Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 53, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 3, 1954 Page: 4 of 54
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0
THE DENTON RECORD.CHRONICLE
Sunday, October 3, 1954
Sunday
ROUND
Hal Boyle Says:
- -
NA’
ABOUT
Ladies, Speak Softly
4
od
TOWN
29
8
O
B, R. J. (BOB) EDWARDS
By
have children, he married Princess
way:
man basis.
dad gives is a box of cigars to his
"They are self-conscious about pals
He doesn’t even offer one
Yesteryears.
6
In Denton
T
guuk
, various sources in order to present a clear in-
k
TEN YEARS AGO
The Man Who Came To Dinner
■
Leaders Of Tomorrow
• 734 s7T 77 T •'
PROTECTION NEEDED
who witnessed the game in South
In
Television Schedules
(As announced by television stations.
By Fred Nehee
4 Look Up & Live
4,
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“I'd like to try one out . . . Would you start a fire, pleaser"
THERE OUGHTA BE A LAW!
A 30
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sunsc«IrTION RATEA AND INTORMATION
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LOoKWHAT
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HOME FIRE
EXTINGLISL
2:15
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11.45
12:00
10 56
11 00
SEARCH
Mt’ -
SOME.
PUNKINS.
9 -
12 50
1 00
4 15
4 30
Pastor
morrow
11 15
11:20
11:30
6 40
5:50
5:55
6:00
5 45
6 00
8 45
9 00
9 15
0:50
4 45
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8:15
8:30
Dame outsmarted the Txas boys,
but the South Bend boys had no
luck with the Texas line. And, boy,
O, boy, those Texas lads sure know
how to tackle hard. They laid out
several of the opponents and I think
Texas Longhorns will go places in
the Southwest Conference.”
12 45
1 00
Stone and Joan Graham were ob-
serving birthday anniversaries.
Alfred E. Smith, 70, native of
New York City’s east side, four
Vou PROBABLY.
LEFT rr IN THE
OFFICE*
appear with no warning at all to likelihood of tornadoes over a wide
slash a path of destruction and area of the country.
Musical Memo
Betty White Show
Love of Life
i
Binzier
as a
"Yeah, we had a good rain, but
it didn’t fill my lake,” said Penn
Heath. "In fact, the lake's level
is a foot lower now than it was
when Allan Bogan took the picture
of it which was in a recent’ is-
sue of the Record-Chronicle. May-
be the next rain will give me more
stock water."
1 .30
1 55
2 00
News
Weather Telefacta
Movietime
New* Final
I ‘ ’
12.15
12:20
. 12 26
12:30
4:15
4 30
1
4
MGD
38
5
8
4
5
tra9e
. k ■
resident now of Austin, was here
Danton Pub- Saturday to visit his sister, Miss
F
r
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1 30
2:00
2 IS
2:25
3:30
.1:00
3:30
3 46
tea (
to Heaven
L> rr was na
576YUR
I b PEN, )
everything but their voices, and to his wife.
they have the worst voices in the
world. It is perhaps a mark of
their nervous and aggressive as- LOOKING BACK
sertiveness. Stand outside a crowd- — ■
2
They must write and edit impartially and must write
- and edit truth. Any other manner marks not a news-
• • * * ........
*<
‘VA
5#
out this year and is associated with
the Kochton Plywood and Veneer
Co., Inc. of Fort Worth. He is a
graduate of North Texas State and
while in college here he was one
of Denton s fine fire department.
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g*e.
3:45
4 00
22
52 ■
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Texas as designated by Gov. Allan Shivers. The day
paid tribute to the thousands of young men in Texas
who start early learning a business and more important
—learning how to take care of it.
The Record-Chronicle has 53 carrier boys on its
rolls in the city and county of Denton. Each day, six
times a week these boys hit your front door with the
Record-Chronicle. They are teen-agers who are charged
with the responsibility of keeping tabs on their various
routes. They have to account for all their money, do
their own collecting and bookkeeping under supervision.
In taking advantage of this opportunity to earn
extra money in an important part-time job, these
young people demonstrate their ambition and resource-
fulness.But a neighborhood newspaper route is more
than just a job. It actually can be considered a valu-
able supplement to organized public education. At a
very early age and under careful guidance, carriers
enter the world of American business. Each one be-
comes a junior businessman, charged with serious eco-
nomic responsibilities. He learns the give-and-take of
everyday life, the importance of personal relationships,
the value of money, the rewards of diligence.
It is no accident that many of the nation’s great
business leaders received their start toward success in
the ranks of America’s newspaper carrier boys.
We are proud of our carrier boys and look upon
them as the leaders of tomorrow's business. With the
knowledge these young people gain in school and dur-
ing their early experience in the business world, they
can make of their future what they choose. It will de-
pend on their reservoirs of determination and the ex-
tent of their dedication and resourcefulness. But the
lessons they have, learned as carrier-students are the
ones that are likely to shape their destinies.
And most important of all, newspaper writers and
editors must be imbued with a feeling of fair play.
t
\ •
but not nearly as much as you
had in Denton. That rain should
get farm work started in good 3
shape." Bill has rented his farms lO is' s
ft
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ft
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Good Morning
4 Search for Toi
Denton RECORD-CHRONICLE
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paperman but an imposter in a field that knows no
heights nor depths of success and failure.
"I'm going to make a football
center out of this boy," said Grand-
pa Fred Thurmond as he was walk
ing around with his grandson, Lar-
ry Shields Thurmond, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Thurmond, Jr. of
Dallas. Larry Shields, 19 months,
gives promise of a football player
and Fred said, "I played center on
Denton High, so I think Larry will
follow the steps of his granddad
- C ■
I
Mort* Marquee
pt -
become better acquainted with the news columns of a
newspaper in order to absorb the best and the worst—
but in so doing keep abreast of the events of the
world that shape the future for each of us.
A newspaper’s job is simple to type on a sheet
of copy paper. Its main aim is to gather, edit and print
the news. But in doing these jobs its staffers must
I
cl
Notre Dame,” said C. P. Masters,
‘ 13*
' 'A'' .■ ■.
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KRLD TV
4
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1ea p
Opa
The
the Am
with its
P' nssior
Today
ti n thi
to brea
brrier:
News
nation
suppres
come t
danger
At ev
local, c
there ai
refuse t
public I
its busii
There
manic j
ious of
national
which c
money
sions—a
which i
In th
this typ
tinue to
stalema
Leade
fessinn,
by the
local ne
growing
taking
hometov
Subject to change.)
WFAATV
"They are the prettiest and best Marie Louise of Austria. When she
dressed women in the world, be rewarded him with a son, he re-
cause the women of no other coun- warded her with a tiara containing
try have so much time or money 15 large emeralds and 500 dia-
to spend on beauty. They are also monds. . . The tiara, now in this
the most self-reliant, and the most country, is insured for $350,000. . . .
willing to meet you on a man-to- Parenthood is simpler today—all
5
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Wgs
Bill Butler of the Justin com-
munity said, "We had a fine rain
WBAP-TV
5
Mary Carter's Cookbook
5 What's Cooking
8
10 00 4
Earl Durham, former Denton
222
45294
scholar?
The almanac’s crystal ball; Auto-
mobiles will be much safer 50
years from now. General Electric
engineers say car headlights then
will be 10 times as powerful as
those of today but have less glare..
%.A
"sekcey
itoria
2.
keep on the go almost every minute of the day. A
newspaper survives on timeliness. A news room might
have prepared the best stories and pictures of the day
but if the paper missed its deadlines most of the
। punch would be lost.
And a reporter doesn’t just go out and ask for
news. It’s not that easy. He must reason with his
L. -.. source, fight with his source, chase his source and
finally develop and write the story. Many times he must
■
4 Man Behind the Badge
5 Doctor I. Q
4 Father Knows Best
6 Loretta Young Show
8 Texas Theatre
4 What’s Mv Lina
. 6 The Hunter .
8 Captured
da: Be for weekdave: 100 for Sunday.
0over week.
Mrs. C. B.
09-
CSfGog
4>
For this saith the Lord God,
the Holy One of Israel; In return-
ing and rest shall ye be saved;
in quietness and in confidence shall
be your strength; and ye would
not- Isaiah 39-15.
A consistent Christian may not
have rapture. He has that which
is much better than rapture-
calmness. God’s serene and per-
petual presence—-Robertson.
4 The Big Picture
5 Mr Wizard
H Front les of Faith
4 News
4 Religous Worship
Bend. "As I saw the game, Notre
....
Ezm*wb*e, . y T5 i,
The Newspaper World
Fincher, Dorothy
line. that could be given was an area WICHITA, Kan. (AP)—Burglars
A special research network, warning. got 200 company checks when they
manned mostly by volunteers, al- But if the jump line theory works broke into an office here. Five
ready is in operation over an area out as it appears it might, then weeks later the office again was
covering Kansas, Nebraska, east tornadoes will be robbed of their entered. A check protector was the
Colorado, northwest New Mexico, surprise even if their violence goes only item missing after the follow-
the Texas Panhandle, Oklahoma unchecked, up call, sheriff's deputies said.
Ei
6 (
ed cocktail room and you can hear
their shrill conversation above all
the man talk. It sounds like a buzz
saw going through a piece of tin.
"For feminine allure there is
nothing like a silken voice. Euro-
pean women realize this, and keep
their voices sweet and low.”
Any ladies who disagree with
this verdict? Okay, don’t shout.
Speak softly. . . Softly.
m "Tf/"7
NEW YORK (- The oddity al- and infra-red lamps will keep wind-
manac: . . , shields free of ice and snow.
Ladies, do you want to make Odd items about the great: Na-
yourselves more attractive Then poleon Bonaparte, renowned be-
quit worrying about hiplines and cause of his battlefield general-
bosom lines, and start paying ship, wasn’t so expert in the tac-
more attention to your vocai cords. ties of love. But he wasn’t stingy
A well-known globe trotter sum- with his ladies. After divorcing
med up American women in this Josephine because she couldn’t
Sunday News Special
Texas News
1
=E
Joe Trietsch of the Milam Creek
community, north of Denton, re-
ports a three inch rain at his place
and that Milam Creek was run-
ning. "I can’t recall when .that
creek had enough water to run,
but it was quite some time back,”
he said. Joe Harper of the Parvin
community said that they had a
little more than five inches during
the rainy spell.
—
TV Sunday School
Herald of Truth
Men Toward The Light
This Is The Lite
What’s Your Trouble
*5 terpretation.
" All newspaper people — reporters, editors, desk
men, photographers — must be combinations of many
things. They don’t punch a clock at 8 and 5. Their
working day is 24 hours. Their personality—if they
get the best news first—must be versatile enough to
deal with all types of persons with whom they come
in contact. Newspaper staff members must know all
the answers if they do the best job.
The average American who has
awpamlt reached 50 years of age can expect
to live to be 75 years old.
200- ' g /
boge.
' 7hankt-
UUTKR HYOR,
1 089237
C WHERE'S MY FOUNTAIN
S———7 PN4 rr was
—URIGHT MERE*
62
ologists as "the area of maximum
tornadoes.” Now it is dotted with
instruments for recording jump
line pressures and other data
needed for a concentrated study
of the problem.
Making a study of 1951 weather
in this test area, Tepper and his
colleagues plotted 840 severe lo-
cal storms and found:
725 fell inside the swath of the
jump line.
76 fell outside the swath.
39 couldn’t be related to the
jump line.
The Tepper group then took
those storms on which it had ex-
act beginning times. In this case,
87 per cent fell inside the jump
line and 86 per cent occurred with-
in one hour after the passage of
the pressure wave.
This study, Tepper is convinced,
shows the relationship of the Jump
line and the storms to be more .
.than accidental. Since the jump
line's sweep across the land can
be plotted almost to the minute,
it may be that towns and cities
can be warned in advance pre-
cisely when to expect a tornado.
The weather bureau has been so
impressed by the preliminary work
that It has set up an operational
rub ishea everv afternoon (except Saturanv) and Sunday by:
!tshiez fo Ine, 114 ■ Mickor St
rntered « necpnd ciaes man matte* at the pQAtoffice at Denon, Texna,
Januerv »* 1021 wecordtng to Act ofConeresa. March 5 1873. — -
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NOTHING CAN
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10 00 5 Home
8 Julie Benell Show
10.30 4 Strike It Rich
11:00 4 Valiant Lady
and edges of Iowa, Missouri and
Arkansas. LIFE'S LIKE THAT
This region is known to meteor- ____
National Letter-Writing Week,
which has become an annual event,
will be- observed from October
3 to 9th. The enthusiastic and
widespread interest shown in this A K{ i 11 Kirmriee Foment
P Element une theory & „ ot New vor* state,
20" Scientists Seek Tornado Answer natrara"iruuasrsemnshicil-"."rihrMunaHraBDiz
successful, according to Postmas- when certain weather condi- take at the Texas Theatre,
ter General Arthur Summerfield. WASHINGTON WR—There is rea- disappear as quickly as they come. Weather experts have found the uons exist, tups a switen either twfnty years ago
You might join the letter-writing son to hope that the U.S. Weather Sudden local storms are the wea- pressure jump line travels like a t ring d € osto.senq a Sin Joe Hutcheson of Denton pjay.
week and make some friend hap- bureau is on the track of a new ther forecasters nightmare, but wave before a cold front. It may P it teh Memphis team was
pier. Drop a line to some friend forecasting method which will strip scientists are clawing into the se- be as much as 150 miles wide. • is hoped these gadgets can leading the Southern League in
to whom you have not written in tornadoes of their death dealing crets of why these storms happen Experts have traced‘this atmo- be mass Arduced for less than $100 batting percentage with .350.
a long time. A good letter doesn t element of surprise, when and where they do, spheric pressure wave by means eamh nd then installed at stra- Buddy McNatt of 'Dallas was
need to be forma, or literary. Last year alone more than 530 The answer, or a part of it, may of instruments known as microbar- . . points where volunteer or reg- visiting Mr. and Mrs. J. W. McNatt
You are the main ingredient. Just of the vicious twisters roared out be in what has become known as ographs, which show that as the ulr weather observers can pick of Aubrey
write as you would talk. Letters of the skies in sudden, smashing a "pressure jump line” or "squall jump line arrives there is a sudden tlephne and notify the near- Mrs. J. T Gossett, Mrs. W M.
are important- hey span great dis- assaults on farms, towns and cit- line," which advances before a increase in air pressure which vio-weather station when the bell Shofner, Mrs. J. W Collins and
tances and brtng peop le together, ies. Most of them were in the mid- cold front smashing into a warm, lently disturbs the atmosphere. rings With these calls, the wea- Mrs. Faye Talley of Justin were
an they bring happiness to our west and southwest. moist mass of air. Dr. Morris Tepper, 39-year-old ther people could get a "fix" on guests of Mrs. Jack Reeves in
_____ Unlike the long lived hurricanes. Meteorologists for some time weather expert in the U.S. Weather the jump line. Dallas u _ . 7 pm
which move slowly out of the Gulf have known that when the cold and Bureau, has taken jump line rec- Formerly, the approach has been Ul 1oe 8 ®n „ot s.were
"Texas University has a good and the Caribbean as spotters keep warm fronts meet—and certain ords and related them to midwest for weather experts to look at the aturedni rrt, I * *
football teau, though it showed cioge watchr, tornadoes oftentimes other conditions exist—there is the tornadoes. atmospheric conditions over the r
up .pretty badly last week against appear with no warning at all to likelihood of tornadoes over a wide His preliminary studies show 70 United States and then to pick
to 75 per cent of the reported tor- out those areas which were ripe
nadoes followed the path of a jump for tornadoes. The best warning
c..
ri--Compensations for a good newsman are not
formed mainly by pay or prestige — although both,
naturally, .hold bearing. But a person who is at heart
a real reporter gleans his compensation through doing
a story first and best that helps one or a million people.
His feeling of accomplishment comes when he sees his-
story in the finished product of a newspaper and views
the results.
A newsman’s world is filled with thrillls, heart-
break, work, sadness, play and enjoyment—all reaching
the extreme at one time or another. His is a unique job
in comparison with other trades and professions. And
he's proud to be a part of a newspaper—if he isn’t he
should be in some other business or profession.
5s"
& V‛
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i)
_
The Faith Memorial Baptist
Church, an outgrowth of the Brig-
bie Springs Baptist Church, will
not close its charter membership
until October 10th. Faith Memorial
is now an independent church and
is cooperating with other Southern
Baptist Churches, with Rev. C. E.
Newman, as pastor. Rev. Newman
said, "We organized the church at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar
Owen on August 6th. with 13 mem-
bers and at present we have 28
members, eight of whom have
come by profession of faith and
baptism. This small group has al-
ready purchased a fine piece of
property from Dr. Jack Skiles, cor-
ner of Beaumont and Sunset, just
off highway 24, where we hope to
build a church as soon as pos-
sible, probably within the next few
months. We are highly gratified
with the fine response received.
Services will be held at 10 in the
morning and 7:30 at night.”
.2-
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.4
8.)
Showtime Matinee
House Party
Amy Vanderbilt
The Big Payoff
1 he Greatest Gilt
Beulah
Golden Windows
Henri's Hollywood
One Muna Family
Heart of the City
Bob Crosby Show
Concerning Miss Marlowe
Brighter Day
Movie Marquee
Hawkins Falls
Secret Storm
First Love
On Your Account
World of Mr. Sweenev
Modern Romance
Martha McDonald's
Kitchen
Pinky Lee Show
Ann Alden
Barker Bill Cartoons
Hix Gun Theatre
Howdy Doody
Variety Fair
Hee Saw Zoo
Kiddle Karival
Portia Faces Life
Party Time
Sports With Sherman
Frontier Playhouse
World News
Evening News
Weatherman
Talk About the Weather
Cowboy Thrills
Evening Edition
TB
OU
4
Jim
/
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ft
5.00 4
5
8
5 30 4
Ruby Mae Durham, who under-
went surgery last July. Mias Dur-
ham is a teacher in North Ward 10 00 *
Public School and will resume her 8 .Myater’piayhoun.
teaching there this Monday. 10 15 4 -—
” ■> 10 20 2
By nail tn Denton and adjoining gounttes, only where Carrier service ta not Some of the boys are getting out 10:28 5
13151 De " mohtha, 00-00: three montha 930 one month their rifles and camping equipment 10:30 B
pi man outaiae Denron County: 11*40 oar year ata momraa. rT*O; three preparatory to taking off for Col- MONDAY — OCT 1
minihs »»» one month. 8130. orado. New Mexico or Wyoming 7 M .4 PMShi •
TEtEPHowEc-aaai - or some of th* other western states 00 8 h^"’
a.cn tekehohb C-2001 that have an early opening of the 8 Today
NOTICE TO PUBLIC: deer season. Quite a few of the 7:35 4 Aorruntu Show**"
Aan,-agaaaareectarm,Hnesn will be aana; zuretena ouoom nein otama Rockies, as there they find the .2288 : MomgSno"
M be hsber attention big blacktail deer, much larger Trenk.wtndlub .
The puoivhms Are not renponnipie for copy ominona, typographical errors.than the, whitetail deer of South 80 « Morning show
M ethziuninttlonai rror that ocbur other than to correct in next isue Texas. 8:564 Local Nawa
*^."8 ^^oyht ‘o that* attantloa. All adrarttatng ordara ara accepted on 9:00 4 Garry Moore Show
ahimhamdddmniluziai 0, ’ 8 Ding pong School
b- dtd"MMad,‛ . nmre: K NIgK HeA
MAMBEN or THE ASSOCIATED PEEBS B 30 4 Arthur aoarrey Show
a A Time To Live
Movie Marquee
Feather Your Nest
Guiding Light
Farm Ac Homa
Farm Editor
Jerry Haynes Show
Weather
News
News
Welcome Travelers
Bobby Peters
Muggle and Her Friends
Noon Edition
143 UodHM
Aan , Le)
The 15th annual observance of National News-
paper Week started Saturday and will continue through
Oct. 8. It is a week in which newspapers and readers
alike take a check of the free American press.
It is a time for newspapermen to take stock; to
review their own misgivings, correct those they can and
give to the public a better, unbiased account of events
' that are happening in their home city and other points
* in the state, nation and world.
And it is also time for readers to take stock; to
g
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_y-n,22.
/
FIVE YEARS AGO
Maximum temperature yester-
day, 87; minimum, 75.
A girl was born to Mr. and
Mrs. W. H. Rainey, 1818 North
Elm Street, Monday, at the Denton
Hospital and Clinic.
Mrs. H. L. Stanley, 226 West
Mulberry Street, returned from
Amarillo, where she visited her
two daughters.
.d,
6 Wild Bill Hickock
8 Tony Martin Show
A 45 4 Perry Comho Show
8 Camel News Caravan
7.00 4 Burna and Allen
5 Come Closer
8 Hid Caesar Show
7.30 4 Texas In Review
5 Voice of Pirestone
8:00 4 1 Love Lucy
6 Texag In Review
8 The Medte
8 30 A December Bride
_ 8 Ll be race
8 Robert Montgomery
9:00 4 Studio One
* Wrestling
9:30 8 Mr. District Attorney
• 10:00 4 Talent Scouts
8 Final Edition
10:18 • Weather
' 10:30 8 onther
10:38 6 News Final
10:80 4 Fire Prevention
~P International Pollce
. 1 Mystery Playhouse
10:45 4 Chronoscope
1I« 4 New*
5 Tonight
8 Tonight
11108 4 Four Star Theatre
World Series quip: Would it have
helped manager Al Lopez of Cleve-
land if he had been a Rhodes
6:10 4 Sports Today
8 Weathercast
6:15 4 The World Today
8 John Daly and the News
6:30 4 Douglas Edwards News
Church Services
Hour of Worship
News
The Christophers
Industry on Parade
Cartoon Time
Industry on Parade
WFAA-TV Power Increase
Faith For today
Weekly News
Noon Edition
Pro Football Game
Facts Forum
Pro Football Gaine
Chriattan Questions
Cainera’s Eye
Weatherman
Weekly TV Preview
Movie Marquee
Range Rider
Zoo Parade
Hong* of inspiration
Sunday Sports Page
Music Hall Varieties
Hall of Fame
Super Circus
Magic in Fashions
Youth Takes A stand
World of Mr Sweeney
Cowboy O-Me
Meet The Press
Itamar of the Jungle
You Are There
Roy Rogers Show
Weekly Edition
Drew Pearson
Lassie
You Asked For It
People Are Funny
Jack Benny Show
Sunday Playhouse
Mr Peepers
Toast of the Town
Soldier Parade
Comedy Hour
C. E Theatre
Walter Winchell [
Television Playhouse 1
Marth* Wright Show
le
c-22
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HI ND 15 — OCT. 3
4 The Christophers
4 A Precius Heritage
8 What a Your Trouble
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WINDOM, MINN . REPORTER: '’You can't spend
more than you have and remain solvent. The longer
such a system is followed, the more Impossible It be-
comes to keep afloat. Know anyone who trades in a
mortgaged car on a new one and has both a newer car
) and a bigger mortgage? The woods are full of such
people. It is bad economics. It’s somewhat like drug
addiction. This applies equally to a person, a business,
- or a government.”
Saturday was National Newspaperboy Day
24
87
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 53, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 3, 1954, newspaper, October 3, 1954; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1430909/m1/4/: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.