Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 275, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 10, 1952 Page: 2 of 16
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.1
Thuradaj
Thursday, July 10, 1$H
PAGE TWO
TH! DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLB
Ci
Denton Man
MARKETS
Man Dies In Chair
p »
GOP Raises
Ta
Glee
Tru
an
Ann
Puerto Rican
Her
Is New Hero
■ ’
involved
the
I
Regarding Taft, to whom he has j
4
RUN IF CHOSEN
£
good
I have told
Rayburn called for defensive mil-
of
counting on 76 time to appeal to Americans to
b,
li
Dismissed:
f
'<♦>■ unman mnii*'1
viously unseated
I
who was born Wednes-
t
J
I
..
k
from the floor. "She's not here
4
*
credentials
77/7/i
I
1
COMING SATURDAY
Now thru Saturday
Yvonne De Corio
Rod Cameron
In
FRONTIIR GAL
In Technicolor
TONIGHT - FRIDAY - SATURDAY
★
*’ •
Now thru Saturday
*
• * ■
i
*
; rii
<
Serial
j
b
f
II
>vnzfi,
* «»t ylPiP/
Crownl
Border
REX
■ uhhhI
w
■
Truman Signs
Military Build-Up
Funds Measure
Girl Cheerleaders
At Lewisville
To Attend School
James A. Erwin
Enlists In Navy
Of Republicans
By ARTHUR RDSON
CHICAGO, (T — The Republican
Dinky Cartoon
Travel, Florida
Latest News
party
Chicago by Sen
Extra
Mr. Magoo Cartoon
Samba Manis
Color Musical
Latest
News Events
be known yesterday he'll , burn said.
It was good to be back home,
the speaker declared, "after sev-
ville ( - -
main penitentiary.
■fr Today and Friday -fr
Everybody's Laughing
— But Cary
Cary Grant - Betsy Drake
"ROOM FOR ONE MORE'
1821
Arnold
,,onder’| Marshall Butler, a Taft supporter,)
i told reporters he feels Taft is still with ?9< followed by Dallas. 95;
A I _ . . - -- - U AW A .. • . Kt.. AAA. >y« . A rT-... aA
Ad
1108
Fran
JoptCl
KolomalA
DRIVE-IN THEATRE
(J
I
City co
3 nated a s
s here but
I delinquent
E terest in
The mi
’ this year
Under 1
Old Guard
(Continued trom Page 1)
— Plus —
Carton - News
Features: 1:45, 3:41;
5:37, 7:33, 9:15
TEXAS
■■181 Hamm inrnn
f
I
i
DONALO'OTONNOR
LORI NASON • AUQ UUTT
■DREAMIAND1
aninnhUTtHimiw
|
j •
duplex Hardwood
blfn.to, ettle fan.
Hee u> appre< late, ,
^Jotvn
about "the mistakes of the Ache
son-Truman Lattimore party de-
scribed in Chicago by Sen Me
who still is the titular head I earthy."
K)El McCREA
BMW Slicmu___
MaannUM MiSM taw WMa
tatata.aMCB WMiuwMa
Monoid Duck Cartoon
and Pete Smith Short
"Go on down, Genie.’ somebody
. " L a pre-1
delegate from
Stars m"
last week, but 23 were accumula-
tive from previous unreported
weeks. The county has had 48 cases
this year.
Incidence in other counties the
past week: Tarrent, 11; Dawson
and Martin. 8 each; Travis and
Victoria. 4 each; Bowie, McLennan,
and Nueces, 3 each; Anderson,
name isn’t Eisenhower or Taft.
He’s the man who gave the
tension-ridden 25th G. 0. P. con-
vention its first big relaxing belly
• laugh. He put some honest fun into
the deadly serious politics here.
His name is Senor Marcelino
Romany of Santurce, Puero Rico.
In less time than it takes to click
a castenent, Senor Romany chang-
ed the atmosphere of a national
f mendats
at a lai
Voted
work o|
new fis
he was its last presidential nomi-1 jng, snapped that be didn’t know soldier.”
nee—had been loudly booed ft | anything about that He added "I'm i
Now thru Saturday
That TA1KING MULE k
k _ dF/-' Back—
jKBnSm wd
ZSmAfiA thsfl
fl
For Rape Of Girl, 4
County district court and sentenced
to death for murder.
The stay moves the execution
date from July 11 to August 12.
The stay was granted after the
board of pardons and paroles re-
ceived a telegram from Sam Bar-
baria, Reed’s attorney, asking for
additional time to present the case
to the United States Supreme
Court. He said the extra time was
needed because Justice Hugo Black
was on vacation until end of July.
Thomas Andrew Haley, 27, died
at 12:12 am. today for the rape
of a four-year-old Fort Worth girl,
May 26, 1951.
Reed's supporters have contend-
ed the Negro was not permitted
to choose a lawyer. He was de-
fended by a court appointed lawyer
after his own attorney suffered a
heart attack. They also claimed
race prejudice, lack of time to
defense, and perjured
was involved in the
j Bexar. 83; Nueces, 78; and Tarrant,
much 65. Those counties cover some of
| the greatest population concentra-
tions in the state—Houston, Dallas,
Denton
ther to al
west of t
The pri
acre trail
city limit
Mrs. W.
tion petit)
city com
. Accepts
I stoners J
ance call
In othd
ors:
Authors
to sign J
Chalmers
437 for al
power pll
Deferr!
Fire Chi
two-way I
j departml
’ Passed!
funds frl
Renewal!
ment Fil
Fund tol
warrants!
engine pl
Emplol
the TexJ
faculty tl
Decide!
way St]
Alice Stl
does noil
on eithel
Agree]
north frl
Street al
posited I
fice, an]
is in lin]
Refer]
ter and]
Mayor |
Fire In]
the req]
make a]
terial a]
mm
AMONG THE GENERAL'S VISITORS—Among Gen.
Dwight D. Eisenhower’s visitors in Chicago, Ill., was
this tearful little miss, 10-month-old Yvonne Luttrell of
Tampa, Fla. The Republican presidential nominee aspi-
rant seems to be having a hard time trying to get the
youngster to smile. Even the large balloon is no help.
(AP Wirephoto).
1
son. Janies Peak of Lake Jackson
Miss Elizabeth Elbert of
A'yl
AUSTIN, — Governor Allan
Shivers today granted another 32-
day stay of execution to Booker
T. Reed of Dallas on recommenda-
tion of board of pardons and pa-
roles. It was the seventh stay
granted Reed.
Reed was convicted by a Dallas
Bl
IdTT T 1
IT' v” , j]
I
rancis
GOES to
west POINT I
what he's witnessed of inter-party
wrangling, but is "worried” over
Indications his favorite candidate
—Robert A Taft—"is going to get
beat.”
Television has covered not only
developments on the convention
floor and all major speeches, but
also several committee meetings.
Truman has been watching on a
large screen TV set in the White
House. Aides said he "tore himself
away from television" yesterday
to greet Secretary of State Ache-
son, returning from a tour of Eu-
rope and South America.
(■ The GOP candidates for the pres-
idential nomination, on the other
hxnd, undoubtedly have been too
busy with private conferences and
other business to watch much tele-
vision.
r What does the President think
Party has a new hero—and his ! about the convention so far? From
what he told reporters and State?
Department officials yesterday, it
shapes up like this:
For one thing, he enjoyed the
committee wrangling. With obvi-
ous relish, Truman said he ob-
served that the Republicans "did
all the quarreling they could in |
committee.”
Such committee meetings, to set- j
_ tie arguments over contested dele j
convention from one roaring with | gates, have been thrown open to
rancor to one roaring with laugh- ] radio and television for the first-*
ter 1 time
A great man. the senor. but' one! Regarding Taft to whom he has |
who doesn't look like a hero He’s j referred repeatedly as his favor
a short, potbellied, 59-year old law
yer and onetime judge, with his
name next to last on the list of |
-----1,208 delegates.
How he came to be a hero is a
remarkable story of a remarkable
night in the history of the Grand
Old Party.
The argument had followed on
and on over which delegation from
Georgia should be seated one fa
cast L, — ---------------- -
ternates. i Lane
In a talk with the Senor later I
learned, among other htings, that
while he was a judge he threw all
of Gov. Guy Tugwell’s cabinet in |
jail.
were
wn as
intent, Philadelphia. Norwe-
I, Viennese.^ Dijon atl Monte
■tre (French) "----;
I tbor ("Anthony Adverse”) streets.'two atatee.
"When they took on Texas, they
took on too damn much," Duff
"We are cutting Johnson grass yelled bnck.
and Sudan to feed the cows now,"
Robert explained
Most of the farmers who reap
any kind of harvest at all will
I ONE ATTRACTION
I AT AHO PERFECT
Qi
Truman's trip to the airport ap
pa,cut,j vauj^.i linn miss the
address vesterd iv bv Sen. Joseph j
bitter !
In the back of the hall a dozen
!Texans fell into each other’s arms
I in a delirious, back slapping, shout-1
at Sherman Monday night. He also | ing huddle Mrs. Ralph Feagin of'
Houston, a dignified woman with
graying hair, was 1
Evary
Night
nwi
a Taft I
have!
CHICAGO. iiT — Election of
Jack Porter of Houston as Re-
i national committeeman
from Texas was regarded as a
Mrs. Bliss practically ran down the Iv;vi,ws u;;cr
suit to the Texas standard mark- j (0 pjc)j Up
ing the state delegation chairs. | ni(.n
The convention tecested, the.
lights were going out and the hall [ eV(,
was almost empty, but Texans still
were celebrating in a back corner. There'were reports Star
Porter Gats Hug spn u ;; ...... _
They sang "The Eyes of Texas quarters today — and they touched
again—almost a hundred of them., ofj speculation the former Minne
Then Sen. James Duff of Penn- f--_ -j-y
sylvania, a man who went to Texas ! COmnllttnent to the general,
last winter tn the Eisenhower
up to hug Porter.
‘Vot<
patently caused him to miss
"Too Much Holl"
"We stayed with it, didn’t we,1 ,
Mrs Bliss said. "A lot of people p„b]|Can
have told me it was the Texas f ~
fight that brought all this out into cerfa|nfy today.
------——— --- 1 He has been nominated for the
post by the Texas delegation tn
the Republican convention. Mrs
Roy Black of Dallas has been
Special to The Record-Chronicle
L E W I S V I L L E—Three high
school cheerleaders here will at-
tend the cheerleader school at
Southern Methodist University
next week.
They are Jo Gentry, Monna
Feagins, and Margaret Ann Gas-
ton, all of whom were elected by
the student body of I>ewisville
High last spring to serve next
fall.
The students will learn tumbl-
ing and how to lead yells and con-
duct pep rallies in the school,
which will enroll students from
Texas and ixiuisiana.
WASHINGTON (JT — President
Truman Is sitting in on the Re-
publican National Convention — by
television. He's probably seen
more of some major Chicago ac-
tivities than have the GOP candi-
dates right on the scene.
So far, he says he's happy over
Warmir Bros. wmommH
BRINB TNI SCRHN AU TNI TIRI, OT
^Streetcar
9 Named
H Desire” |
rBT HW bn__CHARLES K ftLOW i
IGH--MAR10N BRANDO-^
McCarthy of Wisconsin, a
critic of the administration.
voring Sen. Robert A Taft or onelwhetjler he had anything to sav nomination,
favoring Gen. Dwight D. Eisen-1 ., a s i a m • *■ ♦ »»* zx F ♦ a A a Fi <1 11 rx wx i v t rx
hower.
Names had been called, and the
man who still is the titular head (
of the party. Tom Dewey—because |
Corn
(Continued from 1)
I don't think I will sell it for en-
silage.”
Morgan said some of his com
will make 20 to 25 bushels per
j acre.
I "We're gonna build a real Re
publican Party in Texas, ’ Porter
reap loudly asserted
—ill A radio man stuck a microphone
corn for their own use, in front of Alvin Lane of Dallas.
— t _ _ J i rx _ _ _ — 1 ___ — — aA • U a ’T'a v o ■ 4csv Fi.
James Arthur Erwin, son of Mr
and Mrs. George L. Erwin of 917
Cleveland, has enlisted in the
Navy at the Denison recruiting
station.
He will take basic training at
the U S. Naval Training Center.
San Diego, Calif. Erwin attended
Denton High School.
prepare a
testimony
trial.
Haley entered the death cham-
ber this morning at 12:04, received
the first shock four minutes later
and was pronounced dead at 12:12
am.
The convicted rapist of the little
j girl asked a reporter—Don Reid
i of Huntsville—to relay a plea of
: forgiveness to the child.
| "I hope the girl will forgive me
i for what has happened," Haley
' said, "for 1 forgave her and I
not campaigning for the including Dwight D. Elsenhower.
' But if McCarthy said it, it's a nomination but 1 have told my
of friends that if a deadlock comes
1 11 be a good soldier and serve
BONHAM '.V — Sam Rayburn my country and my party,” Ray-'
let it I
Reporters asked the President accept the Democratic presidential
... . -----------
to launch his campaign !en strenuous months" in Washing-
- ■ ' ton.
Rayburn went to bat for his fel-
t Democrats. He said
and |
1102
Prison Escapees
(rive I p Meekly
HUNTSVILLE, — Tired, be-
dragglied and hungry, two con-
victs who escaped Eastham Prison I
| Farm Monday surrendered meekly
i this morning on prison property.
Authorities apprehended the pair,
' Thomas S. Ballard, 23, and Walter
J. Barnes, 26, about 8 30 a m. in
a field adjacent to the Wynne State
Prison farm two miles north of
here.
The escapees hadn’t realized the
field was prison property.
Since Monday night, the convicts
said, they'd been hiding in a clump
of bushes on a vacant lot in Hunts
At the verv’moment’of victory 1 hower 33 votes to five for Taft. ; viUe only three blocks from the
ai inr itiv iiiuiiinu viinnj, i;......—,------1 K u main penitentiary.
22 for Taft j ————————— .
fire in Korea I flag and just plain yelled. I to 16 for Ersenhowen •, Ireland Readv
I Rayburn will be busy during the i The orchestra and the organ The Eisenhower people haven't »
I next 10 days before leaving for burst into "The Eyes of Texas” b(*n talkln/ about a fi^tballot DUBLLIN (A--The Irish Tourist,
I Chicago to be chairman of the Voices joined in all over the hall I victory in the general s bid for the Board is to set up travel bureaus
I Democratic National Convention.
He Will speak at Royse City
(Thursday, in McKinney Friday and
gf Charman Kfftnrlav nioht alAA
I plans to campaign next week in
T" a •• v- a 11 near! /"2 r* AAta ar 11 1k> ^1 Syill^
Rayburn's opponent, Reagan middle.
Brown, is from Terrell. j "go on oown, uonie. so
shouted at Mrs. Ja< k Bli»s
I viously i
I Midland.
i0 "We'll probably have to buy, cans can go into the election with
I most of our corn from the mid- dean hands,” Lane said,
western areas," Csrl explained. • V. -.2 „ ‘“
"Like alfalfa, most of it will be vention would have special badges j R,t night he had no comment on
who answered talked Spsnish ,on: MrR A J Ellis. 421 Bolivar;
I asked about the Puerto Rican
GOP background.
One delegate announced loudly j
that he represented the true party
Dirksen
(Continued from Page 1)
to their feet, yelling, screaming,
pop-eyed with excitement, anger
or approval. There were unforget-
table pictures then, and Dewey
himself provided the best of them.
He sat t
with a
lie was
black holder.
Every eye in the hall turned to-
Wins Wings
A Denton youth has been com
missioned a second lieutenant and
fighter pilot at Craig Air Force
Base Ala., after completing 13
months of pilot training.
He is Leslie S. Harding, son of
Mr. and Mrs. George L. Harding,
of Old McKinney Rd.
Lt. Harding is a graduate of
| Denton High School and prepared
for his cadet scholastic requlre-
| ments at North Texas State Col-
lege.
I At Denton High he was sports
editor, a member of the Spanish
Club, and the National Honor
Society.
His brother is a graduate of the
U. S. Naval Academy.
nomination. Lodge said only that jn an the major centers of the
.... ._ | states to attract tourists,
j the Board announced here.
The bureaus will be opened in ,
riVh't' 'in "the I vo,es f’oing to Gov Earl barren, visit the Festival of i’reiand' to be I
° | of California—70 from his own held in April 1953.
Delegates
- te 1)
., who at
then the reading clerk
"Puerto Rico, three ;
Thus began something
60c &
*53W
D4UVLIN THUTM
TONIGHT & FRIDAY
Incredibly, it must have taken and overtures, featuring "Porgy ,
five minutes to call the three and Bess by Gershwin-Bennett,
names. Because it turned up such PERSONALS
complications as this: Mrs. George P. Elbert, 306
“Mrs Provldcncia Romas de Texas, has as her guests this week
Villamil," cried the reading clerk. Mr. and Mrs. James Elbert and
"What was the name, please’" ■
came the heavily accented uuzx. a,’d ...
as if the place were filled w ith Houston
women with similar names i Mr*
"Mrs. Providencia Romas
Villamil,” cried the R C. again
Scripture Block
Graveled By City
City workmen have excavated
and graveled one block on Scrip
ture Street from Thomas to Bon-
nie Brae Streets, Bailey Coffey,
street and bridge superintendent,
reported today.
Excavations have been made
for curbs and gutters on Thomas
and in the Skiles Addition, and one
block on Mitt Street from Ave-
nue (’ to Avenue D has been
graveled.
"But I have made 40 to 50
bushels in good years." he added
Corn grown by Lord Smith and
others in this area also may be
good enough to pull.
But fellows like Johnny Martin
are cutting their corn for silage
and are buying immature corn in :
there, apparently cool,, ^or
fixed smile on his face. *_J J*' ''' **’* *' ""
holdiri; a cigaret in a
he is looking for victory on an
early ballot.
On the first ballot, Eisenhower
forces still were
=S: RAYBURN WILL
! favorite candidate is going to get
, beat.”
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
grsnuY
3 bedroom, 3 bathi. beautifully dee- nominated for national committee
orated home Reatrtcted development.' |
Ewlng Real Fjtate. C-3715 or < -4600. WOm"^
LOUT "BLACK end white Boaton Bull :
Dog, child's pet. Reward. Bam
Laney, 53S Roberts. C-208*
LAJftdf S3GTHEA3T rooms, share
kitchen end bath. 1808 W. Pralria.
c-?nai. I
1 ROOM unfurnished apartment 321
«, Prairie, inquire at Mahan Store.
3 ROOM modern, furnished house.
table-top stove, electric box. C-2408
KPKRIXNCn) paper hanger, price
reasonable. prompt attention.
C-3408
2 WILTON Rues and matching email '
rug Good condition. C-S804
vdvr OLASaRB tn brown ease.
TOCW Otudoor Theatre, Tuesday.
0-800? ________________
FOR SALE or trade Tor 11 vectork one
of two Oliver "70'' tractors with
or without equipment. »478 00 and
*780 00 J w Witt, Little Elm
Phone 142. ____
2 FURN18HKD Suplei apartment.
near NT8C. vacant 12th. C-247V or
C-2332.
BXCRPffSNALLT NICE furnished 2
bedroom brick
floors* Venetian
gyrate, close in
iTkAYKD NEAR Bertonvllle. sable
and white inale Collie dog; answers
to "FsBow"; child's pet. Rewartl
Waiter Nash. Route 1. Roanoke
Wan+ tot>rRf«»icRb"fountain help.
work nights Apply •" person.
Brooke Drug Store
' delegation on an early ballot,
down to Texas and ‘ -------------------------(
the open and helped the other
states. We just raised too much)
.heli.”
The convention rejected - ■
compromise which would
seated 22 delegates named at the .
state convention run by the old ,
guard organiation, and 18 selected i
by the rival faction.
• r. ,r. - ---r —- ----- —- ------ ----- —,. —- — ------- — its action threw out recommen
at Dewey There predicted Carl and James Degan co-chairman of the Texas-for-Ei d n f the natjonal committee '
Ilirksen and eriei u.. 1___i_______ r-u.k ... . ... ...
Home
for re election from the Fourth Dis-
trict, the veteran congressman told
constituents in a radio address he ,ow Democrats. He said their! from Georgia, making it apparent gates. The winning slate is divided
Truman, his good humor vanish- would take the nod to be "a good presidential candidate could lick that a roll call would be a waste
anybody the Republicans put up— of time
-----------„ -------------- I Cowball Clangs
Rayburn called for defensive mil-' c., ...^ ,.. . . .........
itary strength and sounded opti-! Ben Guill of Pampa clanged a cow-1 The lineup cleared by the Creden
mistic about an eventual cease-; bell, waved a four-foot-long>.Tcxas Aials committee was 22 for Taft
The Eisenhower people haven't
been talking about a first-ballot
sota governor might make a firm
_ jiiiiiiiunriii lu mt* gvnvidi. |
winter in the Eisenhower There were indications, too, that
cause, came up to hug Porter. Eisenhower might be trying to cut
They sang "For He's A Jolly jnt0 the heavily proTaft Indiana
Good Fellow” for Duff.
"He came <
kicked it off center for us,” Porter
his sons, Robert and Ixiuis. op-1 yelled.
—J-‘-y and find it1 ”wh'
hard to get enough silage.
lin the running
i "I think he is still very
in the fight,” Butler said.
Stassen Still In
I The California delegation had a San Antonio, Corpus Christi, and
I caucus and its chairman Sen Wil- Ft Worth.
-------------- , nani r TMiuwiauu, i»iu mr niviii- i ••>>>» <*J
Trevor were recording a song for berg f0 their TO.vote line firm ' new casea laat week and Dallas
I for Gov Earl Warren County had 24.
"If we not swayed by ru- Grayson had Ita flrat caaea of
mor,” • Knowland aaid, "we have the year, five at one blow. Other
the opportunity to nominate Earl counties where polio struck for the
Warren for president.” ! first time were Castro, Aransas,
That meant, in Knowland's view, Coke, Gonsales, Rusk, Stophens,
a distinct possibility of an Eisen- Upshur, and Young, all, with dhl
hower-Taft deadlock. | case each.
Harold Stassen told a newa con Lavaca County recorded 24 cases
ference he Was staying in the race.
He has 25 comm It tod votes
Around Eisenhower’s headquar-
ters in a downtown hotel, there
was a general atmoanhere of con-
fidence In victory.
By the strength hie forces dis-
played, the flve-star general of the
■ Army appeared to have pulled
-■St ■
Grand Prairie.
Mrs. Nona Weir, Denton, surgical;
Mrs W. T Reed.
medical. Dismissed: Mrs. J. W. i 'J’za/’f Kr>zrfz>t>
Meehan and baby. 1118 Pan ' I Uli DUUUl
u handle: E. L. Sawyer, 1021 High (Cominurd fr6rn Pate 1)
Why, I don't know The fellow land; E. M Easley, Route 2 Den-1 Kenera) Wln win on the first
- [ton; Mrs A J. Ellis. 421 Bolivar; j ballo* ,
Mrs A. D. King. Justin; Mrs. Nel-1 H(, (jeciarc<i he is confident that
I Maryland’s 24 votes will be cast
unanimously for Eisenhower.
But Maryland's Senator John
LTVEBTOrK
FORT WORTH (AP)— Cattle 1 200
calves 600; steady to 26-50c higher.
Good end choice slaughter steers
and yearlings 837-132: common to
medium kinds 817-836, good and
choice slaughter calves 837-832; com-
mon and medium calves 818-828;
culls 815-827. good and choice Stock-
er calves 828-832 75. common and
medium kinds 818-427; medium to
good atocker yearlings 821-821 50;
heifers 824.00 down; Stocker cows
814-817.
Hogs 800; steady to 75 cents lower;
choice 180-240 pound butchers
820 50-821 25: choice 155-175 pound
and 250-380 pound hogs 818-830.25;
sows 814-817; feeder pigs 818.
THI K8DAY GRAINH
FORT WORTH, (AP) — Wheat,'
No. 1 hard, 82.41-82.47.
Corn, No. 2 whlta 82 57-82 50
Oats. No. 2 white, 81 03-81 04
Borghums, No. 2 yellow mllo 83 18-
83 23 per 100 pounds.
~ Terrell and Greenville.
I Psit Mstroni and Patron* Club medical Dismissed: Johnnie
! postponed their dinner meeting Burns, Fort Worth.
scheduled tonight to Aug. 1?. Elm Sfreet Hospital and Clinic: [
Cleo Evan* wa* introduced to Dismissed:- Mrs. R. A. Under- .
Denton Optimists as a new club t wood, Grapevine.
' i after BIRTHS
I Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Jenkins,
The North Texas State College 1310 Neff, are the parents of a
, ouiimici Dauu -.‘.I t,..v .o sec- daughter who was born Wednes-
I ond and concluding performance day in the Elm Street Hospital.
♦ aiv Hnnlzc SACCIAB t ZA. ’ “— 'L * 1
WasVuero Rico's delegation in dis night at S st^the Denton City Park
pute? Could the challenge I
made? At last, the answer: yes
WASHINGTON, or — President
Truman signed into law today
a bill providing 4611 billion dollars
for the nation’s military build-up
in the year that ends next June
30. The measure supplies the mon-
ey to raise this country’s air force
to a formidable 143 wings by mid-
1955
The total sum given the defense
department was about 5 billions un-
der what the President had asked.
He told Congress the defense de-
partment would need nearly 51 Vi
billions as a bare minimum for its
"stretch-out” preparedness pro [
gram.
The bill also provides for:
1. Payment of $45 a month in
extra combat pay for servicemen
on duty under fire sii.ee the Korean --- ---
War began. A minimum of six days ! sa*°' ‘ for
in the combat area is required for |lovea n
aaAk rr»r*nth*J rllntKililv
Ike Backers
(Continued from Page 1)
Texas-Georgia seating con- j
They said he went to bed 1
about 11:30 p m and wasn't awak-'
ened when the convention reversed ‘
its Credentials Committee in his j
favor.
Eisenhower forces won the Geor-
I gia contest by a vote of 607 to 531.
' Then the Taft people let the |gen
I oral’s Texas delegation be seated
without a rollcall.
The Georgia group which had
been approved by the credentials
unit was made up of 17 Taft dele- i
14 for Eisenhower, two for Taft)
| and one undecided
The Texas victory gives Eisen
state and six in the Wisconsin,
delegation.
But the general is hoping to pick
up a big bloc of the 76 if Taft-] (Continued from Page 1)
i——j—. . . , . , . , | Eisenhower deadlock possibilities son- Rfd Bank, N. J., who at
..AnCLr lth n°.i .a dXtm 1 fafl° out of ,he Plcturc ana Warren ' 80 years old is the oldest delegate
di... „ .. num a releases his delegates Taft also here, this convention is serious-
„i„v some Warren1 minded and determined. 1
Women delegates and alternates
Another bloc Eisenhower has his nt this convention set an all-time
on is the 24-vote Minnesota . high. They number 3W—an in-
delegation pledged to Harold E. crease of 14 over the 1948 conven-
er... ri'—~ ---- 5, tion.
will visit Eisenhower head-;-------------—---- ■ - ■■ ■
lis Couser, 212 E Oak; Mrs. Len-
ora Winniford, Lake Dallas
- Denton Hospital and Clinic: Add-
thort, and Instantly all three were mitted_Bert Pope 111,
hurling Spanish at each other. |
Oddly, at the very moment this P'irc
, was going on, the convention took1 ' 1,9
up the Puerto Rican delegate dis (Continued from Pag» ii
pute, and unanimously seated the
one which did not include Romany, had been rehearsing a hot blue*
But It didn’t really matter. From
coast to coast, he’s still the hero
of the party.
HOSPITAL NOTES
Flow Memorial
rs.
Panhandle,
ces
he; cal; ------ ---------
___Hath ~ • •
; Mrs I "yah yah yah”
noes and no yeses became two noes Dan McAlister, 1821 Scripture, |
and one yes. The no votes were surgical; Hugh Arnold C.-:Lr:
by the absent delegates’ al t Route 2, Denton, surgical; L. L. |
< surgical, j face,
! loved her with all my heart.”
each month’3 eligibility.
2 Authorization for the Navy to
build a .second G5,('tO-ton super air I
craft carrier. The bi! did not, how 1
ever, supply any new funds for j .,
building the giant carrier. » > t-
In the pro adjournment rush Con- . -v
gresa agreed on a total of $46,610,-
938,912. Truman a^ked $51 390,709,-
770 for the year beginning July 1.
The breakdowns by services
shows: Army—$12,239.500,000; Na-
vy—$12,842,459,642; Air Force—
$21,118,361,770.
song a nd-da nee number
Broderick Crawford and Claire . fjani F "Knowland, to!d the mem-i Hard-Mt Harris County had 52
their movie when somebody yelled
"Fire.”
"Oh, yeah — quit kidding,”
powled the tough guy actor, think-
ing it was a gaG based on the !
previous blaze
Other movie actor onlookers in-
cluded Gordon MacRae, Virginia
Gibson, Sheldon Leonard and Joe
Vitale.
Eighteen studio workmen suf-
fered minor burns, cuts or bruises
fighting the tire. Two had heart
attacks. One sound st«ge was
scorched and cannot be used until
repaired, the studio said. A shed
14®° two ator1** blgh
containing stores of scenery was
An imitation ocean liner and within striking distance of the first Bexar, ( alhoun, Hidalgo, Parker,
<lock, & grand central ttation and , presidential norriinaiion for a pro-i and San Patricio, 2 each; Braiorla,
< New York park were destroyed. , feaaiona) military man since Ulya- Edwards. Port Bend. Q.sgg, Ham
rows of outdoor sets j ses S. Grant won the prise and Alton. Hardin, Hays. Hockley. Jef
the Midwest, Western, the presidency in 18M. ; (arson, Midland, Smith, Taylor,
Philadelphia Norwe ! Taft fought a valiant read guard Upton, Wichita. Wilbarger, Wil-
action against the seating of pro-. liamson, and Wood 1 each. The
and Bonne' .'-a-1 Eisenhower delegations trona the armed forces reported two cases,
■-----.»v I unlocated as to county.
is not here.”
But the senor won his point.
When his name was called, he. cal; Mrs. .Merlin C <
votfed yes. So that which was three delivery, Denton, medical:
| were 1
Crocker, I of "sit down.” ,
The smile stayed on Dewey’s ]arRe fee<j ,tore here
' j, and no other emotion
much as flickered there.
1509 Bolivar. ]--
W.j
And dairymen like the Duvalls,
three miles northwest of here,
are putting up all the silage their
silos will hold L. P. Duvall and
. ward Dewey. P h o t o g r a p h ers .
1 climbed over each other s backs to h,r,t
| snap pictures. People stood on
chairs, craning, yelling and gestur-
i ing. The galleries were a night-
mare of sound and excitement.
A man, with his hands cupped
been loudly booed It j
looked like a situation in which
a single wrong word might be the damned lie, you can be sure
spark which could blow up the
party. -------
The rollcall had gone on. labor I
iously, painfully. It was obxious
that the Eisenhower forces had
wen, but the tension hadn t less
ened.
And
bawled: "Puerto Rico,
votes.” Thus began
right out of comic opera.
The reply came back. "Puerto
Ri o casts three votes no ”
The senor moved onstage and i
stele the show.
He began by demanding that the member here Wednesday
delegation—all three members—be noon,
polled individually—just like New .
York’s 96 and Pennsylvania’s 70 Summer Band will give its sec-
had been. [
Big discussion on the platform of the first six weeks session to-
br'band shell. The public is invited)
to attend the concert of marches [
Alice E. Lindsey
! children, Sue and Jimmie,
‘N Elm. are viriung in Ruidoso,
"It's all right,” came the voice ; N- M > for several weeks.
. .. --------- ------
Another name wai called. Again Flow Memorial Hospital:
the voice. "He is a delegate. He mitted: rs. J. C. Goodner,
surgical; Mrs.
Saunders. 501 W. Oak. medi- I A man, with his hands cupped anv
George, I around his mouth, was bellowing gfpP the
1 ««__I a.o.k a.ok” pt YAft.a Thnrn . . .
* vrK«ul’vv*ai«uiliau v* —— -- dal|Ong Of rne national committee i
Ik>os for Dirksen and cries agriculture leaders of this com- senhower Club. and of tho credentials committee. ]
I munity. The Degans operate a "We can now go forward Wrong Thp rre<1<>n(lal(, committee had I
has ben righted, and tjie Republi- vote(1 07.24 for the Taft plan after)
on all-day session reviewing the
bitter, uncompromising battle be
Word got around that the con twoon the party fractions.
shipped into Lewisville I would 1 ,n<i credentials ready today for the th(. action,
estimate that the corn crop here Porter delegation
will be only one - fourth of (he
normal yield.”
Polio
(Continued trom •*<• J»
Harris County was far out front
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 275, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 10, 1952, newspaper, July 10, 1952; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1348691/m1/2/: accessed June 20, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.