Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 98, Ed. 1 Monday, November 23, 1953 Page: 4 of 12
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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I—
THE DENTON RECORD.CHRONICLE
,r
Monday, November 23, 1953
Mon
Denton
Hal Boyle Says:
Th
r. -
T
Ski
Christmas Is Nearing
By E. J. HEADLEE
By HAL Byz
can see a halo over her head in
d
• w urn
28
Nation Today:
Brownell
92829
Skips FDR
0
Bi
By JAMES MARLOW
WASHINGTON
Atty.
The Rising Generation
W
The Worry Clinic
teaspoons does it take to fill
1
device which proved
Vocational Guidance Request
I
1
ace in the hole Don't do like ma
l!
This subcommittee can hardly
er
we will never get out.
H.
EACH TIME I AM PROMPTED
by saying he had merely inherited
hours in “cultivating" him.
I
J-$55
envelope, plus a dime.
done.
By Fred Neher
A salesman’s customer may al LIFE'S LIKE THAT
1 /1
Television Schedules
J
7
(As annorced by television stations.
POKING BACK
11 30
MONDAY— NOVEMBER 23
4 Of
Yesteryears
rr
4 15
In Denton
6
4 (larry Moore Show
«
5:30
4 Money in the News
/,
1
/ 23-53
7 30
5
8
8:00
THERE OUGHTA BE A LAW!
8
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TI ESPAY— NOVEMBER 24
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THE ANOCIATEn nut
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Church Board
Has Late Nevs
Eisl
Ha,
tablespoon?
measuring
8:20
8 30
10:38
11 .-00
5
8
1 one
little
5
8
1
I
ny thoughtless salesmen who throw ternal security, which is investi-
it away by growing enamoured of gating subversion, pick up the ball
distant pastures that appear green- and run with it.
B
8
8
5
5
8
13 25
12 30
12 48
1 00
(beq
19
7:28
7:30
7:55
8:00
real profession. It offers an in-
telligent person more security
and more leverage for prying
out salary increases, than any
other occupation. For the sales-
man may have 1,000 bosses, so
if one grows hostile, he still
has a '“job" with the remain-
ing 999.
By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE
Case J-355: Larry B., aged 26, is
9 00
0 30
10:00
8 15
a 25
8 30
11 45
12 00
EE MN
Mrs. N C. Nail of rum was a
Denton visitor today.
4
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CHlt
think J
tins tal
Allen
esota
l eft
billfold
tificati
ing pel
and re
lower
and a
t to t
Aller
vacatiq
I' 3 pod
argest
years.
Noon Edition
I ll Buy That
What’s Cooking?
Showtime Matinee
Mr. Michael
House Party
Weekly Previews
great merit.
But if you have no more capi-
tal than an intelligent brain and
good health, you are always at the
mercy of your lone employer. For
if he dislikes you, you may be out
of a job tomorrow.
A salesman, however, may have
hundreds of employers simultane-
ously, since every customer is his
bosss.
The salaried worker in a store or
factory, has one boss The latter
6 45
7 00
h
H ’
8 06
8 40
8:45
8 88
9:00
Farm And Home Editor
Money Man
How To Drive And Stay
Alite
Carousel
Newa
8:30
10:00
Kiddle Carnival
Sea Saw Zoo
Frontier Playhouse
Western Theatre
Evening News
Handyman
Cartoon Time
Cowboy Thrilis
3 45
8 58
Iy to NM ume tor M
iper, wweaai
/
/
/
1 15
1 30
1 55
2 00
4 30
4 45
5 00
10 38
1010
6 45
5:85
8 00
B. E
A HEATED DISCUSSION devel-
oped in Mitt’s Coffee Shop on North
Locust, about a matter that every
housewife should know. How many
b l
gg
5
8
5
0:00
0:0
0:40
10 00
5
8
errors
“un
6%
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7 O
AAfrc
(THANKS FOR THE SHOVE,:
--y TOUOH LUCK ABOUT YOUR
U DMMAGES’ WELL-
TA TA! ---
)
“fPs A Boy,” the bulletin board
announced. The only other print- 10:65
tag was the minister’s name, and 11300
the following: . »
“Parking in Rear." mo
A
8
- 8
1 5
I 8
8
"uHE GUN WE’D MOST LIkE TO FRACTURE 16
THE NQ-GOODNIK WHO ROPES Us INTO HELPING
HIM GET H15 LOAD STARTED-.
“Lady, there IS a burglar down here . . . don’t meke your
hueband get up on a cold night like this to make sure!"
8
5
8
4
8
8
5
a
c’/vst
2
/
I
/
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8
4
5
8
edjolning MWtHl. ony where Carrier eereice to not
t « motha. MM three momtha, 93.50: one month.
""
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feEFORM
SCHOOL
76)
W
gjaa ,o-
g i a
Ma J
cial field ___ _____
"Besides. I don't even know what introvertive tasks like bookkeeping, longer. But if he had 1,000 custo-
I’d like to do as a life work. I accountancy, or engineering, for he mers originally, he still may have
al field. dislikes mathematics. 999 who will buy from him. So
enjoy people, and never was any ’ Salesmanship is one of the most his loss is negligible
Besides, with a little more ef-
Q
i
'L: 12525
WBAP TV
$
her home in Lewisville after visit- 10 25
tag friends in Wichita Falls. 10 30
Born: To Mr. and Mrs. Nathan 10 45
Solomon. 915 N. Elm Street, Wed- 11 00
nesday night, a boy.
Dr Glenn Frank called sales-
men the "sparkplugs of civiliza-
tion." And salesmanship is a
32
to hold some man in contempt, I
am reminded of my own weakness,
my obvious inadequacies and the in our army in Europe at present,
long windrow of failures which “Dr. Crane. I am interested in
PUSHING!r )
GOT HER A
1 GOING.' L
him’ How did he handle it’ Any
differently from Truman’
White went to work for the gov-
ernment in 1934. Whittaker Cham-
bers says White was in a Soviet
spy ring in the mid-1930s. Elisa-
beth Bentley says he was still
spying in the last years’of Roose-
velt's administration.
Perhaps in aiming so hard st
Truman, Brownell figured he could
start the ball rolling and then let
the Senate’s subcommittee on in-
8
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Subject to change.)
WFAA-TV
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Hg8 T g : ‘
P EA.u,
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(ND DOES ue
OFFER. TO PA
OUR DAMAGESF
IN A Pic’s POKE .
HE DOE9!
Guest Book
Martha McDonald’*
Kitchen
Turn To A Friend
Welcome Travellers
Ern West more
On Your Account
138
8
R
3 30 8
8
f™
Today
Today
Weather, Newa
Today
Morning Newa
Today
Newa and Previews
Film Jockey
Weather
News
Morning Devotional
Arthur Godfrey
Ding Dong School
Money Man
Glamour Gin
Hawkins Falla
Charm School
Arthur Godfrey
The Bennett Story
Fun With Tour Coffee ’
Strike It Rich
nobby Peters Show
Hire* Stope To Henven
Follow Your Hear
Vallant Indy
Julie Benell Show
Love Of Life
Good Morning Pastor
Applawomag.
NEW YORK u— It always used • dim room.
to make me uneasy when I heard - "‘But soon after she gets her
a woman praise a man. Christmas loot, the sweetness and
I figured the poor fellow was light vanish, and the normal bark
either already under a tombstone— and bite come back into her voice
or failing rapidly. again. Her feeling of gratitude
But lately—well, I just don’t fades faster than a snowflake in a
know. Women are saying so many bonfire."
nice things about men they are But is this really so? Isn’t this
getting calluses on their vocal sour old-timer merely living in the
cords. past’ It is true, perhaps, that
"it doesn’t mean a thing except human nature never changes. But
we’re getting closer to Christmas," how about the nature of woment
one gentleman cynic told me. "The There are signs it is changing with
average woman’s disposition be- revolutionary speed
gins to improve just before I choose to believe, for example,
Thanksgiving. that old fashioned chivalry and
“By the first of December she courtliness aren’t dead. They
is acting like a human being. By merely have undergone a change
the middle of the month, as Santa of ownership.
Claus gets nearer and nearer, you Like everything else that used to
be symbols of masculine domi-
FIE YEARS AGO
Maximum temperature yester-
day, 52; minimum, 23.
A girl was born Tuesday morn-
ing to Mr. and Mrs. J B. Bush.
1022 Wilson Street, at the Denton
Hospital and Clinic
Richard Wood, Spanish American
War Veteran. was taken to the
Veterans Hospital in McKinney for
medical treatment.
TEN YEARS AGO
Born: To Mr. and Mrs. E. J.
Judkins of Krum Tuesday morn-
ing. a boy, In the Denton Hospital
and Clinic.
Mr and Mrs. C. A. Skiles had
as their guest Mrs. C. A. Skiles,
Jr . of New York.
George Sanders, Philip Dorn
and Brenda Marhall were featur-
ed in "Paris After Dark" at the
Texas Theatre.
TWENTY YEARS AGO
Mrs. J B Shelton returned to
CINCINNATI • — The bulletin
board in the chrch yard usually
gives the time and data of services
and the text of the sermon. The
Rev. Ritchard Lyon, pastor of the
Price Hill Baptist Church, how-
aver, recently put it to a new
use
THE SUN BREAKS OUT
- (From The Sherman Democrat)
The dispute over Trieste, which for a while threaten*
ed the southeastern anchor of Allied defense of Europe,
has been put aside by Yugoslavia as it meets with Greece
and Turkey to resume the planning of the defense of
the Balkans. . - *
A permanent secretariat has been established to deal
with their military collaboration, in addition to other
matters of common interest. General staff talks between
the three powers are under way and the whole subject
of mutual defense is progressing as scheduled.
However, the larger aspects of the collaboration are
clouded- by the Trieste dispute. Greece and Turkey are
members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, as
is Italy. Yugoslavia is riot.
Any co-operation between Yugoslavia and Italy will
now have to await the disposal of Trieste. A solution
satisfactory to both claimants must be found in the in-
terest of the defense of South Europe.
L BAO
COMPANY
KqEaipzlng, •
fort by cold canvassing he can re-
cruit a new customer to take the
place of the one that he lost.
No other occupation in the world
gives the lone individual The power
that salesmanship does. For there
are plenty of rival companies in
almost every sales field nowadays
Moreover, your customers belong
primarily to you, the salesman,
and only secondarily to your firm.
So you can generally take a large
percentage of your clients with
you, when you find it necessary
or advisable to look elsewhere for
a new sales job.
Your customers are your friends.
You may have spent years culti-
vating them and gaining their res-
pect. So don't throw them away
by shifting to new territory every
few years!
Salesmanship should be a life-
time profession. Stick to the same
territory all your life and you’ll
generally make more money. If
you aren’t treated fairly by your
present company, cake your custo-
mers with you to a competitive
firm.
For your personal clientile is your
to Lenton Countyt 815.60 per vear: montha, 87 Aft three
month. 81 an N -
• "
Girls
rung
their k
As st
ion of
New Y
ing of
wholes!
came a
the bn
skirts
false a
Perh
from I
t do
manufa
pushed
"decre
next
dresses
ing wh
peggv
She gave a series of question*
and problems prepared by another
Gen lady— Dr. Alice Heim—to a mixed
Brownell, whatever his reason, group of 700 British university
skipped over the Roosevelt admin- students. The results, she says,
istration when he acrused former ’bowed boys are smarter than
President Truman of being lax girls, reason better, and learn
with Communists. quickr through practice
Yet the alleged spy rings must Maybe. It also could prove that
have been inherited by Truman a kindhearted woman scientist is
from the Roosevelt regime. But able 1° devise a test on which the
Truman and FBI Chief J. Edgar lads could get a better grade 01,11
Hoover, like Brownell, concern the lassies.
DRNTON RECORD-CHROVN61.K
Pubihed avery ntternoon (except Saturday and Sunday ny: Dentos Pub-
shing Co., toe. S14 E Hiekory St
enterea as secona da** nail matter as the postortice at Denton, Tasaa.
Janunry 18. 1021, according to Act of Congrena, March 8. 1818
SUBSCRIPTION RATVs AND WFORMATION
Minetes copien: Be ter wekdaya: 10c for Sundar
Cito Carrtor 80* per «a*k
Mbymzeie. v. H10,.
I
I
I .A-
I
too keen about mathematics, if fruitful fields for a trained man
this information would help, who likes people. It also offers the
"If you were in my position, what greatest independence compatible
kind of work would you select?" with little capital. For your pro-
With no further information than gress then depends on merit.
6:00 4
5
nance—such as money. tobacco,
pants and the dry martini—chiv-
alry has been taken over by wom-
i en They are showing more and
more gallantry in their attitude
toward the weaker sex, man.
What else but pure gallantry
explains the recent statement by
Mus Kathleen Watts, a British
psychologist, that men are more
intelligent than women?
; de.
trated their explanations on what
happened in Truman's time
This glossing over of the Roose-
velt period raises questions which
may have to be answered before
the sensational case of Harry Dex-
ter White fades from the news.
For example: Did Roosevelt
ever know, or was he ever told,
about a spy ring in government in
his administration? If so, who told
eem ere MB vesponsibie for copy omisaona, typographical
eiatenuonal error that occur other than to correc tn Mil
l mucht to Shrir attention All aavertining orders are nccpi
,M cusc
.
5
8
12 15 4
6:15 4 The World Today
8 Evening Edition
41:26 4 Continental Weather
5 Weatherman
6:30 4 New* With Edwarda
5 Hu perman
8 Dinah Shore Show
6:48 4 Jane Proman Show
8 Camel News Caravan
7:00 4 Liberace
B The Buick-Berle Show
8 Life Is Worth Living
7:30 4 Red Skelton Show
8 This is Dallaa
8:00 4 Thia la Show Bustnees
----
peace of mind —Dr Meador’s Trail to get established in a good job
Dust. and marry
----- “I have a college diploma and we have in the above paragraphs,
FROM TH- LIONS CLUB NEWS graduated from Liberal Arts with we can’t make an exact diagnosis can fire you at his whim
LETTER: Little Johnny, age sev- a B S. degree. But I have no par of Larry's special talent. A eneemene m"etome L-
en, raised his hand. “Teacher” ticular qualification for any spe- But it seems that he is probab- so grow angry at him, and even
he askd, “suppose a man prom- cial field. ’ ly an extrovert, and not fond of refuse to patronize his wares any
ised a girl a penthouse, a yacht, a
limousine, and marriage. Can she
462
4 j
4
D
E
Send for my bulletin "The New any spy ring that existed.
Psychology of Advertising & Sell- instead, he took full responsibil-
ing" enclosing a stamped return ity himself for what was or wasn't
that it takes three teaspoonfuls to
equal one tablespoonful. Mitt said
two; Raymond Pitts said, two;
Wayne Swick said, four; Gene
Thomas said, three — and that’s
correct All of which goes to
prove that a little bit of Ignorance
may be dangerous thing.
Ask a dozen people the spoon
question and more than half will
say two teaspoonfuls equal one
tablespoonful; which also goes to
prove that we know very little
about the commonest things in life.
Henris H ollywod
Ann Alden
Atom Squad
Mary Carter’s Cook Book
Movie Marquee
Gabby Hayes Show
Howdy Doody
Hot From Hollywood
Party Time
Kiddle Carnival
See Raw Zoo
Frontier Playhouse
Western Theatre
Evening News
Dinner With The President
Cowboy Thrilla
Evening Edition
Weatherman
Wild Bill Hickok
Arthur Murray Dance
Party
Camel News Caravan
Burna And Allen
Sky King
Name That Tune
BW Conference Football
SW Conference Football
Review
Voice Of Firestone
I Love Lucy
Crusade in Europe
Dennis Div Show
Wrestling Prevues
Red Buttons
Wrestling
Robert Montgomery
Presents
Studio One
Amos ‘N Andy
Suspense
Final Edition
Weather Telefacta
Channel 8 Theatre
News Final
The Pastor Calls
Movie Marquee
Chronoscope
Nighttime Movie
Since every customer may have consider its work complete without
required hours of planning and con- tracking the alleged spies back to
fading, once you get such a root- Roosevelt’s days and learning
er, hang on to him! whatever was then known or done
His goodwill is a "plus" factor about them.
in your favor long after your com- Truman, always loyal to Roose-
missions have been spent, for vou velt and his memory, could have
can return to him for more busi- tried in his talk to the nation to
ness later on, without spending take some of the heat off himself
••
3
5 The Kate Smith Hour
2 15 4 Muste Hall Varteties
8 Wrestling Workouts
2 30 4 The Bob Crosby Show
6 Fireside Theatre
8 Make Room for Daddy
4 Wrestiing
6 Circle Theatre
8 Wrestiihg From Pappy’s
8 Judge For Yourseif
6 Bob Comsodine
6 Bportaman Club
4 Tour Jeweler’s Showcase
8 Texas New*
8 Pinai Edition
4 Weather Telefact*
8 Channel 8 Theatre
8 News
4 Search For Tomorrow
5 Beauty School
4 Guiding Light
4 Workshop
trace the course of my life; there- vocational guidance," he wrote
fore I am prone to seek, instead, from camp.
his friendship and my profound “After I get back home, I‘d like
BERMUDA CONFERENCE
AFrom The Paris News) *
President Eisenhower told his press conference that
there is no program for the meeting, December 4-8 in
Bermuda with British Prime Minister Sir Winston Chur-
chill and French Prime Minister Joseph Laniel, and that
the sessions will be informal, around-the-table discus-
sions.
But Senator William Knowland, majority leader of
the Senate, who has returned from a trip around the
world, has different ideas. As a member of the Senate
Foreign Relations committee and of the Joint Atomic
Energy Committee he thinks the President should ask
the two Prime Ministers very flatly just how far they
will go in a common front against Russia. He does not
think “the Communist leopard has changed his spots,”
and sees no effective non-aggressiorpact with Russia
until Russian troops are withdrawn from the satellite
countries and free elections provided under supervision
of the United Nations.
Senator Kriowland is right, and even if there were
some hard-boiled questions on the program such a meet-
ing will still be too cozy for the comfort of Americans.
The setting is Churchill’s idea and it is the kind in which
he 8 a master salesman — as we should know by this
time — and we can expect that M.Laniel will be more
impressed with the Churchillian ideas than with those
of President Eisenhower. And Secretary of State John
Foster Dulles, who will accompany the President, and
who has hinted that we might think about a United
Nations seat for Red China, may not be much help in
keeping us out of unsafe agreements.
Perhaps President Eisenhower is of sterner stuff
than the two preceding Presidents who were talked into
things that were bad for us. Let us hope so, for if we
make a few more bad bargains we will be in so deep that
The "SCANDAL SHEET” asks
What next?
We read in the papers that after
selling everything from pins to
pianos, toys to television sets, gir-
dles to gondolas, fireworks to fur
coats, baby shoes to beer, the
army is going into the saloon busi-
ness—another example of tax-free
government in competition to tax-
ed and restricted private business.
Remembering how the old army
once prohibited the sale of any
intoxicating drinks near an army
camp, then went into the bier
business, and now is said to be
expanding into the hard liquor
business, even in dry states, one
wonders why the change.
Is it thought that this will make
better men and soldiers? If so,
why do we have restrictions on
the sale of beer and whiskey to
other people? Soldiers are people
and if it is good for soldiers then
it must be good for other people.
If it makes drunks of some people
then it will make drunks of some
soldiers.
The Scandal Sheet of the Metro-
politan areas has always been op-
posed to restrictions, but perhaps
the army should be restricted; re-
stricted from making drunks of
our young men. Then too, as this
whiskey will undoubtedly be tax
free, and sold at less than half the
price of taxed whiskey the army
may find itself the center of a
thriving bootlegging business
around its camps, especially in
dry territory.
We would much rather see the
army training its young men to be
soldiers and men, instead of drunks
and bootleggers.
NO EXEMPTION
(From The Denison Herald)
Neither in the Constitution nor in the laws, ruled
Chief Justice John Marshall, is to be found any excep-
tion to the right of an accused to compel the attendance
of witnesses. “No person could claim an exemption." And
the chief Government prosecutor admitted that “a sub-
. pens may issue against him (the President) as well as
against any other man.” So Marshall issued a subpena
on Thomas Jefferson, President of the United States, to
appear in person with certain documents.
It was in 1807 before a federal grand jury in Rich-
mond, Va., presided over by the Chief Justice, consider-
ing charges of treason against Aaron Burr, former Vice
President. Burr demanded that Jefferson produce a letter
from Gen. Wilkinson, also certain orders to the Army and
Navy that, Burr alleged, would prove the Administration
was bent on "destroying" him.
The Burr case was permeated by politics, Jeffer-
son was determined to have Burr convicted of treason.
Marshall, Federalist and arch enemy of Jefferson, was •
set on thwarting the President and his Republican re-
' gtme.-----------------------
The “subpena duces tecum” issued by Marshall
called on the President, if he refused to honor it, to "show
cause” of his refusal. And Jefferson did refuse and did
show cause.
He wrote that if he were to appear in person, he
would have to appear in other trials, in other parts of
the country, connected with the Burr conspiracy. That
would prevent him from giving the proper attention to
the Presidency as required hy the -Constitution.
As for the papers demanded by the subpena, he was
forwarding the Wilkinson letter to the prosecution, to be
laid before the grand jury at the prosecution’s discretion.
Most of the letter was later made Available to the grand
jury.
The military and naval orders, Jefferson wrote, had
a public and private aspect. Those with a public aspect
would be delivered, those with a private—i.e. secret—
aspect would be withheld. And the President, “from the
nature of the case,” would have to be “the sole judge" of
• which papers “the public interest will permit publica-
tion.” To turn over everything demanded “would amount
to lavine oven the whole executive books.”
After Burr had actually gone on trial under indict-
ment for treason, he demanded that the Chief Justice
declare the President in contempt, and punish him, for
‘disregarding the subpena. But Marshall decided he had
gone as far as he could go, and took no further action.
♦
Mitt has a
8 45 4 Variety Patr
4 00 5 Ann Alden
8 Atom Squad
4:15 4 Mary Carter** Cook Book
8 Movie Marquee
8 Gabby Hayes
4 30 8 Howdy Doody
4 45 4 Hot From Hollywood
8:00 4 Party Time
N
- o
• •
ec2 NAER.
TELEFNORB C-tW
NOTICE TO pvm.ict
..3
UM upon the charucter. reputatton er standinc of any
zorportlomn will fee «ladiy corrected upon being called
tevtion
If you buy stock in a company,
or marry your employer's daugh-
ter, you may have permanent ten
ure in a company even without
022K5WBEWT" " " "
8 Sports News
8 Movie Marquee
4 Nighttime Movie
Y/lf MY )
BUMPFR’ < =9
MVOR/LLfJ n
-e
• I
A, A a '
j What Other Papers Say
B eih. •
sue him for breach of promise’"
The teacher shook her head.
"No”, she said, "breach of prom-
ise cases are now outlawed in this
state.” Little Herbert, 8. next
to Johnny, leaned over and whisp-
ered. "There you are pal: I told
you that you had nothing to worry
about.”
hi . 0/
itonal ra^e Doings
• • •
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 98, Ed. 1 Monday, November 23, 1953, newspaper, November 23, 1953; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1424645/m1/4/?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.