Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 126, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 8, 1953 Page: 3 of 16
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Right for Spring
Woman • Misses
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SUITS
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ington.
PAJAMAS
Eisenhower, in his own message, CITY DRUG STORE, SHRADER'S
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ness.
$8
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$4
All Wool
Denton, Texas C-7923
218 Austin
They later were his dinner guests ' tioning organ
ange.
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GREATEST CARS
4s
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a
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IN 50 GREAT YEARS
COATS
800
R
■
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- Men's — Corduroy
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On* (T)Table
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48-inch Better
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Ask About J5-Day Trial Offer!
OUR RE PUT AT ION -VOURPROTECTION
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On Disply January 9%
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She was the widow of Brig. Gen
Cornelius Vanderbilt, great,grand
son of Commodore Cornelius Van-1
hua.
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might say about atomic develop-
ments and possible future controls.
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with
llery
llied
hand
and
bridegroom from is parents for
a time and brought a substantial
reduction in his inheritance.
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Borden'a tunermilk restoree alka-
line b»hnce - sett you rtght afttr
vear-end ralf-rortint. ocerindul-
gence i Tich Holiday Fere.
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Chi-
snow
utral
were
derbilt, founder of one of Ameri-
ca's greatest railroad empires with
the New York Central as the key
stone.
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Girls Batter
DRESSES
Only 18 - Bat real value
Men's Corduroy
room
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One (1) Group
Now Styles and Colors
All Wool
TODDLERS COATS
Soma with Leggings
Mrs. Vanderbilt, who was in her,
80s, had been inactive in recent'
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his
Bed
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Italy
som-
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BUILD FOR THE FUTURE
with a COLEMAN BLEND AIR
For Particulars See
(ration—the absolute necessity of
bringing atomic power under ef-
fective international control.’’
But the question arose as to
how this could be done, in the
face of Russia’s past refusal to
agree to the international inspec-
tion which the West insists is
needed to a sure such controls be
enforced,.
Sen. Russell (D-Ga) said that
until the Soviets display some will-
ingness to yield in their position
he can see little advantage in re-
opening negotiations toward inter-
national controls.
jy to AM. Aik or-wiiar ,
Mesnnge" which fully ezplains this remark-
~Hr hnm« > WMii Im u
“New Year’s Blues*
Not My Policy ”... Cow- j
ville Insurance Agent
hat tired, headaohey, upset
condition (New Year's Blues)
had me feeling like a bum risk!"
says Godfrey Guernsey, likable
Cowville insurance agent. "Then,
• , I tried Dr. Elmer’s Buttermilk]
Now. I feel as sharp as a paid-up
policy. It's easy to lose thoae
New Year's Blues with Borden’s
Buttermilk!" If New Year's Blues
has got you feeling uninsurable
- Why not take C. Guernsey’s
advice. Try delicious Borden's
Buttermilk today!
mitmuMntittiutiunia
UKtmmina
EI I ROOFING AND
DLIL SHEET METAL
World's newestV8 powers
BUICKS
k
, 1
2- .2
N
li7u
i
Y. -
It has, also, wondrous handling ease, u-M Ptutr
i»g as lUiuM . It has superb comfort. It
has sumptuous fabrics and tailoring. And its acoustics
are so thoroughly mastered that it may well be one of
the world’s most quiet cars. •
But no listing of facts can do true justice to this phe-
nomenal automobile, or to its brilliant brothers, the
* 1953 SUPERS and SrECIALS.
And no words can really tell you the beauty you see,
the comfort you feel, the excitement you experience-
when you look at and drive any one of these big, beauti-
ful, bounteous Buicks for 1953;
Will you come In and see for yourself that these are.
in simple truth, Buick’s greatest cars in five brilliant
decades? ’
II
-
While 8 only lasts .
Men's AU Wool
TOPCOATS
years but never lost her top so-
cial standing.
At a Lew Men's Nylon
PAJAMAS
1200and
$20.00
Save Plenty — Now
HOUSTON ( — Four long
distance telephone calls may help
bring about the capture of two men
charged here with a $1,000 robbery
police are hoping.
Detectives yesterday placed calls
to Fort Worth, Greenville, Dalhart
and Tecopa, Calif., in an effort to
find Adolph Mourney Stroter and
Eddie Hall, both 27.
-----
-4 Colors
„e
Kefauver (D-Tenn) saw in
the Truman statement “the great-
est challenge of the new adminis-
will rely on his Cabinet and staff
to produce a series of revisions
of the Truman estimates.
In commenting on the Truman
State of the Union message, Taft
said everybody could agree on “the
basic principle of opposition to
Communist Russia,” but he con-
tended Truman’s operation of this
policy had been “full of error, of
wavering, of failure ....”
There were no indications what
Men’s — Winter Weight m.
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Telovision mept-fhe BUICK CIRCUS MOUR-avory fourth Tuendoy.
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-bnbtnmegaaiuoox
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cles ml 902 when she and heriaa third eye in the center of their
husband entertained Kaiser Wil- beads which, among their remote
helm II aboard their yacht at Kiel ancestors, many have been a func-
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Sevan (7) only — Man's “TS$20
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legiate Student Association . . lastfall . . . Leonard is a sociol-
Last year she was state secretary ogy student from Dallas, and
. . . Among other things, she's worked last summer at National
known for active participation in Democratic headquarters in Wash-
1 ‘ • .i H/ ’ .
WASHINGTON ( — Congress
members remained divided today
over the value of any new try
for international atomic controls
while applauding president Tru-
man’s stern warning to Stalin that
nuclear warfare might end civili-
zation.
Senate Republican Leader Taft
of Ohio, who voiced sharp critic-
ism at Truman’s valedictory to
Congress yesterday, told a reporter
President-elect Eisenhower prob
ably will have his own State of
the Union menage ready for Con-
gress soon after his Jan. 20 in-
auguration.
At that time, the new President
can be expected to outline his
views on what Taft bad described
in a statement as a legacy of the
Truman administration—“the most
dangerous foreign problem this
country ever faced.”
Truman’s State of the Union
message was read by clerks to
the Senate and House yesterday.
He will follow through tomorrow
with a budget message in which
PHARMACY, TOBIN DRUG
STORE, INDUSTRIAL DRUG
T TEBE you see pictured the Golden Anniversary
II ROADMASTER — engineered, styled, powered and
bodied to be fully worthy of its paragon role in this
fiftieth year of Buick building.
A quick listing of simple facts will reveal just cause for
celebration.
•
It has the world's newest V8 engine. Vertical
valves; 12-volt electrical system; 180 pounds lighter;
entire engine is so compact, a new, more maneuver-
able chassis has been built around it.
* It has IBB Fireball horsepower. A new Buick
record; engine horsepower per pound increased 40%.
k It has a compression ratio of 8.5 to 1. Highest
compression on the American scene today; bettered
fuel economy.
A It has a dynamic-flow muffler. For the first time in
automotive history, a muffler with zero power loss.
It has d now Twin-Turbine Dynaflow Drive. Now
adds for swifter, quieter, more efficient getaway to
infinite smoothness at all speed ranges.
A It has now broking power. Most powerful braking
action of any Buick in fifty years; plus the new ease
of Power Brakes, optional at extra cost.
A H has a still finer ride. The softest,
m - steadiest, most buoyantly level ride that
m Buick's advanced engineering has
I 'yet produced.
Je8, 1
Sen. Byrd (D-Va) has predicted
e the President will ask for spend-
Women's E
Only 14-AH Wool
a , ot wo
Men's
■▼■wRo 0 yae --
THI DENTON BBCO■D-CHRnN1CLB
Congress Split On New Try
For World Atomic Controls
nobkn
aboard his yacht in Biscayne Bay,
Fla., in 1942.
Mrs Vanderbilt entertained and!
was entertained by more mem (
hers of European royal houses
than any other woman in Amen
ca. She was considered one of the
last remaining links between the i
regal pre World Wat I American
society and the larger and more I
democratic post world W ar II so
ciety.
The famed hostess and beauty ।
cntertained in a conventional man |
ner? and remained aloof from the ,
merrier elements of cafe so ’
ciety. She seldom dined in public. I
and attended the theater infre i
quently. However, she was a regu !
lar attendant at the opening night I
of the Metropolitan Opera. Her box t
was social headquarters for the 1
Diamond Horseshoe set during in
( termissions.
Mrs Vanderbilt was the former
GTace Wilson, youngest daughter
nt Richard Thornton Wilson, who
came to New York from Nash-
ville. Tenn , shortly after the end I
of the Civil War with a fortune |
he had built up as English agent;
for Southern cotton
Mrs Vanderbilt made her debut J
in 1895, at a time when Cornelius
Vanderbilt, son of Cornelius Van .
derbilt ill, then head of the fam- '
ily, was starting to learn the rail-
road business The two young peo- j
pie became attached despite op -
position from Vanderbilt's parents -
They were married in 1896 with-
out the knowledge of’his parents.
The marriage estranged the
fur-
nable
root
S OT
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ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY!
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I Double Rack
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SNOW SUITS 4
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SHORT COAT312
wandmdhuu.-
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eggGtthatmen etnk
ien’s — Corduroy er a A Big Value — Men’s A m
Winter Caps $1 JACKETS $10
------------------ -l_ ... !......
$200
- Others-$2.00
—mmm
j ouge “4
Laa
Meet JULIE BOURG, junior Smiling LEONARD WEEKS is
student at TSCW . She’s from head of the NTSC student body
Odessa . . Girls on the campus . . . His nickname is “Squeaky” f D II
4 admire her dependability and . . . He’s interested in off-catopus In KohhArU
leadership . . . Julie is senior politics, too, and directed aPtu- * 1 J
delegate to the Texas Inter-Col dents for Stevenson” gHHfMjsqtf *
FRESNO, Calif. (n—Police today
sought details of theideath of a
woman whose body was found in
an automobile trunk shortly after
her estranged husband failed in a
suicide attempt t
They said Millard Blackwell, 36,
Hanford, Calif., jumped in front
of a truck and was taken to the
county hospital with head and leg
injuries.
A note in his pocket indicated
he had planned to kill his 28-year-
old wife and then take his own
life? The note also directed police
to a parking lot where the car
containing Mrs. Rhoda Blackwell’s
body was found.
A medical examination revealed
Mrs. Blackwell died of hemorrha-
ges and a ruptured liver.
Sidney J. W. Sharp of Hanford,
her attorney, said the couple had
quarreled and both had filed suits
for divorce. They had two young
sons.' *
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v The general's father, "who died
in 1899, left him $500,009 and the
income for life from a on mil-
- lion dollar trust fund Eac4of the
other children received 7"mil-
SUITS
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M d dlw stow
$4000
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Trumans statement that the re-1
cent U. S. hydrogen explosion I
opens "A new era of des-
tructive power” prompted Sen.
Hickenlooper (R-h) to observe
that the need for effective inter-1
national controls “grows greater
and greater." Hickenlooper is top
Republican on the Senate-House
Atomic Energy Committee.
Gen. Vanderbilt. who did nett
share his wife’s fondness for so-
ciety in his later years, died
TMhha, .,
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Body Of Woman
Found In Auto;
Probe Starts
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Big Saving -
Shop Carty
da* mdusirenci
..__________________________________________________________________________________________________
Over four milltomn bottles at Sha Willa mi
T—stmt have been sola for rellef at
•ntqmamat dlstrees arining trmstemac
aqdbuodenal Ulcers due w Euns nua-
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-
PAGEi
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| Thuvsdandanuy63.-—
AT NTSC, TSCW
mete 80488888 r • ■
A -j
ing authority ranging between ,75 -------------—
billion and 80 billion dollars. Symptomeof Distress Arising from
jrfetrj STODAHSLRES
QUICK RELIEF OR no con
Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt,
Leader Of Society, Dies wRebbaazaxithatirearmasnsharess
J ‛ inf • 31,000 holdup Monday night.
fI the bulk of the JSKki .“"X, 5a
Vanderbilt, recognizedleader of fortune—set 37 million dollars- Houston cafe operator, robbed him
• New,York and, NewPo R.I went to Comeaus’ brother, the of 3105 and his autombile and
society for half a century, died late Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt, left him tied to a bed in a San
of pneumonia .( her Fifth Avenue Later, Alfred gave Cornelius six Antonio tourist court .
home last night after a long ill- million dollars Alexander identified his kidnap-
' Almost from the time of the; pers as Stroter and Hall.
young people’s marriage, social Homicide Lt. Frank Murray
rivalry developed between the said calls were made to officers!
bride and her mother in law and in the four towns because it’s be J
the two had rival salons at Sara lieved the pair have friends or ।
toga. N. Y , for a time relatives there _____________|
The younger Mrs. Vanderbilt
plunged into European regal cir-: Many lizards have remnants of
been
itru
ng,"
. “I
irted
•nd
use
_ i)
field
into
run
was
n to
GRAHAM BUICK COMPANY
. • -0
309 N, LOCUST DENTON, TEXAS
• —--------------I
Dress and Sport ,
SHIRTS
Joel
no
ous-
alk-
ding
I
JACKETS^ $7
DRESSES
tilldmd maro so
. 30 nea ubala •
Now as marked
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 126, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 8, 1953, newspaper, January 8, 1953; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1424529/m1/3/: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.