Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 288, Ed. 1 Friday, July 25, 1952 Page: 2 of 10
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FrM«
Friday, July M. 1W
J
T H F.
record-chroniclB
DENTON
PAGE TWO
i Puerto Rico
Texas Claims Part
Becomes Free
Commonwealth
)♦.
Three Red companies advanced
Pl
with
I
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f
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, 1
GIORGI STiPHiNS
^"$5
Tj*.-.'
sowing the deadlock over prisoner R tlJ(
a a •» n a final arena Rlzxzslrinrf «a I . r
I
i
TEXAS
BEN BRACKEN
11:30
BolivarRevival
"SUGARFOOT”
in Technicolor with
r
i
AM IMTIISTATt THEATEt
TODAY thru SAT.
2.1
NOODLUI
highlv modified form
The Rex
first
medical,
MARKETS
N
1/Kuat.
EMPIRE
Minnie
4
k*
CoIoa Favorite - News
• Today and Saturday •
Tha Mightiest
Adventure of
facts
ment* request
DRIVE-IN
CAMPUS
THEATRE
60*
LAST NIGHT
G
the
Donald Duck - New* - Al Brendel Comedy
4
FOR SALE
*
FRAME
★
AUDITORIUM
j®
' Be
Their flwtpictaiMWiMUr'TI'* weed h» leafhe'.
1
CORNER PEARL b BOLIVAR
45 fact x 80 feet
FOR APPOINTMENT TO INSPECT
Fl
I
CALL AT CHURCH STUDY - PEARL STREET
9:00 to 11:00 A. M.
— PLUS —
I
P
, I
FRII-VUI SATURDAY 11:30 P. M.
Sum*
to.. /
I
j> V J
t
TEXAS
I Di »
h
leoGORCEY bowery boys *,
4
F
1
''04AWtt./W' !
■--- vNMrveM •rfm.Atoam
cUNIAIV ___
f FRONTIER
French Repel Red
Drive On Key Hill
** •/
I I
Industrial Credit
McCLURKAN BUILDING
Denton Rodeo
Will Broadcast
Election Returns
Randolph Scott
Adele Jergens
Wolt DHney't
"OLYMPIC ILK"
SATURDAY NITE
FREEVUE
: oat ™
- 115-117. leader pin 818 down
All six major companies were
parly to yesterday’s ajjreement
TONIGHT end SATURDAY
DOUBLE FEATURE
TODAY tr
SATURDAY
I
I
I
SATURDAY
Humphrey Bogart
Katharina Hepburn
PER
CAR
EVERY
NIGHT
halir
a vol
skin
Wra
igan
and
and
I Texas i
1 whether
Miss Groves,
i*
o toman
DRIVE -IN THEATRE
Joptc.
Feature Ha. 2
"WEST OF THE BRAZOS"
-------A----------
BriaaDONUVY
Ooirt Trevor
TVCKM
V~. lALiroM
>•*•< AMM
L'R
ARTHUR
were
F
-llt«llf
t,5
Your
Vote
and
Influence
for
S. BRADLEY
for
Justice of Peace
Precinct One
Will Be
Appreciated
WkftNCa Mnod <*sse»w
WHbSfllO
"US^IreM
DENTON S POPULAR
®WCF
TODAY thru SAT.
OLD WEST-
Carton - Serial '
THE MONEY
.. IMilIII)
Bergman <
Joan - Arc
-*• JflSl FERRFR
^Jotun
-WIW
l ^WHib
1
British Spy
Makes Appeal
Shaner is Held
At Bartonville
- FNHI
-W
W T. Rouse.
w hose i
now on 1
‘ZSOLT.. Korea .r — French in-
ftWtrymen today hurled back a 500 at 2 a m. against the hill west of
man Chinese Communist drive on
T-Bone Hill in a bloody opening to
tb« Mth month of the Korean War.
•French defendera of the Western
Front hill inflicted heavy losses
during two hours of pre dawn hand
to-hand comhat
PERSONALS
Miss Blanch Groves, missionary
that slips through
your fingers - will
pay the loan that
pays your bills.
Personal, Confidential Assistance
FRIDAY GRAIN
FORT WORTH (API —Wheat Nn
I hard >2 47',-53'.,.
Corn Mo. 2 white 83 70 1 3-74 1 <
Oat* No 3 81 03 ',-06',.
L Mjh'imi 83 21-38
reaola's gun which shot the guard. I
However, the law makes no dis I
Unction between companions in a
felony which results in a murder.
IF .
• nl
* J
Taft Hartley Act. was rtie reason
Truman gave for refusing to use
that law despite a formal requeat
by both houses of Congress The I
act provides for court orders for-]
bidding a strike for 80 days
■DREAMLAND'
F' ■■ i
*r' j
CHURCH OF CHRIST
PEARL AND BOLIVAR
Denton, Tsxm
seven hours later. Other
House peace efforts, in
and June, had all collapsed
SUZAN BALL
LONDON — William M Mar
shall, 24yearold British Foreign
Office radio operator convicted of
slipping state secrets to Russia, to-
day appealed his five year prison
sentence
Marshall was caught in a park
on June 13 with Pavel Kuxnetxov
Iii South's Victory
Filmed in the Belgian Cango
in breath-taking Technicolor
Features: 1 15, 3:20, 4 15
PJu. One Cab's Family
Those 52 votes went to Virginia,
South Carolina and Ixiuuiana tv-
, ery time a vote was taken
Those 52 votes also were protn-
. 1,
1950. A White House policeman,
Pvt l^slie Coffelt, was killed but
Collazos attorney said it was Tor
reaola's gun which ahot the guard.
T M ‘ J
' I-
From then to
rinralad atrilra
second secretary in the Soviet Em- i
bassy here The Britisher admitted '
meeting the Russian numerous
times before and had a secret doc
lument in his pocket when picked
i up
■ Kuznetsov protected from prose i
I cution by diplomatic immunity, left ,
(the country at the British govern
rv«AM*'a ronsinat
Negotiators
Fail To Break
Thom All
"THE AFRICAN QUEEN"
'®wconnt
•Ad
01
the
pounded|
meeting
members to stay out and i furlough
15 day es '
their ' ‘
six
|---------------------------------ZL-----------------------
Truman Spares Life
- Of Oscar Collazo
BUSY AT HOME — While fellow Democrats met in
Chicago to name party standard liearers President
Harry S. Truman sits for finishing touches of a life-size
bust in Washington. The sculptor is Nicholas Tregor of
New York. (AP Wirephoto)
C. E. MILLER
(20th Anniversary)
Writing all types of insurance. Specialising in
Automobile Liability Coveraga.
FHONE C-2215 104 McCRARY BLDG.
.»| | .-s .-s I i I n 11 \ u MBWVwcs, sas io>’ awz s • * • y
to china for 30 years, ia visiting
hour for 6.50.000 ba'ie steel work | in the home of Mrs
i highlv modified form of | 1912 Bell C
shop which allows present [ home is in Bridgeport,
The Peah Dramah^ Performance
he believed the majority of the Tex
Ian* would go for a combination of I
Russell with Gov Adlai Stevenson
I of Illinois, with either man at the
. lop of the ticket
Virginia, South Carolina and Ixulis- ------------------------------
tana—got to keep their seats in the
convention.
The Texas delegation had fought
for that Gov. Allan Shivers had
done some fast stepping floor work
I Virgnians said they could see it's
I results.
"From our position on the floor,
we saw the very effective work he
did with other delegations in our
liehalf,” Wiliam M. Tuck, former
governor of Virginia and chairman
4
Spacial fa Mia Record-Chronicla
BARTONVILLE-Mis Thomas I
Adams was honoree at a pink and |
blue shower given by Mmes Frank
| Nash and Izmzo Medhn. Roanoke,
and Mmes. P V. Whitacker,
of the state s Central Democratic ; Claude Ixjwery, C. E Dupree, and
Frank Smith. Bartonville
Mrs. Pearl Miller was in charge
of games. Gifts were presented to
emergency,
Franklin 344 Robinson
gency. Mis Wanda-Gregory, Rt 1
| calT«a 821-827. med’tum and good
stockar yearling* 822: atocker cal res
. 830-830.
Hoga 180 butcher hog* xteady tn
80 cants lower sows and pigs un-
changed. choice 180-240 lb butchers
822. choice 155-175 lb. hog» 818 75-
heevy butcher* scarce; sow*
any nf the meetings
Mrs. | —
W orkinen Burned
t. Aubrey, Mrs. J.
msn, Rt. 2. Denton.
BIRTHS
Mr and Mrs. Bill Ooten. Wichita
Falls, parents of a six pound fif-
teen ounce girl at 8 38 thia morn 1
mg, Flow Memorial Hospital.
R Inat
age I
/It is
\nspe-
;A1 Pi
gure
follow
‘ Th«
18 th
much
msec
heat.
> Gn
a m<
be in
| warn
jin sec
! Ins
Dear
grain
The! i
deter
the s
I Thi
can
the
and
aible
warn
ture
can
fork
grair
then
to th
Ap
aide
buck
rr I
surfi
jgan
the
tion
form
WASHINGTON lit — Preaident 'he President s guards on Nov.
Truman is aparing the life of the
Puerto Rican who tried to assas
finate him at Blair House in 1950
Presidential Secretary Joseph
Short announced — without com
ment — late yesterday that the
death sentence of Oscar Collazo
had been commuted to life im
prisonment.
The 38 year-old
•’ By GEORGE McARTHUR
-MUNSAN. Korea nF—The three
w«ek news blackout was lifted from orl,x,,, , , 1U1 r „ lr
tha Korean ymistice talks today.; V(Val wil|‘ be be|d ,t thf shiloh
<0
I
Committee, told reporters "We
want to express our thanks.”
Texans had signed the loyalty as-
] Spacial to tho Record-Chronicla ]
BARTONVILLE — A 10-day re j
....i oe neid at the Shiloh ;
f hurch starting Wednes j
The Rex. Frank Estep of
Dallas will conduct the services
Mr and Mr*. Oliver Simmons
will direct the music for the serv
ices.
Prayer meetings will begin at 8
each night and services at 8 15 |
pm
¥
surance to see that the Democratic i the honoree and ice cream and
■ • nominee* gel on state ballot* Tbetr - cake weia served Ln the loliowing.
neighbors had balked Mmes K F. Hatridge and
Earlier tn the week some of the daughter. J W. Turner, Ronald Me 1
delegates had questioned i Gatlin, Archie Alley, Oscar Smith,
they would be betraying I Fitzgerald, Walter Nash, Oliver
itheir friends who helped them get Simmons. Elizabeth Powell, and
— —j.u_..•---niece Nancy and Misses Faivie
Vanda Dupree. Barbri Ixxwery and
Barbara Medlin
Starts Sunday
Ren Bracken of Camden, Aik
will speak twice daily at the revival
services al the Bolivar Baptist
Church which begin Sunday
| Services at the two week revival
; will be held at 11 am and 8 p m |
Saturday night s rodeo will
geared to politics, with reaulLi of I
the election being broadcaat over
the public address system. Earl
Foreman, president of the Denton
County Rodeo Association, an
nounced today.
The weekly rodeo-7 to be staged
in the Fair Ground* arena, will
start at 8 15 pm
Ministers of Denton County and
their wives have been invited to
attend the event as guests of the
association, Foreman said Chil-
dren of the Cumberland Presby-
terian Orphanage also have been
invited, he added
An act from the Gainesville Com-
munity Circus will be presented
as an added attraction.
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico -
Puerto Rico joyfully assumed her
new role as a self governing "free
' commonwealth" associated
the United States today — exactly
54 year* after American troop*
; landed on the Caribbean island dur
mg the Spanish American War.
Flags of the new commonwealth
were to flutter out over all the
i island’s public building* at noon
today, signaling the adoption of
the new constitution under which
the 2'* million Puerto Ricans will
administer their oxvn affairs.
j Gov. Luis Munoz Marin, who has
been active in pushing the new
:constitution since he became Puer-
to Rico's first elected governor in
1948. xxas to hoist the island's red,
| white and blue banner over the
capitol building here Parade*
Land celebrations were planned in
Lail the island * towns and cities.
July 25 long has been a local
holiday commemorating the 1898
landing of the American* who
wrested the island from Spain »
400-year rule From now on th*
legal holiday will be known as Con-
stitution Day
2. Denton, medical.
Flow Memorial Hoapital Admit '
ted—Paul Beyette, 823 N Elm.
medical, R W Cole. Rt
Sanger, medical Mrs M
i rell, Rt 1, Denton.
Wayne Lasseter. 722
medical; I
( H I C A G O
claimed part in the victory of the the Southerners’ side
«
»
» ■
: •• ■
The 38 year old Puerto Rican
had been scheduled to die in the |
electric chair here on Aug 1 for
his part in the death plot.
Collazo was wounded and a
companion, Griselio Torresola. was
killed in a furious gun battle with
I-----
8h»ep 150 stcadx. utility »nd *>xxl
•laughter spring lamba 824. utility
•nd good slaughter ewea 88: eotnmnn
• nd medium feedar lambs 815
exchange—final issue blocking «
ttjee—still unbroken - ••
-Despite a United Nation* offer to
return an additional 13,000 captives (
ttg, the Communists, 18 off-the-1
record meetings since Jhiy 4
pfljved "completely fruitless,” said i
Mgj- Gen. William K. Harrison Jr.
'•‘We are no nearer a solution of
tlje problem today than we were
oe July 4,” the chief Allied dele-
gate said, but added:-----------
/‘As long as we continue negotia
tibns there u always hope, when
the enemy proposed thia morning
that we go back into open sessions,
I agreed heartily.”
Starting tomorrow proceedings
will be made public daily a* for-
merly. Tomorrow's session is set
for 11 a m (9 p.m , Friday, F.ST)
The U N Command said it re-
hued to back down on its decision
not to return forcibly any prisoner i
to the Communists Only 83,000 of
170,000 Allied-held POWs want to
be repatriated, Harrison aaid. This
is an increase of 13,000 over the fig-
ure submitted to the Red* earlier,
before screening of POW's was
completed.
The Allies aaid the Communist*
insisted on the return of 118,000
prisoners These include 20.000
Chinese captives of whom only
6,400 will return voluntarily
Chorwon, an old Iron Triangle an- | t
chor city.
Artillery hursts punctuated hand
to hand fighting as the 500 Com ’
munista got caught in crossfire of I
French positions at the bottom end I
of T Bone
A frontline Allied officer esti
| mated 56 Chinese were killed and
. 150 wounded. The cut-up Red forces
(withdrew at 4 a rn
The French battalion is attached
to the U. 8 Second Infantry Divi-1
sion. which has fought the Chinese
since July 17 for possession of near
POU Deadlock i Shiloh Revival
---------------- I >0/7/7,< Wednesday
Steel
i Continued from Page II
learned the agreement includes
these conditions
A wage boost of 16 cents an
George Stephens, baritone soloist
of FoYt Worth, will direct the
/ music.
> The Junior Bixtster Band will
meet each evening at 7 30 and the
' young people and adults will also
medical m"1 al ,hat ,ln’p for P,aJpr
Schmitz’ K**' T1,omai Landers, pa*
Mn^Arbel'Miller. «17‘x , ‘nV"Cd
i Newton, medical; Robert Barnett,
i 117 N IxKust. medical; Ui«. i
Muriel Evers. 1035 W. Oak, medi- '
cal Dismissed—Mrs James Seely
HOSPITAL NOTES
Denton Hospital and Clinic: Ad-
paid mitted — Jesse Hampton, Keller,
! v-.,.. .... ...... vacation j accident, W M Allen, Little Elm,
after 15 years service a two-year medical Dismissed - Baby Cal- ind baby.' PonderL D.? J? Grimea,!
I contract dating from last June 30. I vert, 1012 Wilson; Mrs Minnie | u, , r r «h..i»..td im
reopencr next June I Clipper, 1316 F. McKinney.
Elm Street Hospital and Clinic:
fT > ‘WM
J T.gU®
FRIDAY LIVESTOCK
PORT WORTH (API—Cattl* 300: i
! ealvaa 300 *U*dy to weak com-I
' mareial and good slaughter yearling*
822-820 utility cuwa 816 50-818.50.
| oommerela1 and good .laughter I for #a(.h worker pre strike I
I averaged slightly under 82 an hour
The strike, longest in the na
tion's steel history, will have cost
more than 21 million tons of the .Republic
defense-vital metal by the time ■ ■ ■
full production is resumed It has,
imperiled the defense program and 1 tv ,
stopped altogether the production | durtix c
| of sgme high priority items like
105 mm shells
stark facts which
presumably
his
»
1
White
they would be betraying | Fitzgerald, Walter
seated if they didn't stick with them
in the balk.
One of their reason* for staying
•lan,«!berrv
*mer-! ’
PORT ARTHUR P - Three
workmen were burned two
I baby’'502'7 W. Oak', Mrs”’ven'son seriously, by an explosion and fire
ti.ti i«»- -u. ba__ i i ' vpitprdav at fhr Cnmnanv
H.' chap ' refinery here
ers, a
I union
non-union
1 give* new employes a
: cape period during
month of employment,
holiday*, three week*
----
.1 Dismissed — Baby Cal-
--------- --------------- .... 1012 Wilson, Mrs Minnie R( ,, r)enlof, L, c. shulfield.1222
with a wage reopener next June I ( lipper. 1316 f. McKinney. w
I 30. Elm Street Hospital and Clinic:
I These concessions come to a Admitted—Lynn Crumbaker, Rt. 1,i
| total of just over 21 cents an hour (Roanoke,
for each worker Pre strike pay |
By MARTHA COLE in the convention was that they had
— T e x a a 52 votes that would count a lot on
*tnrv ths* 1 Ka Vmit hurnara' si/4p
(south at the Democratic Convention
toda'
“You tell 'em Texas was here,”
said delegate Bob Pinkston of Cen- ,
ter * ised to be a favorite son of the
• You tell 'em this is one Demo- south — Sen Richard Russell of
crativ muxeutiun where the South ' Georgia The Texans voted in cau-
won said Slate Sen. (Jttis l.ock of |cus yesterday to cast them on the
Lufkin first ballot to Russell as the presi-
"Feri wonderful." .said Wallace dentiai nominee.
i Stufflebeine of Itasca, still enthusi-1 p and wben Russell is out of the
astically waving a lx>ne Star flag race tk)ey aren’t saying officially
I although it was 1 am. ((ST) "nd what friey will do. Gov. Shivers said
Texas was just 'eaving the conxen-1 . .
| tion hall
Wallace Sax age of Dallas gaxe a
long phewwwwww. '
Texas' neighbors of the South-
Oak. Mrs. Ros* Coggin* and
Hall. 126 Peach, Mrs. J. J Queaen (yesterday at the Texas Company
' A..krA., Ur. i u refinerv here
They are I S. Steel. Bethlehem.
‘ ' -Jones and Laughlin,
Inland, and Youngstown Sheet and
Tube Together they account for
70 per cent of the nation « pro
capacity
Other steel concerns are fully
I These stark facts wh>ch Ihr I pvpected to gn. along wnh the
(President presumably pounded j ’Xreement reached between Mur
’ home m his 10-minute meeting I ra> and ,he B,« S,x
| yesterday with Murray and Fair I
! less, undoubtedly played a large
| part in the settlement which'came)
TOO LATE to classify
WASTTTX) ironing, 825 B«*tty Street,
phone C-STSe
I TAiLk t6p 'RANG8 2 bathroom
. heater*, large alnk, Hollywood bed.
j *eoond-hand door. All good condition
See at 1621 W Hickory, or phone
C-46J0__________ _
WANT bOMBONB to ahear email
bunch of aheep. See Albert. Stude-
baker (Jotnpany, Denton x
WANT TO TRADB 2-bedroom home
for larger home located near
Ncwth Ward School. Phone C-4408
riadt CASH today, by telephone.
C-4054. Mark Waldrlp lower your
car payment* now. Skip first pay-
ment
PdB BALX In Lewls^lle, 6 room
house with 8 room garage apart-
ment attached 3 porejxe* 2 bath*.
3 room* and 3 room apartment*
furnished. Rent* 8110 per month.
Pour room* for living Large lot, lo-
cated on College Street next to grade
school. 87000 J. B Davis Phone
4463._LewUyllle
FOR SALK Choice bxiaineM comer,
priced right, consider trade. Phone
C-M05_______________
FOR SALK 23-lnch window cooler
with 20-lnch Pan only used few
months. 1500 N. Locust
April May lock developed The old contrXtt
The bitter dispute actually start-
ed last November when the union
served its demands on the indus-
I try. An almost instantaneous dead
I l^r-lr riovolorwtd The old r-nntrSTt
(expired Dec 31 I
The strike and ttie long dispute J April 8 the union canceled strike I
which preceded rt had enormous. plans • half dozen times,
repercussions throughout the gov-1 Those strike postponements, add-
ernment ing up to far more than the 80
tin April 8 the President seized day ‘ cooling off" period under the
tha entire industry in an unpre *-• ----- ------
erdented show of executive power.
The Supreme Court wrote a per
manent chapter into the nation s
constitutional system when on
June 2 ft voided the seizure as
unlawful and said Truman had no
inherent power to lake over the
nation’s biggest industry.
TYie 26 cent pay and union shop
recommendations made by the'
Wage Stabilization Board on (
March 20 led to a complete re- !
vamping of the WSB last month |
Congress abolished the WSB,
which Trpman had created by
executive order, and set up a new I
board with no powers at all to I
intervene in and propose settle- i
ment* in labor disputes. Particular
criticism wai directed st the’
WSB's union shop proposal
---— I All six major companies were
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 288, Ed. 1 Friday, July 25, 1952, newspaper, July 25, 1952; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1348719/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.