Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 57, Ed. 1 Friday, October 17, 1952 Page: 1 of 11
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Denton Record-Chronicle and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Denton Public Library.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
1 *Un
itn
GOTH YEAR
I
r'
DENTON, TUAS, FRIDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 17, IMS
Aaooctotad Pram I round Wire
★
★
VOL. L
NO. 57
★
★
►
A
—
&'e
V
ROUND
ABOUT
TOWN
\1
he
NOTF DEMANDS COMPENSATION
th*
Beer Seized
(
i
GUILL SAYS U.S.
HOMES IN PERIL
an
11
f
Samant,
Weather
o W-..
■
>‘1
against aggression.
Jil
MILESTONE IN MEDICINE
4
MB killed. 4JM wounded and M
-
1
fight for Ftepotat
ai
BOKa still held control
11 heart, and are
to
*
Ad
to
IM
- —red hit with a hint it baa
A J
■5
K
f
i
f
• a
- ■
nat aa E
iy night er
iJBureg*
liquor tn a dry area. Another weekend
tempcraU
of Doily Service
to Denton County
Says GOP Would
Ban Farm Props
By BAVE CHBAVBNS
Associated Press Staff
Gov Adlai Stevenson goes gun-
UN Awaiting
Red Fireworks
Truman Says
Ike Would
Indonesian Riot
Follows Election
the mechm
working nn
. janasetairiltey.
. Whereas the Russians have con-
tended the U. 8. craft violated So-
echos from a fresh outburst of
politicial gunfire between Daniel
and Shivers on one aldo and Demo-
on the.
night M
couldn't maasnre it.
tog tern]
and eart
new cool
TnM'ri
far sout
by Satan
teS
27 ever
adds w
Republic rm
______ Hu, center peak Horae monMain
on Sniper Ridge northwest of
Kumwha.
Late reports said the desperate-
ly-battling ROKs still held control
yesterday -ftopanetog GOP erW-
cism of his administration aa
I" and "so many
SAN DIEGO. CaUf. UR — Gov.
Adlai E. Stevenson charged today
that Republicans plan to' abolish
farm price supports if they win
See STEVENSON, Psge 2
In the
ly, C__
Korean soldiers searched
____I hill hi Cherwoa
-----, up7. ■
□31
and Sea. Joseph R. McCarthy ad
Trnmaa toted that EiasBMtoftr,
-----------_ HsMtolaan-
South Korean
the shell-seared
Valley and reported dig
147 Chiaeee bodies bw
loose dirt and hidden
' ' ' ' ■ ' ' " • " ft
. K CtAe 51#
DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLE
hi iiiiiini atoihiitrii sawJKO
2
■ v
2?-
Unprovoked Attack On B-29
■ “ *“ a j— — * - ~ w
‘wanton and unjustifiable at- ———
as the Republican p
didata, has sndsra
and added:
"The Republican
the presto enty can net escape ro-
He has jad an attack at moral
blindness. for totafe ha to wftting
to aeeopt dho very pmcttoae that
identified too so—IM 1MHMP
ran* although he took a tesdteg
~ HMHttof Enrage —si
The AeaMaat'a rimarim were to
JAKARTA, Indonesia Wl—Thou-
sands of Indonesians ran riot in
Indonesia’s capital today in the
wake of a parliamentary vote cen-
suring Defense Minister Hameng-
ku Buwono lx, the popular sultaa
of Jogjakarta.
Several thousand persons
mobbed the residence of the Neth-
erlands high commissioner, tore
down the Dutch flag flying there
and ripped it to shreds.
Government tanks and artillery
rolled into the heart of Jakarta as
some IS,000 demonstrators congre-
gated around the parliament build-
ing at daybreak and demanded the
legislature dissolved.
—■—-——-— ........... .............f". * , i. wtairo'ffirowel I. ■—
Stevenson Invades Texas
In Bid For Crucial Votes
WATER LEVEL DROPPING—The dwindling water supply in Lake Dallas is shown
in thia recent photograph. The lake's condition caused the Dallas city council to meet
at an emergency session today. (Record Chronicle Staff Photo)
_
Lake Dry-Up
Alarms Dallas
communism
-bn—ito"__, JHMWM
The President pushed hto drive
for Democratic votes in Now
Hampshire and Massachusetts wRh
increasing intensity after speeches
? -yr
-__
skies
boms for
slowly rie-
jwT> tonight
r iMarday. However, a
treat Is approaching the
I K
fel'j.
Connally’s certain successor,
Gen. Price Daniel, wfll not
be on hand. Daniel, unopposed
nominee of both parties in the gen-
eral election, is on Eisenhower’s
side.
Eisenhower left Texas with his
managers claiming 54 per cent of
ipty of Wood, with no work to
the still-beating heart was
opened to repair a faulty valve.
The man. 41, and not identified,
is alive and well today, - three
months aftir the historic opera
ttoo July ..... t ... . . .
I
valves or dangerously bulging i
weak spots Id heart walla, tan out I
—-------1 . - " ——— !
one human success was Par Insurance Bae C. P. Whisenant '
• ■A W InaursM* >geiwy, C-4IM ,
It nows —, « it aaMalgM
2Z- 5 , «a*
zzs >:S—
Savage Hand-To-Hand Fight
Rages For Sniper Ridge
SEOUL lift-Nearly 1.000 Chi-
nese troops assaulted Sniper Ridge
■Btoal Korun front to-
Mr Rod artillery fire ao
> South Korean defenders
The condition of Lake Dallas
created a near-emergency today
in water-conscious Dalias.
The level in the big lake to Den-
ton County, which supplies most
of the water for Dallas’ population
and industries was M feet below
the spillway Thursday. Thli is the
lowest figure ever recorded, said
Karl F. Hoefle, Dallas water su-
perintendent.
A report by the Army engineers
showed that only 7,840,000,000 gal-
lons of water remain in the lake,
considered to be only a four-
month supply for Dallas and the
Park Cities.
Acting City Manager W. S. Mc-
Donald ordered the Dallas street
cleaning department to stop flush-
ing streets. He also discussed
methods of saving water in Dallas
parks. The city council was to
meet in emergency session this
afternoon.
The Lake Dallas situation, which
had been virtually ignored by Dal-
las officials through most of the
current record-breaking drouth,
came to widespread notice in the
city largely through a recent story
in the Denton Record-Chronicle.
The Record-Chronicle reported
that Lake Dallas was so dry hay
had grown on thousands of acres
of the lake bed and Denton Coun-
ty farmers were harvesting the
unusual crop.
The story, given vide publicity
throughout the nation, stirred Dal-
las officials into action.
In Dallas, It was reported that
McDonald would recommend wa-
ter rationing measures be adopted
by the city council at the meeting
this afternoon.
It was also reported he plans to
recommend immediate action to
tap Lake Texoma if the Lake Dei-
ty JUKRTTA WATSON
Recerd-Chrenide Staff Writer
Ben Guill, state campaign man-
ager for Dwight Eisenhower, told
a gathering of college students
here Thursday night that the
greatest threat facing America to-
day is the policy of "paramount
rights.'’
Guill spoke to about a 100
students and Denton resident! in
the union building auditorium st
North Texas State College.
The former Republican Congress-
man from Pampa tied the para-
mount rights situation to the tide-
lands and told the students "if
they can take the tidelands under
paramount rights, they can take
your home or anything they want
to take.”
"Forget the tidelands—but re-
member paramount rights," Guill
told his audience. , « -
WASHINGTON W - President
U. S. Charges Reds^tfade &'iZ^?
a leading part to liberating rr
from their domtaatinn"
..In o^aeattang^dorsandatirm
•ed by Congroaa Ji
TYbmqb oatt _
toMnhiiooopby of racial superf-
yWtalBSil by the Nish."
jndMrf thorn svha voted tar th*
bill. Truman aaid, were RopsriMfeaa
Sen. Richard M. Nixon of CaHfer-
nia mow the GOP candidate fer
vice
united Nations, n.y. on -
Russia’s AndrtC Vtohinaky L_,"
the United Nations waiting today
for the Red fireworks he is ex-
pected to touch off .in replying to
U. S. Secretary of State Dean
Acheson’s plea for a concerted
U.N. effort to end the Korean War.
The Soviet foreign minister was
not scheduled to speak today, and
he told newsmen he did not know
when he would address the Gen-
eral Assembly.
"Maybe never," he added with
a wry grin to the journalists.
Poland was the first Iron Cur
tain country listed for the assem-
bly's general debate today, draw-
ing fourth place in a tentative
lineup of five countris
But Poliak Foreign Ml
Appease Reds
Cnlto Gtawral’e Pten
For ftoMtaff Yanko O«t
Of Kona ‘Cheap Poittkr
ABOARD TRUMAN TRAIN IM—
President Truman declared today
that Dwight D. Eisenhower •’ap-
pears to be willing to undermine
our safety if that will get him
elected president.’’
He asserted that the GOP presi-
dential nominee "is apparently
. suggesting that we pull our troops
I out of Korea and tot the South
Koreans do all the fighting." ’
The President went on to say.
r hi a campaign address prepared
i for delivery at Lawrence, Maas.,
1 during tho oecand day of a train
nutomobilE htumptng
I ’•I’ve never seen anything cheap-
bo teswuM«Mk^witoou Mt [iDiartng
By ALTON L BLAKBSLEE ..
AP Science Reporter
DETROIT UR—A successful me-
chanical heart, to give human
hearts a holiday, was announced
today.
For 50 minutes, the amazing
little machine pumped a man’s
blood through his body.
—Rumbling Mho a eu»t washing
machine, it by passed the leftside
of Ml heart. It detmired the Wood
coming from his lungs, and pulsed
it back into his arteries.
Empty of blood, with no work to
do, the still-beating heart was
Another milk truck—containing
more beer and whiskey than milk
— was discovered by officers
Thursday.
Sheriff Ones Hodges* office had
been investigating the beer-nin-
ning for nearly throe weeks and
finally sprang the trap in co-
operation with a State liquor
Control Board agent.
The two and ono-half too truck,
operating out of Muenster, Cooke
County, wee being driven by
Thomas E. Jetzelsberger, 21, ef
Muenster He wee arrested on the
Thnfeday’a high temi
was 74. Low this morning
slightly warmer than anti
Stevoswon vrib bo met at Moe-
cham Field at S:M p.m. by House
Speaker Bam Rayburn and Sen.
Lyndon B. Johnson, spoerhoeds of
tho natiosiat Democratic ergantn-
tion’s defense of usually-impregna-
ble Texas
Son. Tom Connally will introduce
Stevenson at Houston Saturday,
but r
Atty. Gen.
phen Mitchell on the other.
Mitchell hinted that the rebel-
ious Texans, such as Daniel, may
be cut off from political patron-
age Daniel fired beck that Mil
chell can’t scare him and that Rus-
sia is the only place you need to
fear political reprisials.
Democratic Gov. Robert Kennon
of Louisiana, another of the South-
ern governors backing Eisenhower,
joined Daniel in reply to Mitchell’s
statement. He said if Mitchell was
keeping a record of Democratic
voters, be would have to make
room for "several hundred thous
and Louisiana Democrats who
plainly indiciate they too will vote
fer. F.isienhower
Mitchell had said that Demo-
crats such aa Daniel would be put
"In the record book for future ref-
erence.” Shivers’ commosit was
that men like Mitchell are tho ones
he hopes to see removed from high
office by election of Eiaienhower.
DENTON AND VK3N1TY: Fate
sad alighUy vmrMrnr today, to-
night and early Batarfey. CaeL
er into Saturday and Sunday.
TIMFBRATURM
Losse Star Aoe Saoge
Tbanoay
r--
* *** ‘
a pat’
10 pm. .
The ROK Ninth Division today
reported ft inflicted a l
IIJM casualties on the
___ _ _____atato-MMaN than tho Strength H
The Chinese and ROKs dosed to a full ChingM it I vistas to ntee
Ninth Division troops pulled t
off Man Ham JMl M Aaafc a
flghtiM^ ChtaMfe MemmBmI
ComntonM 4e*d llttorod ^
frMAWtaM*5*M^^
"Ween. Boa at^m q£k**
Mr Griffith says they sold the
ear in response to their Want
Ad in The Record Chronicle.
--------- UBB AND READ .. —
RECORD-CHRONlOirT
WANT ADS
To Place Yum
Dial C 2551
----- -Ask for Ctsisiiai -
| virt frontiers, the U. 8. note said
the Attack actually occunrad boom
similes from the Japanese island
of Hokkaido and S miles from
Russian-occupied Yrt Island.
The sharply worded U. 8. note
advised Moscow "to consider the
grave consequences, which can
flow from its reckless practice, if
persisted to, of attacking without
provocation the aircraft of other
states.” -----------*.—
It rejected the Soviet claim,
made in a Russian note of Oct.
12, that the bomber wao over So-
viet territory and opened fire on
two Soviet fighter pianos before it
disappeared.
Moscow was asked to furnish an
immediate report on the romd* .of
a search operation believed to have
boon canted out by a Soviet petrol
boat operating from Suishoto- Is-
land, and to provide fell Informa-
tion about any crow members who port to
might have survived.
, .- . - --- . - r - -----------e----------
t^rXo^S? New Cool Front
May Reach Here
humane. The Research was sup-
ported by the Michigan Heart
Association.
tied, surgeons can bettor remove The surgeons told their pstient
bullets or other objetta, repeir Is definitely improved, but ft is
not yet fully known how much he
beneflttod fro mbis operetta)?
i Rheumatic fever had left him
with UM enlarged heart valve. U.
Rte HEART. Page 8 _ |
A
//
------- • - .
States _____ _ _ _
Moscow that Russian Nanas
tack” on the American B-2B plane
missing off Japan since Oct. T.
The note demanded compensation.
Payment is in order, the U. S.
said, both for the toss of the piano W—- ’
“ Mu*1 ’an
isbed. ■ ■ i
The U. S. declared the B-28
was on a routine flight off the
northern end of Japan, was entirely
unarmed and its officers were un-
der explicit orders to remain witb-
ninT to™™^",“
cans threatening to bag 24 electors ’A-"
who could decide the presidential
twee.
He steps into the cross-fire of a
Democratic revolt that could splin-
ter Texas away from the Solid
South for the second time in its
political history.
Stevenson begins his counter-
offensive against a thrust earlier
this weekk by Dwight D. Eisenhow-
er. His first speech is at Fort
Worth’s Will Rogers Coliseum at
4:50 p.m. (Denton time).
Eisenhower’s campaign through
Texas was blessed by Gov. Allan
Shivers and his state organization
in close aUanco with the state
GOP machinery.
.., . ,^..1 .’p-
AH HAHI
This little story concerning cor-
respondence has been making
the rounds in London. If you
got a letter which states, "The
matter la now under considera-
tion,” it really means “We lost
the file." If you write again and
they reply, “The matter is un-
der active consideration,” ft
really means, “We are now be-
ginning to look for the file."
On the other hand, if you want
folks to give serious considers-
tion to your selling offer and
reply promptly by phone, mail
or in person, just list the items
you want to sell to the widely
read Want Ad pages. You’ll
like quirk
I the vote. The Democrats say ft
isn't so. but they were doubtful
enough of the outcome to put their
candidate on tho stump here. It’s!
never been considered necessary
before to bring a Democratic pres
idential candidiate in person to
Texas. '
Stevenson's job taro wiK be to
kept bolster party ifoOS ttaA WMftoWto
' and his Democratic allies in Texas
are trying to erase. He also speaks
Friday at Grand Prairiie and Dal-
las. Saturday morning Stevenson
goes by train to have breakfast
and political chit-chat with John
N. Garner, former cice-presidient
who said last week he would vote
the Democratic ticket from top to
bottom.
After a short speech at Uvalde,
Stevenson goes to San Antonio for
an appearance at the Alamo, then
to Houston for his wind-up speech.
Stevenson hits Texas amidst
Allied fluting men MMitaw
- ___ - pile up Red casnaitieu-MjP
■tUtataw approactont that ef the fint
e Commu- <«.» —
The EI0gb Amy 0*1841
• sp’.i^c*tar,r,,y *Tru
1,75* CbtoOMk.
Triangle and
Ridge wero toe
feet ABM cMm
las water level continues to drop.
Hoefle, the Dallas water super-
intendent, cause in for some criti-
cism.
The disclosure that the lake has
only a four month supply was about
half the amount Hoefle thought
the lake contained a month ago.
Mayor J. B. Adoue Jr. said he
was not surprised by the Army
Engineers' report.
“It was really a little more wa-
ter than 1 thought we had,” he
said. “I thought Hoefle was
wrong, all along."
50 years,
their adn
rupt?”
Guiii admitted that thia was like-
iy, Md ••M. ’lf
4 fie* GUHJ
By R. J. (Bob) BDWARDB
Then hear thou from the heav-
ens, even from thy dwelling piece,
their prayer and their supplica-
tions, and maintain their cause,
and forgive thy people which have
sinned against th&.—II Chronicles
8-39.
Know all and you will pardon
all.—A. Kempis.
A • • •
The first of eight such pictures
as sponsored by the American As-
sociation of University Women
and J. P. Harrison, manager of
* Theatre Row, brought the best
money-attendance on Wednesday
night that the show has had on a
Wednesday night in the past three
and one-half years, according to
Harrison. The Association receives
20 per cent of the admissions and
that money goes into a special
fund, which is use<r to help put
selected students through college.
When you attend these shows on
Wednesday nights, once each
month, it seems, for the next seven
months, yotf will be helping some
deserving young man or woman
attend 'a school of higher learning.
“We thought we might be mov-
ing back to Denton a while back,”
said W. R. Simmons, former Den-
ton citizen now of Grapevine. ’’We
have been in Grapevine for the
past seven years, most of which
time I was associated with Allen
Butane, but at present I am as-
sociated with a furniture flfm.
Grapevine is certainly growing
fast these days.”
• • • •
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Strong have
returned from Lubbock, where
they attended the West Texas-New
Mexico Apparel Market. Joe has
been a representatives of the Kauf-
man Knitting Co., Minseapolis,
Minn., for the past 14 years. He
said, “If all land planted to cot-
ton in Texas were producing as
much as the counties around Lub-
bock, Texas alone would produce
enough cotton for the entire na-
tion. It is believed that around
1,000,000 bales will 've ginned In
that part of Texas.”
Roy Baker and State Liquor Ota*
trot Agent H. M. Branch of
Gainesville.
Branch confiscated 55 cases ef , WI-k. . .
beer and eight pints of whiskey. Saturday Night
Jetzeiaberger was charged with J °
MmKfjatVas ‘ ‘
Ho entered a pto* of nflto before
County Judge Gerald Stoekard and
upon the riresnmsntatfo* ef Comk
Attorney Darwto Wilder was
ad |500 and ceurt costa.
Vflder said the fine was paid
immediately by a Muenster man.
to a similar ease several weeks
•go, another milk truck driver wag
fitted for transporting liquor And
beer to • dry aroe. He^toe, wee
reported to be operating out of
Muenster.
TRUMAN STUMPS Nl< 1ENGLAND—President Tru-
man is freeted by CongrtfBman John McGuire of th*
third Connecticut district 8ft bis arrival fa New Hqven,
Conn., to atart his three day tour of New England on
behalf of the candidacy of Adlai Stevenaon. (AP Wire-
photo)
“I believe that the big reason
for no more oil testing now than
there is may be due to the lack
of steel and water," said Roy
Phipps, local qil man,. "Pipe for
drilling is most diffkult to obtain
and the shortage of surface water
handicaps operation of an oil test.
In my opinion, when these two
shortages are overcome, there will
See ROUND ABOUT, Page 2
worked on other persons sines.
In dogs, thia same pump has dividii
been rigged to by pass both sides might
of the heart, putting the whote whose
heart on temporary vacation.
In dogs also, it’s been combined
with an artificial lung to by-pass
the entire heart plus the lungs.
The heart-lung machine someday
may do the same for humans.
Thto human suceeai HUBS 1
milestone in medicine. With mech-
anical hearts, ths heart can be
laid open for no waurgary, mmr
direct view.
With part or an the heart onq>-
to speak,
star Stan-
islaw Skrzezewski was not expect-
ed to steal Vishinsky’s thunder by
replying to the. major American
foreign policy speech Acheson
made to the asembly yesterday.
Diplomata assumed the Pols
would stick to a text prepared well
in advance but considered he
might indicate whether the Com-
munist lino on Korea would be
conciliatory or antagaiistic to the
West. , >
Before these speeches, the as-
sembly was to taka up the propos-
al to include on Ito agenda the
Asian-Arab bloc’s charge of racial
discrimination in South Africa.
South African Ambassador G. P.
Jooste was expected to speak for
an hour against inclusion of the
item, arguing that the matter is
his country’s own affair and not
within U.N. jurisdiction.
Acheson in ftis speech yesterday
urged “every member of the
United-Nations ... to support the
co—tai action to Korea* and
pta—d a fight to the finish
A ' .V4*'' ■' '"»> V > • 1 Ji
g ny’HMFt' 8f7A! y_' ,’jtf
Machine Takes Over Work ,.
Of Heart During Surgery
turners, plug holes in the heart'xi.
dividing wals. The spare heart*
_‘ l aoBMday help save people
whose «wa. heart*
The human success was an-
nounced in the Journal of the
American Medical Association by
Dr. F. D. Dodrill, Dr. Edward
Hill and Dr. Robert A. Gerlach of
Harper Hospital here. General
—,
Guiii took a few verbal awiaga edge of Sanger
at Sam Rayburn and President ~
Truman. He accused Rayburn of
“cut-throat” practices to tea cam-
paigning. and —I that Harry Tru-
man tried to incite hate in the
Negroes by hia speech in Harlem
last week.
Guill quoted Rayburn aa aaying,
“J believe in reciprocity and the
people who deal with me had
better practice tho same titing.” <
He referred to the 27*4 per cent
depletion allowance on oil, Guill
said. He added that Rayburn was
also practicing “political bribery”
by announcing from his campaign
headquarters that 85 more Texas
counties had been added to the
drouth relief lial.
“Rayburn la more of a captive
2 Stevenson is a cap-
tive candidate,” Guill declared.
Running down a “check list" of
the campaign issues, Guill com-
pared the stands of General El—-
hower and Governor Stevenson on
Texas ownership of Its own tide-
1®nos, compulsory 1* E* vt ropcftl o*
Taft-Hartley, repeal of controls,
elimination of government waste
and extravagance, elimination, of
corruption to government, stepping i
inflation, limit on Senate debate, <
tightening security laws against i
Communists. I
After outlining the views of each <
candidate, Guill said that Eiaeo-
hower's views were more Texan." 1
Gibing the corruption to Wash-
ington, Guill told his audience “we
ought to get Washington back
where a mink an lente a polecat In
the law."
H* hit at Sesrotary *t Agrieul-
now w wasn UTp nmiw.
After hto speech, G8D wgrebal-
lengod in a question *gd answer
session by ■ a student who asked,
tiblieans have been In
rt ft —t sb likely ft—
Mratioe would be cer-
tion center—e af th* NattaMl
Bro TRUMAN, Fags >
“Rayburn to
speaker titan J
Running down a “check liat" of
I
h:
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 57, Ed. 1 Friday, October 17, 1952, newspaper, October 17, 1952; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1348791/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.