Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 87, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 23, 1952 Page: 2 of 31
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.
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1
A.
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ws»
f L.
Dr
121 Av*. A
rote
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1
destroyed In North Korea — the
1-
“Helicopter* are
now used
er
<*
Predecessor of the heli
|
commentator
b
owwS . .
t
24”
for your storht plena...
and Gerber is working on
Sul
South Side Square
.....1
*”vnr»»’
own
laat
♦
Nov
r
T~
|t
>
/>
PIERCES
- >
I
;i up i>i*,URn« ibaai Apaephk.W'WW-
Sewth SUe Sqtaere
i i 1 i i ■-■■■■
■^KHtenAgS
TO 22 BELOW
IN MONTANA
—
RED PURGE
(Continued from Page 1)
London admitted that Slansky, j
who ia accused of placing his Jew-;
Play Planned
At Northwest
dress** thet art bore, beoutiful and bouffant...
illustrated
Wl HAVE
OUt HIT
ASSORTMENT
IVit
OF
were
Light snow
(ted in the Panhandle and
F. J
wl
i
si
4E
»
' HALL-
MARK
(Santa item.
Do
.... |
I
</
*
4
LE
Jr.
ant
E!
fre
aft
Ph
—
Joptca
— nylon net over taffeta —Mee
bodice, sparkle-dotted, attached stole... ir
MODERN CLEANERS
FHONI CINTtAL 7142
Free Pickup > Delivery
1 rt ■ ^■i.;:us»s(.riMis.,rTr<
_
’____n» asms nrm».cnoict» _______
MERCURY IPS Denton .- MARKETS
*
ere A**oe
week. He ,
busmesa education section. ...
Tech
leredlth are
'night. ,. J"
TSit jONUhiU^__
gue Saturday.
of communism cornea from within mg anti-Semitism
and not from without.
At thia point, Dewey and his in-
fluence are in the
Santa Item:
Levely end right
for the Helideyi.
r-
ROY N. LUKINS
GREAT AMERICAN
RESERVE
ln«vraM« Campany
Ml Salivar C-MS7
I.;
HANDSOME, 2-PIECI J
LIVING ROOM SITS »
JM< ,WI J
-
OwutmAi
PAGB TWO .
Wire Protects
West Germans
*
«w*r ef •*-
VNIeg* for
Misa Alta Mae Holder, Sanger;
Mr*. B. c. Lankford, 212 Ave. E:
Mrs. J. H. MeLaln, Route 1, Den-
ten; Mr*. Stanley Mil
Scripture: Mrs. Tom S.
is? r
wS]
NOW! I
Out-of-towncra iu KRUM am Mr. and Mrs. Weaiey WUtea and
swr *$. ft a"s xre :: ft ft
man Miller and son attended the funeral N Mra. Olga Ritter, a
frequent visitor in Krum, In Wichita, Kans. ... Mr. and Mra.
Lange, Iowa Park, are house guests of Mr. and Mra.
. . Confined to their homes with illness are Miss Susan
i lated a municipal ordinance by
blowing their horn,, during a Re
publican street demonstration
The tail drivers had joined in
a procession which escorted to his
/;
//j
i/ JS
.1
Dr J. L Carrico, member of
NTSC faculty, is celebrating an
I other birthday anniversary today
Rev. M. C Hooter and Beth Bow-'
era will observe birthday anniver-
i sarioa tomorrow. Monday.
lie—Ad
iry Koiner, Krum, mod-
lissed: Mt Word.
Irg. Bill Holbrook, 410
Karl f’opeland. Route
1 !!?
Miss Moneldg Rhfoe'
Elm; Samuel! Wright,
Chickasha, Okla. .
Elm Street Hospital—Admitted
|k.. ” *
Uin, medical. Dismissed:
Xinnsti nsmiTTorr —
W“1tUr
j^gin, Denton! f
ROUNDABOUT
(Continued from Page 1)
cd down after he had hern in the i sibility rather
woods only about three hours; Ma 1 wisp — even
Stuart also got two; William Earl, “
one; Billy Lanford, one; Marvin
Llnenaehmldt, one; T. 0. White,
one and Harry Owens bagged two
big op goblerg. Maek Stuart, In
addiiton to his two bucks, shot his
automobile, the shot going through
the hood of the car. It aoems that
Maek was getting ready to shoot
at a takget. leaning on hie auto-
mobile. Through the scope, which
ia slightly higher than the barrel of
the gun. he could see the target
all right over the car. The bar-
rel of the rifle wasn't raised suf-
ficiently above the hood, ao when
the shot was fired, a hole appear-
ed in the hood.
Mrs. H G Chitwood said, 'T
you know what the country needa'
Well, of course, we thought of sev-
eral things, but we weren’t right
She said, “The country needa a1
man who knows the needs of the
, country.*’
Smartly styled sets in
modern deelqns. eapertly
constructed, upholstered
in o wide range of colors.
1 were rescued by helicopters.
Allied warplane* struck heavily
at Communist supply lines and
transport during the week The
Herman Lange, Iowa Park, are house
Schults . . . -J „ 1— ‘-—LI . -
Barthold and Mrs. Larry Bryant ... Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Talley,
Fort Worth, are visiting the H. M. Coles.
ir«.A?iri,k°xdtfin^ob.r|
1
u ai i H. i h
MSI r3w£
Denton Hospital and
mitted^Henry Koi
»■ adahty;' jjgt III
• Demon; Mrs Marvin Tunelcllff.
Laka Dallas
BIRTHS
Mr and Mrs Javt Ramry w
mm . Uh dm anta <4 a Jrh I
who wn bom at a.m, Fnder.
but that 1
Foster Dulles instead.
Dulles served as Dewey s for
eign affairs adviser in the 1944 and
1941 campaigns, when Herbert
Ira. Maude Vandeventer. 924 Fee-
■ --------Mra
-WUL.
0. Jar-
y. Fart
Readier n.
Mttr • of Teag-
RRO tn DaMas
Sente Item: Nothing ni<
Santo Itemi Nothing
nlcas Hua a Livie*
Suite Rar Xmoa.
LI4MT4MK
RTM iAJ*i—OatUe and
a lwMawS? d«rftl‘'Lw
i Oaaiinad 14 cents and
lambe vera about at
Range: Slaughter Stasre and yeas,
num M-aai; elaughtar cows a6-*“
siaughtsr calvea M-US; atocksr calves
W48S down; atocker mrllnls MS
down; stncksr ateara Ml down: stacker
co«o 411.40 down; elating hoes toy
am*, snwe aia.&o down: aleuebter
lambs S0-S22 feeder lambs S15
down; slaughter yearlings *8-*18;
aged wethers *10 down; slaughter
awes ga-ao-M; atocker awes *7.00
down
wi " ■ 1 ...... -
Labor Leaders Meet This Week
To Choose CIO, AFL Presidents
WASHINGTON. Nov tfi-Top Whea the APL ewveouea loM
leadership ol the AFL and CIO September pubbdy «»dor»^ **
meet aaparately negt week to
chooee new preaident*.
Moat obaerver* tea AFL Secre-
tary-Treasurer George Meany a*
; the logical successor to President
; William Green who died yesterday.
, But in the CIO a vigurou* contest
wa* under way for the job of Pret-
1 ident Philip Murray, who died
. Nov. 9.
i Although few labor leaders were
willteg to discuss it openly, the
question of unifying the two or
ganigations was getting some seri-
ous thinking .Evidence appeared C
be lacking, however, that unity
would auddenly become a real pos-
' ■ than a will ’o the
..„r with brand new ____
leadership at the top of both organ-, of CIO vice president* and etecu-
ixstions ! tive officer* was scheduled to di*-
Moany, M - year - old eno • time I cuss a fitting mentortgl to Murray,
plumber who rose tn second spot in i But the main topic tor study Ra-
the eight - million member AFL in i doubtedly will be the matter of
194®, ha* boon steering the AFL Murray's successor. The following
for • y«r or more during fre Friday »e CIO Ewcuttvo Commit
quent illnesses of Green. I tee meets in Atlantic Gty ■
Many is credited with an »ag-. preparation far the annual eonven-
groasivenoaa which probably more; tion. The convention, starting Dec.
thqn compensated tor Groan's fail- 1. officially will elect a CTO preei-
ing strength of the past tow years, dent.
East Tennessee
service tn
*
r OHbeW ms
. . I
PEACE PLAN
(Continual from Page 1)
IfTJb th*y that prospect
•- F? Allying itself with the Western
viewpoint the Indian propoasl up-
holds the principle there must be
no forcible repatriation of pris-
oners.
All but three of the 14 defend
i are Jews. The three
a former member
may be the over-all the party Presidium named Josef
trend of Pl-oaident elect Eisenhow Frank anti Karol Svab. former
(deputy minister of state security.
'TVS... .k a a! a o I*
Six FRISCO residents were delegate* to two stale conven-
tion* this week. Attending the Southern Farm Bureau Federation
meeting in San Antonio were Mr. and Mra. George McKaney
and Clayfon Clark, representing Collin County . . . Mr*. Otis
Newman, president of tbe Frisco Parent-Teachers Association,
llr». 1L c. Richey, and Mr*. A. E. Morris, attended the Toxas
Congress of Parent* and Teacher* in Wiehita Falls.
• • • •
Mr. and Mrs l^onsrd Moore, JUBTW. IN Oil paronU of a
gill. Lydia Jean, born Monday in a Fort Worth hospital . . . Mr*.
Robert L. Ellis and children, Tulsg, Okla., wore recent guests
of Mr. and Mrs. L. F. Tate and daughters . . . Also visiting in
Justin were Mrs M. T. McClure, Bridgeport, and Mrs. Barney
McClure, Paradiso, who were guests of Mrs Richard MeCiure.
# • • •
Mr and Mrs. L. C. Ray. CROSS ROADS, recently entertained
Mr*. Ray's mother. Mrs. J. G. Murphy, Commerce ... Mrs.
Gene Redfearn was in Sherman this week ... Mr. and Mr*.
Edwin Hoeffner, Dallas, wore guests of her peronts. Mr. and Mrs.
Edd Webb , , . Mr. snd Mr*. Odus George and children, Decatur,
visited his mother. Mis R S Goorge ... A post nuptial shower
honored Mr*. Jackie Joe Redfern, the former Miss Erllne Gaston,
Thursday evening at the Community Center Gamea were plaved
and gifts wfcre presented. Hostesses w*re Mrs P erm an Smith,
Loe Miller and Floyd Schmittou. Guasta were Mmes. Charles
Wilaon. Oscar Miller, Tom Gaston. Denton: Mr*. J. H. Byrom and
Mr*. Mandv Roger*. Harlan: and Mme*. Bailev Redfern, Joe
Lawson, Bill Hampton, A. S. Sitz. l«o Miller and Raymond. Car.
roll . . . Dallasttea tn Justin were Mr. and Mra.Elbart Gilbert
Mr. and Mra. Bob Tutt, and Cecil Garriaon, who viaited Mr and
Mrs. H. McCullum
16? to
HELENA. Mont., Nov It <*
t —The temperature plunged to
St below soro at West Yellow-
stone last night after a cold
-I.*!- . throw ,rwit n»Qv«<* •outh >nt® W"
ms within a atenesjthrow of m|ng and Colorado.
huge prison where Hitler * top |
. —.-----
Sabre Jets
Blast MIG
SEOUL, Sunday, Nov. 2J
U. S. Sabre lets blasted another
MIG-15 Saturday for 1® confirmed
kills in six straight days of victory
[ over the Russian-built Communist
interceptors.
The Fifth Air Force reported a
second MIG was probably de-
i stroyed Saturday in a dogfight
about 10 miles south of the Yalu
I River boundary of Manchuria. It
last was seen streaking eastward
in fiamea. The confirmed kill was
in the same area.
The battlefront was quiet. Chi-
j nese patrols maintained light pres-
sure against South Korean posi-!
tions in the Sniper Ridge area of;
, the central sector.
ish friends in high' se^Stirt If^JlfitiV^ctS
i sphere. \
_ The Western diplomats said
ascendancy Caechoalovakia appears intent on hjttic line"and absorbs most of the
There are reports that Elsenhow- estranging her relations with ls-j|0HM among Allied troops.
er asked the New York governor rael and Rnmama and Hungary
to become his secretary of state, [*n *n 'f they bring to man(jer gpoge at ceremonies for .
Dewry suKRestrd John Jc^ish-born Ana PaukeT TOT’ | mallv activating the new ROK 12th
lies instead. mrr Romanian foreign minister. and 15th Divirions.
' ri
“I am a little afraid that I' m j
not going to get a good stand of
said Ed Lynch of the
ludapsndeui School Dlsulot Denton
County. Tesaa for the cuuatructlou1
of ADntTIOHB TO THE WXISTTMG '
HIOH ROKOOL BUH.DIMG The bld
openinc be held In the office
of Mr Chester O Utrickland I
In th*
----- --------„ ... Tess*
tinned Their 1441 Ponttac was I Plan* end epecifieettotu may *>•
overturned in the bar pit Dam- obtained from Wyatt c Hedrick,
ages were estimated al SSOO ’ "^somT
Two automobiles skidded through Tessa, upon depoeit <>f sasoo Addt-
mud and collided Saturday morn- I tlonal sots of plana may be Obtained
mg at the intersection of Charlotte uP°n ouwUbt payment
. of *18.00 per eat Deposit! hem
contractors who do not submit bld*
' will be forfeited unless th* plans
—J ‘ hflcatlona are itturnad at
hours before the time set
— of bid*
cashier'* check, or i
—- -nr Ol the total!
drawn In favor
of the Denton Independent Ochool 4^"
required with each L hj M
proposal aa guarantee tost bidder 1*
.....................“II
p**:
Did you know that Denton had
its first snow this past week. Some
of the boys, who war* up at 3;
o'clock Thursday morning, said
that a heavy snow wss falling for |
several minuter That's entirely t
hearsay with Roundabout.
350 F»rda «f 1
Spandau Jail today to protect
nearby German residents from
molestation by Soviet prison
„„ ’ ______
Hie action was- take® by order
of British Maj. Gen. C.’ F. C. Cole-
man after two instances in which
’ the Russiaa lentnea arrested Ger-
mam for walking along a footpath
leading to a number of garden
. - to
I patrol high tenaion power line*, oil *e,t®rn part of the county. “Since !
*ine* and to herd cattle;” he •**«••’'». •■4 *• didn't get a*
“It ia also being widely uaed *®uck •• did some parts of:
th* county, my whest hs* been
coming up in spots It'll take a
considerable more rain than we've
„ ». Brownsville
Christi tt. Texarhana
-
Protection "• Bsrawty
CHAIN LINK HNCI
B.H.A. T®rm> - > Ytt. te Pty
L V. BEAN — C-MB4
•eside al one of the
Texa* State Teaeh
> in El Pase this
be in eharae a
—section. The . r
held at theme w|H be ' FirturtisHc TttA-1 Lak
| U..and Mr* FrodMeredlth hrt|
t aswt vUttifr IDs Tavlur Meredith. •!» “
t Mfltf, ix^ust- t i &bd Mrg Morwitth
■.’HBHPM’ «• ‘ ucu, Fla., where
. *
-— a-)
und Erno Geioc. demoted Hungari-
an *late planning minister.
.»»• vcuipa.*!.*. »«.«.. ..v,„v.. All such stepa. these sources
Brownell Jr., designated by Eisen >*»<’• would help to picture Russia
hower for attorney general, was * J *■“ “* u
Dejsey's campaign manager.
chosen for secretary of the interior
can’t be classed as a "Dewey
mati," and yet he was at the s'de smooth Israeli-Czech relation*. It*
o' the New York governor uhen *bn..nirri,.A >h»
Dewey engineered a i—.
thrpugii last June's Governors
ahjrh was an indirect slap at Tait modern detective fiction
ip th* Texas delegate squabble
T^ius far. Taft can claim only
nnq su p p o r t c r in the cabinet.
GeOrge M Humphrey of Clevc
lanp. named for secretary of the
Traasurv.
■ft) a large meaiure, a president
on I j r
NE1
ride i
wind*
in thi
tion'*
apecii
narco
It c
inaiat<
group
New
thing
addle
and i
The
Ing”
“kick
Wh<
the
but i
culosi
lirnln
Paint
are *
on ti
about
betwi
girla
ber.
Th*
Rivei
addic
aymp
For i
belie'
slum:
Dr.
tor, I
of pt
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cope have opened a cafe in ARGYLE
and have finiahed construction of a new home . . . Mr. and Mr*
Roy Wallace wore recently in C'bUdresa with their son, Grover
' Wallace, and hi* family . . • Weekend guests of Mr. and Mr*.
5E&'ft"3S;
Bush and children.
Democratic national ticket tor th*
firat time in hiriory, Meai
reportedly the driving ferae
the deciaion.
Th* 14 man AFL BxacuUv® Coun
cii m*«u b*r« Tuesday to atort
Gr*en * succesaor. Ha will *orv*
at least until the next eoavMtio*.
The two top CIO contenders are
Allan S. Haywood, «®-yaar-old ox- -
executive vice preaidenl. and Wai-,
ter Reuther. 4S-year-old head of
the United Auto Workers, biggest
of all CIO unions.
to Few were willing to apeeulate on
' i which of the two men would
emerge, from meetings starting in
New York Monday, a* Murray's
successor. The New York *e*efon
The Marketing Club of Merth he will attend radar and electron-1
Texan Slate College will meet at ic* school
• .a > tea* r» — sw-aiw ga»m» r»iu ... .... Mis* Halen Jean Harris, daugh-1
hi* funeral afternoon. Unjon RmWing cafeteria. Joe ter of Mr. and Mrs John Harris,
Mr Btown, T5, died in hu home, Be|den president of the Dallas 5M S. Ekn and sn occupational
wij Myrtle, after a year * Illness. > flrm thgt beapB hj| namr Wij| pe thcripy student st Bsltimore, Md.
Rur.ai te ui^ar the apeak(,r He wl]| he intro.; vjgited Mr. and Mr*. Irving Luns-
Jack Schrniu a’M* Iduced bv Phil Miner, president ford Jr. in Petersburg. Va , last
... r w „f th, pluh weekend. Mr*. Lunsford is the for-
Dr. I. Stanley Janes, avttier, mor France* Castleberry,
missionary and world-traveler, i uacbitai uatii
will speak on the North Texas: ti u t **
State College campus Monday »l , p P
3 p m. in the NTSC library aud> medieri ^Mtt^failv^Gilbirt
torium, sponsored by the Student ■ «£• 8•{?. 0'J”?;
Religious Council. The public i*;709 ” * ",tty
invited to attend. ;J« “SE 8UI£rV
James Cogdell, Dent on. medical.
PERSONALS Dismissed: Maxi* Batson, «ft> A«d-
Dr Robert B Toulouse of NTSC arson; Miss Liilitn French, TSCW;
has been elected treasurer of the ”** •>-----
Texas Audio-visual Educatoin Di-
rectors. The new group seeks to
bring about wider use of audi-
v!«u«l instructional material in Tex-
i as schools and colleges and among
araat I auuu groups. . .
,real! Mr*. Philip Chanee. 119
, | returned from Beaumont where
she attended the funeral of her
rister, Mrs Joe H. Riley. Tu®»-
d*y. Mn iwVy, Hfeioug '
*. of Resument, had boon a
1h Dem op;
- 4 Un E. Johnwm,
counting at TOw. I
Women, will preaid
idly in this area B ..
Proceeds will be used to finance — — ——.—----—— i ■
.Nazi Victim Aids
Freedom Moves
J HARTFORD, Conn 'V*—Joe Ger
urriM amim, iwn i/w . . .
phine Beam, Gaily. Lewi*. Fred- *"
, , , e « own* 1 UAH tn pucinp Nazi COHCl?!!!FII1 ion
rick La»*en. Jerrv Farren, Billy
Sreddv' 7ndb Ce’oroe’ Wi« ’ v‘r'*W* #ca,e «**"
Hotfh And motels in the two .... - 1 .. , -J tint in America s program for de
tine 'torn ieirnmnai u ilk £o»*« »• kf) iMmaiiswat
out for Knoxville for the Uortl-BlowerS DrOW
me
To'.al damage could not b« eati- Krtw Vie* s/eir
>wj ______ ......... ........ aie.i The Westhcr Bureau here rruill .flfiyur
In Tact,'he jnight get it without >’«'l nothing on it* book* io com ANKARA. Turfcev > - Mavor
. i .. .U_ ..-.-u-u.- nare u Ih lha ho.vy fall Fiftaan BtnHtrhoB1U(' a Democrat,
nchr- fell dur.ng a 24 hour period cal)ed a pp.,, conference to com-
,hc .n Kno- ville but that was 6f> year* p|a)n that taxl drlvars hari ,io
jn- 3^0—• a_j — — — * —a*-----
Amateur radio operator! main-
WW I
■ KV !
»! i 1
i ■'
• H-ball
Taft, Dewey
Struggle For
Power In GOP
WASHINGTON. Nev. 92 l^-The
fitrt signa of a struggle for power
within the new Eisenhower admin-
istration are beginning to make
thefo appearance.
The prospective chief antag-1
onisls ar* two veteran* of the Re- ( mmlsler in rj«s uonuon men k „ »ha rwA-inrii
publican political war* - Goy. worked wj(h Slansky and Gemln- *'‘‘•‘J**8 the^
Thomas E. Dewey of New York, dcr ,0 flu olher key jobs wilh dis-' *" r*‘ J J* _n(?'
twice hi* party's presidential nom- siden(s ^r»tinn.7 tr^bils One
incq, and Sen. Robert A Taft of AU but lbree of tbP u defend-(*^ation*l
Ohio, who lost three efforts to gain ant, are jew< jbe u>iee arc probably destroyed and
the nomination. Clementis, a former member of f0" da®,ge®- .. .
involved may be the over-all the party Presidium named Josef |e^Jriv^ AUie<j pland„' wei^ „Phot
er's next four years in office deputy minister of stat* security. a"*”PIh,r (ommuni*t ground
In es»ence, Taft and Dewey The charge sheet makes it plain ■u""*.. • T .
represent two wmga ol the Rcpub.; the. Jews are prime targets of the Df>rted tbat tbe two Sabre pilots
lican party struggling to channel trial, the biggest Communist show
the Eisenhower administration into; of its kind since the Moscow purge who 10,1 the,r oper^onaUy
their own pattern. of the 1930*.
D«wey represents what — for Western diplomats In Vienna
lack of a better description—is speculated that tbe trial is being
.ailed the "internationalist" wing .staged with an eye on the reaction weekjy report said 7M trueks wer*
of the party. Taft represent* those of (be Arab nation*, technically j ds-jroJ.£;j i_ Kore: - {*■“
who believe, a* Taft said in the still at war with Israel. It is a sig J highest'total since last"ja'nuary.
campaign, that the greatest throat nificant manifestation of a grow u i vw... G....,
of communism come* from within ling anti-Semitism in the Soviet jainca A. Van Fleet told an audi-
ence that the Republic of Korea
Army holds a major part of the
SAOJF STORM
(ConUnuad from Page II
w»'s An estimated 4.OX) grid fan*
itit m . ........... "r,f reported m rooned at Lon-
propose* and Congress dis- Bn.’* ' l,r!’*n Ky
* _ a *27 in .* |I««4es;c nmrl tvsnlnl
cit'o' •«ere istnmed with fan* who
had . i
little doubt That the Ohio senator
can install himself as Republican 1
mated ihe Weather Bureau here
i it* book* to com-
•.“KlVif'Wro b tbe “amicable 'iar,f *;,h *b* h,'avy fal1 Fifteen ,\t?f
.1.«• a a II « IH/i’iai *<->11 a! • > a.. »> <v aa Ol ..
settlement he has predicted.
Whatever Taft's position,
Ohioan will have a strong
fluence on the course of legisla
tion. Elsenhower's program could tamed conta'-t wjjb isolated cities
suffer greatly if Tsft opposed any in East Tennessee Associated
portion of ft. If Taft is co-opera- Pre«« service to new-miper* in
Uvf, as he has told friends he Bristol. Johnson City. Kingsport, home !*met Inonu. former Turkish
wants to he, the progi-am will find Elizabethton and Morristown was president and leader of the opposi
smoother sailing cut off for more than 12 hour* tion Republican party
Taft apparently ha* checked oft -
an< future ambition to become
president
onl; ..
po**. That is where Taft is likely
to have his big innings
If he chooses to fight, there i*
install hlinself as Republican
floor leeder In the new Senate
Sponsor* are Mr* Ze ma (’han*y,
Mrs Virginia Cundiff and E. S
Kaiihiro.
In th* cast ar* Nil* Faye Hughes.
Greta Smith, Don Spradley, Da-;
1940 to escape Nazi concentration
camp*, is inventor snd producer
of a variable scale device impor
Mid ipect
i*mc 1* :
for opening of bld*
A bld bond c?.z-
earUfled check for 5
•mout of th* bld. <
District, .will b«
will *ni*r into contract an* execute
bond within ten days after reeetertng
notice of award
Caab hid subosltted win include
gtnersl conetruetlon work, plumbing
and heating work and. electrics]
work
Th* Owner r*Mrr«e th* right to
reject any or ell bid* for legal nr
other reasons and to waive any tot-
mantles
FR«D MINOR Pseldsnt
Board Of Trustees
Dentn® independent
School Dletrtct
9®. Dee V
BBRUN, Nev. 33 iM—British *a- bousas witbin a
. .. -r-w. < jor war crimes,
Gen. Coleman first protested to j
the Russian authorities about the
! conduct of the guards and then
' without Waiting for a4 reply, de-
cided on the barbed wire method
of screening the footpath. Fifty
British engineers and 20 military
police strung ----
Soldiers of all four occupation
powers guard the jail, which holds
former Deputy Fuehrer Rudolf
Hess, Admiral* Erich Raeder and
Karl Doenitz, banker Walther
Funk, munitions expert Albert
Speer, diplomat Konstantin von
Neurath and Hitler youth leader
' Baldur von Schirach. They are
; serving from 10 year* to life.
8 Sons Serve
As Pallbearers
For J, IL Broun
The eight »ons of John Howell * ». « w...
Brown served as pallbearer* at ’p.m'‘Fridi'y’m" he "sfadtnt
hit funeral Saturday afternoon. union - -- ...
Belden.
Burial was in Roselawn under the |
direction Of < ' ” *
Son*. The Rev. C. E. Newman
condueteE th* Mrvice*.
Mr. Brown, A retired farmer and
grocer, had lived In Denton County
lot 59 JWI H* Was born in Mur-
es* County, Tenn, and was a Pres-
byterian,
Survivors include hi* wife, Mrs.
J*H. Brown: two daughters. Mrs
Lprene Brown. «01 Myrtle, and
M>». Gu« Cogdell, Corinth; eight
cans, OtM, 0. C , Emmett, Dorris,
aW Cladde E. Brown, all of Den
ten. and Arch. Ceeil, and Bumie*
Rrowm of Corinth: two sisters,
ite McNeill and Mr*. U-
lons. both of Denton; a
mJ Brown, Denton, to i ” ..TXLnT---------
Mrro and three great ua^8rUp
a/fft returned from Beaumont
•ATI
roatT 1
■aftrtsr u
sows were
ter lamb* <
to *i off. 8|*ugh-
iMl.SO and teedw
Jl lower Yewrttnx*
•nd oteer aheep were Steady.
iaa: Slaughter susr* and year-
M-4S1; slaughter cow* S4-SIT;
laughtar calvae *9-498; ateckar caivr-
M45 dawn; stoefear ye*rlln*s “
*
A
I
A play, "Good Glory.” will be
presented at 8 pm Dec f
the tbe senior class of Northwest High sea helicopter service expand rap-
__________ ficHonal ' piT’">tol* of the el-
Conference in Houston, Tex ders pf Zion, Arabian night* and the senior class trip .
a A a • . SI . a _*___ mAZSaPM /isbf <a«. f I sa *■ a.
Helicopter Use To Expand
*. „ cZJn Area, Speaker Predicts
Denton, a* well a* Dalia* and |
Fort Worth, some day will be a
hub of helicopter service. Hans
.... Weischeel, chief sales engineer of
The U. S. Eighth Army com-jhe Bell Aircraft corporation, pre-
i— diet*
“The Korean war proved the
advantage* of the helicopter. ’ he traced back to Marco Polo by the h”1 *7, <*1 ,hal wheat to a good
* J i---— Marco Polo returned *tond.
, -— ---- - flying top.” ! ,,, , 4
“its future 1* ' he said. Predecessor of the heli- .1 *?ues’ 1 *,n a native Texan."
ight in the field* of commercial.; copter was the autogiro.-developed i ?aidF E Hanks, "a* I was born
Ilian and military u»*.'' by the Germans. ,B tj"* •'*’•- To® wy father and
now building Accompanying Weischsel to Den
ton were Paul Marcolt, assistant
manager of public relation* nf Bell
Aircraft Corporation, and a Denton : Pal„.in- ,_d h.v,
m.n, P.U Crtmu., -h« .. n...
Ml** Kathenn HarpeC of Oat
wood. Ky., write* asking that one
of the Record-Chronicle TSCW Spe
1 . . as she
said she’s like to live over again
some of her college day* here
M .4 i. :She was * student < TSCW, 1914
Griffith said applicanon* can be ig and afterward taught institution-
Service in Denton
After the
demonstrated
tending freedom. giving ride* to director*.
The scale I* designed tn solve !--------------;--------
graphical problems quickly. Nin , MnTirt<
ety-fiva par cent of hi* company s U*4a^p RWllVRa _
production is for government pur j <m VHTiagMbvr for Hina
poses and Gerber is working on Bid* will be received until s oo
TRAFFIC ----------------------
(Continued trom P»*e I)
were going north in front of the
i Naim*’ vehicle to Fort Sil). Okla , i —
W J A a Ob a 1 a 11) IC H <1C II I O> OL D OQLS, III tn
where Lieutenant Ritchie it ata- n<-hooi Buiidtn* in Denton.
Dam i obtained
Av*nu*. (
mud and collided Saturday mom- 1 uon»i eets
ja* *® A L» as Istlwss* ant ion aw/ I 'U*t-lz%4*o i bv bidder;
and Ave, H in Denton
The driver* were Nathan James.
19, of Wul Prairie Strut, and
Galdio Ranson. 5®, of Chxrlotta
Street. Ranson's car landed in a
ditch,.
Damage to Jam**' 1941 Marcury
was estimated by police at MOD
Damage to Ranson * 1941 Pontiac
was estimated at |150.
RAIN
(Continued from Pag* I)
A profeaeional rainmaker hired
by Dallas started to work trying
to turn North Texas' drizzles into
downpours by dosing the clouds
with Silver iodide. Generator*
war* sat up at such point* m
Ranff*r. Durant, Okla . and Tylar
A* th* day ease into night, the
rain wa* still to light to do driod-
out crop* and pasturos mueh good
or to raise raservoira avan a frac-
tion.
More scattered shower*
forecast for .Sunday
mas *xpeeted in the 7
upper Muth Plains
Tbe forecast said freezing tem i*"
peraturea would be fell overnight waaeiia
from the Panhandle through the; I
upper South Plains and possibly I
througn the rest of the gouth j |
Plain* and from the Pecos Valley • ‘ ■*-*.
eastward. fj L ’
By Sunday night,. |he nprther
might slap a light freeze on North, .
East and Central Texas.
MM afternoon Temperature* In- Iw-
53, Midland S, El P»M 51, Dalia* ■»
•0, Ban Antoftfo 3® ------
and Corpus
51, Del Rio
and her allies as anti-Jcwiih in
the eyes of the Arabs
(fev. Dougla* McKay of Oregon. The Jerusalem radio station.
— .-----—---* <>._ "Voice of Israel.'' today predicted
Dewey a I'’’ >n hitherto relatively
can’t be classed
characterised
I pipe line* and to herd cattle;
I said-- ' ■
to spray crops and garbage dumps
where flies gsther."
The history of the helicopter was
told Chamber of Commerce dirac- i speaker.
tors at their meeting in the South- i from Chin* “with a
erh Hotel Friday
bril ' “ ‘ '
civilian , . .
Many cities are now budding Accompanying Weischsel to Den-i M>
Fori Worth lurnlnj oul th. - nylnf i * ' I'T. •' Mt“ '«• ' •»™ •"
»„!g nr.™... ..0.1. „ *,;y,?,';,rsS:,u'E!.,,?"0„n •-
i - . * . here for nd9vpr>l vpai-k ’
ager of personnel placement l.
Weischsel told the directors that
about 100 Denton residents are em-
ployed at Bell s two Texas plants . u
-th. .-ninu .c,aI Editions be sent her.
The plants employ approximately lh- < )1L, ln liv> Av-
2.000 people, and 1,000 more are ,
n*T1^' hh*(7,d . ,i She was a"s'tudVnC?< TSCW, *1914
Griffith said applieanons ran be ig and afterward taught institution-
secured at the Texas Employment a| management at the college and
,„ n«-.=r haB charge of the college cafeteria
luncheon. Weisch.se! i for the vear, 1922 M an(J 24
the helicopter by
rsr*
IKJI HIIVII m.ii ••*•-.n«s «sv to.* a«w ww Uit fttlUIH K4B3B UI VI IH wr-wg s*|f,|i
resolution Prague testimony as a mixture of School at the school auditorium
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 87, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 23, 1952, newspaper, November 23, 1952; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1348822/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.