Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 267, Ed. 1 Friday, June 10, 1955 Page: 3 of 12
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Frlday, June 10, INI
THE DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLE
CD Clinic Held
OP
GLASSMAN'S
akers
e
■ :
disasters.
tt
TERRY
CLOTH
q
I
OF
795
1
INDIVlOUALLY BOXED •
OPEN SAT. NITE
GLASSMAN'S
I
• APPLIANCES FOR NATURAL • BUTANE
1
s
Men's Broadcloth
I
Pajamas
O
WITH A...
8
Long Legs
KOOL
KOZY
Fancy Patterns
EVAPORATIVE COOLER
$298
S
$3995
1
OPEN SAT. NITE
GLASSMAN'S
3
1
1
MEN'S
SPORT SHIRT
SPECIAL
GAS S EQUIPMENT CO.
Dial -2538
South Side Square
Chevrolets
198:298
F
162^
OPEN SAT. NITE
GLASSMAN'S
YOU HAVE NOT SEEN
180
E
THIS BEFORE
I ■
WHITE
SHIRTS
f
77
I
8
$
Your choice of sleeve
98
2
p
gt
Curl. Collar Guar.
To Outlast Shirt.
STRETCH SOX - Fancy ... 59c - 79c
WE GIVI GREEN STAMPS
—
PH. C>2125
4
lb
20
st
li
II
URDAYSPECIAE,
SA
‘4
d 1 >•
• FRENCH OR
BARREL CUFF
KOZY KOOL
Prices Start
arations of shelter, home fire pre-
vention, and the application of
civil defense methods to natural
Four Denton
Students Get
Debate Letters
cge
,e
There are at least two eclipses
of the sun visible someplace on
earth every year. I
America’s
Pocket Cash
On The Rise
%
I
LOOM
Colors Blue/
Nhite, Maize
517
14-17
□
FULL CHROME 5 PC. DINETTE SUITE
with table 16x60, for only...........
Model Shown is
Model KKV-22-VC
restores: Swirl Blow-
er • Volume Control •
Pomp • FoU Guaran-
tee... only $114.95
Z
n
12
FULL CHROME 5 PC. DINETTE SUITE
with tabla 30x48, for only.........
I I
84995
m
S
Lots of New
Patterns in
Crisp-cool summer
shirts.
ROBES
FRUIT
• ier
5 S
MEN'S PLISSE PAJAMAS
• SHORT SLEEVE (4) AQ
• SHORT LEGS P«"•
5
z
z
2
$
Why not compare those prices and get yours,
while this offer lasts.
—
length
Warranted Never
(5
JONES CLEANERS
12.2 West Hickory
Dial C-6013
Men's Initialed Handkerchiefs
Box of 3 Imperial Handloomed
EMBROIDERED a 69
HANDKERCHIEFS As BOX
Makes An Ideal Father's ay Gift
cA
I
GA
special
hill-flatteners!
’64”
W 7
S
' V
$
z
a FREE INSTALLATION
If You Buy Now... Don't Delay!
ALLEN BUTANE
See that fine fat mountain yonder?
You can iron it out, flat as a flounder
... and easy as whistling!
Just point one of Chevrolet’s special
hill-flatteners at it (either the 162-h.p.
“Turbo-Fire V8” or the 180-h.p. “Super
Turbo-Fire”*) ... and pull the trigger!
Barr-r-r-r-o-o-O-O-OOM! Mister, you
got you a flat mountain!
. . At least it feelt flat. For here are
engines that sing as sweetly as a dynamo
... built to pour out a torrent of pure,
vibrationless power. Big-bore V8’s with
the shortest stroke in the industry.
So most of the time they loaf. Even at
the speed limit they just dream along,
purring out a fraction of their strength.
. An engineer can understand why they
are so hyper-efficient. But you don’t have
to be an engineer to know that these are
The sweetest running V8’s you ever
piloted. Just come in and try one out!
"Optional at extra ML
21.
7.
- , . v
..
Horse Overparks
DIXON, HL u — It was a
horse on somebody when city fire-
man Chester (Shorty) Strange-
land’s saddle horse broke loose
from its barn. Policeman Frank
Chapman "pinched” it for staying
overtime at a parking meter.
Four students from Denton have
been awarded letters in debate at
NTSC. They are Miles Schulze,
Ben Chappell, James Ellis, and
Ewing Cooley.
The awards were announced by
William R. DeMougeot, Debate
Club sponsor, on the basis of in-
tercollegiate speech competition
during the past year. Fourteen
students earned letters.
Schulze, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ivan Schulze, <10 Woodland, is a
government major.
.Chappell, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Hyder B. Chappell, 326 Ponder,
was a spring graduate with a
speech major. He was a member
of Pi Phi Pi social fraternity and
Pi Kappa Delta, national scholar-
ship society.
EUis is the son of Mrs. Mary B.
Ellis. 420 West Sycamore. He is
a pre-med major.
Cooley, son of Mrs. Velma S.
Cooley, 900 Egan. is a psychology
major. He is a member of Blue
Key, national honor society for
men.
line goes straight ahead—south—in the picture. Work is
progressing steadily throughout Denton County on
the 47-mile Santa Fe link. (Record-Chronicle Staff
Photo)
The meaning of civil defense for
the homemaker is the subject of
a two-week workshop now in prog-
ress in the, NTSC School of Home
Economics.
The workshop on the homemak-
ing teacher and civil defense fea-
tures a series of talks and dem-
onstrations by civil defense work-
ers. Mrs. Frances Pender directs
the program.
Appearing before the group to-
day and Saturday is Gaines West
of the Federal Civil Defense Ad-
ministration.
Others who have taken part this
week include Mattie Treadwell
and W. G. Roach of the FCDA, Col.
W. E. Matthews of the Ground Ob-
server Corps, A. J. Fogaley of
the Texas ABM engineering ex-
tension service, and Hal Hood,
Dallas Fire Fighting Corps.
West’s topic will be basic rescue
preparations. He will discuss prep-
s A 1 URDAnSPEC/4 /
EAURDAL SPEC Mi >
COURT HOUSE RECORDS
MEN'S BELTS_________$1.00 8 $1.50
—•maim
(2
SATURDAYSPEC/4,
i
Mrs. Grace Martin, coordinator
of women’s activities in civil de-
fense and disaster relief, will con-
duct the concluding workshop ses-
sions Tuesday and Wednesday. Ac-
tivities scheduled include emer-
gency home sanitation prepara-
tions. first aid supplies, water
purification, first aid demonstra-
tions, mass feeding, and other
topics related to disaster relief.
I
-
■' A > pi
• SaSVD 3NVdOMd 10 • 3NVn8
DON'T FORGET "POP" ON
fwdDu
4
, WHERE NEW SANTA FE ROUTE BEGINS
This is the “takeoff’ spot for the Santa Fe Railroad’s
short-cut route into Dallas. The picture, taken about'
midway between Sanger and Krum, shows the new
route, left, curving southwestward toward Denton and
its ultimate destination—Dallas. The present main
The American Bible Society dis-
tributed more than nine million
Bibles and parts of Bibles in the
United States in 1954.
No Bargain
inferior cheap cleaning that b
weakening and injurious to
clothes. With clothing costs as
they are today. it’s just plain
good common sense to send your
things where they’ll be cleaned
safely and superlatively. Our
way is the most modern method
—the cleaning process that re-
vitalizes and conditions gar-
meats as it cleans them.
MEN'S TRUVAL
Furniture For:
BABY?
ANDERSON FURNITURE
219 W. Oak Danton
a
-
CHESTER MORRIS
CHEVROLET COMPANY
Phone C-5451S. Locust & Mulberry Streets
W‘
y
NEW CAR REGISTRATIONS
Mrs. M. E. Moore, Carrollton,
Chrysler Windsor.
L. W. Tenley, 715 Westway, Ford
pickup.
Wiley C. Gilmore, 1400 West
Hickory. 4 door Plymouth.
W. W. Little, Lake Dallas, 4
door Buick.
Calvin Sauls, 1302 Broadway, 4
door Buick.
W. G. Stum, Fort Worth, Ford
coupe.
James K. Bennett, Lake Dallas,
Ford Victoria.
Chas. T. Goodman, 1401 Oakland,
4 door Ford.
Wayne E. Cox, Krum, Ford
pickup.
J. N. Davis, Gainesville, 4 door
Ford.
J. J. Scott, Fort Worth, 4 door
Ford.
Joe A. Reeves, Frisco, Cadillac
DeVille coupe.
E. E. Taylor, 723 Ector, 4 door
Buick.
T. W. McPherson, Lewisville,
Chevrolet coupe.
D. & P. Construction Co., Lewis-
ville, Chevrolet station wagon.
Louis Groening, Lewisville, 4
door Chevrolet.
R. E. Warnack, Lewisville, 4
door Chevrolet.
L. C. Heath, Roanoke, 4 door
Mercury.
H. B. Titcomb, 1117 North Elm,
4 door Chrvsler.
C. L. Wheeler, 2300 Denison Dr.,
Ford pickup.
Ray Christian, Slidell, Ford pick-
"“Charles S. Heflin & Priscella L.
Heflin, 219 Bryan, Mercury coupe.
J. H. Russell, <11 West Oak, 4
door Cadillac.
L. C. Baker, Frisco, Interna-
tional pickup.
Richard D. Crosby, Lewisville,
4 door Chevrolet.
Ruthie Mae Bond, Lewisville, 4
door Chevrolet.
G. R. Oglesby, Lewisville, Chev-
rolet sedan.
J. L. Myers’ Sons, Lewisville.
Chevrolet station wagon.
Verda Green, Lewisville, Chev-
rolet coupe.
Aldo Hill, Lewisville, Chevrolet
coupe.
E. L. Tisdell, Lewisville, Chev-
rolet pickup.
Harold J. Brumley, Lewisville,
Pontiac station wagon.
E. G. McClatchy-Freda M. Mc-
Clatchy, Dallas, 4 door Pontiac.
W. G. Collier, 704 West Oak, 4
door Oldsmobile.
J. F. Reiman, 918 North Elm,
Plymouth sedan.
James S. Fullwood, Arlington, 4
door Ford.
Charles W. Mitchell, Limestone,
Me., Mercury station wagon.
i David W. Wampler, Duncan,
1 Okla., 4 door Dodge.
Floyd E. Gresham, 2419 Denison
Dr., Dodge pickup.
- Carl F. Smith, Box 294, 4 door
Plymouth.
Dorothy McClister; Krum, Ply-
mouth coupe.
N. C. Pearsoil, Argyle, Ford
pickup.
James L. Rogers, 2299 Scripture,
4 door Chevrolet.
Robert A. Becker, Dallas, 4 door
1 Plymouth.
N. N. Bates, Box 857, Chevrolet
coupe.
Ralph W. Conway, Box 857, 4
door Chevrolet.
James A. Gambrell, 702 West-
way, 4 door Chevrolet.
MEANING OR DEFENSE
For Ho
$100 - $150
MEN'S TIES* *
NEW YORK (—Americ’s pock,
et money is on the rise. Private
industry is paying out eight billion
dollars more this year than last
in wages and salaries.
Businessmen are competing
fiercely for their share of total
personal income — now running at
an annual rate of around 296 bil-
lion dollars, some 11 billion more
than a year ago.
Wage scales - like those being
hammered out in the auto and
steel industries — are taking big-
ger jumps than last year. Hun-
dreds of companies have signed
labor contracts and the majority
have hiked pay by 7% cents to
10 cents an hour—a 50 per cent in-
crease over last year’s 5 to 7-eent
pattern.
Whatever else it may do, the
Ford Motor Co. agreement to sup-
plement state unemployment bene-
fib during periods of layoffs will
relieve the minds of merchants in
many cities where suto industry
payrolls are a mainstay of retail
trade.
More people had jobs last month
than in any May in history, the
Census Bureau reports. The Labor
Department’s Bureau of Labor
Statistics adds that 61,000 persons
found new jobs in factories dur-
ing the month. And the factory
work week averaged a half hour
longer. The average weekly pay in
factories rose to a record 176.11.
This wss $1.34 higher than in
April.
As a result of the big boom in
business in general, the public has
more to spend today than ever
before. It is now spending at an
annual rate of 243 billion dollars,
according to government figures.
Optimists think this rosy grow to
231 billion next year.
After spending what to necessary
for food, clothing, shelter, trans-
portation and the like, the public
now has about 140 billion dollars
a year it can spend or not as it
chooses. Before World War II peo-
ple had 30 billion dollars they
could spend over and above neces-
sities. >
-
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202 W. OAK
‘v27SN
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 267, Ed. 1 Friday, June 10, 1955, newspaper, June 10, 1955; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1449786/m1/3/: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.