Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 46, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 29, 1957 Page: 2 of 41
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PAGE Hvo
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mm
Next-To-Last
t.t
.. 42m.
Fired By AEC
■ DENTON PERSONALS
The AEC said Charleston turned
1
Hardest hit were achools and
Udi "nearhyste-
layer suggested it
SCHOOL MIXING
SLOW, STEADY
1
long
had I
beliet
and Mrs. Donald Reese Wren of
1
ive we would have suffered
naming
of Daniel
was
rest of.
HASLET — Funeral service for
of
nessee, Texas and Virginia.
Haslet were held in the Church
GOAL
Mrs. Eastwood died at her home
Ira M. Cox Dies
Town of 4,000 leveled a
farmer, died at his home Satur-
IF HURRICANE HITS
J
You Should Stay
Cal
Mr. Bowers, who died Thursdi
Atlantic Ocean or the Gulf of
as the result of a stroke he st
Wi
fared
it of the First
Ik
3 in October. However, they’re
June through December.
Herd Sire
FOR SALK NOW
The average life span
ricane is only nine days
of a hur*
tions.
BULLS
». The en-
Court Gains $818
Ages 33—2303:13—F
tai Rhythms and Creative Ex-
BE
Situ
name applies only to
sian
standard higher than
See . .
P
State Reserve Life Insuronce Co.
DU2-3525
115 Shermon Dvive
1
V
4
=
1
0
44
\
I
he retired aa i
National Ban
L'p- la
• .
Conservative Demos Eyeing
Blakley For Post In Senate
Eastwood Rites-
Held At Church
a'13-candidate field. He said when
he accepted the post he had no
US hurricanes were recorded dur-
ing September, 94 in August and
in
Ju
i
l
arage
I four
Central America and Mexico.
In the China* Sea and Western
Pacific the hurricane is called a
N.M. for a got
Blakley reje
ed
T»
Ta
“ of
ni
fo
Si
Ei
a successor for the
l's regular term from
--HOB
ALL
OCCASIONS
ei
F
Si
ot
tinted session,
pleas of his
by
ov
wi
th
ar
Hi
of
R
Ri
ne
Pl
IB
At
in
er
Aw uen,
"e-ea me on, I
wum-*NW.
gewenunsuen, Ovilem
f mw mi faw
m • whe
tapent mhm wm.
*’ MW phene ... •
Tummamemet
28 U—Texas
kly looking for
nddate to beut
r1
-1
. ■
uickly.
t and
GEE MEDICAL PANEL BLASTS
MASS FLU VACCINATION Shot Of Tests
D
B
H
hi
m
4,
L
31
he
SI
T
V
W
at 1:30 p.m. Friday.
Survivors include two sons. 0
. 1 —
force.”
Gov. Luther H. Hodges sat in on
the press conference. Hodges will
head the committee of five South-
ern governors at the White House
conference Tuesday to which Stev-
enson referred. The governors will
seek immediate withdrawal of fed-
eral troops at Little Rock.
FUTURE OUTLOOK
The Macon editor said he be-
lieved “enrollment increases and
End Quickly
CHAPEL HILL, N. C., Sept. 28
( — Adlal Stevenson said today
he hopes that soldiers “can be
He said leading Negro educa-
tors say desegregation will not
Most large colleges had
. Lals filled. Nearly all report
ed an improved situation as the
one of the brightest of this year's
Atomic Energy Commission testa.
Today's was the 23rd shot. An-
By whatever name, hurricanes
are rough customers.
There isn't much anyone can do
about one except get out of the
way. That's why the Weather Bu-
reau is going all out to develop
and put into operation the very
latest methods of storm warnings.
By its own admission, forecasts
while getting better are still far
from perfect.
Hurricanes, originate in tropical
ocean arena and the first report
of one may come from a ship a
thousand miles from shore.
For the first time the usual
weather observations are being
supplemented by a chain of co-
nnamniina W > WwiA W a l W W — waau L-- Mln.
"PETeVve SumSt*t0lS run nv
paid volunteers.
The Weather Bureau also is
making more and more use of ra-
dar in storm detection.
PHONE
Briefs - Births - Hospital Notes ,
Eleanor Says Red
Standard Is High
COPENHAGEN, Denmark,
Sept. 28 (P—Mrs. Franklin D.
Rooseveit came out of the Soviet
Union today on her way home
and said she had found the Rus-
reports this week.
But from all sections the out-
break was described as of mild
form and nothing to compare with
the treacherous malady of 39
years ago.
Four Hurt in
Garage Blast
HEBBRONVILLE. Teg.. Sept.
28 •-An explosion, which was
felt throughout thi South Texas
ago. If he and his position
been dearly expressed I don’t
night, was a longtime Denton —
dent. He was an elder of the First
I
s
3
x
J
"p,
Provence joined the Waco News-
tribune and Times • Herald in
June. 1937, after graduating from
Baylor. He was copy editor and
reporter. night news editor, day
news editor, and became manag-
ing editor in 1947, He waa appoint-
ed editor of the Waco dailies in
August. INI, succeeding the date
Frank Baldwin. He was named
editorial director of the News-
papers. Inc . in April. 1854.
YARROROUGH
Yarborough denied this week
that he has pinpointed a time cer-
tain for making .known his inten:
tions. He shows every sign thut
he is a man running for some high
political oftice. Mo is following a
statewide speaking schedule, ap-
pearing before eivie clubs, at ro-
deos and reunions, and almost
anvwhere the crowds gather.
AT
TEXAS WOMANS UNIVERSITY
2017 Denison at 1;23 a.m., Sept.
28 in Flow Memorial Hospital
A boy was born to Mr. and Mrs.
Andy Lee Pierson of Route 1 at
6:56 a.m., Sept. 38 in Flow Me-
morial Hospital.
jig'
S.
L
a naval reserve officer obviously
in protest against the sending of
federa troops into Little Rock.
Ark , to enforce integration in a
high school there.
What induced
ria?” Dr 7 Use
that local authorities and law-
abiding citizens everywhere will
see to it that they are never need-
ed again anywhere.”
SUPPORTED USE
Stevenson had supported Presi-
dent Elsenhower's action with a
statement in Chicago Tuesday
that. “Federal forces must in this'
situation be used to put down'
until you get smacked by a hurri-
cane. And when it comes, you
should hope for the best but ex-
pect the worst.
That was the word today from
the Weather Bureau, taken from a
wealth of statistics dating back
78 years.
In the last four years alone, hur-
ricanes have taken more than
1,880 lives and caused more than
tag: down houses,
and snarling pow
been known to
Youth in Fined
In Liquor Case
A 19-year-old Breckenridge youth
who was visiting in Denton was
fined 835 Saturday in Corporation
Court for illegal possession of al-
coholic beverages.
Joseph Robert Jackson of Box
113. Breckenridge, was arrested
Friday night by Denton police. He
was released after paying the fine.
Also arrested Friday, in con-
nection with the theft of hubcaps,
were two juveniles The young-
stars were released to their par-
ents
member of the Maryland House
of Delegates, and George N. Sei-
bert Jr., Repblican member of
the West Virginia House of Dele-
gates.
The conference. called weeks
before the Lttle Rock integration
dispute came to a head, was de-
signed for the discussion of mu-
higher entrance standards will
keep out three-fourths of the Ne-
groes who want to go to integrated
colleges."
CMR MISCHIEF DOM 47th
BLANCHETTE POLLED HEREFORDS
From Sanger ta Boitvac tom 8 miles N.W, to aign
She told a news conference here
that "Physically. I am sure. there
-has been an enormous develop-
ment in the last 40 years."
It was Mrs. Roosevelt’s first
Sunday, September 18, 1931
-----------------
. SIND
FLOWERS
one billion dollars in property
damage. If hurricane-caused flood
tion supported by the Ford Foun- _______-___________
dation and made up largely of. In Louisiana, North Carolina. Ten-
Southern newspapermen, seeks to nessee. Texas and Virginia "
keep abreast of the constantly
changing situation by a system of
reports from its newsthen.
trains right oft their tracks
WORD MEANING
The word hurricane means "big
wind.” and h believe to have orig-
inated with the Carib Indians The
__-_____________ Sea,
and in the Pacific Ocean -near
For Dentonite
Last rites for Mrs, Annie Louise
Ballard Lawrence, 77, of Route 2
Denton, were hold Friday at Jack
Schmits A Son Funeral Home by
the Rev. W. S Hancock of Austin
and the Rev. Ferman Weedon of
the Grace Temple Baptist Church.
Burial was in the IOOF Cemetery.
Pallbearers included E. L. (Bud
Williams, Frank Mayfield, H. H.
Snow. Julian. T. Koon. Harry Rob-
l neon. Lawrence Nuckles, Jess
Cagle and Dick Harris
reported in critical condition in a
hospital in nearby Falfurrias.
The blast came as mechanics
worked on a butane gas truck
inside the Hebbronville Motet- Co
It blew out the roof and walls
and set the structure on fre
Windows were cracked as far
as two blocks away.
Critically injured were Manuel
Hinojosa. his brother, Pete Hino
ENNOLL Now
Dance atadtaa new Health, Phy-
aieal nmm and Recreation
Baltdtng. MI Avenue. $7.00 for
wmTTAJIT#
owl v"8
a, . eoAAeu on, ne
Fine* paid in Denton Corpora-
tion Churl test week went over
the 8800 mark, with 8188 of it to
partial payments.
Vaccine manufacturers are only
responding to public pressure, he
said. ,
In Washington.'Dr. Carl Dauer
of the Public Health Service int-
mated he thought some of the
statements made in San Francisco
were unfortunate. The PHS has
urged "maximum possible im-
arose from publie demand for
vaccine that had been manutac-
tured for emergency purposes.
, 9
Who knows what tomorrow may
bring. Protect your family and
loved ones with adequate in
surance in case tomorrows
finds you gone , , .
ROCKET IN A BALLOON
This is an artist's conception of the fourstage Project
Far Side rocket vehicle which the Air Force is ready
to fire any day now over Eniwetok Atoll in the Paci-
. fic. It i* expected to reach 1,000 to 4,000 miles
straight up and would be fired byremotecontrot
from the ground after the huge plastic balloon car-
ries it to an altitude of 100,000 feet. Inset at the
bottom shows the overall view of the onion-shaped
balloon 200 feet in diameter. (AP Wirephoto)
---------------------------------------
In San Francisco, 400 miles
sway, early risers saw the 8 a.m.
flash through drlazly skies. It was
clearly visible in Los Angeles,
sums 250- miles southwest of the
test site, as a bluish colored false
dawn.
TEST PLANNED
Observers in Las Vegas. Nev.,
75 miles away, said that today's
test-code-named Charleston—was
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
While controversy swirls around
the use of federal troops to en-
force racial integration in a Little
Rock, Ark. high school, what is
the broader factual picture of in-
tegration as It now stands nearly
3% years after the Supreme Court
outlawed segregation in the pub-
lic schools? .
+ Stew and steady to a ready and
reasonably accurate answer. But
how alow and how steady?
The Southern Education Report-
ing Service, a nonprofit organiza-
in Childress
Klein of Sanger at 1:15 p.m., Sept
37 in Flow Memorial Hospital.
A boy, Dan Keith, was born to
Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Thomas
Pockrus of Roanoke at 1:31 p.m.,
iMt. IT to Flow Memorial Hoapl-
taf
this national misfortune which has
been so widely exploited by our
enemies.
"It is time now,"-Stevenson add-
ed. "to bind up our wounds. I
/SA me
Ralph Yarborough may have a
friendly eye on multimillionaire
William Blakley of Dallas.
That presumes that Yarborough
will seek reelection to the full sig-
year terra la 1958 and that Blak-
lev would be willing. Blakley was
interim senator by appointment
of Gov. Allan Shivers early thia
year when Price Dental resigned
to become governor. —
tual problems by representatives
of 11 state governments,
it included delegates from Ala-
gankenramnsr“L"donid, M- sarah Ann Eastwood,
Smddhomaslsonh Nraaroitmnot Christ Saturday afternoon, in-
nessee, Texas, Virginia and West torment was in the Krum Corn.
Virginia. etery. „
ter Ian Church USA Saturday.
The Rev. John G. Marvin, pas-
tor. officiated. Burial was in the
Saint Jo Cemetery.
Oklahoma and West Virginia.” he
said. "It moved at a halting pace
time has come "to bind up our
wounds."
At the same time, Stevenson said
bo felt the “national misfortune"
at Little Rock could have been
avoided if President Eisenhower
had earlier "clearly expressed”
his position on enforcing court
decrees for school integration.
STATEMENT
Stevenson brought along a hand-
written statement on the integra-
tion controversy to a news con-
ference here. He read it to news-
men and announced it would be
his only word on the subject
"It is no secret," he said, “that
almost two years ago, I urged
such mootings as President Eisen-
hower hke arranged for next wook
wih the Seuther# gevernere
"I wish ha had conferred with
them and leaders of both races
w*
—e
a
•ILL BILL REPRESENTING
WACO, Sept. 38 (D-Waco News-
papers. Inc., which publishes
newspaper In Waco. Austin and
Port Arthur, announced promo-
tions today for Harry Provence
and Patrick E. Taggart. Provence,
a graduate of Denton High School
is the son of Mr. and Mrs. E. W.
Provence of Denton.
Provence will become editor-
in-chief of the newspapers. Tag-
gart will become executise vice
president of the parent organisa-
tion and publisher of the Waco
News-Tribune and Times-Herald.
The other newspapers are the
Austin American and Statesman
munhzation" against Asian flu.
From the start, Dauer said, Iha
PKI has found only one way to
chock the disease and protect in-
dividuals. "and that is by vaccina-
tion. Nothing else would atop IL”
Aa for the atatement by Dr.
Ranta regarding vaccine deaths.
Dr. Bauer said "I don't think the
Public Health Service would agree
to such a statement as that."
.JWhn widespread flu was noted
in Asia last spring, the U.S, Army
flow some of the virus to this
country, where it was identified
as a new strain. The PHS then
asked .pharmaceutical companies
whether they could make a vac-
cine and they reported they could.
HONPITAL NOTES
Flow Memorial Hospitat ---------
Visiting Hours: 10130-11180 a.m.,
8-4 p.m., 78 p.m.
Admitted: Mrs. Don Wren, 2017
Denison, medical; Mrs. Myrtle Pat
Anderson, 608 W. Hickory, acci-
dent; Mrs, W. W. Klein, Sanger,
medical; Mrs— Nelson Pockrus,
Roanoke, medical: Mrs. Bill Hicks
519 Lovell, medical; Mrs. Winifred *
Barnhart, 405 Fry, surgical; A B.
Fitzgerald, Argyle, hedical; Mrs,
Andy Lee Pierson, Route 1, med-
ical; Mrs. Viola Price, Lake Dal-
las. medical.
ischarged: Mr. Pat S. Till-
man ind baby, Fort Worth; Mrs.
Thomas T. Kirby and baby. Route
1; Miss Diana Watkins, 705 Pals-
ley; Mrs. Jack Stephens, 1113
Greenwood; Mrs. Opal Reed, 811
Hillcrest; Mrs. Willie McCrory,
630 Schmits; Dr. James Thomas
Jonas, 1725 W. Chestnut, R. 0.
Fulton, 1131 Texas.
Elm Street Hospital a Clinie
Visiting Hours: 9130-11130 a.m.,
3-5 p.m., 7-8:80 p.m.
Admitted: Zeke Holloway. Pil-
et Point, medical: Mrs. Annie Ar-
ATOMIC TEST SITE. Nv.,
Sept, M (—The next-to-last atom-
ic explosion of the 1887 test series
was detonated today with a bright
flash seen over mueh el the West
quickly withdrawn" from the
school integration scene at Lttle
Rock, Ark.
The twice-defeated Domocratlo
presidential candidate, who had
counted for $125
Topping the list for number of
violations were 18 left aide park
tag citations which netted 818.
Following closely were 1? cita,
tly for running atop signs which
ponly 311 zcent parking meter
fines were, issued, bringing in 883.
while five II fines were paid.
was named
a Nfexk n
f assistant .professor of medicine.
. and Dr. EDI* Sox. Saa Francisco
I health director.
I Dr. Rents declared: “If we were
I to give the vaccine to one million
I persons across the board right
I now, we would have more deaths
I and illnesses from the vaccine
I than we have with the flu."
Dr Donald M Campbell, presi-
dent of the medical society, com-
menting on the clamor for vac-
cine. stated: ' I’d say there to a
good deal of hysteria or near-
hysteria.... I'm giving the vac-
cine only to relieve the near-hys-
teria." ___
~ --•................—---------------------------------;--=
",5 ,■ r . - • . :
Town Topics
UMM M M X U. tste a, toma"
U.l^t
2301 NorK Akara st.
Delta*. Trie*
NIGNTS-SNDAYS-MOLIDAVS
-2-233, -1-142
omvuireprares sren componanon
•ANUVACTURES cvumi nets
■ WASHINGTON, Sept. 38 Uta—If i for a hurricane-’Willy-Willy.”
you live within 380 miles of U»0 ‘
. Vague County while he was a small
boy. He returned to Denton Coun-
ty. moving to Denton in 1927, when
out to be leas powerful than ex-
pected. Even so, it was rated as
about nominal, a nominal blast
being the equivalent of 30,000 tons
of TNT. The rumble from the test
was heard as far away as Boulder
City, Nev., 80 miles distant
balloon
Charleston was detonated from
a balloon tethered 1 500 Teat
above the desert. The AEC said
that only traces of radioactive
fallout were -measured -outside-of
the test area.
.. There were no military maneu-
vers in connection with today's I
test it was termed a "highly ex-
perimental" shot. Seventeen
scientific tests of an undisclosed
nature were conducted in connec-
tion with it -
supported President Eisenhower’s
decision to send federal troops to coileauz"
Central High School at Little ho«nitsl«
Rook, told a news conference the daspta
josa, and Preston Finley, foreman
of the garage Moya. Cesario,
Nay driver of the truck, was in serious
Mf. condition, . '_______ _ _____
fednesday Several others were treated for' Mexico, h's just a question of time
nton resi. minor burns and shock
dent. He was an euaer oi me r irat 1ancasurtios “smmennand ambu
Eon.“zavrng been a member for answered the cali.
. Among those on the panel were'
Dr. Karl F Meyer,- emeritus di- A ll • II .
rector of University of Califor- A fl | A1 HonAg
nia’s Hooper Foundation, and one---M--- --VVP
of the world's foremost experts on [ ri _ _ * __
Troop Use To
versity of California professor of,
medicine; Dr. Henry Bruyn, U.C.
$150,000 Loss in
Big Dallas Blaze
DALLAS. M 38 U_Nineteen
pieces of fire - fighting equipment
battled a 5-alarm blase in the
center of Dallas’ garment district
early tonight. The fire poured
clouds of smoke over the down-
town area.
The fire was confined to a 2
story building on Commerce St.,
but endangered the 8 - story
Fidelity Budding next door.
At least one fireman was over-
come by smoke. Fire Chief C. N.
Penn said the toes would hit at
least $150,000,
aS.ldeaAbSftmmermanan.Fromi Fine Pavers
has resigned his commission as •
Make your yard a safe
-a playground with "
19 CYCLONE 1
Oi FENCE! 1
one of their friends to continue in
the important U.S. Senate post.
Blakfey is showing some signs
of being a potential canididate.
He has invited a group of polit-
ical writers to be his guests next
week at his 88,000 acre San Cristo-
bal Ranch south of Santa Fe,
i thewshnok Former Dentonite
ingpbvruacomeanderanr Gains Promotion
education.
Benito Mui
alter Benito
revolutionary.
• )
over 25 years.
GMrn vamey"cwmamunoyy to a Libel-Conspiracy
but to. parent -moed « MonJury Considering
Verdiet in Trial
Officials Of
South Blast
Use Of Army
BALTIMORE, Sept. 38*0 - A
group of Southern officials today
backed Gov. Orval Faubus’ de-
nunctatlon oftmewe or federat
troops to enforce school integra-
tion in Arkansas.
The action came in the adoption
of a resolution at the windup sea*
sion of the three-day Southern re-
gional conference by the Council
of State Governments. • _
About 50 of the 130 delegate* to
the conference were present and
voting at the session. All hut two
rose in favor of the resolution
Governor Resigns Hk _
- Position lu Reserve
A total of 324 citations account-
edfor the ereran figure or $818
CHDREN’S DANCE CLASSES paid in the Twelvespeed-
ers contributed of the total
and four intoxteation citations ac-
< AUSTIN, St
conservatives i
a UX Senate
friends that he seek election Io
the full Senate term last spring
after serving two and a had
months as a fit in white Texas
of a son, Kirk William, born Sept.
27 at Baylor Hospltat,Datlas.
Mr. and Mrs. J, L. Wright, Ml
W. Sycamore, entertained at din-
ner Mrs. W, E, Mann, Mrs. Rob-,
art Harris, Mrs. Nat ikas, Mrs.
J. W. Crain. Mrs. Hugh Moore
and Miss Daphne Moore of Los
Angeles.
Mrs. George G. Welch, 1408 Aus-
tin, had as her guest her sister,
Mrs.. Edgar C. Wolters of Shiner.
. --- when Shivers left the governor's
persons — office.
Three of the four injured were —.....—— ......— ■■ .......
inRueng th"rwratamutbrenkaf other to plonnedln4 week,
epidemic of 1918 was indicated in The AEC said Charleston t
At Denton Home
ran. Aubrey, surgical.
Dismissed: Mrs. I. L. Johnson,
Route 3; 1 Mrs. Tommy Prater and
baby, Lewisville.
BIRTHS
A girl, Marjoue Elizabeth, was
i born to Mr and Mrs. Billy Eldon
Hicks of 305 Gates at 854 a.m,.
Sept V tn Flow Memorial Hos-
pital
A boy. Keith Lynn was born to
doom Negro colleges.
T---—
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Harpool JrM
i 3333 Houston PI, are the parents
Hg-eoy-t LOS ANGELES. Sept. 38 i-
which he was connected for more' The burnacwhn hateadaliberated damages are ineluded, the cost
than 40 years. tonspiracy case fur n days re-goesup another billion dollars.
Al one.timehe.heldconsidera- ported to enurt^ today ~ tkmt | wnn«T PASr
Mb oil and land interests tdontteyhave not yet taken a formal. Me worst may be over for this
Countmerbertsepramncrbureamamdycatnd »
te make his home with a widowedtv Walker summoned the jury to'month. From 1887 through 1068.
week ended.
Texas ABM had 1.800 cases di-
agnosed as the Asian type.
The University of Texas Health
Center was crowded with patients.
An appeal was made for extra
nurses. Dr. Ben Primer, health
officer at Austin, estimated 1.700
cases in Travis County, tripling
last week’s total.
•Il ages • prices
"COME AND sir*
You Are
•WELCOME
trees
have
blow railroad
Npboonam Iheurhpppinesssugltour
. ..' nd. — Nay Heng* met leading Soviel officials. She t
and the Indian Ocean a cyclone, leaves tonight by plane for New
Australians have their own name'York. »
hope the soldieracan be
withdrawm from Little Ri
The Associated Press asked
three of these newsmen, plus Don
Shoemaker, executive director of
the SERS headquarters at Nash-
ville, Tenn., to provide a preview
report of what is going into the
book which takes its title from
the May 11, 1855, ruling in which
the Supreme Court directed that
integration must proceed “With
All Deliberate Speed.”
Superior Court Judge Herbert September
sister to chilarees. month. From ""
szae—ess
of Alvord, and twourandehudren. Foreman Fred L. McCulley re In the 30-mie belt along the
Pallbearerss. included Fred Den -plied: "Your honor, wo have not' Attentte andt G^f N°Nexico
dy. Dr. V. V Craig. H. H Han-1 reached a verdict. We have not a hurrlrew may hit once in"ev.
son. » A. Hogan. Drue u finished qoing through the evl-eryrsearsor hot°mrtn
and Raymond Wheeler. Honor- dence and no ballots have been onn-oti.r ma "ioenuvap
ary pallbearers were W. * KIng taken." . enn tin .SLarnaBuoronstnne
and A. D Odom i The court then instructed the has Already had three this year
—T------ jurors to resume their dellbera. I - - -e*
day nt 4 30 p.m? He was 74.
A retired farmer since 1940, Mr. Riteg ( ondneraet
Cox lived at 3407 Denison Dr. Ho ----cD —OHuUCLC
Ite announced goal is the gath-
ering of factual information, un-
colored by the reporters' person-
al opinions. Soon it is to publish
a book. "With AU Deliberate
Speed. " which will sum up the
work to date
Rites Held For
Joe Bowers, 79
i
Funeral services for Joe Bow-
ore, 79, who moved from Denton
to Childress only two weeks ago.
were held in the First Presby-
opments in detail and in depth
from the vantage points of 17
states and without any expression
of opinion."
"Our survey will, show," he
said, “that at the end of three
years there were leas than 700
ochaol gfolritto Smgt toted out
of some 3,000 biracial districts in
the region and that of these only
a handful were outside the border
states, and that some two million
white children and 335,000 Negroes
were involved in 'integrated situ-
ations.''
Joseph B. Parham, editor of the
Macon (Ga.) News, discussing
higher education exclusively, said
that “Negroes enrolled in 105 of
308. public coUegee, 55 of 181
Protestant schools, 35 of 48 Cath-
olic schools and 38 of 114 private
schools in the South last term.
About 35 more institutions were
integrated this fall."
Weldon James, associate editor
of the Louisville Couriter-Journal,
said that one of the reasons for
the "relative smooth transition to
integrated achools” in Kentucky
was the fact that leaders of both
major parties bespoke compliance
after the Supreme Court's 1854
ruling.
DEEP SOUTH
W. D. Workman Jr., South Caro-
lina Capital correspondent for the
Greenville (S. C.) News and the
(Charleston) News and Courier,
reported on the "Deep South.”
Virginia. North and South Caro-
lina, Georgla, Alabama, Missis-
sippl. Louisiana and Florida.
"In general,” he said, "the
Deep South had a stronger body
of prosegregation legislation on
the statute books in 1947 than in
1854." /
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 28 U—
A panel of medical experts has
reached the conclusion that mass
immunisation against Asian in-
fluenza doesn’t make sense.
The group met last night at the
request of the San Francisco
Medical, ociety. to assess the sta-
tus of t Asian-type virus.
}
tire storm system moves forward
slowly, usually at lees than 13
m.p.h. However, the wind speeds
in the center, or aye. of the storm
may reach 150 m.p.h.
The path of destruction ranges
from 35 to 800 miles in width, end
may be anywhere from 100 to I,-
000 miles long over"land areas.
Hurricane winds, besides knock-
Friends of Yarborough are con-
vinced he wants to return to
Washington and that he has no
idea of opposing Daniel, who is
expected to Meh reelection as
governor. Liberals who prosum- today and seriously
ably win bnek- Yerborough are JTrlL
known to be in accord in wanting
, Be Ready
intentions of running for the on-
Blakley, who was an Eisenhow-
ar Democrat, went along with the
Senate leadership of Lyndon John-
son and voted Democratic there.
He was known in Washington ns
a man who attended to his Senate
business conscientiously and ha
also did not mind saying he en-
joyed his brief term.
Blakley, who was doing a man's
work and earning imu's wages
al 14, is now the top man in a
wide variety of successful busi-
ness enterprises. He is surrounded
by efficient young executives--
some ready-made for political
campaigning.
Shivers is not now considered
a possible candidate by the con-
servatives. He has almost stepped
completely out of the political
limelight, attends to-his own wide-
spread business affairs in Austin,
but has lost none of his deep root-
ed interest in public aifairs
One of his former close asso-
ciates. Jack Dillard of Waco and
Austin, joined Blakley's staff
Those are the highlights. Now
let's see what some of the news-
men reported “in detail and in
depth."
Parham, discussing higher edu-
cation in the South, said that seg-
regation was maintained in Mis-
sissippi. South Carolina, Georgia.
Florida and. except for three days
of the Autherine Lucy case, in
to.-,. — _ _____‘ ------ .
"Desegregation moved at a rap-
id pace in Arkansas, Delaware.
Kentucky, Missouri, Maryland,
died after a lengthy illness. Born
in Fayeville, Ga., on Dec. 35. im,-
he was married to Louise Ander-
son in Denton oneDec. 1. 1807.
Funeral Services will be held at
3 p.m. Monday ta the Central Bap
tist Church with the Rev Lester
J. Singleton, pastor, officiating.
Burial will be in the Little Elm
Cemetery.
Survivors include his wife: four
sons. L. L. Cox of Denton. H. R.
Cox and L. O. Cox of Dallas and
P. H. Cox of Irving; two daugh-
ters. Mrs. Ola Emory of Dallas
and Mrs. Flora Williams of Fort
Worth.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilmer Walter
*
—-akr,
The Supreme Court's May 17.
1554. decision affected 17 states
and the District of Columbia
which bad histories of separate
schools for whites and Negroes.
The District of Columbia deseg- _______________
regated soon afterward. and the Port Arthur News.
FIRST EFFORT ; The new assignments become
Shoemaker said the survey “is effective Oct.1.. _
the first effort to wrap up devel-
leal storms inteAl
Gulf of Mexico dhd C
The resolution said, "The use of
federal troops against the citizens
of any state without proper re-
quest therefore by the head of
said state is hereby formally con-
damned as-a- deplorable violation
9 the inherent rights of all Ameri-
'VXa-MlW vw. came A eiri, *««.•• Mi.
from Maurice Cardin, Democratic
2 GOP Officials
Quit in Protest
HOUSTON, Tex-. Sept, « u_
Two Texas Republican county
leaders have resigned parts' chair-
manships in protest of ProXident
Eisenhower's use of federal tipops
at Litt le Rock.
IL L Durst resigned as chair-
man of Precinct 388 at nearby
Bellaire, and Herbert Cartwright,
Conroe oil man, resigned as chair-
man of the Montgomery County
Executive Committee.
The rosignatioqs were turned in
yesterday.
State GOP Chairman Thad Hut-
cheson expressed his regrets to-
day over the resignation. The men
acted in line with convictions
"which I do not share" he said.
Linwood Roberson
FLORIST
881 W. Hickory DU24861
‛PHE DENTON RE CORD -CHRONICLE
"THE STORY OF CHIROPRACTIC"
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 46, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 29, 1957, newspaper, September 29, 1957; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1450038/m1/2/: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.