Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 253, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 25, 1955 Page: 4 of 12
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SPOT REMOVER
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Gets Realism
teaching, the school having closed
school play scene, Larry Jones, 13,
bat hit Will between the eyes'and
sent him to the hospital with a
it money in their
cut that required four stitches. It
less urge for social
to a sudden-
tion with the Cominform. The big
end.
in
whether it would be a matter for
ard when he was in office. Mrs.
Has Own Y
Mrs. Ray Crawford of Argyle.
THAT SINKING FEELING
By Bud Blake
THE ONFORTUNATE
WHO HAD LUNCH
I
SENT IN TO ALLOW
and
nm
yesterday. The 16 passengers and
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nrm
BUSINESS MIRROR
625
THERE OUGHT A BE A LAW!
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style of beauty. He usually leaves
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back of his head rather long when
he gets a haircut, but this time
Ns
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toe fotBundey.
City
>i 300 per week.
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only.
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with 21 million of
back several programs
ms
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em
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6 28
Tito Appears Negative To
Reconciliation With Reds
Atomic Ship Is Couple Of
Steps Past ‘Just Talk’ Stage
TIME TO SHOP
FOP HIS WIFE -
1
kitchen matches for such pun
He said, “Well, when I wor
Nick Akin was lighting his cig-
aret with a fancy lighter. A friend
asked him why he didn’t use plain
nessmen can obtain confidential or
secret information needed to de-
velop civilian uses of atomic en*
ergy. Lack of such data has held
Rescuers Climb
Toward Wreckage
NAIROBI, Kenya (fl — Two
groups of mountaineers climbed
Mt. Kilimanjaro today toward the
burned-out wreckage of an East
African Airways airliner sighted
being for
The cost
Yestervear
Looking Back Through
Record-Chronicle Files
Thus it is a matter of note that
Moscow’s delegation to Belgrade,
ostensibly asking that bygones be
bygones, does not include-Molotov.
He is a reminder of the Stalin era,
when Yugoslavia was outlawed.
Evidence at hand indicates Tito
will not "redefect” completely to
the East. He was educated by
Moscow. He would know the risks
involved.
one he likes best.
And a nuclear-pqwered passen-
ger liner has been designed by en-
gineers of Bethlehem Steel’s ship-
Energy Committee was told tl
cargo vessel around NO feet
with a lift from 11,000 to 1
tons would cost 33 million dol
By WILLIAM L. BYAN
AP Foreign News Analyst
President Tito, looking like an
American banker in his trim, dark
suit, was bristling with annoyance
when I saw him last
His anger seemed added evi-
dence that, If the matter was one
for Tito alone to decide, there
It is against such a background
that the Soviet Union carries its
peace offensive to Belgrade with
an unprecedented and humbling
visit by three of the most impor-
tant Moscow rulers—Premier Ni-
kolai Bulganin, Nikita Khrushchev
and A. I. Mikoyan.
Tito announced the Soviet lead-
ganization.
His wife and four daughters are
members.
TWENTY YEARS AGO
Sam Brown, former Denton res-
ident and graduate of the Normal
College in 1893, was here from Den-
ison to attend the college home-
coming. •
Miss Margaret Gurley has return-
n Times Are Good Voters
Little Use In Switching
J.' C. Ashby, 122 Hann Avenue,
employe of the State Highway De-
pcrtment, has been called upon
for many various assignments of
work during his 12 years with that
agency, so it was no wonder that
he was assigned on the job of keep-
ing the bridge on Highway 10. Den-
ton-Aubrey. from going out in the
recent high water. There formed
a log jam at the bridge, which
without the work done by the high-
way workmen. would probably
have been washed out.
as one ever saw,” said Norman
Grant. 221 West Sycamore Street.
■“But as pretty as they seem, they
produce nothing. They bloom beau-
tifully, both tomatoes and beans,
and then the blooms fall off. Some-
thing’s wrong, but I don’t know
what.”
oc0D0oSH5wscF 4
BcK X CANT MS 'Ng BAND:
_WeMIGMTASWELLeE nad
hemmr $ITTINON Jmi
mee"e A CLOSET!
r have
sac-
P/I8
rifices ..."
Belgrade’s Communists will tell
you Yugoslavia is Communist and
will remain that way. As for arms
aid, the reaction one gets is that
the Yugoslavs did not ask collabo-
ration with the West: if the West
wants it, the West must accept the
regime and what goes with it
ed from Frisco, where she has been
MAYSVILLE, Ky. (P - In a .........
ermre tha
i to ihsr
HXt Bpytg SAVS
If A Man Can’t Be Taught
XSSEhisT
mALTEVL
HAD LEFT’NMA
pem
By SAM DAWSON
..EW YORK UK - The atomic
ship is a couple of steps today
past the "just talk” stage.
Several designs for an atomic-
powered merchant ship have been
sent to the White House for Presi-
dent Eisenhower to choose the
ern countries. The Soviet said of
course they wanted no such thing.
They wanted only to help Yugo-
slavia improve her relations with
all countries. including those of the
East.
that’s all the time, I sweat. That
moistens all the matches in my
pockets to the extent that they
won’t light So the fuel lighter." Oh
yeah!
mono in 1951 by only 19 seats. ------------ —
ference between Conservatives and Laborites then on
Mrs. Geraldine C. Foster will
take the place of Mrs. Ed Lynch,
resigned, in the clerical force of
"In my garden there are as pret-
ty bean vines and tomato c‛__
is HE TR NGTOTAKE
THE SPOTS OFF"C69E
LEQPAWD,OR'THE
IEODAw OFF,
THE SPoc2.
out refueling.
The United States Lines is Mid
to be well along in its planning for
a ship to replace the America. The
United States is ON feet long and
can carry 3,000 persons: The size
and cost of the reactor which
would be needed for a ship that
size has not been announced.
But the Congressional Atomic
The plane disappeared Wednes-
day. *
name, why?
Maturity begins the moment you
discover something you want that
money won't buy.
People often feel sorry for a
poor devil; they rarely express
sympathy for a rich Mint
A waiter's observation: "In the
most interesting understandings
reached at a restaurant table the
knees do all the real talking.”
Any red-haired girl who ends up
a spinster simply doesn’t like men.
You're only old once.
Social climbers always remind
me of a racetrack bum who won't
pick up cigarette butts anywhere
except at the 350 window.
Bigotry is the most revolting
form of poverty; it is the only
sign of snobbery a mental pauper
can afford.
Women rarely realize they are
sometimes most attractive when
they're messed up—but never at-
tractive if they're always messy.
Nothing is more maddening than
to have a stranger ask you how
to get to a destination—and then
see him deliberately walk off in
the opposite direction.
A woman is reconciled to mid-
dle age if she will admit she re-
J. J. Crim Jr., Dr. W. A. Remley,
Mrs. Charles H. Saunders and R.
B. Neale Jr. today are observing
their birthday anniversarier
f'11
10
----------------- the nuclear power
The shipping industry baa been of pioneering coins
„.mm
ARNNARD I
WADMOUON 1
WAIRTOTUEF
AMATTRES5
ME AlWN*
eotTeMOST .
ncolPicugus
WABLE5:
sucu 1
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Py,A.nDentn andadjotning coties, only where Carrier cervice
nS'hontA0 .030 Pe months 60.00: three muntha, MM
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=
-se—
HOLLMOt
M-fK,
itatlon or standing of
corrected upon bing
would have an- over-all lengt of
600 feet and could tri
passengers around the
Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Bratcher Jr.
and their two children, Connie. 4,
and Betty Lou, 3, are vacationing
in Florida, where they expect to
spend 10 days. Last heard of they
were in Key West, and it was be-
lieved they would take a boat for
Havana, uba, for a short visit
Bratcher is the owner and operator
of the Bratcher Radio Hospital.
117 Mill Street.
FIVE YEARS AGO
Mr. and Mrs. Noel Haun of Fris-
co spent the weekend with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Key,
in Keller.
Born: To Mr. and Mrs. Royce
Parish, 110 Barnard Street, a boy,
at-the Denton Hospital and Clinic
Mrs. Earl stwart of Krum re-
turned from a, visit with her sis-
ter. Mrs. J. H. Hodges, in Com-
merce.
Slavia, Greece and Turkey.
Soviet acceptance of an Austrian
independence treaty created a neu-
tral island in the heart of Europe.
With Yugoslavia ripped from the
anti-Moscow framework, that neu-
trality would be pushed to the
shores of the Adriatic, and Mos-
cow could conceivably re-estab-
lish communications with the outer
rim of the satellite empire in
Albania.
There would be dividends in the
propaganda effect on West Ger-
many and France, promoting the
idea of neutralism in Western Eu-
rope. A neutral belt through the
middle of Europe would give the
Soviet Union the time it sought to
mend its internal economic and po-
litical crises and prepare to re-
yume Communist expansion a few'
years hence. r
ITacewamnerenhEPoomAPjo
attention. AU advertising order
cdtrol Of Com-
wasno basic’dif-
ROUND
ABOUT
TOWN
By B. 3. (BOB) EDWARDS •
MEMMR or TWE ASSOCTATED Pnass %, ’*
ec-MeeA
Dusty Answer
ALBUQUERQUE GP - A dust
storm threatened to smother her
brand new lawn so an Albuquerque
housewife went over it with her
vacuum cleaner. Some of those
who snickered were seen later try-
ing the same thing. Their report:
you're right, it doesn't work.
fired with interest by the success ,
of the Navy's atom-powered sub-
marine Nautilus. This first vessel
is admittedly too expensive to be
a competitor of the conventional
power plants for our merchant
marine.
something which our
deserved for all
pie I know also regularly
trology magazines. In heaven's
nzz--a
=zma-" ~
1T ""F-T -9 »niB OS BIS on
pockets again they apparently f
revolution, even though peaceft
The Conservatives, however,
NelND*seR5
WHREDOE9ME,
AuWMswNDUPF
FRONT.CENTER
' AND UNDERA
I BA POT!
the sides and back .as clean as the
top (bald) is. He said. "I guess
that barber wanted to give me a
Lee Preston style haircut.”
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wolff are now
living at.1611 Bolivar Street, a
home which they recently pur-
chased. They own and operate too
Wolff Market at Sawyer's Grocery
and before buying their home here
they commuted daily to and from
Fort Worth, their former home.
But Western observers detect
some danger. They suspect a divi-
sion in the Yugoslav Communist
party and that a large number of
Yugoslav Communists would be
happy to collaborate closely with
Moscow again.
What about the ties with the
West, the arms and the economic
aid which came from the West?
Tito has expressed gratitude to
the United States for food sent
when Yugoslavia faced hunger,
and for other aid. But he added:
"We do not consider aid as some
sort of bribe; we consider it as a
thing involving humane feelings on
the one hand, and on the other
sidering building an atom-powered
passenger ship as a sister vessel
to the giant liner United States
and as a replacement for its aging
liner America
The American President Lines
has offered to participate with th
maritime administration in con-
struction and operation of the
atomic merchant ship that Presi-
dent Eisenhower wants.
n-
me
Biyie 01 oeauiy. lie mumo ICdVC3 Mfttte ----------K
the fringehair andt"“Ad"ladt"wo"ateamship compa.
nies are definitely interestea in the
■ ,
e- . 2
re ncmt
। (WELL,,..
v/ LUCKY TO CATCH
/ YOU IN-I've GOT
d a LITTLE RUSH joey
2
members when Mary Pickford
wore curls.
A bachelor never knows what he
has missed. His married friends
don't know what he has missed ei-
ther. But they do like to guess.
For some reason a man who
works a cross word puzzle every
day seems to me the kind of guy
who also would still buy a pair
of high button shoes if the right
salesman came along.
Nothing I know of is more for-
lorn than a small boy without a
hero.
County Clerk A. J. Barnett. The
this week. Mrs. Foster to no strang- would be notull family reconcilia-
The United States Constitution
Convention began May 23. 1787.
1.........—
3858)1,4
Meanwhile, the Atomic Energy
• Commission issued its proposed
, rules under which American busi-
Prof. R. E. Jackson to four times
grandpa now, as a baby girl,
named Sharon Lynn, was born to
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Bowman of
Dallas Saturday night at St. Paul's
Hospital Mrs. Bowman, prior to
he. marriage, was Miss Gene Ellen
Jackson of Denton. Prof. Jackson
will have four grandkiddies to talk
about now.
__________ . Friday.
was to deal Will Perry. also 13.1 Edward*Key, 224 Fry Street, was
a "soft” blow over the head with operated on for appendicitis at
a baseball bat. Larry swung. The the Denton Hospital Saturday
bat hit Will between the eyes'and morning.
E. B (Pete) Tobin showed up
with a fresh haircut, which was
not particularly becoming to his
four crewmen were believed dead, trality to rip apart the recently
men ere "55 “5“" formed Balkan Pact of Yugo-
PkommamanEPo-
But engineers believe the ex-
। pense can be cut now that the
Navy has pioneered the way. They
Foster to a daughter of Mr. and Tthelomrae dacidston anger was
Soviet Foreign Minister Molotov.
with taxes.
But by 1951, when the Conservatives won, Britain
was getting back on its economic feet Employment
was increasing. And as voters_gof
the barber amenear to getumg "Shi Uniomaorsow tines is con.
CHARLOTTE, N.C.‛ - Mayor
seek to retain his ties with the his own private branch of the or-
West. He has no future with Mos-
cow. But there are members of
his party—some of them in high
places—who are suspected of see-
ing a future for themselves to the
East. If Tito were removed from
the scene by death, accident or
coup. there to no guarantee what
his successors might do.
There are some things Yugo-
slavia can gain through full nor-
malisation of relations with the
Cominform, including repayment
of heavy debts owed Belgrade by
those states at the break in 1943.
and a resumption of full economic
relations which might help Yugo-
slavia internally.
The stakes are higher for the
Russians. Apparently the least
they hope for to a Yugoslav neu-
One yesson seems clear from recent political cam-
paigns and elections in this country and Britain: whan
people have food and jobs they are not much in the
' mood for rocking the boat. •
Differences between the politicians tend to narrow
because extreme proposals, attractive in crisis or de
> pression, have less appeal in time of prosperity.
This probably accounts for the slight margins by
which political parties in the United States and Britain
have won victories in recent years.
In Britain’s elections Thursday the Conservatives,
according to the polls, should win a majority again in
the House of Commons and, through that, control of
the government for another five years.
They beat the Socialist Laborites in 1951 by a tiny
margin. If it’s bigger this time, it may be due more to
the split in the Labor party itself than to radical dif-
ferences between Conservatives and Laborites.
That split alone, long obvious, might be enough to
make the British voters shy away from the Laborites
since they wouldn’t know what to expect: a left wing
led by Aneurin Bevin or the Socialists of center or
right under Clement Attlee. ~—----—----.-----
For 20 years in this country the Republicans con-
demned the Democrats’ New Deal and "Fair Deal” as
"leading down the road to socialism.” But since their
1952 victory the Republicans have wiped out none of
the Democrats’ basic social legislation.
The British Conservatives, since winning control of
their government in 1951, have repealed only a few
pieces of the Socialist program put on the books by the
Laborites while they held power from 1945 to 1951.
In the depths of the depression of the 1930s the
Democrats, under the banner of Franklin D, Roose-
velt and his New Deal, which promised sweeping reme-
dies, won by big majorities. After the war, with the
country moving into peak prosperity, the voters ap-
parently felt no need for sharp changes.
The election returns showed how the gap between
Democrats and Republicans had narrowed. The Repub-
licans won Congress in 1954. The Democrats won in
1948 and 1950 and lost in 1952. The margins in those
elections were not sweeping.
That the country didn’t see much to choose between
the parties themselves was evident in 1952 when Presi-
dent Eisenhower won overwhelmingly but his Repub-
licans won Congress by only a squeak.
. Again, the Democrats barely edged into control of
' Congress in 1954. In none of the elections since the
war has either party offered the voters any radical
variety in the way of a program.
The Laborites, with their promises of broad socialisa-
tion, won control of the British, government in 1945.
That was a time of stress for Britons; they were broke,
on rations, under heavy restrictions, and burdened
foreign affairs, nor is there now.
— And in this election, in a fairly prosperous Britain,
the Laborites’ talk of domestic change is milder than
in previous years. In foreign affairs the Laborites,
who went along with the Conservatives, don’t have
much of a talking point.
The Hidden Booby Trap
It takes a soldier to find the booby trap even in
diplomacy. While European statesmen, moved more
by the necessities of their domestic politics than by
sound judgment, are hopefully weighing the latest
Soviet scheme “to end the cold war,’" General Alfred
M. Grunther, Supreme Allied Commander in Europe,
easily spotted and disclosed the booby trap hidden
inside the fine phrases. /
Grunther flew from his headquarters in Paris to-
speak in London, where the emotions aroused by the
general election forced Prime Minister Anthony Eden
to look with rose-hued glasses at every Soviet proposal
for peaceful negotiations because his Labor party -
opposition hold out a promise of procuring peace if
they are elected.
Grunther is not concerned with the political for-
tunes of a given party. He is even less moved'by them,
perhaps, than his chief, President Eisenhower, who
has reluctantly agreed to a four-party meeting of
heads of governments under, tremendous pressure
from the British and French. Grunther is concerned
only with a successful defense of Europe should war
come, and he coldly analyzes every move of the enemy
for its effect on that defense.
Bluntly, Grunther told his London audience it would
be to the disadvantage of the West to accept the Soviet
proposal to ban atomic weapons. The West could not
accept an atomic ban, Grunter pointed out, because
atomic weapons are our only chance of equalizing the
present disparity in conventional power. Without
atomic power, the massive armies of Russia and China
could overrun the world. ..
“We are against war, but not against any particlar
weapon of war,” Grunter declared. “It is war which is
evil. We are in favor of a disarmament program which
will be safe and secure, but we are not in favor of one
which will jeopardize the present in-balance.” The
Reds know they are checkmated so long as we have
superiority in atomic weapons. We should not be so
stupid as to throw away that advantage for their
flimsy promises. — Sherman Democrat
Mrs. J. W. Peel and Mrs. George
McDonald of Pilot Point were Den-
ton visitors Tuesday morning. Mrs.
Peel, wife of J. W. Peel, cashier of
the Pilot Point National Bank,
when asked about the health of
Earl Selz, president of that bank,
said, "He is going good and has
resumed his work at the bank. Jie’s
at his desk every day now.”
sectetaryrtorujudgorcerihstwcs. question remained.however.
. nret. Belgrade. Molotov’s speech thus
Diants seemed t indicate that, with Ma-
• lenkov gone, Moscow was reneging
on the deal.
Denton Record-Chronicle
—- ...
Puondea every atternoon qexcept saturday» ana sunday by: Deaton
Pubiidine Co, anc. ll« s Bekarv at
Entern ae eecona aimas nail matter as tha postotnce at Danton. Tezan
Jen oar, n, 1021, nceordingto Aet of conera March S. 1379.
sunsenrvion NATES AND NNTORMATTON
Dr. J. L. Carrico, faculty mem-
ber of NTSC, usec to be quite an
athlete, particularly in baseball.
He played hardball and then a few
years ago, he was a softball player
in Denton. Met him Tuesday, asked
if he had been playing baseball,
when he squirmed a bit and said.
“Yeah, I played a little at a picnic
the other day and I haven't gotten
over the soreness and lameness
yet” ____
it s remarkable how easy it is to
get hurt, sometimes in an unbeliev-
able way. as was Mrs. Belle Cason.
1318 Morse Street. Monday. She
was in her garden and was pulling
up a few stalks of Johnson Grass.
One of the blades cut the second
finger on her right hand, a gash
which required five stitches to
close.
ers could not expect him to jeopar- cut thst required foui
dize his good relationswith -West-!Falso brought .the play
TEN YEARS AGO
Lt. Herbert Harris was here for
a short visit with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. W. A. Harris.
Mrs. Alice Jameson of Aubrey,
who has been a patient in the Elm
Street Hospital and Clinic, return-
ed to her home Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Chance of •
Pilot Point received word that their
son, Arthur Flake Chance, has
been released from a German pri-
son and was back with the U. S.
Forces.
oaudl
At the time Georgi Malenkov was
deposed as Soviet premier. Molo-
tov made a speech. Touching on
Yugoslavia. Molotov hinted—just
hinted—that Yugoslav Communists
were sorry for their post devia-
Speaking to his Parliament. Tito,
grown gray, portly and florid, lit
into Molotov for such innuendo.
Molotov, he indicated, was trying
to push the notion that Yugo-
slavia's moves toward normal re-
lations with Moscow betrayed a
willingness to "correct” past er-
rors of dogma. This sort of thing,
said Tito. was "nonsense.” throw-
ing doubt on the sincerity of other
statements by Eastern leaders.
There was an implication in this
that during the Malenkov regime,
Tito won his battle with Moscow,
that his price for full normaliza-
tion was an open Moacow admis-
sion that Stalin had been wrong
from the start in his feud with
WEDNESDAY, MAY 25,1955
Therefore thus saith the Lord
God unto them: Behold, 1. even 1.
will judge between the fat cattle
and between the lean cattle. —
Ezekiel 34:20.
We neither know nor judge our-
selves; others may judge. but can-
not know us. God alone judges and
knows u* — Wilkie Collins.
Congressman Frank Ikard writes.
“Many former' prisoners of war
in Korea have failed to file claims
with the Foreign Claims Settlement
Commission for their compensa-
tion. The deadline for filing these
claims is Aug. 21, 1956. Every for-
mer prisoner of war should investi-
gate this immediately for it would
be a shame if anyone's claim were
denied because of failure to file on
time.” Edwin L. Owens of Denton
and len Savage Jr. of Lewisville
were visitors this past week with
Congressman Ikard at his office in
Washington.
say atom-powered freighters and '
liners would have operational econ-'
omies and advantages — more
space for cargo and passengers,
for one thing.
The vessel which Bethlehem
Steel engineers have designed -
EDITORIALS AND FEATURES : :: : THE DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLE ::::
NEW YORK un - Little bgad.
Jumps to big conclusions—or snap
judgments a guy couldn't prove
in court: -
U a man can't be taught by ex-
perience, he can't be taught.
Some people will swallow any-
thing; digestion is the more diffi-
cult art. '
If animals had pockets like peo-
ple, they'd have as many worries,
too
A fellow who is always borrow-
ing someone else’s pocket comb
rarely makes lasting friendships. .
It is bettor to have two holes
showing in your socks than one in
your head.
Four out of five times it is more
expensive to buy a dinner for a
small woman than a large one.
Some of the most religious peo-
Yale Lawmaker
’ NEW HAVEN, COnn. um -
Florida. Montana, Utah, Arizona
and New Mexico are the only
states which never sent a Yale
alumnus to Congress, says Prof.
George W. Pierson,'University his-
torian. Connecticut has elected the
most Yale men to Congress 331.
New York is second with 80. Mas-
sachusetts. home of Harvard, has
been represented by 31 Yale Men.
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 253, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 25, 1955, newspaper, May 25, 1955; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1449772/m1/4/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.