Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 292, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 30, 1952 Page: 6 of 12
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Wednesday, July 39. 1353
THE T) E N TON RECORD - CHRONIC I. E
PAGE srx
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I
Weans
Adlai Aided In Birth Of United Nations
Co
Av
CHICKEN FEED — DAIRY FEED
E. D. (Ed) DAVIS
charges
SENSATIONAL
5*
Illi
O’
I
=^=
LADIES READY-TO-WEAR DEPARTMENT
$2250;
SPORT SHIRTS
I
FORMALS
f •
14
ill
$299
$188 n $588
SKIRT
$349
eight summer robes in solids and fancy
MILLINERY
$1
OUR ENTIRE STOCK — NOW
ond
$1
DRESS SHOES
for
'A PRICE
I
SHOES
PLAY SHOES
'A PRICE
I
^<££^■-7=-
LADIES ACCESSORIES
Dry Goods Department
ALL SUMMER JEWELRY, plus tax
NYLON GLOVES, pink, white, blue
>
WHITE LEATHER BAGS, were $7.14, tax incl.
[{
I
i'
98
STRAW BAGS, assorted colors, tax included
UMBRELLAS, plaids and plain colors
98‘
Lingerie
■
69‘
THE BOSTON STORE
4
r
1
Nylon anklets, I
»r summer.
One group of all cotton seersuckers and
cords. Values to $6.
$1,99
$1.88
$2.88
$1.88
$1.00
Values in Our Basement Store
Lace towels, 2 for
Large size cannon towels, each
Novelty aprons, each
Linen dresser scarfs, each
Ninon and rayon dresser scarfs, each
Choir covers
Plastic shower curtains
Plastic coat hangers, 8 for
Orchard crystal glosses, 8 for ...
Juice glasses. 8 for
Dessert Dishes, 8 for
Tally-Ho prints, yd
Anderson small prints, lovely colors, yd. . . .
Small checked gingham, dark shades, yd. . . .
Polished chambray, yd.
Dark shades, playtone, yd
olid Color Broadcloth, yd
Evening. Floaty nylon nets, silk gauze taf-
fetas, organzas and lace. Short and floor-
sweeping length. Were $7.90 to $29.75.
Clearance womens play shoes.
Penaljo, Vic Colton, Risque,
Deb, Holywood Skooters.
All summer dresses includ-
ed. Fine silks, linens, shan-
tungs, voiles, cottons for
TO THE VOTERS
OF DENTON COUNTY
Plaid ginghams, yd
'Nugget print, ya
Embossed Organdies, yd. .
Tissue chambray, yd. . .
Lovaly fall broadcloth, yd
wai
ment’i
duced
cents
per tin
The
the A
I
THE
BOSTON
ONE TABLE BOXER SHORTS
$aareucker. Sizes 4 to 6
SEERSUCKER SWIM SUIT for girls ond boys
Sizes I to 3
BOYS SUMMER SLACKS
Gabardine shoers. rayons, blues, browns, greys.
ONE TABLE COTTON PIECE GOODS
Broadcloth voiles, sheers, printed solids
The finest money can buv at Snow's
Bring Us Your Custom Grinding
SNOW'S FEED STORE
McKinney Cr Frame Phone Central 6431
c
$9001
1
IF
ll'i
I 1
I
’1
*1
’1
II
I, I
'I I
When the conference started,
press relations of the United States
delegation sagged and Stevenson
To you thot worked so faithfully for me and to
you thot voted for me, may I soy, "Thonk you
so much." I shall never forget you. To you that
voted for another, I hope thot you will not be
disappointed in • our choice. Thanks again for
your support and your fr.endship. .
Seersucker. Alt light
patterns.
$J49 11
$ j98
Reg. $14.95 to $18.95.
iill, , .
VALUES IN OUR MEN'S DEPARTMENT 1
Stevenson said he partment
In the next two years, Stevenson
and Hiss followed official paths
in 1945 when both) that verged and crossed several
were employed by the State De times.
i. i
SUITS All reyon - light colors - fust right for 8 months of the year.
''HE**-;
'i
5WIM TRUNKS
Entire stock swim trunks Reg | / F* f*
$1.95 to $3.95. /4^Xi ■
$2 ji
Illi
I'i I
r
s
| DRESSES
Mil
ONE GROUP LADIES SANDALS & SLING PUMPS $O
Whites, blacks ond browns ““
NURSES WHITE UNIFORMS $1 95
Sizes 12 to 42 “
ONE RACK LADIES HOUSE DRESSES
Sanforized, fast color, 16 to 60
ONE RACK LADIES SUN DRESSES
Dan River fabrics, solids and stripes, 9 to 20
MENS SPORT AND WESTERN SHIRTS
Values to $5 now
VARIETIES — Lines rayons, ginghams,
colorful cottons. Were $3.95 to $12.95, now
I
I III
■ VixIiiJjiilllKi
u j ji
light color.
Il I
I'Ll
Cotton Slips and Half Slips
Cotton Shortie Pajamas
Cotton Gowns ....
Jjforrycloth Platform Scuffs
.TfT----“ J e,!-----
i
li
|l MENS"VENTILATED STRAW HATS
1 One table
SEERSUCKER PIQUE SUN SUITS
Plastic lining, for tiny tots . . . . .
*Ums, Quilted Slippers
MLrwSnW* — ~ ~ ~
■BSH a'Tr... ■
’477
Cotton broadcloth, linens, crepes, nylons,
dressy blouses, tailored, whites, pastels and
dark*. Dressy tailored and sleeveless styles.
Were $2.85 to $12.95.
ROBES
! sox
III Nyl— <
| /I Right foi
ROME __
ers are busy keeping Italy in the ,
; No. 1 spot as the most active film- j
producing country in Europe. 1
i The latest survey shows 35 films [ xv I J?
i either in production of being edited.
1 Production schedules for next i
! month call for another 10 films to
sih
XV/
llv^
lii
l!l|
i
ill!
'ii|f
By ROGIR F. LANP. the predominant sentiments of a .was
SPRINGFIELD DI UP—When helcitT whose mayor once threatened area and the Panama ( anal rone
returned to Washington in 1941, |to bust King George of England
Adlai Stevenson already had ac-'in the "snoot ’ and which ►wc.me
quired a vision of America’s place • stronghold of the America rirst
m the shrinking, strife - ridden movement
world. Stevenson's willingness to swim
His knowledge of international against the tide gave * glimpse of
relations grew in succeeding years, a characteristic that reappeared in
until eventually he assisted in the the Alger Hiss case and in some
birth of the United Nations and unpopular acts as governor of
participated in its first and second Illinois
General Assemblies ! H» hi
All cotton seersuckers in fancy pot- 1
terns only. Regular $2.95 values. ’ ■■
I'll SHOES
III
i! Clearance Boatonion Shoes,
nylon meshes. Browns, tans.
Rog. $14.95 to $18.95.
Ill
f
II
STRAW HATS
WASH PANTS
Il!
BLOUSES
All summer Panamas, Bakus and Milans J
Hots that sold up to $9.95. ^Mi
up He performed creditably
He served as deputy to former
■Secretary of State Stettinius, who
headed the U. S. delegation, at the
U. N Preparatory Commission
Belgium, Hol- ,‘n th' fal‘ 01
1945 He filled Stettinius s shoes
when the latter took sick.
i DUiupr
In Italy, Stevenson met the man I He was "senior adviser" to the
|U. S delegation at the tirst General
Assembly of the U. N. in New York
the following January .That fall,
and in the 1947 meeting of the
aecoimhitr. bp served as jyesrs
^an alternate delegate
various capacities
ISTEFEASO/V BLAMES TWAIN FOR Italy Becomes
CON Fl SION A HOLT FIRST NAME Top Film Center
ST LOUIS P — Adlai E Stevenson, the Democratic presi- ROME tffi—Italian film produc- |
dential nominee, blames Mark Twain "for the confusion that
exists on how to pronounce my first name "
In a recent letter to Cyril Clemens, head of the International
Mark Twain Society, the Illinois governor said;
"While my grandfather, Adlai E. Stevenson, was vice president I
of the United States under Grover Cleveland, Mark Twain was at-
a luncheon where grandfather was a guest. The newspapers of the
time quoted Mark Twain as follows on the pronounciation cf my
first name:
"'Philologists sweat and lexicographers bray,
" ‘But at longshoremen's picnics, where accents are high,
“ ‘Fair Harvard's not present, so they call him Ad lie.’
"Anyway," Stevenson wrote, "the correct pronounciation is
Ad lay ’ although to pul it mildly, I have been called many things "
AND WEEK-END CLEARANCE
Clearance Mansfield >naes, nylon
| ^^L^J^Jmesh. Brown & white, Brown & tan.
A "T Reg. $10.95 to $14.95.
Fabrics, patents, leather.
Light, dark, spectators.
Were up to $14.95, now
i dispatched to rhe Caribbean
-..j r________ t
to gather information on defense
PrNelt‘he'lccompamed Knox and «*ven the )°b of »P™cing them
high Navy officers ofl a tour of "" performed rreditahlv
the nation's bastions in the Pacific.
Further wartime travels lay
ahead Before he was through,.
Stevenson visited Algeria, Tunis
and Liberia in Africa, and Laly,
r ci «iw ui iv. .... .... v.. France, England.
Genera*? Assemblies He held resolutely to his foreign lantl. Luxembourg and Germany
By the middle 194vs, Stevenson policy views. In 1940 after Adolf ln
was workrng on foreign policy ' Hitler’s panzers sliced through J" ----
problems with the late Sen Arthur. Northern France to Paris, he be )wh® el^ht ye®r* afterwards was ;
Vandenberg, John Foster DuDes|came Chicago chairman of the10 be his rival I*1* presidency
and Sen Tom Connally, all far William Allen White Committee to — ^en- Dwight D. Eisenhower
better known then to the public Defend America by Aiding the The brief encounter occurred in
His original interest in the sub-1 Allies. Ik'm? °h “ N’P???" '
ject probably sprang from boyhood I Stevenson returned to Washing- building Eisenhower asked how e -
travels with his family in Europe ton as a special assistant to Navy|thln8s were going and Stevenson In his
and his experiences in 1926 on a .'Secretary Frank Knox, one of two said as well as could be expected, nected with the creation and early
tour of the Near East and Russia Republicans then in FDR's ^That’s all there was to the ex-Junctions of the U. N, Stevenson
It ripened in the 1930s as a mem (Cabinet (change was brought in touch with Alger
her. and finally president, of the Knox put him to work laying In 1945 Stevenson moved over a Hlss
Chicago Council on Foreign Rela-1 legal groundwork for seizure ot 'few notches into the domain of He fir::1, met Hiss in 1933 when
tions The council welcomed for | struck shipyards at Kearny, N J diplomacy proper both were employed by the AAA.
eign diplomats, debated their pro- The machinery he devised served The State Department, mindful (Their contact at this time was
nouncements and weighed possible as a pattern for 60 subsequent of his growing experience, called "frequent but not close or daily," i
effects on the United States pf far seizures on Stevenson to help promote pub- in the words of the controversial
away events | After Japan’s Dec 7^ 1941 strike lie understsnding of the forthcom- deposition Stevenson made for use
Its discussions—snd Stevenson's against Pearl Harbor plunged the ing United Nations conference at at the first trial of Hiss on perjury
voice— were out of haneony with U. S. into World War II, Stevenson San Francisco. charges *
'/i PRICE |
•A PRICE |
y2 PRICE
I M
$1
- 2
$249 up
-3
After 1933,
I saw no more of Hiss for nearly 12
jye.is The two renewed their ac-
quaintance early
con-
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 292, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 30, 1952, newspaper, July 30, 1952; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1348723/m1/6/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.