Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 52, Ed. 1 Monday, October 3, 1955 Page: 5 of 8
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17
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THE DENTON RECORD CHRONiCLB
Mealay, October 1, IN*
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Relief Comes in Minutes
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Elections Slated..
Dr. Hollis B. Douglas
DENTIST
TRY THIS! ZESTO’S
Announces the reopening of his office on
BIG MALT
the South Side of the Square in the Raley
en’s Forum representatives.
& HAMBURGER
Building.
Danton, Tax.
Office Ph.C-
mittee following the graduation ex-
Sherwin-Williams
offers
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a vastly
Onilla
2-3
Carol MTle
improved
2
house
paint
$
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edging.
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19.95
COLORS!
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flat’
HERWIN-WIL L
^erwin-Willia^
gloss
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T a S*
D. T.
CHOOSE FROM
91 EXCLUSIVE
Duster,'
rose bud
Pink
I Nyon
! Corduroy
WOMEN’S
ACTIVITY
CALENDAR
SCHMITZ
FURNITURE CO.
207 NO. ELM
(
the unit coats will meet acceptable
and reasonable economic stand-
Luxury Lounger
by
ercises.
Pan American Round Table will
meet in the home of Mrs. Hal V.
Jazz Combos include;
"The Most Rod"— Jazz and blazing W ear-With-All Rod for brownettes
"Hot and Sweet"—Jazz and soft Tender Pink for blondes
"Real Gone Fink"—Jazz with Sporting Pink, glory for redheads
"Crazy For Blues"—Jazz and Red Raspberry for silvery beauties
"Cool Chick"-Jazz and tangy Apple Red for brunettes
J'
fit
FLAT Anish fort
Shake siding, Stucco;
Concrete Block, Brick
end Cement wells,
Asbestos siding
GLOSS or FLAT Anish fort
Wood siding end Shingle siding
$
SW
Meome
ZESTO
OF DINTON
1706 N. Sim
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ards."
Brazil has about seven million
horses.
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Even before it dries, you'll realize that this
new Sherwin-Williams House Paint is really
different. Improvements in this new SWP°
House Paint assure you of the finest in paint
chemistry ... brush-easy application,
time-defying durability and wide-ranging
color choice.
You’ll do your home and pocketbook a real
favor by using thrifty new SWP. And you
can use it with complete confidence
because more homes are painted with
SWP than any other brand.
CHICAGO m Seven V, 8.
business executives *e scheduled
to visit the Far East—from Tokyo
to Christchurch, New Zealand—to
sell the American free enterprise
system.
They will present the story of
c
MONDAY
Denton Chapter' 259, Order of
Eastern Star. will hold the reg-
ular stated meeting Monday at 7; 30
p.m. in the Masonic Hall with Mrs.
W. B. King, worthy matron, pre-
siding.
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lb
2
Asthma and Hay Fever
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d
k d
di Primstone h avallable atauirug
trigoreenryeror
member-ifnot .nlirelysatishekmr
money will be refunded promptly:.
So look forward to eleep At night
and freedom from anxiety by day.
Get Primatene today! "TrdeMer
| C*. k*M. wnatehau Fharmaca compan
JANET POUNDS HISTORIC PORT
Hurricane Janet slashed at the 450-year-old port of Veracruz, Mexico. Surging
waves inundated parts of the city while winds toppled roofs as the eye of the hur-
ricane moved inland north of-the city. (AP Wirephoto)
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RESTORES BREATHING
Chester J. Dyczkowski, 32, an Army veteran, shows
how he applied artificial respiration to start Sylvia
Franco, 7 months, breathing again at St. Paul, Minn.,
after the baby had nearly smothered in her crib.
Sylvia’s mother, Mrs. Baltazar Franco, watches the re-
enactment. (AP Wirephoto)
Helena Rubinstein’s new
lipstick color
red. hot—and cool! 4" "
It’s red-hot as an after-hours jam session, with just a beat of AFh
torchy blue. It's “cool" (musicology for whatever sends you dear • I
out of this world). It's Helena Rubinstein's intense, exciting
new rhythm for lips, called Jazz!
Jazz mellows your lips to silk all day without repairs. And comesV
your way in special offer Jazz Combo packages, along with anotherS
Helena Rubinstein full-sized, favorite lipstick plus a real 6-inchKlB
record of jazz classics by Columbia Record s own top combos. •
four-day campaign Wednesday
when they go to the polls to elect
class officers, senators, and Worn-
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The graduates of the Kresa
Foundation School of Practical
Nursing at TSCW will be honored
with a reception in Virginia Car-
SWP
Sloss HOUSE PAIN
an wwr
suffer from hay fever attacks.
Authoritative tests have .Proved
that this remarkable compound brings
blessed relief in mere minutes-and
gives hours of freedom from recur-
rence of painful spasms.
. This fast-acting formula is pro-
scribed by doctors for their priyate
patients who suffer from both asthma
and hay fever. And now sufferers can
obtain this formula - without Pre-
acription-in tiny,easy-to-take tablets
called Primatene.* . ....
New Primatene opens bronchial
tubes, loosens mucous congestion, r"-
At NT Wednesday
edid nut
d Limited Tim.
W; WF,6) Starting Oct. 3
P==
‛ / a new Laaiiaaas Dial
Women’s . Forum: Elizabeth
Shaw, Kay Wander. and Raye Ann
Hoyle.
Sophomore candidates are
President: Bill Townsend, Terry
Morgan and Joe Don Baker.
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"SWP.
“emionvwarvT"
sweats nuow
<" i
EMCTRIC ALARM
- 'CLOCK WITA EVERY
Innerspring Mattress
.. JU
Norgaard, 2016 Brown, ‘Tuesday at
7 p.m. Miss Elizabeth Keesee will
be co-hostess. The Founders Day '
program will be observed. *
I St. David's Auxiliary will meet
.Tuesday at the Parish House with
Mrs. Homer Curtis as hostess.
A called meeting for Epsilon Sig-
ma-Alpha Sorority will be held in
the home of Mrs. Warren Caster
on Clover Lane Tuesday at 7:30
p.m.
WEDNESDAY
Mrs. Elizabeth Hindman Taylor
of Commerce, state president of
AAUW, will be guest speaker for
the first dinner meeting of the
year to be held Wednesday at •
p.m. in Hubbard Hall.
Campaigning began Thursday at
8 p.m. and will end Tuesday at 8 1
p.m. According to election rules. I
any candidate who has a sign on j
the- Campus after Tuesday at 8'
p m. will be disqualified.
Friday at 5 p m., the deadline
for filing a petition with the elec-
tion board. 114 students had filed,
according to Eddie Buford of Dal-
las. board chairman.
Friday at 5 pm., the deadline
for filing a petition with the elec-
tion board. 114 students had filed,
according to Eddie Buford of Dal-
las. board chairman.
Each class will elect a president,
vice-president, secretary, treasur-
er. seven senators, and two Wom-
en's Forum representatives. The
graduate class chooses only two
senators and is not represented on
the Women's Forum.
Polls will be open from 8 a m.
to 5 p.m. Wednesday. The election
board, composed of students, will
tabulate the votes.
Freshman candidates include:
President: Stan Neuse. Ed Dollf-
son, Johnny Bynum, Mack Burt.
George Turner, and Ronnie Fer-
rell.
, Vice president: BUI Hanks. Larry
Rollins. and Bob King.
Secretary: Joan Iley. Sissy Rob-
inett, Sue Gay, and Beverly Mar-
tin.
Treasurer: Joanna Jones, Jenna
Shafer, Sue Attebery, and Lucinda
Prather.
Senator: David Moore. Melinda
Ruddell, Marlene Thomas, Dave
Haney. John Q. Rathbone. Richard
Huff. Jim CArney, Bill Kimball.
Essary, Barbara Ross,
ties, and Judy Chapman.
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Vice president. Don M. Moore,
Roy Dunkleburg, Marion Gregory
and Rex Redies.
Secretary: Marjori Creswell
and Ann Hall.
10. • Jau Combos, 2p. ms
a continuing job for all of us to
roll Lodge by the Advisory Com- explore how these high over-all ex-
“ “penditures can be reduced so that
Offshore Oil I
Explorations |
Booming Now
HOL'STW on - Offshore oil ex-
plorations are booming despite
high costs . *—
Standard Oil Co. of Texas spent
nearly a million dollars before its
first barrel of tidelands oil reactrd
shore. The company considers it-
self lucky. Its first offshore test
found oil.
The 318 bsrge and platform drill*
ing.rigsin California..Louiiana J
ana Texas cost an estimated 2U 1
million dollars. A dozen new barges
under construction will add another
* to 10 million.
The California Co. has designed .
a self-contained drilling barge ca- l
pable of drilling in water up to
a depth of 100 feet. Including al
drilling equipment, it is expecied
to cost nearly 6 million dollars
Bonuses and rentals paid federal
and state agencies have exceeded
750 million dollars. Texas and
Louisiana prices have jumped
from a few dollars per acre to ps
high as $2,209 an acre.
Yet offshore drilling operations
are running nearly 20 per cent
higher than a year ago.
Tidelands operations drew con-
siderable attention this week at
the 15th annual meeting of the
American Assn, of Oilwell Drilling
Contractors.
“It can certainly be said that
offshore operations are fast com-
ing of age,” said John Domercq
Jr. of Standard of Texas. “Only
a few weeks ago an operator com-
pleted a producer 33 miles out
from shore. It is possible that in
the not too far distant future it
will be a common sight to find
wells out as far as 50 miles at
some points.”
Domercq said many drillable
prospects resulted in dry holes
costing a minimum of 2% to 3 mil-
lion dollars even ih the early days
of offshore development when the
bonuses paid governmental bodies
were only a fraction of present
bids
“Now with the bidding for leases
as we know it. I dare say many
an operator will run up a tab. on
a prospect approaching the 4 mil-
lion dollar mark and even then
will end up with a dry hole . .
Domercq said.
He added that many of the cos’s
attributed to Standard’s first bar-
rel of Texas tidelands oil were in-
curred before some of the rec set
high bidding for offshore lands.
“It is certainly clear that risks
involved in a venture of this kind
make one think twice before going
off wildcatting in this type of oper-
1 ation," he said. . It will be
t
-----------—.
Consumerism Up cutest "ternstitnmaw"n
munism.
—
... and Lasts For Hours
Tiny Tablet NowAvnitiM* Without PiwuipHoxI
*.f fpem hav fever attacks. The JseAt of P?imston. Is that it
contains medieines found most efTect
tiv* tn combination for those .who
suffer from asthma and hay fever
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NTSC students will climax a |
MBS*!?':'
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f $43 J Ml
TUESDAY
The WSCS of the First Methodist
Church will have their monthly
business meeting Tuesday at 10
a m. at the church. A covered dish
luncheon will be served at noon
with Circle K as hostess for the
day. Mrs. E. S. Buck will present
the program “Literature and Pub-
lications.”
Grace Temple WMU will meet at
the church at 9 a.m. Tuesday for
an executive board meeting with
the regular business meeting to be
held at 9:30 a.m.
Opti-Mrs. Luncheon will be held
in the Starlight Room of the
Southern Hotel Tuesday at noon.
Virginia Uhles of the Dallas Opti-
Mrs. Club will speak on the Ko-
rean Situation.
___________II
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$ Sxcilinq News
E for Homeowners!
"Consumerism" under the spon-
sorship of the National Sales Exe-
umttsf T e,t
N 4 nro.
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MEVER BEFORE...
Puabuva-rumppsmrp.
"-ny house paine
°Durebilityana,
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Treasurer: Kay Speir and Jolene
Averett.
Senator Jay McClure, Sandra
Burch, W. A. "Dub" Brown,
Charles Warren, Berk Kaufhold.
Don Edmonds, Jim Gage. Larry
Reed, Mickey Sewell. Bill Lott,
Craig Boyd. Beverly Harrison.
David Campbell and Sybil Jane
Jordan.
Women's Forum: Pat Cameron,
Jean Whitby and Jean McMullan.
Junior candidates include: ,
President: John Turner.
Vice president: Jerry Johnson,
Wade Moore, and John McLain.
Secretary: Norma Strickland
Treasurer: Eloise Mills and Bet-
ty lu Johnson.
Senator: Dave Bradford. Jerry
Conditt, Lon McLaughlin. Barbara
Saxon, Joann Taylor, Bob Dyess.
Fran Mason. Ramona Orr, Mal-
colm Dade. Ronald Roberts, pen
Gobin. Jessica Klinglesmith, Jim
Stephens and Joe Tynes.
Women's Forum: Rae Nell Pitt-
man. Shelby Sue Unruh and Mar-
tha Bateman.
Candidates for senior officers
are:
President: Jack Reese. H. B.
Cox, David Grigsby and Bob Allen.
vice president: BrucVMeador,
Ronnie Ballard, W. B. Payne and
T. Ray Barlow. ’
Secretary: Pat Matthews, Eddye
Lou Burt and Ann Harrison.
Treasurer: Anna Jo King and
Floyd Coulter.
Senator: E. J. Harris, Claudette
Yancey, Joe Alexander. David
Ferris, Cynthia Davis, James C.
Bennett, Frank Hereford, Carol
Weeks, Dub Womack. Patsy Steph-
enson and Frances McClellan.
Women's Forum: Jerry Gaudet
and Sue Sanders.
Graduate candidates are Pat Mc-
Murray and Gene Bahnsen for
president, and Louis Robertson
apd Orwin Mobley for senator.
■h
• 219 W.NICKORY• PMONEK
■ WD
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Fuvwituve Fan
BABY?
ANDERSON FURNITURE
219 W. Oak Denton
. ■ U
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 52, Ed. 1 Monday, October 3, 1955, newspaper, October 3, 1955; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1449884/m1/5/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.