Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 211, Ed. 1 Monday, April 5, 1954 Page: 5 of 10
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. Monday, April 5, 1954
THE DENTON RECOR--CHRONFeLE-
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BE SURE TO VOTE
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TUESDAY, APRIL 6TH
BE SURE AND VOTE FOR
JACK BRYSON
FOR
NOTICE TO VOTERS
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(Paid For By Jack Bryson)
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THE "EXTRA-RELIEF” MEDICINE
666
AI TACKS ALL
COLD
SYMPTOMS
AT ONE TIME-
IN LESS TIME
Business ‘Dip’ May Sharpen
North-South Industrial Scrap
Corey Appears Happy After
Returning To Comedy Role
Top Musicians
Of Free World
Photograph
Exhibit Set
Quick, Watson,
The Needle!
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ig
A display of 141 photographs, the
National Press Photographers As-
sociaton traveling print exhibit, will
be shown in the TSCW Journalism
Building Library today and Tues-
day.
The show includes many prize
winners by well-known newspaper,
magazine and free-lance photogra-
phers.
Divisions Include the picture sto-
as
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Operates for 15 month instead of
$4.50 to $9.00 a month for vacuum-
tube aids. No “B" battery ... one
15g "A" battery operates entire aid
for 30 days or more. Greater-than-
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power, fewer battery changes! In-
cludes built-in Pltonemagnet.
at-
of
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j
No ordinary pain-reliever
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but 666 can. The 666
formula contains a com-
bination of prescription-
type ingredients not found
in any other cold medicine.
For that "extra" relief,
try 666 liquid or tablet*.
Remember . . . 666 doe*
more because it hat more.
5
TEES OFF ON CANCER—President Eisenhower gets
some expert advice on his golf grip from Babe Zaharias,
famous athlete, at the White House. The President is
using the “sword of hope” of the American Cancer So-
ciety presented to him by Mrs. Zaharias after Eisen-
hower officially opened the 1954 cancer crusade by
lighting a huge “sword of hope” in New York’s Times
Square by remote control. (AP Wirephoto)
ry, portraits, sports, pictorial, spot
news and feature.
The exhibit, which came here
from the University of Oklahoma,
is sponsored by Eastman Kodak
Co.
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it.
, a
ZENT"ROYAL-T;
HEARING AID
VOTE IN YOUR CITY ELECTION
TOMORROW!
By Makers of
World-Famous
Zenith TV and
। Radios.
You Can't Buy a Bettor Hearing Aid At Any Meo!
Taliaferro Radio Shop
209 Novth Locust ' . _ Diol c-7915
!
I
KING SIZE INI RODUCTORY TRADE IN ALLOWANCE
Top money for your old cleaner at
b M
You hear the same calm assur-
ance in other parts of the South.
You can find like confidence, of
course, in some Northern cities,
especially those that haven't been
hit by much unemployment.
But the South seems sure it’s
favored. Two chief reasons are giv-
en and they seem almost contradic-
tory.
1. Southerners say that because
their area isn’t yet as highly in-
dustrialized as some Northern cen-
ters, a recession can’t hit as hard
or go as deep here.
2. They count on depressed
Northern industries looking for new
CHAIN LINK FENCING
FHA No Down Payment
Free Estimate
BOB BAILEY C-6970
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It is with regrets that I have not been able to see
each and every voter personally. I have tried to see
you at your place of business, where you work, or
on the streets.
I have not solicited the homes, since I know of
no time of the day that I could visit in your home
without disturbing some member of the family, I
have tried to see you elsewhere.
If I have failed to contact you personally, please
take this as a personal solicitation of your vote and
support of my candidacy for mayor of the City of
Denton.
A vote for G. H. BRAMMER for MAYOR Is a
vote for economy in city government, always
mindful of a progressive Denton.
(Fald Fol. Adv.)
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C. E. MILLER INSURANCE AGENCY
FIRE • AUTOMOBILE • MARINE • CASUALTY
Fidelity & Surety Bonds
Phone C-2215 104 McCrary Bigd.
ual. He developed a means of re-
moving the excess iodine- This was ..
done with a resin compound put
into the rat food. In the intestinal*
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■ Turner in “A Life of Her Own.” He
escaped from the studio just as
fast.
“I worked one day only,” he
recalled. “I didn’t care for the
script, and Miss Turin r and I
didn’t care for each other. Ray
Milland tok over. I’ve never been
sorry. The incident didn’t seem to
hurt me at MGM I went back to
do five pictures there.”
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Hoover prices are as low as $19.95.
' , Easy terms, no carrying charge and
I a strong guarantee. Try one.
KK ----Ua
General Sheet Metal Work
Guttering - Spouts
Ventilators
DENTON
Roofing & Metal Wks.
125 1. McKinney C-8424
MAYOR
"MMANMANLMMd Yk8
Clean. Easy to r"U*. M
use. Over 11 million users. 60
muyme HARDWARE CO.
m V Em 3 69th Year in Denton
Magic Chef - Speed-Queen Washers - Lawnmowers
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system this resin books onto iodine
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HEADING FOR ITS SLOT—Hydraulic lift takes car to its allotted space in Los An-
geles’ Pigeon Hole Parking garage. Five le zels can hold 128 cars on plot 60 by 90 feet.
Two Initiated
Into Fraternity
Mickle Calhoun, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. A. O. Calhoun, 807 W
Sycamore, and Genelia Elizabeth
King, daughter of Mr. and Mrs
T. W. King Jr. of Argyle have been
initiated into Phi Upsilon Omicron,
national home economica frater-
nity at North Texas State College.
Both students are sophomore
home economics majors.
Miss Calhoun is a member of
Alpha Lambda Delta, national hon-
orary fraternity for freshman
women; Ellen H Richards Club, an
organization for home economics
majors; Junior Mary Arden, wom-
en’s literary society; and Chi Ome-
ga social society.
Miss King is a member of Alpha
Lambda Delta, Ellen H. Richards
Club, and Alpha Delta Pl social
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SAN FRANCISCO UP-The pos-
sibility that cancer can be “quar-
antined” at Ite site of origin in
the body and thus be prevented
from spreading fatally has been an-
nounced by a University of Cali-
fornia medical researcher.
So far testa have been made
only-on rate. But the experiments
have made it tough for a trans-
planted malignancy to get a foot-
hold in the animals. Whether the
same procedure would work In hu-
mans is not known.
Hie experiments were described
to science writers by Dr. Kenneth
O. Scott, director of the school’s
radioactivity research center. The
science writers are touring re-
search laboratories at the Invita-
tion of the American Cancer So-
ciety.
Iodine la' the key to the situa-
tion. Experimenters recently found
in
ao
ci
Begin Festival
ROME (—Top musicians of the
free world launched a two-week
festival of 20th century music in
Rome Sunday. A competition for
12 young composers—two of them
Americans—is one of the top
events.
This year’s International Confer-
ence of Contemporary Music, April
4-15. is an offspringjof the 1852
Masterpieces of the 20th Century
in Paris That month-long festival
of music, ballet and painting, de-
signed to prove that art thrives
on freedom, brought howls from
European Communists and high
praise for such American perform-
ers as the Boston Symphony Or-
chestra and the New York City
Ballet,
The Reds so far have ignored
the Rome festival, perhaps be
cause the sponsors are playing
down the political angle. And the
Americans this year are leaving
most of the spotlight to the Eu
ropeans. The program’s sponsors
wouldn’t be surprised, however, if
the Communists started sniping at
them.
Leading composers, music crit-
ics and performers were invited
this year from Russia and her
satellites but the festival’s chair-
man, Nicholas Nabokov of New
York, now on the staff of Rome’s
American Academy, said oly Po-
land’s leading composer, Panufnik,
replied—" x very polite letter say-
ing he was terribly busy.”
The festival is sponsored by the
anti-Communist Congress for Cul-
tural Freedom, which staged the
1852 Paris event, the European
Center of Culture of Geneva and
the Italian radio.
The top event will be the judging
of compositions submitted for
three 20th Century Masterpiece
Festival Prize Awards. They will
be given for the best concerto for
violin and orchestra, short sym
phony and chamber music for solo
voice and instruments.
U. S. gin and yeast heir Julius
Fleischmanr is putting up a total
of 25,000 Swiss francs ($5,827) in
prizes. - -
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TOUCH OF SPRING—Secretary
of Welfare Oveta Culp Hobby is
smartly turned out as a witness
before the House Ways and
Means committee. The dark suit
i stopped by a colorful scarf and
simple lapel pin fashioned after
a maple leaf. She testified about
proposed legislation on social
security extension. (AP Wire-
photo)
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that the graasasa of iodine to the
animal system promoted the
growth of cancars after they had
been planted into the animate.
Dr. Scott found that the presence
of cancer caused the animal w
tem to store more iodine than us-
Comvomib*rTimo 4922
PuymeetPlas VN
Taka your choice —
Upright or Tank —
They're both
Hoovers, and you
will like the
wonderful help they
give in cleaning rugs, bare fleers,
curtains, upholsery, blinds, etc. greet
Hino and lobor savers. You'll like them.
HOLLYWOOD IP — Sewen years
ago, Wendell Corey was brought
to Hollywood on the strength of his
work in the stage comedy “Dream
Girl.” Today he’s doing another
comedy, but he had to go back to
the stage tor it.
In the darkened Biltmore Thea-
ter of downtown Los Angeles, I
watched Corey, Diana Lynn, Es-
telle Winwood, Marshall Thompson
and others rehearse “Sabrina
Fair” prior to its Phoenix opening.
On a nearly bare stage, the players
went through their lines in the
New York hit, which will play Los
Angeles, San Francisco and Seattle
in its road tour.
After the run through. Corey
went to lunch. He seemed happy
to be returning to comedy, which
had been his strong suit on the
stage. Yet with one exception, he
has done no comedies in the couple
28
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opportunities in an era of keener
competition.
The postwar battle of the South
and North over industries may be
heightened by rising costs and
slipping sales volume.
The North had contended bitterly
that the South is luring industries
away by promisee of cheaper la-
bor, tax concessions, and local
bond-financed factory buildings. -
Southerners retort that bait has
been used by only a few commu-
nities and the South has been de-
veloping its own industries and not
stealing them from the North.
The big postwar industrial de-
velopment, they say, has been part
of a drive to round out their econ-
omy, to take advantage of natural
resources, and to meet the South’s
own consumption needs and rising
living standards. They see this
trend continuing in spite of any
crecession.
It’a hard to find a businessman
in New Orleans who will admit
that there’s any real dip here to
far. Yet, some official statistics
might seem to belie their confi-
dence.
More persons are out of work
here than a year ago. Early this
year the Jobless total was 15 per
cent higher than in early 1953. A
slower but still downward drift in
unemployment continued in March.
Retail trade is a little slower,
although high by any but recent
boom standards. Merchants blame
a late Mardi Gras and a late East-
er.
Wholesalers are worried about
high inventories. A leading banker
says most are overstocked and
some are being squeezed.
Contractors say they aren’t get-
ting new building orders at the
same rate as this time last year.
And less cargo is passing through
the port, which recorded striking
gains in the postwar years. New
Orleans blames the drop which
started last year on two things:
(1) a shortage of dollars in Latin
America for buying North Ameri-
can goods; and (2) a cutback by
the U. S. government in the vari-
ious types of foreign aid, which in
former years paid for large quan-
tities of American farm products
and manufactured goods.
But New Orleans business lead-
ers count on these factors to ward
off the worst of any national re-
cession there may be:
1. Manufacturing is only one
fourth of this community’s econ-
omy and it is highly diversified.
2. The oil and natural gas in-
dustries expect to go on growing
—and to backstop Louisiana’s econ-
omy in general.
3. Labor troubles in other sea-
ports, as at present in New York,
may divert more traffic to New
Orleans.
4. The South’s climate makes
living cheaper in many ways—and
that’s why, they say, that labor
rates are often lower here.
New Orleans Seema confident
still that it’s going on growing.
of dozen films he has done here.
And that exception didn’t draw
many laughs and had best be for-
gotten.
“I came to Hollywood at a time
when everything was grim," ex-
plained Corey. “I don’t mean the
business; the movie industry was
still prospering then. But produc-
ers were making hard tales of
crime and corruption, and I fitted
into the pettern.
“I was either the criminal or
the law prosecution or defense, it
didn’t matter. It got so that I
almoat felt I had passed the bar.”
When he first arrived in Holly-
wood, he was hustled right to Ari-
zona to do a hard Western tale
with Burt Lancaster and John
Hodiak, “Desert Furies.” He has
been hustling from picture to pic-
ture ever since, with stage work,
TV and radio sandwiched between.
On one occasion, he was rushed
to MGM to play opposite Lana
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PORTLAND, Ore (P—Someone
walked nto the chambers of Muni-
cipal Judge John J- Murchison—in
the center of the police station—
and stole his inscribed pen desk
set.
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—GMV-
Disease Can Be‘Quarantined’
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NEW ORLEANS (P—s it the
North’s recession New Orleans,
like some other Southern cities,
seems to think so. And if the busi-
ness dip continues, It mav sharpen
the postwar industrial rivalry of
the North and South.
“We’re in a different position
here,” a leading New Orleans
businessman says today. “We have
been touched very lightly by the
recession that has hit some cities
up North. We’re confident that—
no matter how deep it goes in the
industrial centers in the North and
Midwest—the slump is bound to
be felt less in the South."
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 211, Ed. 1 Monday, April 5, 1954, newspaper, April 5, 1954; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1441790/m1/5/: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.