Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 90, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 26, 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.
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4- ,, r.il'fj -'■ ■ 1 C 4f
• "4*'C *< ’'"MW *”*
I
SOTH YEAR
’$
Mm
5
★
VOL. L
NO. 90
★
★
Si
i,
£s
Schools Re-Open,
.ol
g5;!
Teachers Head
For El Paso
State Session
■
MRS. JULIAN LAND
D.
BOYD
I
N
IRS
•W
se
ROUND
ABOUT
I
s
art boft happy
reogea
k
9
Weather
V
OVBTA CULP HOBBY
«•
by
I
V
Teiai was
MW
4-H Winners Receive Awards
Here
1
at the
A com
that
i the
com-
s
"’F
L
In
USA. wi
♦
. See 4-H CLI
The
... ... H.
II
II
II
♦
*
mmL Donnie Mayfield
i. Joe Howard ShelkH
cloth**.
of the
He war.
4
I, ♦
LIO BOUTWELL MM. HARRY OWBNS
HOME IN U.S. TOPS FOR SOME
I
i
of Daily Service
to Denton County
Homecoming
Starts Here
Coldest Night
Looms Here;
24-28 Forecast!
k
M
S3
i
apace aa there are only
lies there. Zanzibar has 157
r*“
i
TEXAS QUADS
LEAVE KOREA,
ALL TOGETHER
■Amarillo
Wednesday.
1
1
MIN. Krum, and Doyle Fletcher of
*
life — stiff together as they
have been for nearly two yean
in the Army.
The brothers, Anthony. Ber-
nard, Carl and Donald, said
they will find temporary jobs
when they get back and later
start a cattle ranch in the
Beaumont atea.
- The quadruplets came to Ko-
rea last May and served with
the 7th Division’s 73rd Tank
Battalion. Carl la a sergeant;
the others corporals.
Traffic
„ -proved
that when he said the thing he
was moot thankful for was that
Eisenhower won the election.
T*? * America” will
,ift ** orphans "to’ for
nations an over the world.
BfJko V *
’waasw-i
----,...... U.. —.....— 111...... ■ ,
Freedom, Health, Children
Make Folks Here Thankful
WITH U. 8. SEVENTH DIVI-
SION, Korea . m - The .
23 - year - old Perricone quad-
ruplets of Beaumont, Tex., left
LAKE DALLAS
MAY RISE FOOT
AFTER RUNOFF
~r‘ ’4wb,"k ju
W. P. AUSTIN
JIBM
“I asked him to make a com-
plete check on my record and
make a complete report on it to
the new President.”
At Washington the White House
said loyalty checks by the FBI are
“routine” on Presidential appoint-
ments to cabinet and all other high
posts. The practice was discussed
by White House aides in connection
with a request by John Foster Dul-
les, Btoenhower’s choice for Secre-
tary «t State, for personal clear-
ance.
Following her appointment, it
was disclosed that Mrs. Hobby had
contributed $100 towat-d the unsuc-
Aanoctatod Ptmb Lmm* Wire TWI
. ----------------------------......-»■—
Panhandle Clears Snow And h
MMaSgM . -. an
» » m.
4 tun. ____ M
-A-mu-
. a am.
to ajn.
lid
or cry. It had
. Lr i—at toe rag was
to his throat before he quit ctying.
When he quit crying I pulled th<
rag out”
To 1
I
Mound, achievement; Dori. Crew- mt FuW ^AtSpS *™m. de
ford «f Argyte add Noel Hutchesou « KaJ “ * “ ‘ '
----------------- * of IJttto 1
At Achievement Progra
Fifty three modal, and awards ’of Argyle, leadership; Peggy Smith I Mound, tractor maintenance.
wore presented at the annual 4-H Argyle, Millard Taft Smith of
Achievement program to Hubbard
Kall Tuesday night.
Bor WBuraMib Sm ErP. WhManani
I A W ImvroMO Agency, CAIN
•' • ■ 32r“"'' ;
Benton, Democrat, who sought re- I
election in Connecticut. Her name I
was on the list of Benton contribu-
tors filed with the Secretary of
State, a dupstrh from Hartford*
reported.
Visting th- editorial department
of the Post, Mrs. Hobby greeted
each staff member after her ap-
pointment was announced. They
included her son, 20-year-oid
William P. Hobby Jr., the Post’s
assistant secretary-treasurer and
! a city desk reporter. |
-----— i Her daughter. Jessica. 15 was i
to* toe Hobby’s home in Houston’s .
her record.
She phoned J. Edgar Hoover,
head of the FBI, and announced:
-=• First Methodist
jdl ed the drive
Woid ol the
through the rial
to be able to work. “I’ve got good
health and am able to work to
get the things I need and that’s
a lot to be thankful for,” he said
today.
"I have so much to be thankful
for when I stop and think of all
the people who are leas fortunate
than I, that I just can’t count all
my blessings,” declared Mrs.
Frank Woods. Ml Denton “I’m up
on my two feet and can do any-
thing I want to. I'm thankful for
that,” she added.
Mrs. Julian Land, Rt. 2. Denton,
aaya that aho has no specific little
2311 N. Locust, most thankful. She
stated emphatically that "I’m
thankful to be living in America
and nowhere else in the world.”
D. B. Boyd, 1223 Broadway,
after a little thought said, ”1 think
we all havo countless things to
be thankful for—things such aa
living in America and having a
happy family.”
"I thank the good Lord for let-
ting me live and for aB the bless-
ings that go with living, whether
I know about those blessings or
not,” stated W. P. Austin, 2127
Oak, owner of the Couatry Store
on East Hickory
DaSaiOol
rille. W:
the temperi
^oice Of America’
World About Denton
od that mere than
lAke Dallas’ water level has
risen a half foot since the week-
end rains started and may
rise another Hatf foot when the
runoff is finished, a Dalias wa-
ter official said today.
“if we get a foot of water
in the lake that will be Tio.ooo,-
000 gaUeaa, about enough foe 1»
days supply," said Henry
Graser, assistant waterworks
superintendent of the water- 1
short metropolis.
Lake Dallas got 3.M inches
of rain durtag the three-day
period and approximately ooo.-
000,000 gallons of water a day
are now flowing into the lake
from the runoff around Den-
. v.. Ina. CarvaUteA.
_ _ _g ____ _ sji ... _ 4b * .«•.**
Giri Chokes
Baby To Death
SEATTLE GB—A high school girt
z, yho Mid abe lost her temper when
a baby she was tending wouldn't
stop crying told officers she choked
a 4-month-old boy to death with
a cloth last night.
The girl, Ellen Noroen Fem, 15,
was caring for Garry Payne, son
of her next door neighbor who had
<<»« to the grocery store. Gsrry
started crying soon after the
Paynes left the house, she said in
a statement to Detectives C. F.
Kirschner and R. W. Waitt.
The detectives said she told
' I took him into the bedroom
and laid him on the bed. He
lard Taft Smith tt ATOM wore bert" wil»on <rf Argyie. farm and I
named Gold Star Girl and Boy for home eleCtric; Don Robinson of
Denton County. They were selected ponder, Jon Pierce of Pilot Point,
aa the best all-round 4-H member*. Sianlav Caddell of Krum, and Bal-
^SMB S —wmn M«eass«* Unwed . C- m «• • .
of Krum, Yvonne Allen of Argyle, achievement;
Thomas TYieUch of Blue Mound. UUie Mwind'
and Horace Trietsch of
By BARBARA GILLIHAN
Record-Chronicle Staff Writer
Once long ago. the Pilgrim
fathers of America paused to give
thanks to God for hard-earned
harvests and the blessings that
took them through a hard year in
a new country. z .
Since that long ago day. people
have continued to set aside one
day in the year to give thanks—
thanks for food and shelter, thanks
for fun and freedom and even
thanks for the fat gobbler placed
on the table Thanksgiving Day.
Denton ------
a year to bo especially thi
Many of them are moot
“just to ‘
that is foea JnT’wh^e' there to
plenty of everything."
Leo Boutwell of Roanoke says he
to thankful to be living today and
miny Texae ctaee.
la Bryan today, it o
..........
clothes then will be flown to Ko-
res .
When the clothes arrive io Pw-
mh. a “Voice of America” cor-
2Mth Tramyortetta; Truck Bat^
taboo, ia giving the American styir
Christmas party for hundreds ef
Korea orphans.
B was Glasa^totter ta the Raj
thT Started*
The .Firn^ NupUw^Cfouxwfo a^foe
TOWN
By R. J. (Bob! RDWARpS
No man can find out his work
that God maketh from the begin-
ning to the end.—Ecclesiastes 3:11
But we do begin to catch flashes
of revealing light that suggest
God’s purpose on earth. We have
enough knowledge to know that
God wants us to use our powers
for the welfare of our fellows.
Homecoming activities began to-
day at Denton High School with a
special assembly program and pep
rally at 10:30 a.m.
The program was launched by
representatives from the classes
of the late 1920’s. Norris Russell,
chairman of the ex students group,
helped to arrange the program.
Exes who participated were Mrs.
Verne Carrington, R. B. Neale Jr.,
Mrs. C. C. Whitson, Sarah Moore
and Dale Houston. Former cheer-
leaders who attended the pep rally
included Mrs. Cole Parks and Mrs.
Alice Bell, representing classes of
the 1920's, and Sue Lovett, L’Jon
Walker, Beverly Wilson and Joann
Matthews, more recent graduates.
Ex-students will be honored
Thursday night with a homecom-
ing dance at the North Texas State
College Clubhouse from 8 p.m. to
midnight. Highlight of the home-
‘ 1 ’ : J corona-
tion o fthe homecoming queen at
half-time ceremonies at Thursday’s
Denton-Denison fotball game.
ists, especially in the Wichita ares
where more than UB persons wgro
Wednesday. Farm and’^■uiriud
roads in Hutchinson CouMy were
still closed and hlf ----------
were finishing the
ing the Pampa to
Pampa to Mobeetie
Texas skies write
except for West TSxss from El
Paso at far eaat aa Abilene—-and
for the coast. But even in those
areas there was no promise at
more precipitation.
Temperatures dipped to Reel-
ing or below la the wide area
north and west of a lino generally
running from El Paso to TyMr ta
iaUDwOCK nad IT, vniiarc&s 20, Kl
Paso N, Abilene N. Wichita Falls
27, Dallas 31, Waco 33. The low
that most buses in a hundred mlle
radius around the city ware on
However, Desk Sgt Merle Btrtek-
land fold tlw Associated Press tha€ ' I
straoto and highways won 1
that motorists were edvtood it
at home.
Stricktand cadi that aM
there had beea some trouhla
wU”1 r.
. __ ------------was
•till crying; be wouldn’t be quiet.
I looked him over and everything
hut he wouldn’t ba quiet
"1 th«n lost my temper and
grabbed a
similar
to the pajamas sm the bed i had
such a headache, and to keep him
Quiet I pushed with my fingers
and shoved the rag down his
throat.
“He shut up all of a sudden and
gurgled. He was so still snd
didn’t say anjrthii
Nemod Hka ages
A*. a ** w ** *
--...■•W aw SfSMS VBJMA*'
>qult cry‘B< 1 P1111*1 lb‘
Then she summoned her mother
. J?? u hy police as
delinquent"
Union Service
Marks Holiday
Union church services sponsored
by the Denton Ministers Associa-
tion. a school and college holiday,
and the traditional Thanksgiving
47, became dinner were to highlight Denton’4 Gutek,
the Texas observance of Thanksgiving Day Pbxw
By JUNBTTA WATSON
Record-Chronicle Staff Writer
Twenty-three Denton County
teachers including the man who will
become preaident of the state’s
largest professional organization
were on their way to El Paso to-
day to attend the 74th annual
meeting of the Texae State Teach-
ers Association Thursday, Friday
and Saturday.
Most of the Denton teachers will
participate in the three-day pro-
gram which will include outstand-
ing educators from all over the
United States.
Saturday, Robert L. Proffer, as-
sociate professor of government
and education at North Texas
State College is scheduled to sept
up to the presidency of TSTA from
his present post of first vice pres-
ident.
Six faculty members and Dr. J.
C. Matthews, NTSC president, will
make up the NTSC delegation.
Dr. Matthtfws will greet NTSC
exes at a special reception of the
Ex-Student Association Friday in
the Green Room of the Hilton
Hotel.
L. M. Collins of the School of
Business faculty will participate
on two programs of the business
group Friday. He is state director
of the United Business Education
Association. I——: r _
Claude Kelley of the School of
Education, state consultant to the
Future Teachers of America, will
participate in the executive aes-
sion. Dr. Emmett Cambron of
NTSC, president of the Texas As-
sociation for Health. Physical Ed-
ucation and Recreation, will con-
duct the physical education group
sessions Saturday.
Also attending from NTSC will
be Dr. Witt Blair, dean of the
School of Education, Maurice Silk,
of the School of Home Economics,
and A. A Daniel of the School
See TEACHERS, Page 2
citizens agree that thia is things to be thsnkful for. She’s <m East Hickory ■
be Mvfol lr a . ctamtry especially thankful for asy two many people. Gilbert Gleger, a ,
tee and where there is children. They are both happy Dallas visitor to Denton proved 1
and healthy.”
A homo in America is the thing
that makes Mrs. Harry Owens,
OVETA HOBBY
GETS KEY JOB
i .T, m,
■____________ : t •
IWTON RECORD-CHRONICLE
■SPr ■ - .....' -’fT
DENTON, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 28, 1952
pected to shiver in the coldest traveling in the Panhandle
—-/ h- .. a*
pushed from highways tale six*
foot banks on the sides.
The snowstorm which bit the
Texas Panhandle was part of a
storm which damped an icy —:_
over most of Kansas and Note
Tuesday and reached into
souri, Iowa, Mlmmeta sad I
home. At least six deaths were
blamed on the storm.
The Kansas Natieaal Guard
3,403 Bales
Of Cotton At
County’s Gins
Survey Shows Drought Korea” Sls”’week'"for"clvntan “f
Cut Season’s Yield
Far Below 1931 Total
By ALLBN BOGAN
Reeerd-Chrenicla Steff Writer
Approximately 3,403 bales of
eotton have been ginned in Den-
ton County this season—a decrease
of nearly 3,000 from the estimat
ed M4I bales preeeeeed la MM.
Most of Denton County’s nine
major gins eiossd down this week,
with each showing a moderate to
sharp decline over last year’s to-
tals.
The poor M52 cotton production—
probably the lowest on record here
—is blamed chiefly on the drought.
From June through October, very
Uttie tela Ml ea the thirsty crop
and 45 days of 100 degree temper-
atures er over also took their toll.
Cotton, which looked good after
spring rains, withered and died
from lack of moisture. Some grow-
ers didn’t even bother to harvest
the sickly crop this fall.
The 3,403 bales processed by
Denton County gins does not in-
clude all the cotton grown in the
county, however. County Agricul-
ture Agent Al Petty said be esti-
mated the total production on all
farms of the county amounted to
slightly over 5,000 bales.
An estimated 2,000 bales of cot-
ton picked in this county were pro-
cessed by gins in adjoining coun-
ties. These included two big gins
at Frisco, just across sthe line in
Collin County, and one each at
Prosper, Celina and Grapevine.
Some Denton County cotton also
may have been ginned in Gray-
son and Cooke Counties. -
The threat of the pink boll worm
also hurt business for many gins.
See COTTON, Psge 2
Should one feel that parking
conditions and heavy traffic in
general are to great a nuisance
to take, there are countries on this
earth where such conditions will
not hamper his driving or happi-
ness. On this earth there were
54,300,000 motor vehicles of all
types in 1951. according to the
latest figures. Of these near sixty
million vehicles, 40,500,000 were
within the confines of the United
States — 14,400.000 scattered
throughout the rest of the world.
The United Kingdom ran a poor
second with 3,300,000 and Russia’s
2,600,000 just about equals the ve-
hicle population of the eastern half
of Texas. Canada ranks fourth
with 2,500,000 vehicles and France
comes fifth with 2,400,000. Highway
Highlights suggests Greenland for
less traffic congestion and more
parking
22 vehicl ,
and British Honduras 585. Brazil,
with 443,000 vehicles and an area
larger than the US. should be
fairly clear of carbon monoxide
fumes. China’s 53,000 vehicles were
a minor factor in the transporta-
tion of her 450 million people.
• • • •
The recent rains put some of
the ereeks to running, soma only
slightly with two others on some-
what of a rampage. Clear Creek ------,
at the Sadger Crossing had just a coming activities win be
few inches of running water and ■ “ *
Big Elm was running in some
See BOUND ABOUT, Page 3
vT ’T'SHM
A
COULD HAVK SOLD
SBVBRAL
WAROROBIS’
said the advertiser after she
got results from thia Record
Chronicle CliMified Ad.
Sold second day, received about
it nrttx
Oilk Wantratia, 4 dnwn
toaea rer hanging *
It’S SO EASY’
to get results with a Record
Chronicle Classified Ad.
I ■ ’':S:*IT8 SO EABT.
to place a Record-Chronicle
Classified Ad because we have
Ad Takers to help you write
Sea Related Stary, Page 12
HOUSTON ur — Oveta Culp
Hobby, former head of the Wom-
en’s Army Corps, prepared today
to return to Washington as admin-
istrator of the Federal Security
Agency. ,
Her appointment was announced
yesterday by President • Elect
1 Dwight Eisenhower, who said she
'would attend cabinet meetings be-
cause of her "vitally important po-
sition” in directing government so-
cial and welfare work. The post
does not technically have cabinet
rank.
Mra. Hobby, a Democrat, is pub-__
lisher and editor of the Houston cesful campaign of Sen. William
Post along with her husband, for- - ;
mer Texas Gov. William Pettus
Hobby.
She ffrst called her staff together
and told them of her new appoint-
ment. Then she issued a state-
ment:
"I accept the assignment of
President - Designate Eisenhower
with great humility, for I am deep-
ly aware of its importance to the
people. I shall fulfill to the best of
my ability the responsibility placed
on me.”
Later she saki that she had asked;
tto. to mate . complete abtestl &
parliamentarian of BL
House of Representatives when she
was barely 21. While atill in her
early twenties she recodified Texas
banking laws and the rules of pro
cedure for the Texas House and
Senate.
She was parliamentarian whan
Fred Minor of Denton was Speaker
See HOBBY, Page 2
---uauw ■
UK
’ 1 Jan 53
Bm’
But
-Adtejsiji
Stay At Home
By THR ASSOCIATES PR BBS
Temperatures elimbed grudging-
ly in the anow-loekod Texas Pan-
handle Wednesday. Moot highways
were back in use, some schools
re-opened, and airlines resumed
scheduled flights.
MBIilHil r<. f ortlFti a rri|Cnj ut
low zero as a cold wave trailed
behind the snowstorm which rinsed .
highways and schools yesterday-
But dawn aaw dear skies. A
benign sun shone down on the ear
stalled in the drifts alongside high-
ways often open only to one-way
traffic.
Highway Department employes
worKea early ana xaie to cwBr
lanes.
school a reopened
But many rural
zchooU to the Panhandle decided
to give their students a tang
| Thanksgiving holiday. They will
; not re-optn until Monday. - —-
treachamiBi coating of ice bo*
The Denton County area is ex- M*th the snow made for hazart-
I ‘ ‘ - - — - - - -
weather of the season tonight as
the mercury plunges to a tow of
24 to 28 degrees. Skies will remain
clear and temperatures will rise
slightly for Thanksgiving Day,
the Weather Bureau indicated.
The dry norther, accompanied
by strong northwesterly winds,
swept over North Texas Tuesday
and sent the mercury down to 28
degrees in Denton County early
this morning. Winds ranging from aumi nauvoai womw
20 to N miles per hour ewept the turned out to eW stranded motor-
cloud* out of the skioo and erased ■ * *** ■
amauxm Air— -*^a 9lhrih Ihdkfotrto ammmJb.
WHEN* 'WWCWte ■wBF'-Wffiw
olh<r jptiM. fnd ^ ‘4'
o > -W- Tm was roported in msny rural
I here. The mercury ‘
degrees on both Oct.
U.
Farmers sad ranchers crossed
their fingers and hoped tonight’s
freeze wouldn’t be too severe. A
heavy freeze might halt the growth
of small grains and winter legumes,
up to a stand over most of the
county following the recent rains.
Agriculture folks today were
still totaling the benefits from the
weekend showers, heaviest general
precipitation in Denton County
since last April. The rainfall, which
totaled 3.87 inches in a three-day
span, was termed “just what win-
ter crops need” to keep them
thriving.
Too, many small stock tanks
were filled for the first time since
spring and the larger ones were
at least half full. Creeks poured
water *
las si ---- -----------
to have risen six inches. It put an
See WEATHER, Page 2 ,
Thursday.
A four and one-half day holiday
was to begin today for students at
North Texas State College and
Texas State College for Women.
NT students were to be dismissed
at noon, the Tesaies 15 minute*
later. Classes will be resumed
Monday morning at both roBfow
Public schools ta the city and
Denton County also will be closed
Thursday and Friday, . i
Thanksgiving will bo a holiday
at the public buildings. The post-
office. city hall and county court-
house will be closed. Law enforce-
ment officers will be on duty,
however. Denton banks also will
ha
The 12 prisoner!
«**«MN*i ha f/irEn
O. tones) Hodges
plete Thanksgiving
turkey end all the
be served.
At 1«:3» am Thur .day . re
ligious service will be held for the
inmates by the Rev. Herbert John-
son. pastor of the Assembly of God
Church on Crawford Street. --i
“ ~ \ John Marvin, pa.tor of ®*
I Presbyterian . Cbitrch ’
speak on the “First Da
lEBVlcLj’.^aBr*141*’
J
■ 'L Lil'
a
J Naney Boyd of Krum,
VaTiey.' Connie Mac Yeatts of Pon- clothing: Shirley Taylor of Dea- j
ited the awards to the 4-H Mound, poultry
rad <iila whose cords were Wilson of Atgyie, Nesi
Yvonne Allen of Argyle, girl’s!
Argyle, Conrad Jackson of Green rceord; Nancy Boyd of Krum,!
Me*. VmsfAs Ums ckilhinff* AhirlEv Ttvlor nf Dm
Jaek Gray, county judge-elect, der and Hollis Trietsch of Blue <»". Crawford of Argyfo,
....... fcroro^^^™flfomcy Boyd of Krum, frozen foods;
Aimte Laurifr beater of Lewisville, ■
Marily Givens of Krum and MH- I
JdT&t Smith of Argyle Were wii^K™mAr«“ CIX’ ?^k«ol Glendinnint of Groen V.J-
ley, food preparattea; YTrimte Al-'
ton of Argyle, public speaking. L
i sai- Marx Lou Mullens of Argyle, J
of Krom dairy Nancy Boyd of Krum, Yvoane AL'
Doyle Fletdtek of'ton of Argyle. Earlene Triplett of
. r . ---- -■ .-----Lamer of Ijiwis-
i of Sanger,
of "
Krom, Charles Wayne .vllto, Elisabeth
DENTON AND VICINITY: Fair
and cold today and tonight; tow
temperatures 24 to 28 degreaa;
fair and slightly warmer Thurs-
day.
EAST TEXAS: Colder today and
tonight; light freOM.
WEST TEXAS: Fair and cold, tows
10 to 30 degrees tontaht
-Tp&aaanmjto
HUb TueaUay
Low today
Laaa Mar flea
Teaaday
IS noon 40
3 p m el
♦ P“........ «
.....• JFJM, , - n M
__ g s j s —»
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 90, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 26, 1952, newspaper, November 26, 1952; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1348825/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1: accessed June 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.