after the regular luncheon- I tels, transportation and other serv-
aession. ”1 *ce companies love the more than
------------------------------------113 million Americans who go to
The library of Congress has ac-
quired a printer’s copy of the
Lincoln Douglas Debates and also
a letter from Abraham Lincoln to
the Chicago Press and Tribune re
questing two sets of that news-
paper's reports on the debates.
I
■ <<'
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I A MEV T
MrMlwla I ■ Law
.« HOME & AUTO
hires. Tro4e your present tires for
positive safety today!
Here's How This Tiro EliniliMrtes^i^
Dangers of Blowouts and^unch^^'
With each purchase of an Amana Food
Frggztr. Thg amount you receive depends on
the size Amana you buy..
r «’ ’
executive. Smith, a Lubbock county resident,
now
Edwards, works for the State De-
partment.
In her years at headquarters
Mrs. Edwards has added a second
string to her bow. She wants to
see more and more women in
political life and more of them
holding down jobs. She* has been ,
successful in getting many of them
1 “The Truman, Boyles, McGraths,
McHales and McKinneys, with
i their swarms of influence peddlers,
I deep-freeze recipients, bribe takers,
, tax dodgers and fixera can never
be looked upon as true representa-
tives of the party of Jefferson,
Jackson and Wilson.’
“The Democratic Party’s nation-
al organization needs a hot wash
I of disinfectant, not a white waah
I of soft soap"
S1IIIU1, .« <UT.
* of Throckmorton County,
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 274, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 9, 1952, newspaper, July 9, 1952; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1348651/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.