Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 80, Ed. 1 Monday, November 2, 1953 Page: 5 of 8
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Monday, November 1, 1953
THE DINTON RECOR D.CHR ONICLI
Storms Seen
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ACTIVITIES CALENDAR
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Jersey, Virginia To Elect
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THE QUEEN’S WISH — Queen Frederika of Greece,
smiles as she is served an American chocolate ice cream
soda, one of the things she said she always had wished
for, at luncheon in Washington by newsmen and women.
She thanked the waiter and later ate ice cream for
dessert, but did not -sample the soda. (AP Wirephoto)
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Heavily In
W. Europe
WASHINGTON (P—The Commu-
nists have “lost heavily’’ in mem-
bership and trade union support
in Western Europe during recent
years, a Senate foreign relations
subcommittee said in a report pub-
Hished Friday,
The 60-page study surveys the
strength, tactics and objectives of
the Communist movement through-
out the world, country by country
and region by region.
WASHINGTON (P—Private indi-
viduals and organizations are help-
ing the Senate internal security
subcommittee to finance free dis-
tribution of its report on “Inter-
locking Subversion in Government
Departments.”
A spokesman for the subcommit-
tee, headed by Sen. Jenner (R Ind)
said today he could not name the
donors nor say how much they
have contributed to pay for print-
ing copies of,the 50 page report.
However, figures he gave indi-
cated that the printing of more
than 85,000 copies has been pri-
vately financed.
The report was published late
in August after hearing* into the
688 $788
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GAMBILL
INSURANCE AGENCY
General Insurance
Mary Jo Fowler, Owner
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Cattle Rustlers
Making Big Haul
KOTA BAHRU, Malaya e —
Gangs of rustlers are rounding up
cattle in loney village* in North
Malaya and taking them across
the border into Thailand for sale
to dealers. •
Despite close cooperation be-
tween Mlayan and Thai police, it
has been difficult to detect stolen
cattle being driven across the shal-
low Gelok River dividing the two
countries, according to reports.
8852
WASHINGTON I — Americans
paid $79,100,000.000 taxes in 1952
and the federal government got
most of the total.
The Census Bureau, reporting
yesterday on taxation and public
spending, said that general public
revenue was divided about 72 per
cent to the federal government,
18% per cent to the states.
It said spending ran more than
101 billion dollars, or $646 per per-
son. While figures are not avail-
able for an exact comparsion with
earlier years, the bureau said, fed-
eral expenditures were about dou-
ble those for 1942.
The total tax figure was up 24
per cent from the previous year
and was nearly four times the 1942
total.
Uma Akmedova.
“With what heartfeit shyness
and pure joy did Khalima meet
Kamal. She sang the finest songs
for him. She read beautiful poetry •
to him,"
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GIRL SCOUTS HONOR MRS. HOBBY —After these
girl scouts presented Mrs. Oveta Culp Hobby, secretary
of welfare, a copy of th new Girl Scout Handbook,
the cabinet member had them autograph it for her.
The girls are Caroline Axtell (left) and Carol Ann Yen- j
zer, both of Silver Spring, Md. Mrs.* Hobby formerly ,
was a member of the San Antonio and Bexar county,
lex., Girl Scout council. The Girl Scouts honored her ’
for her long interest in scouting. (AP Wirephoto)
T-SHIRTS - Solids, Stripes....... cad An
COTTON BLOUSES........... 3 | UU
ALL WOOL SWEATERS........ Tmha
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Washington Gets
Biggest Bite Of
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TIPTON’S
Things are especially bad in the
Soviet republic of Uzbekistan,
where Moslems make up a large
part of the population, Authoritlea
there, Pravda warns, are behind
the times with "a wrong attitude
toward women.”
Pravda bean down on one re-
ported case involving one Kemal
Rakhimov, a “certified teacher of
Da
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hjr.
While the report said
MOSCOW e—The ladies of the
Soviet Union an not getting an
even break from their menfolk and
Kremlin overlords are not happy
about it.
Wife beating, polygamy and
child brides are under fire. Such
practices, says Pravda, Commu-
nist party organ, are in violation
of one of the keystones of Com-
munist policy: equal rights for
women.
Actually, equal rights for women
in Russia is more theory than
practice. Female workers do most
of the heavy work on Soviet farms
and a good part of it in Soviet in-
dustry. Moscow street - cleaning
gangs are heavily staffed with
women. Not many Soviet women
reach positions high in the gov-
ernment.
But Pravda says such "feudal
practices” as plural marriages.
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5dity A
gress had adjourned, the Senate
could not be asked to authorise
printing additional copies.
In this situation, Lowell said,
"friends and organizations inter-
ested in the committee’s work”
chipped in to pay for the printing
of additional thousands of copies
for free distribution.
Otherwise, the subcommittee
would have had to refer request*
to the Government Printing Office,
which sells the document for 20
cents a copy.
Asked who these friends and or-
ganizations were, Lowell said he
did not know and added that, even
if he did, he did not know whether
they would be willing to have their
names made public
He also said he did not know
how much money they had paid
for. the printing, but he said he
understood the Government Print-
ing Office's wholesale rate for bulk
purchases is as low as 4 cento a
copy. At that figure, 85,000 copies
would cost 33,400.
House seat. Democrat Harrison A
Williams Jr. is running there
against Republican George F. Het-
field. Rep. Clifford Case, a Repub-
lican, resigned to create the va-
cancy.
SUITS 4.500059.50..
wife beating and the like must go, to the heart of a student of his, a
buxom lass by the name 9t Kha-
Things went along
Than Kemal started
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Observers anxious about which
way the political winds aro blow-
ing will be holding up fingers to-
morrow in the directions of New
Jersey, Virginia and New York
City.
New Jersey and Virginia elect
governors. There is also a special
House election in New Jersey’s 6th
District. New York picks a new
mayor, as do a number of other
cities, including Pittsburgh, Cleve-
land and Little Rock.
in no case, perhaps, is there a
clear-cut test of the popularity of
the Eisenhower administration be
cause of the many state and local
issues involved. But the results
will be closely watched, particular-
ly in the wake of the upset Demo-
cratic victory in a Wisconsin spe-
cial House election three weeks
ago.
President Eisenhower is on rec-
ord in support of all the Republi-
can candidates. His press secre-
tary, James C. Hagerty, said so
last week after some confusion had
developed in the wake of the Presi-
dent’s statement at a news con-
ference that he was interested in
seeing the GOP retain control of
Congress next year.
The President some weeks ago
posed for pictures with Paul L.
Troast, Republican candidate for
governor of New Jersey. He and
Theodore R Dalton, GOP candi
way Communist agents infiltrated
the executive and legislative
branches of the government.
To date the subcommittee has
distributed 111,000 copies.
In addition, the report caught
the fancy of the Republican Na-
tional Committee. A spokesman
said it had purchased 50,000 copies
and has sent them to party leaders
throughout the country — "even
down to the county level.”
In the report, the internal se-
curity subcommittee pieced to-
gether accumulated evidence and
testimony about Communist pene-
tration in the government, from
the early 1930s on.
It concluded that Soviet agents
have carierd on a successful and
important penetration of the gov-
ernment, from the lower tanks to
top level policy posts, and that ।
"this penetration has not been
fully exposed.”
For three weeks or so after pub-
licStion of the report, the sub-
committee received sacksful of
mail requesting copies. Requests
are coming in now at a rate of i
about 50 a day. |
Asked about this demand and
how it has been met, William E.
Lowell, the subcommittee's infor-
mation officer, gave this account
in an interview:
The subcommittee has Senate
authorization to have up to 25,000
copies of its hearings and reports
printed by the Government Print-
ing Office for free distribution.
However, the demand for this
particular report quickly ex-
hausted the subcommittee’s allot-
ment of 25,000 copies. 'Since Con-
Farm Policy
ALBUQUERQUE um - Western
governors generally say they back
the administration’s farm policy
but concede it may lead to political
storms ahead.
"Certainly it will hurt political-
ly.” said Utah’s J. Bracken Lee,
"but I’d rather lose being right
than win being wrong.”
The chief executives—Republi-
cans all—spoke up informally on
the growing controversy over farm
prices and Secretay of Agricul-
ture Benson as they opened a two-
day session. On the program, they
are scheduled to talk about mining,
highway financing, higher educa-
tion and water and listen to a ma-
jor address by Secretary of In-
terior McKay.
Lee led a group of governors rec-
ommending that President Eisen-
hower and Benson stand pat on
their efforts to find a solution to
the farm crisis.
“What hurts most,” said Lee,
“is weakening within the Repub-
lican party itself over this issue.
Certainly there is a party rift. But
we stand to lose more by giving
in to a loud minority than by stand-
ing firm on our principles,”
Gov. Arthur B. Langlie of Wash-
ington said the attack on Secre-
tary Benson "is a lot of Demo-
cratic wishful thinking."
"It takes time to go from right
to wrong. What do they expect of
a man in such a short time. He’s
trying to find not the answer, but
a step that will lead to stabilizing
the situation without upsetting the
entire economic picture.”
The conference chairman, Gov.
Howard Pyle of Arizona, conceded
the cotton allotment program will
hurt in his state, but says he has
found no reason to believe the con-
troversy will leave a deep political
scar. He backed Lee in asserting
the GOP would lose rather than
gain if it accedes to demand to put
supports on livestock.
Suggesting the Western gov-
ernors are not united on the issue,
Gov. Goodwin J. Knight of Cali-
fornia noted his state is "not in-
sensitive’ to farm policy criticism
in the Middle West. And, he added,
“Wisconsin was not an incident—
it was a defeat and something the
party has to face.”
New Mexico’s Gov. Edwin Me-
chem says how much the farm
controversy hurts the party in elec-
tions “depends on what happens
next. Secretary Benson could turn
out to be the hero of the entire
situation.”
date in Virginia, had a chat at
the White House but not, the Presi-
dent has said, about politics. An-
other recent White House caller
has been Harold Riegelman, GOP
candidate for mayor of New York.
In brief, this is the picture:
New Jersey — Troast opposes
Robert B. Meyner for governor.
Both are relatively unknown po-
litically. Troast is chairman of the
authority which built the New Jer-
sey Turnpike; he has never run
for office before. Meyner made an'
unsuccessful bid for the State Sen
ate in 1951. Democrats are not
counting too heavliy on wresting
the State House from the GOP,
nor in winning the 6th District
1
"hmmd
*
FORMALS 05660 45 24
..
,, Silver ■
strength in Western Europe
reached a peak prior to 1947 and
since has declined, it expressed
no complacency about the Red
menace there or elsewhere in the
world
On the contrary, Sen. Wiley (R-
Wis) said in an introduction that
"perhaps the most basic impres-
sion which will arise from this
study is the very rapid growth of
the Communist movement."
Wiley is chairman of the For-
eign Relations Committee and of
its security affairs subcommittee,
for which the study was prepared.
It said that, although Communist
party membership in Western Eu-
rope has dropped heavily, the
Reds have succeeded in maintain-
ing electoral strength in Italy,
France and Iceland.
Wiley commented, however, that
“very often, I arge Communist
votes, as in France and Italy, rep
resent not so much pro Communist
votes, as anti government votes.”
But he cautioned that a small,
highly disciplined Red group can
succeed “in a wrecking opera-
tion."
In less than four decades since
the Bolshevik Revolution in Rus-
sia, he observed, the Communists
have grown in strength until they
now contiol governments of one
third of the population and one
fourth of the area of the world.
film, "Holland Bulbs and Soil
Red Preparation for Planting Bulbs”
will be shown.
THURSDAY
The Elective Study Department
of the Woman’s Shakespeare Club
Crepes - Assorted Colors
BLOUSES 19.95-
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BELL3nFINI(A(O.
PMONF ’Afi AUSTIN k MFMINNFY
OU R ft* PUrATION VOUnPKOTICTION J
day meeting Tuesday at 10 a.m.
Committee conferences at 10 a.m.
will be followed by a business
meeting at 10:30 aim A covered-
dish luncheon will be served at
noon and at 1 p.m. a missionary
program will be presented by Mrs.
Mary Lampkin and Mrs. T. J.
Fouts. Topic will be “Convention
Echoes.”
The Circle Star Square Dance
Club will meet for dancing Tues-
day from 8 to 10:30 p.m. in the
American Legion Hall. Ross Kar-
ney will call and the Denton Play-
boys will provide music.
The Woman’s Society of Chris-
tian Service, First Methodist
Church, will have a business meet-
ing at 10 am and luncheon at
noon in the church Tuesday. Mrs.
J. A Barnard is leader. Circle C,
with Mrs. F. B. Huey Sr. as chair-
mar, will be hostess group. Miss
Mariha Sanders of the TSCW fac-
ulty will present colored slides and
report on her recent trip to Eng-
land and the continent.
WEDNESDAY
The Newcomers Club will have
a coffee-business meeting Wednes-
day at 10 a.m. in the home of Mrs.
H. B. Titcomb, 1117 N. Elm.
First Presbyterian Church, USA,
will meet in Fellowship Hall at
6:45 p.m. for a congregational
supper.
The Faculty Wives Social Club
of NTSC will have a tea Wednes-
day afternoon from 3 30 to 5:30
p.m. in the Crystal Room of Mar-
quis Hall.
The Denton branch of the AAUW
will meet Wednesday at 5:50 pm.
at Marquis Hall. William D. Bar-
ney will speak on “The Offense
of Poetry.”
The Garden Culture Club will
meet Wednesday at 2:30 p.m. in
Hubbard Hall Hostesses will be
Mrs. C. G. Cummins, Mrs. Rube
Martin and Mrs. W. J. Moore. A
philology, a good chap in the opin-
ion of his drinking pals, but, in
reality, a petty man."
Kn.al laid seige some time ago
BRUNCH COATS - HOUSE c A ce
COATS - COCKTAIL DRESSES 3/1•%
COTTON PLAIDS - OTHERS T“E”
MONDAY
Dr. and Mrs. J. C. Matthews
will entertain members of the
North Texas State College faculty
Monday from 8 to 9:30 p.m. at a
reception at Marquis Hall. Dancing
will be in Terrill Hall.
TUESDAY
South Circle of the First Chris-
tian Church will meet Tuesday at
3 p.m. in the home of Mrs. C. K.
Woods, 1005 W. Highland.
The Auxiliary of St. David's Epis-
copal Church will meet Tuesday
at 7:30 p.m. in the home of Mrs.
C. H. Hancock, 619 Austin.
Circles of the First Presbyterian
Church, USA, will meet in the fol-
lowing homes Tuesday: Circle II
at 3 p.m. in the home of Mrs.
Paul Kearns. Circle III at 3 p m.
in the home of Mrs. V. Y. Craig,
2205 W. Oak. Circle IV at 3 p.m.
in the home of Mrs. John Marvin,
2038 Scripture. Circle V at 9:30
a.m. in the home of Mrs. Paul
Schlosser, 2127 W. Oak.
General WMU will meet at the
First Baptist Church for an all-
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fights. Then Kemal made his Mg
mistake, at least as far as Pravda
is concerned. He took a whip to .
Ms wife and turned her out to the
street.
Town officials heard about it,
but didn't take action Pravda tells
why:
“They were having troubles with
their own multiple wives and their
hands were full."
AAP A •md• TWEEDS - GABS - CHECK &
(DE I X SUEDE CLOTH — LONG
■ W COATS. WERE $22.50 to $29.50.
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will meet Thursday at 3 p.m. in
the TSCW Ex Student Building I
with Mrs. Curtis Dooley and Mrs.
James Sheffield as hostesses. Miss
Beulah Harriss will speak on “Rec-
reation for Teen-agers.”
FRIDAY
Fine Arts Department of the
Woman’s Shakespeare Club will
meet Friday at 3 pm, in Marquis
Hall. Hostesses will be Mrs. Anna
Burgoon, Mrs. George P. Elbert
and Mrs. A B. Tyson.
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didn't have much to do with winning your
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PH. C 2I35
-
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 80, Ed. 1 Monday, November 2, 1953, newspaper, November 2, 1953; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1424627/m1/5/?rotate=270: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.