Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 284, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 29, 1954 Page: 4 of 10
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.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
F—-
am
rA E B ENTON R IC ORD.CARONIC LI
Tuesany, June 27, im
T
mA
Hal Boyle Says:
s
Elephants In Season
69
• • • •
How Much Time
The
\
1,
F82
/
t.
bor
(Now
1. His father was
j
T$
*a
<»
0422
$
The Sower and The Reaper
1
3
-6
02
to send troo
pr
w
Uy Fred Nehev
LWILL-YUM.
11:15 4
r
4
Th*
5 Mrs.
8
Camel News Caravan
News
3
2
THERE OUGHTA BE A LAW!
TAXI
DENTON RECORD-CHRONISLE
o
,\
8daa.
22
£
I
Q2
*
TAxi
for
0
7
advertised 12142 «
I nt thren 11100 4
Economy Grocery
:aupazae,ourwau"astanpup"nationadl at three
for ten cents.
1
-4
I
4
1
sk
---m-
$
I
I
10
By FRANK CAREY
AP Science Reporter
Teletaeta
• Theatre
Wenther
• Weather
wi
of
pr
St
th
im
Be
Television Schedules
(As announced by television stations. Subject to change.)
I
J
e•
M*
al
at
L
lei
th
the
ie
M
F
F
M
M
Ci
se
fa
li
bi
W
di
in
W
c«
he
go
ic
po
fa
cr
of
of
le
of
i
bl
de
ec
<”
B
sa
m
of
of
lei
or
M
an
T
ga
El
an
fle
as
Le
by
The Money Man
Weather
News
House Party
Lttle Theatre
Noon Edition
TUESDAY — JUNE 29
4 Martha McDonald's
Kitchen
e
6-21-54
WBAP-TV
s
“Let’s get behind somebody who
can win,” he is reported to have
said.
46222
MHMDEB or THE ASBOCIATED eunsB
a
l
L.’ '
"I’m not asking for a loan, oxactly . . . It’s more in the nature
of a gift."
9
h
3a
prejudice, no bias, my mind is
completely open.”
ALTHOUGH JENKINS DID NOT
seek the appointment he accepted
because, as he told the Nashville
Tennessean, April 11, 1954: "The
issues are so sharply drawn and
5:58 5 Evening News
6:00 4 ---
Among the major countries producing railroad
equipment, the United States ranks first in output of
locomoties and freight cars while the United Kingdom
leads in passenger car production.
51.
LOOKING BACK
Y esteryears
In Denton
I
Plains,_____ __________
killed in a railroad accident in
tv
United States, Britain and
hardly afford a split if Rssia attacked.
They’d have to fight, and together, or surrender. They
‘won't have the luxury of time to discuss their differ-
position to object o the kind of truce the French make.
After all, the French did the fighting and the dying in
the need for such an investigation
ever arose.”
JENKINS OWNS, AND OPERA-
tes as a hobby, a 500-acre cattle
farm in the Tennessee River Val-
ley. He has one daughter, Mrs.
Alexander Cunningham. Jr., and
a granddaughter, nineteen-months-
old Evalyn.
It now sems certain that the
publicity he received on TV will
catapult him into the race for
U. S. Senator from Tennessee.
7ankct
"8.280,
NEwAezN*/
11:30 4 Garry Moor* Show
5 Hair Styles
12:00 4 Double or Nothing
5 Farm and Home
Aite Shew
tght
tn Faces
B that 000HT w—ee
a Steel! mi. All adv
born in Union County, Georgia.
it, she lives in Talico
ta Tonight
i rial"”"
I '
I
|
n.be
f
0: ’
22
ops or plane* into Indochina, is in a strange
object jo the kind of truce the French make.
J
T-.
001,
N,bi
11:30 5
11:35 4
Denton—
10:35 4
KRLD-TV
4
69
SSSSSWfSSSff
---"
GREEN MOUNTAIN FALLS,
Colo. Few people were greatly
interested in the subject-matter at
the McCarthy-Army hearings; they
were more interested in the new
personalities who appeared on the
American stage for the first time.
Ray Jenkins of Tennessee was one
of the most interesttag of these.
Part of the following was taken
from Current Biographies.
RAY HOWARD JENKINS was
born on Mreh IS, 1897 in Unaka,
North Carolina, a Cherokee County
village in the Great Smokies near
the Tennessee border. His birth-
place is no longer in existence as
it was submerged during the build-
tag of one o the dams of the
Tennessee Valley Authority in 1933.
His father, C. S. Jenkins, was a
country doctor and Ms mother, the
former Amanda Nicholson, was
A recent Twentieth Century Fund study points out
that over two-thirds (10,700 miles) of the 15,809 miles
comprising the urban part of the federal-aid highway
' system, needs improvement estimated to cost $8 billion.
that war.
The Eisenhower administration also has political
problems to think of. It helped itself to office in 1952
by criticising the Democrat’s conduct of the Korean
War. With the November congressional elections com-
ing-up, the administration has to think twice about
sending any more American troops into Asian fighting.
Secretary of State Dulles now reportedly has a
plan—a military alliance of Britain, France and other
non-Communist countries—to protect Southeast Asia
after the truce in Indochina. But he has never spelled
it out to the public.
In short, the United States would like to stop
communism in Asia, but, because of the possible con-
sequences, has been less than willing to go all-out.
The British have some interest of their own in not
wanting sudden war or getting mixed up too fast in an
American plan which might precipitate all-out war. The
British are closer to Russian atom bombing if the big
war does start.
They, being a nation of traders, would like to trade
, with China, always in the hope this might split China
T away from Russia someday.
In addition, the British have to consider the atti-
tude of their Commonwealth nations,- such as India,
whose Prime Minister Nehru stands flatfooted against
war by the West in his continent.
IB =tems—--e
Gagaya0oareae
It killed
CRINQELY to
B.W all ,
tUATPOUGU
gNA
8 Time for Magic
8:18 8 John Daly and th* News
5 380 4 Douglas Id ward* and th*
New
5 Dinah Shor*
6*5 6 Kiddle mt Parade
545 4 Political Bpech
5 News
WFAA-TV
s
How to Drtv* and Stay
Ally*
Good Morning Pastor
New*
G
■
-
in mud, parching his food crops “Prospects unsettled over the na- goes a long way. . gress.
In burning sun, perhaps manufac- tion. High enthusiasm followed by Rain makers using one or the Martin referred to the resigna-
turing storms to be infected with skepticism in some sections.” other of the materials usually tion of leftist President Jacobo
germs.or radioactive dust. Rain making projects were in- charge farmers 3 cents an acre Arbenz Guzman in describing the
.S kept esinchuding scient istsao spired by what happened one day for “seeding” clouds over range Guatemalan news as apparently
WASHINGTON nA .rl.nti.f the -.S.. Weather Bureau - main- in 1946 in the laboratory of Dr. land, 20 cents an acre for wheat reassuring.
JENKINS' LAW PARTNER, ER- breathed into a .mngtA.scientit tain that.evid lencezisfarfrom con- Vincent Schaefer, then of the Gen- land. , Speaking later before television
by Jenkins (not related to him) ereth drnto.a hmetyp reter elusive that weather control has j Electric Co., in Schenectady, if an area suffers from too much and newsreel cameras, he said
te chahman of the Knox County eghyearsagoandsstartedamini any chance of being achieved on a N.Y. 12 rain, cloud seeders believe "over- Dulles views Arbenz' resignation
Repubucan"commikte.0 attrasnzwsfarmwirhnthpsunrtwnpracticalscale.cicampmoz tc schaeter had been trying to seeding m” be the answer.They as favorable sign
tftelcTenaessg Vawvegvstated queston: ,. ,„ skeps W. that when rain “■ dupiicate ntthedaboratory"oe 01 a b possb.e toSUick hurri- other.™ dhe snger and Sen.
tiin. With resist m noyemMo. “Can mancontrolI the weather?” creased it was due to artificial nature's supercooled clouds - canes, break up smali thunder ate GOP ‘Leader Knowland of
tonswith resrecta Senatprr Tests of rain and snowmaking techniques. It might have rained clouds, which.contain. waterin clouds berore they can brew tor- California said their White House
Erczrtnriw” an he toldthe have been hailed “ milestones of anyway. liguidistate eventhpughithe tem- nadoes and clear fogs from sir- conference this morning dealt with
mMCxarmnytsm,,.:and he. to 2. ■ new era in man’s relation to na- A committee appointed by Con- perature is below freezing The ports 5 the busy legislative program,
subcommittee that he had no pre- ture. The faithful think it may be gress to evaluate the tests has not water doesn’t freeze because it is P° ' 5 & P k •
conceived notions on the merits perfectly pure. He wanted to find
out how this "supercooled” water LIFE'S LIKE THAT
Doings
By E. J. HEADLEE
. i
l
Ek*
#5
Half the meat produced in the world I* beef and
veal, four tenth* I* pork, less than a tenth is mutton,
and the rest is goat and horse meat.
", • i ' ■.
sMPAni
’ ■
te
I The Money Man
) Valiant Lady
S ” Cheatre of Romance
S arid* and Groom
km.oskafcn.
falls to the ground as snow or rate. _
depending upon the temperature Drecrecte
beneath the cloud.
In general, seeding works only
on 'supercooled clouds.” Fortu- Rrieh+er
nately for the rain makers, a lot DIISIIGI
of these are floating around, even
in summer. But they are found WASHINGTON UR—GOP congres-
1923.)
Ray attended the University of
Tennessee Law School where he
won first prise for scholarship. He
was admitted to the bar in IMS.
Jenkins did a stint along the Mexi-
can border as an Army top ser-
geant and was champion wrestler
of his company. He served in
World War I as a Navy seaman.
AFTER THE WAR HE OPEN-
ed a law office in Knoxville,
a
13:15 5
13:30 5
11:30 4
5
13:45 a
1:00 4
515 60 INS rean StS montna, •nao; three
TELEFoMC-2581
of this controversy. I have no
. -
VUJW,Y.- A
-----------------------------------------------------:----------------------
-g
/•X • 1
Monai
The tonnage of merchant ships built in the United
States has returned to peacetime levels (487,000 gross
tons or 12.5 per cent of the world’s total in 1950) after
unprecedented wartime expsmsion, according to the find-
ing* of * Twentieth Century Fund report
By HAL BOYLE safari?.
. NEW YORK I—Any girl who “Of course they can,” said Bev.
falls to ambush a husband during erly. 'We’ll have 5 white hitters
the summer open season on bach- and 45 native boys in the party,
elors can soothe her pride by going “We'l have hot water at all
to Africa and mowing down an times, plenty of ice cubes (we take
elephant along a refrigerator), home-made
Mias Beverly Putnam is organ- ice cream, and fresh eggs every
izing the first all-girl elephant morning.: The native chef special,
safari in history. The 49-day trip, zes in dishes such as antelope soup
starting Sept 10, will cost .$3,120, and gazelle barbecues.
plus Midfor a license that allows "The first three days are rough
onepeterhant.onfrom >n elenhant —personality-wise. You average 50
"Butsthe ivory from ane Pha ” to 75 miles a day in hunting cars,
ordinarily sells about $300, and your bottom gets real sore,
said Beverly, practically, ‘so that The sun gets you down at first, too,
should cover the cost of the license. and sometimes the tsetse flies are
it isn’t necessary to buy an ele- Etherm.
phant pin They can be rented." “But there is so much else to
Beverly. talle pretty, darkhaired make up for it .the excitement
and 32, is no stranger to. Af • during the day, the nights around
Since her childhood days in a.con- the campfire, listening to the
vent, she had dreamed of adven- coughing of distant leopards and
ture in far places. Last winter she the OWing of hyenas
threw uphe iob with Scandinavian •mhe women soon learn to get
Airlinestoleada groupof H girls along—if they are ever going to
°"J? V safarito Africa^ get along: of course, sometimes
Thm rteransK inage fon there are some jealousies.
included housewives,- The fight to get seats next to the
glegirls,.widows and, ivoreees; white hunters at dinnertime can
- look at Africa, and headed back however the ^sibiUty of r.
home. But a durable doxen stayed However, “* ’2™^. .Q rQ
andhadlaufnetme, banging away man isnstuddgathrthund-mui
-Only . M* with guns_the hunting..safaris,and whennthey
rest used cameras,” said Beverly, learn thatth ere,is an., angir
She herself bagged a buffalo, * safari roaming the veldt, too,
zebra,.two.gazelles, a wildbeest The men sometimes like to ride
Can Adozenor more women ac over to our campin, thez evening
tually have any fun together on a and discuss the day s shooting,
Sald every.
7:48 4 Political Bpeech
8:00 4 Danger
5 Truth or Consequences
830 4 Wresttg..,
5 Mr, and Mfa, North
pivr YEAns ago 2:98 J
Mrs. C. W. Jacobs, «13 West Sso * ArhurMrray rut.
Hickory Street, underwent minor 10:00 4 Th* world Today
surgery Wednesday morning at • ***"
the Denton Hospital and Clinic.' 10:15 2 Er Lotont th* Weather
A Mr. and Mrs. Avis Belew and 5 Wether Teietncta
family of Cooper Creek commun- • Channels.Theztre
ity were guests of her sister in 1035 * SportpiTonight
Dallas. 10 JO 4 Nighttime Morl*
Mrs. Minnie Yeatts returned to ... • bprta with herman
her home in Wilson, Oklahoma, aft- 10:40 0 Mote Mareuee
er.a visit.with Mr. and Mrs. O. WEDESDAY — SONI 3o
n an* Bunday byt Denton Pub- Ather Yeatts of Ponder. boo 4 Morning Show
----- * 5 Sunup
sunacumon un, m mrommATon
ir* if? 100 to Bunda-
4 Agrieultural News
4 Morning Sho*
4 Local News
where he has practiced ever since.
He has appeared in some SOO
criminal cases, and “He is natural-
ly very proud that none of his
clients has ever gone to the elec-
tric chair.”
“HE'S THE SORT OF LAWYER
who completely dominates a case
and a court. Rising with square .
jaw set, and fire in his eyes, he'll ’
untie his tie, and go to work. The The Rainmaker's Story
as* gripping his handsraresaimost only above altitudes of about sional leaders reported after a
Can Man Control The Weather?
for the G. O. P. nomination for Editor's Note—In one of man’s possible to break droughts and hold yet reported, hp The Associated cause it can be dispersed in asor bit brighter in Asig.c v
Congress in a special election in earliest attempts at forcing rain back floods, sidetrack hurricanes. Press has surveyed representative of "smoke" 0yerrelati d lyilarge House speaker Marin (R-Mass)
IMO, but lost to Representative from the skies, he angrily fired can- prevent tornadoes and hailstorms rain-making operators, clients and area 8. Also,.it can bedi spensed m adeth atassessment on theb asis
John Jennings, non balls at likely looking clouds, and dissipate fog at airports. scientists. from, generators on the ground of what he said was a little .re-
IN 1950 HE BACKED HOWARD But since a brilliant discovery in Sme ien envision man uang Their conclusions mieht read like Dry ice must always be dropped port by Secretary of State Dulles,
actively* hogdefeateaznennintr 2“6.thi attemp Progress mor th weather as a weapon of war- this if you put them in form of ramveairplande costs more per of Vresiden”” Eisenhower and ns
“th imprtsstsvencate.neroginsthonirn bokging down.the enemzlatrops aforecast: . pound than dry but ■ Republican lieutenants in Con-
Republican Convention he urged of three articles, Is the story of in udePaehin8hs. Prospects unsettled over the.na- goes a long way.
. (unsuccessfully) the Tennessee de- how he’s going about it
legation to switch to Eisenhower. -----
PROMT of MI9 DOOR.' 4
5 Cowhoy Thrill*
8 Evening mdition
4:10 8 Weathercnst
8:15 4 Outdoor Bporta
8 Baseball M*U or Fam*
6:25 5 Weather
8:80 4 Juvenile Jury
5 Superman
8 Buster Keaton
7:00 4 Meet Mulie
5 Pirestde Theatre
8 Make Room for Daddy
7*0 4 Musie Hall Varielles
6 Top Play* of 1954
8 Center fltag*
is suddenly changed, in nature, in-
to a snowstorm.
He produced clouds by blowing
his breath into a freezer. But he
couldn't produce snow even though
he added to his clouds a variety
of materials — soap powder, sugar,
talcum powder and volcanic dust.
Then one day he was having
trouble keping the freezer at low
temperature. He dropped some
chunks of dry ice into the box.
— A miniature snowstorm devel-
oped before his eyes.
The find touched off a host of
experiments involving the “seed-
ing” of clouds with dry ice from
airplanes in an effort to make them
yield snow or rain.
Schaefer and other investigators,
both civilian and military, claim
they produced precipitation by this
means — or at least that precipi-
tation quickly followed seeding.
Later it was found that silver
iodide, dispersed from planes nr
generated as a kind of “smoke”
from devices on the ground, could
serve the same purpose. Crystals
of silver iodide closely resemble
those of dry ice.
The theory is that these sub-
stances provide “nuclei” for mil-
lions of tiny ice crystals in the
cloud. As the natural crystals at-
tach themselves to the nuclei, the
formation grows and eventually
euces.
— They have that luxury now, and are using it, be-
. cause they are not in a hasty war but in a long-range
• one. In the end the long-range war may be just aa
fatal. The Communists are inching ahead,' a* in Indo-
China.
The fact that President Eisenhower and Secretary
of State Dulles and Prime Minister Churchill and
m Britain’* Foreign Secretary Eden called th* meeting to
discuss their differences is testimony to the fact that
they do have time.
None of them knows how much. Meanwhile, the
Allies, including the French, act in their own individual
interests and debate their differences.
Q___
The French held Indochina as a colony while not
under pressure to do otherwise. When the Communist-
lad Vietminh challenged them,- the French showed they
would make only-imited -sacrifices to hold what was
theirs.
They sent no draftees into Indochina. That has
been a,yar fought by French volunteers, and Germans
and others in the Foreign Legion.
And in the past year the French, who pay a lot
less in taxes than the Americans, weren’t even able,
or willing, to pay for their war in Indochina. The United
States was carrying 78 per cent of the cost
When they reached a crisis in Indochina, and
didn’t get direct American intervention, there was no
word from Paris the French would step up their fight-
ing with draftees. They began at once to look for a
truce.
In Europe they have stalled for years about join-
ing the single European army which this country con-
sider* the only true bulwark against future Russian in-
tentions of attacking the West
If the French approved creation of that army, and
joined it Germany would be allowed to rearm at least
to the extent of providing 400,000 troops for the single
• army to serve beside the French. *
The French fear of a rearmed Germany, even to
a limited degree, so far has been greater than their
fear of a Russian attack if the single army isn’t formed.
Split to pieces by internal politics, they seem incapable
of acting.
And they may make a truce with the Communists
in Indochina that will leave open to them not only the
whole country but all Southeast Asia unless the Allies
can form a miitary alliance to prevent further Com-
munist move*.
The United States, in turn, since it wasn’t willing
so distinct that investigation
seems necessary. I will do my 4:00
beat to see that both sides are 8 KidalKarnival
given full opportunity, facing each 4115 a Ann Alden
other, to present their cases.” How- 4 iao : Bobbz Petera.
ever, he also stated that he re- asas 2 Parasenmazhoune
garded it as “most regrettable that 5100 a see saw Zoo Club
.... e e
4
~E9
P
? A
‘)
8 Showtime Matinee
1 30 4 Sequel
5 Ask Washington
8 Quest Book
1:55 8 Charm Sohool
3:00 4 Brighter Day
5 What’s Cooking
a Welcome Travelers
3:15 4 TB* Becret Storm
3:30 4 Porta Facte Life
a On Your Account
3:45 4 cash qutz
8:00 4 Mary Carter'* Cook Book
6 Movle Marquee
* Pinky Lee Show
8:30 4 Variety Fair
* Howdy Doody
4:00 4 Martha McDonald'*
Kitchen
8 Klddl* Karnival
4:15 8 Ann Aldan
4:80 5 Bobby Patera
8 Frontier Playhouse
4:45 4 Party Tim*
8:00 5 See Saw Zoo Club
8:15 * John Daly and th* Naw*
5:30 4 Douglas Edwards and th*
N*w*
8 Th* World of Mr. Bweeney
8 35 8 Klddl* Hit Parade
8:45 4 TV’S Top Tuna*
5 Nawa
8 Carnal Nawa Caravan
8:55 5 News
8:00 4 Arthur Godtrey and Hla
Flends
8 Cowboy Thrill*
* Evening zaition
8:10 8 Waathercaat
8:15 8 Bnseball Hall of Fama
4:35 5 Weather
4:30 4 Wild Bill Hickok
* My LAtte Margie
7:00 4 srike It Rich
5 Mystery Theatre
8 Kraft TV Theatre
7:30 4 I've Got A ecret
5 Mark Sabra
8:00 4 Blue Ribbon Bout*
5 Racket Squad
8 This I* Your Life
8:30 5 Anni* Oakley
8 I Married Joan
8:45 4 Greateat Pighta of the
1 Century
8:00 4 Thta Week of Sport*
5 Cisco Kid
8 Duffy'* Tavern
8:15 4 To Be Announced
9:30 4 Music Hall Varlettes
5 Madison Square Garden
8 Dangerous Asnignment
10:00 4 The World Tody,
8 Th* Taxa* Nawa
8 Final Eitton
10:16 4 Lets Talk About The
9-2
23*
TIN YEARS AGO ...
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Randals and 630
daughter, Christina, U, are new « w —-----
residents of Denton, having moved 7:00 2 Morning Show
here from Alice. ’ 725 . Erpaffws.cup
. ____ 2. __ca0a2. ..r.m. H Born: To Mr. and Mrs. Tilman 220 4 Morning Show
98000: Tremoneas.soz’one month, M. Moore, south of Sanger, Sun- 3185 ♦
" day,a boy,.who has been named 8 pingbonggehoo
Albert Lee Moore. .. 8 Maggi* an<i Her Prinds
8:30 5 On* Man’* Family
... • Cowboy Ciasaten
2:42 8 Three Step* to Heaven
__ _______ .. _. 9:00 8 Home
NOTICB TO PUBLIC: Zerwer, five miles west el Ungtr, ... 2 The Money Man
zmtrmaassmmtmnsntz GpeSsrt.g“kumm ha’S 33 ; 2
xeupammps nurSS1' ‘
A advertisine ordara see abceptedon Marriage license was issued to • x—— —
Robert C. Dooley and Bernice Ad- 1030 2 Hawkins
ams. a Betty W
"S ,
-
TWENTY YEARS AGO
t Born: To Mr. and Mrs. V. T.
10:30 4 Night turn* Movie
8 Snort* with Sherman
10:40 8 Movie Marquee
WAHiyaED 9,
()
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 284, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 29, 1954, newspaper, June 29, 1954; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1441863/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.