Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 238, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 19, 1953 Page: 12 of 12
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Wenday, May 19, 1953
THE
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tee
for us to expect any teacher, who
sponsibilities of parents.
4-
1. Not opposed to congressional
ed no smear tactics are used.
‘s forces.
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Yanks Stoned
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-Fred Moore
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Graduates
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$-5
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Television Sale
WATCH
Save 20% Now
FOR
OLD JOE
This Stock Reduction Solo includes
Mrs. McClendon Is Installed
As President Of Garden Club
SHEPHERD'S WEEKLY SPECIALS
$
24c lb.
29c lb.
33c lb.
209 N. Locust
Ph. C-7915
liff, reporter.
ib
up very, much,
IH always have
of course.
MOVE UP IN STYLING
R
A
here were
' P
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B
call. Most were
mbers of the
Rightist Socialist party.
; IF ALL AT
0ne
C-8857
MOVE AHEAD WITH MERCURY!
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Police Force, has been
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GET THE FACTS—
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ROAST
under tres
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ARM
ROAST
This was the route over which
the division, commanded by Red
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GARDEN CLUB HEADS — Incoming and outgoing
presidents of the Denton Garden Club are Mrs. D. T.
McClendon, left, new president, and Mrs. F. G. Scott. Mrs.
McClendon took office at a meeting Monday at the home
of Mrs. W. R. Hicks, 521 Texas. (Record-Chronicle Staff
Photo) ,
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'INSTALL NEW
UNITSONE
( BY ONE
a month ago hi support of three
other rebel divisions driving into
the kingdom from North Viet Nam.
Vietminh force* advanced to
within sight of the royal Laotian
residence city of Luang Prabang—
and then withdrew without a bat-
tle. More than a week ago, the
other three rebel divisions quit
Laos, pulling back over the king-
dom’s northern frontier into the
Black River district of Northwest-
ern Indochina.
French sources seeking reasons
for the surprising withdrawal have
speculated that the invasion may
have- been called off on orders
from the Soviet Union and Red
China as a part of the Commu-
niat “peace drive."
Other explanations advanced
have been the start of the monsoon
rams, with their crippling effect on
military operations. or a break-
down in the long Vietminh supply
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YOU’LL GO FOR
ITS HONEST VALUE
n
a.
bergeet eta
imekma if YC
UNO, wy 1AM
Join Ml the popukar HCW custom of
starting at adding tothegir graduate’s sterling servicr
Place-settings $2t 75 and ap.
Federal tax included
old Neale, A. C. Maddocks and
Frances Craddock. The meeting
was held in the garden shelter and
coffee was served in the house
Mrs. Scott is counselor for the
second district of Texas Garden
Clubs, Inc., and is serving her
second year as president of the
Denton Garden Clubs. One of her
projects for next year is the es-
tablishment of a garden club for
Girl Scouts.
•.* —
-4en-
5 1
— i
ere said to be in pursuit, but ap-
rently with no great prospects
VO
TRY A CLOSE-UP of the strikingly.de-.
signed new Mercury interiors—smartest
in its field. New colors and fabrics are
rich and radiant. Biggest Mercury win-
dows yet make sure you’ll see. And b
Mercury's prices make sure you’ll buy!
c3
if YAM BROS
A.t PLUMBER, ^
inb
1
A
o
w
u
M
C
IN
SHORT RIBS
Beef
B-RYANBROS.
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OLMTO.TEX. "w»
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vice president; Mrs. Melvin Tay-
lor.
; Eugene Fowler,
I Mrs. Robert Rat-
--nend
GREAT AMERICAN
ROY N. LUKENS
RESERVE
Mmes. L. H. Nix, Pauline Smith.
A. O. Ammons, Eula Gray and
Alice Alexander and Miss Mary
g
add to the joy of her graduation
with the perfect gift . . .
e, %j l
Kede%alon
sT{WLN—
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INOI, Indochina u_The last
munist invaders of Laos were
rted on their way out of the
i mountain Indochinese king-
Parents Are Hosts
To Band Members
At Picnic, Swim
A swimming party and picnic
honored the Denton High School
Band last night on the TSCW cam-
pus.
Hosting the party was the Band
Parente Club. Mrs. Eugene Fowler
and Mrs. Cole Parks are social
chairmen.
Special guests were junior high
school spring graduates who plan
to play in the band next fall. About
one hundred band members and
guests attended.
Band Parente officers for the
next school year are M. S. Gantt,
president; Mrs. Dick McClendon,
OKLAHOMA CITY - Hard
hitting speakers at the 57th annual
convention of the National Con-
gress of Parents and Teachers de-
clared yesterday the nation’s
schools were:
1. Shackled with outmoded con-
cepts.
2 Assuming too many of the re-
h.*
"I
seasoi
Jack
the n
past,
conclu
Police
April,
arrest
of the
one of
as ar
we’ve
chain of thousands of raeiiee peek- -I
tag supplies on their backs over ]
mountain and jungle trails.
tac
of r Etching them.
French officials said the Com-
munist led Vietminh s crack 304th
Divisdont“ ms ring eart and
the coart of Annam and territory
t^McCiays
West side Squere
w‘
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•=EEH
thonhictmhy’zognyunxhgteronydurakt
foot.— WONDER SALVX ana Wonac
Medicated Soap •“ help
fer the bev ta th. Arm,
wonvER"SALVg 2"..
antseptie. Ne ugl epp"aranee"Sfef
ehildren. GM WoNER SALVE
WONDER MEDICATED sAFKesnS
or mone refunded. Truly wonderfui
vreparationa. T them. Jar or Tuba
- .
sz2..!g
Church of Christ in Big Spring,
after having served as pastor in
Denton for several yuan. He said,
“We like Big Spring and our
church *-
_ ■ ■ withstood the op-
eration nicely and that it may be
several days before he will be able
to return to num.
T
y. '
,jaer
F'
Eue
COMB IN and take a good look at
Mercury’s eye-catching Unified Design.
It’s trim, dean—with no bulges, no
fussy decorations. Designed in larger
units that go together. So much easier
to handle—and so easy to own.
sciucaricaily trearea ouper
to counteract diaper rash!
No Work — Better Health
Two Deliveries Weekly
Rental Diapers per Wook
108 Drapers 2.25
96 Diapers.......2.00
60 Diapers....... 1.50
Your Diapers (any .taunt)
.......1.00
Baby Laundry...... 25c
-ROCKABYE-
Diaper Service
— Phone C-2560 —
TALIAFERRO RADIO SHOP (
ROVNDABOVT
(Continued fom Pag 1)
called to the pastorate of the
TAKI IT AWAY for a road test. Try
proven performance, greatest in our ex.
clulvely V-8 history. Choice of drives:
standard, Touch-O-Matic Overdrive, or
Merc-O-Matic. Let us give you the facts
about moving up to Mercury—today.
sta
Ing. to train, teach, counsel and
advise all the children he or she
instructs?"
He contended, “We are asking
them to do far too much if we
want any part of the job to be
done well."
Meanwhile, at a press confer-
ence, Lawrence G. Dethick, su-
perintendent of schools at Chat-
tanooga, Tenn., was asked if con-
' *
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Red invaders
A NEW SERVICE
FOR MOTHER AND
—BABY-
UM COST UM WORRY
Protect your baby with our
Albert Sydney Raubenheimer,
educational vice presdient of the
University of Southern California,
told more than 3,000 delegates to
the convention that obsolete teach-
ing methods were still being em-
ployed.
‘Our methods of teaching," he
said “almost universally reflect an
acceptance of the idea that a child
is merely a blank tablet that has
to be impressed and inscribed with
facts and preconceived ideas."
Raubenheimer asserted the test-
ing of children on contents of text-
books tends to restrain all possible
development of interest and imag-
ination.
G. F. Bruce of Edmonton, Can-
ada, president of the Canadian
Home and School a nd Parent-
Teacher Federation, said teachers
are asked to accept too much of
a burden in many phases of ac-
tivity not directly connected with
school work.
“I ask you," he said, “is it fai
rt
3. . ■ '
3. Not opposed to congressional has, perhaps, not more than 11
investigation for subversion provid- years of schooling, phis as little
as seven months of teacher train-
-
k 06
M». and Nn Jack Morgan have
moved from Alice to Decatur to
make their home and he baa be-
come associated with former
Grady Woodruft. in
gmrng
House speaker and vicespeaker. If
the coalition had held through to-
day’s vote for prime minister Yo-
shida could have been unseated.
His election as premier gives
Yoshida authority to form his fifth
cabinet, but most political observ-
ers predicted rough sledding ahead
a tender spot ha my bout for
Denton" ....
C. K -Woods, veteran mail car-
rierof the local post office, was
taken to Dallas Satasday, where
beentegedahonq
today. French-Laotian forces China-trained Gen. Hoang Minh
Tao, knifed into Laos more than
Monday a coalition of four oppo- l
sitiom parties, including the Right- i
tot Socialists, swept Yoshida’s po- |
litical foes into the key jobs of !
TAYLOR MOTOR COMPANY
All Models in Our Stock. Ranging in
price from 199.95 to 429.95 All sets
are 1953 Models. We will arrange
terms to suit you. 10% Down.
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Drug Store
Symbolizing the Progres of Molor
Compon’a SON Anpiverary- "50 Yvon
Forword on the lUrri Rocd"
By Red Mob
TEHRAN, Iran un— U. S. military
headquarters here announced to-
day that an American sergeant suf-
fered a bead wound yesterday
when a mob of Communist parti-
sans stoned him and another sol-
dier
The injured sergeant, Thomas
Quirk of Brooklyn, N. Y., was rid-
ing in an Army vehicle with Sgt.
Frank W. Corpe of Akron, O.,
when the mob rushed the car,
shouting “Yankee go home." The!
Communist sympathizers spat at'
the sergeants and struck them
with their fists. -----------—----—!
The announcement from the
American military mission to Iran
said the sergeants—both in uni-
form-reported a policeman forced
them to drive toward the crowd,
which gathered around the .
Justice Ministry. Another police
man directing traffic halted them
at the peak of the attack but made
no move to interfere with the mob,
they said
The sergeants escaped by pulling
out and speeding around the halted
traffic.
Mrs. D. T. McClendon was in-
stalled as new president of the
Denton Garden Club at a meeting
yesterday at the home of Mrs. W.
R. Hicks, 521 Texas.
Other new officers include Mrs.
Tam Richardson, first vice presi-
dent; Mrs. J. D. Thomas, second
vice president; Mrs. R. B. Eskew,
Jr., third vice president and flower
show chairman. Mrs. Ralph Cole,
secretary; Mrs. Clayton C. Davis,
corresponding secretary; Mrs.
Robert Talley, treasurer. Mrs. J.
A. Rose, publicity chairman; Mrs.
Lillie Wisely, historian, and Mrs.
Scott, parliamentarian.
Mrs. Joe Wilson was in charge
of the installation, assisted by Mrs
Linwood Roberson. As Mrs. Wilson
spoke, Mrs. Roberson arranged a
symbolic bouquet of roses, which
was presented to the new president
at the end of the ceremony.
Chairman of the hostess com-
mittee was Mrs. George Bishop.
Assisting her were Mmes. J. R.
Huffines, F. L. McReynolds, Har-
•Am tears
Yoshida Named
Japanese Boss
TOKYO to-Aging Shigeru Yo-
shida today was chosen prime min-
ister of Japan by the House, which
handed him two stinging defeats
The Liberal party leader polled
204 votes against 116 for Mamoru
Shigemitsu, leader of the rival
Yoshida. IS, has headed four
Japanese eabinets since World War
U. He is regarded as pro-Amer-
ican.
Seventy emu members of the
House abstained on the final roll
DI NTO N »gCOH D C H R O N IC LI__
gm Obsolete Methods Of Teaching
In Nation’s Schools Are Cited
I
M2h
■■p J
® ‘.02
25 8
- -cs
, J
gressional probes of subversion ( •
among educators constitute a t
treat to local control of public j
education.
He replied it “depends largely
upon the manner in which thei,
vestigating committees function.
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Rewem
Shepherd's Gro. & Mkt.
208 Austin — FREE DELIVERY — C-2914
held by rebel chief Ho Chi
Kb 0,%
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"rmepaiggharrgrgrsdhamszee" 7 s
L
"We've had sufficient rain for
the present," said Cari Atcheson
sf Slidell. “In fact, we would like
fasuszonw.senecmeudgcatp
the time machinery cm he worked
raad^ fteld "hidhu aw. "to
no damage fom ram or wind to
my toemodiato neigtiharboad and
we .look forward to a good yield
of both wheat and oats.”
Champ Taliaferro went to Dal.
jy Brterday to enter BL Parts
Hospital where he to at present
under medical care. His father.
A- Taliaferro, said. “I rather
think Champ will be at the tom-
ai few days before he re-
• • •.
. "Missouri and Arkansas have
had • lot more rain than we have
bad here and they have taken an
; the appearance of lakes rather
than farms,” said B. B. Sheiton,
who. with Mra. Sheiton, returned
from Columbia, Mo. They went
hw there to be at fee bedside of his
sister, Mrs. Minnie Thrasher, who
to under medical treatment at a
hospital.
• • • •
tg1*
vuga,", ‛-V- I
---mrh-ht-
andon Laos
l several or
. to at present
trartmenT’and ^to mnaenntboa
tathewi return bon in a few
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To Hear Ivey
Ben Ivey, president of the Den-
ton school board, will spook at
Fred Moore Negro School grad-
uation exercises at 8 p.m. May to
The ceremonies will climax a
monthof ondefecboel activities
for the school
Baccalaureate services. 3 p.m.
Sunday, will feature an address
by the Rev. Curtis Brown, Mt
Pilgrim Methodist Church.
Both ceremonies will be held in
4 the school auditorkuam.
Supt Chester 0- Strickland will
present diplomas to the graduat-
ing seniors and Principal Fred
Moore will award special honors.
About one hundred juniors, sen-
iors, faculty members and guests
attrsded the anneal prom Thurs-
day evening in the auditorium.
The junior class sponsored the
. . affair, +which centered around “An
Evening in Paris" theme.
Students from the first through
sixth grades visited the zoo in
Dalles last week on picnic out-
ings. I
n practice of law; Msrgia has
heron and. Mrs Morgan is
mer Mias Jane Shands,
r of Mr. and Mrs Henry
*) Shands, 1023 W Syca-
more, t
• • • •
Sam Canefst. one of Denton's
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 238, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 19, 1953, newspaper, May 19, 1953; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1427200/m1/12/: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.