Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 304, Ed. 1 Monday, July 23, 1956 Page: 3 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.
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the DENTON RECORDCHRONICLE
To Be onstructed
cee
Daniel Telecast Tonight
• 7".
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3
Steel Talks To
.♦“SW
Resume Tuesday
No
No
Red
Red
Tape
Tape
DENTON FEDERAL
SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION
210 AUSTIN
DIAL C-7885
Over 22 Years of Service to Our Community
Pair Witness
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son.
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a motorcycle policeman to the
g,' ,
at the north tip of Chicago’s Lin-
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K
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95
BIG 11 CU. FT.
SPECIAL PRICE
region of the appendix.
-
OF ONLY . .
ration Program to
Soil
o
And your old refrigerator
A
RASY BUDGET TERMS
Denton, Texas
101 Avenue “A"
Phone: C-4482
—
< hi
1.....
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n
Another Lady Mode Hoppy
With A FRIGIDAIRE
RIGIDAIR
5 Scholarships
Are Announced
Radford Off On
Far East Tour
WORLD FAMOUS
Accounting and
Record Control
Aid Appeals
Answered In
rushed out of their North Side
apartment building and directed
Mr. and Mrs. Richey Adami have
returned home after a vacation in
New Orleans.
,%)
2
JACK HODGES
Back Of Postoffice
Mrs. L. C. Frazier attended the
Women’s Society of Christian Serv-
ice School of Missions ia Dallas.
Bud Tidwell visited Ms daugh-
ter. Mrs Oma Green at Lake Jack-
JIM HARDIN
Phone C-6224
SELF DEFROSTING - All
Porcelain Compartments
REMOVABLE Rust-Proof
Aluminum Shelves
YOUR
OWN HOME
handling other
tions have been
There are only scant traces of
water vapor in the atmosphere of
mars.
pay their executives more. the re-
port said, the difference can come
out of profits.
The subcommittee reported sal
aries and bonuses running as higb
as a $264,000 total.
But it added that on the whole
the industry's profits are not ex-
cessive.
News From
Justin Area
By MM. DONALD DEUSSEN
Record-Chronicle Cerrespondent
McDonald also said wages can
be increased without prices being
raised. He declared
“Indeed. any inflationary ten-
dencies that may exist in our econ-
omy stem not from wage and sal-
ary increases, which are vitally
needed, but from pricing policies
of industry generally and. particu-.
larly, the steel industry."
ELECT
A. M. AIKIN, JR.
Lieutenant Governor
(Paid Political Ad*
FULL-W4DTH Super
Freezer Chest
METER-MISER &
5- Year Warranty
2a
MANILA I - Adm. Arthur W.
Radford, chairman of the U. S.
Joint Chiefs of Staff, arrived today
for a three-day visit to the Philip-
pines on the first leg of a Far
East tour.
Al " 11 ■ X
•rvoc-
-ie,
coin Park
VICTIM UNIDENTIFIED
The victim was not identified
immediately. Police said she was
about 35. ,
The killer escaped before the
Besleys and the policeman reached
the acene. He has not been found.
Besley told this story of the
slaying:
“I was watching the sail boats
on the lake through my opera
glasses about 4 p.m. when I no-
ticed a woman sitting alone in an
Jerry Wilson and Johnnie Rosser Delivering A Factory Special FRIGIDAIRE
And Another Satisfied Customer Is About To Bo Mode . . .
FORT WORTH, um - American
Airlines soon will start construc-
tion of the first school in the
United States to be devoted entire-
ly to the training of stewardesses,
O. M. Mosier. vice president, said
Saturday
The school war Amon Carter
Field will be equipped to train
1,000 a year Scheduled for con-
pletioh in' August, 1957, it will cost •
one million dollars.
Wallhide
AMERICAN TYPEWRITER
& OFFICE SUPPLY
Pittsburgh s newest paint sensation
resists stains and dirt spot* can be
washed of easily. Economical, it out-
lasts any ordinary paint!
Jack Hodges Paint Store
• "Service Is Our Most Important Product"
nod to speak at Austin Monday
night in a rally. He said he would
give away a truck load of water-
melons.
J. Evetts Haley at Misson Mid
"the gun-toting Duke of Duval,
George Parr, favors Sen. Price
Daniel." Haley asserted Parr Mid
that Daniel had done "him some
favors. “What are those favors?"
Haley asked.
Daniel's brother, Bill, jumped up
and asked: “Do you want me to
answer you now?"
He was shouted down by the
audience who Mid be already had
spoken.
Haley said he didn't know why
Daniel wanted to come back "from
the highest office the people of
Texas could bestow on one man
to run for governor."
Daniel said at Fort Worth he
would outline his plans for Texas
on his TV appearance. He said h
would discuss his stand that Tex-
as must enact a program to help
Mve the family size farms and
ranches from the "twin disasters
of drought and mortgage fore-
closures.'’
"The federal government has
loans and feed programs which
the Secretary of Agriculture should
ase with great speed," Daniel said
“But it is now evident that our
state should also bear its part in
the load."
J. J. Holmes Mid he had receiv-
ed information telling him who
was involved in the Bardy car-
bombing of a veterans’ land scand-
al witness. Holmes said he would
make public the information with-
in 43 hours.
“It's so fantastic a lot of people
won't believe it,” be Mid. “We've
definitely got the man. We know
who it is. We have depositions.”
Brady attorney Sam McCollum
III. -a key witness in the veter-
ans' land scandals investigations,
was seriously injured last month
when his car blew up.
•e*.2
.4,
imaginary situa-
tried out.
Mi
a .
■
SPuTM "aededd:urzer
“We hope he isn't loft out. IC*
not so bad after it’s over.”
be financed by water user tax
instead of advalorum tax.
He again will support Lobby Con-
trol Bill and Law to prohibit
members of the Legislature
from taking fees from any
source.
RUBBERIZE
SATIN ANKH WALI FAINT
Hundreds of today’s meet wanted
hues to cheese from.
A
PITTSBURGH —The United
Steelworker* have accepted an
Industry proposal to resume con-
tract talk* in New York Tuesday
in an effort to end the 23-day-old
steel strike.
The talks were arranged last
night in a brief telephone call from
the industry's top negotiator to
USW President David J. McDon-
ald.
Only a few hours earlier Mc-
Donald had issued a statement
bitterly critical of the industry's
pricing policy. He Mid for each 31
increase in labor cost since 1945
exorbitant price increases have
yielded Mil in additional reve-
nue ”
There was no immediate reply
from the industry.
One of McDonald's close asso-
ciates Mid the union chief was
caught by surprise when John A.
Government Contract System
Assailed By Probe Chairman
SATURDAY IS VOTING DAY
Fess Parker Set To E
0290/7 • 29)9
industry is back at work by con _ _____,__,_____________
vention time "the Republicans will i scene The ares of the slaying is
be able to point with pride at a- "----- " ------- *
record of no interference by gov-
ernment in the internar affairs of
management and labor."
McDonald, in his statement at-
tacking the pricing policy of the
"Thensonly
5
I
Home Loans for Buying or Building
Your Financial Problems Are Solved a.
Stephens, vice president of U.S.
Steel Corp., called and suggested
negotiations resume. When the
latest series of negotiations ended
Saturday, both sides indicated they
would wsit for the government to
make the next step
PREMURE DENTED
Federal mediator Joseph F. Fin-
negan. who returned to Washing-
ton. emphasized the government
had not pfessured the industry or
the union to get together again.
There was no public indication
that the industry had officially
changed its proposal. That called
for a 52-month contract which, the
industry Mid, would provide a
package wage boost giving the
850,000 strikers 17 2-3 cents an
hour in the first year. The union
estimated the offer at 14 cents an
hour for its men, who had aver-
aged $2.46 hourly.
The decision to resume peace
talks raised the question here that
the industry might now be prepar-
ing to present a formal revision
of its contract proposal in the
discussions here last week the best
information was that no concrete
proposal had been made by either
side but there wore discussions on
a three-year contract. The union
reportedly was cool to the idea.
As the strike went into its fourth
week and more than 100,000 in
allied industries were furloughed
— Steel magazine Mid the ’ be*'
will be on” to end the walkout
soon It doctored that unless the
strike is settled before the Demo-
cratic National Convention, which
starts Aug. 13. "the Democrats
would have some good talking
points about industry and labor
suffering during a Republican ad-
ministration."
GOP HOPES
But. the magazine said. if the
To top It off, the Loveless' baby
sitter, Roberta Norman, 13, had
her appendix removed list night.
"The only one left," moaned
Forrsewnen onumrs-te, me 22222tnew
5 In Family
Lose Appendix
NORTHRIDGE, Calif. u — At-
tendant* at Northridge Hospital
now refer to appendicitis as
“Loveless disease"’and police of-
ficer James Loveless is glad he
lives only three blocks from the
hospital.
It all started July 1. One of hit
six daughters, Kenna Sue. 10 was
rushed to the hospital and operat-
ed on for appendicitis.
Then came July 11. Carol Jean.
5. had the same pains and the
Mine emergency operation. AU
went well until tost Friday when
Judy, 11, and Esther, 9. were tak-
en to the hospital. Two more ap-
pendectomies.
Saturday night Carol Mignon,
6%, wm next on the operating ta-
ble. Same trouble.
Loveless, 14, went home to bed.
But he wm back at 3 a.m. Sun-
day with pains of his own in the
The Texas Senate normally is
composed of four-fifths Law-
yers and only one-fifth busi-
ness men, farmer* and ranch-
er*. Bradshaw to not a law-
‘t trmava J—«.
T’ b BMsines8 Maa,
saturday, July 28th
(Pald Pelitical Adv)
■. . ■
Mr and Mra. Roy Curry of
Louisiana are guests of Mr. and
Mm Carl Smith
By THE ASSOCIATED PREM
The movies’ Davy Crockett join-
ed two hillbilly bands and a fire
truck in the Texas governor’s race
ballyhoo Monday. Saturday is
voting day.
Feu Parker, the screen Crock-
ett. wm in Fort Worth to emcee
Sen. Price Daniel's state-wide
telecast originating from WBAP-
TV Monday at 9:30 p.m.
W. Lee O’Daniel, who travels
with a string band and fire truck,
Mid Sunday night it would be up
to the Legislature to find the
Alert Windup
EMERGENCY PRESS HEAD-
QUARTERS, Operation Alert O—
The U.S. “government in hiding”
braced itself for a flood of appeals
from the state today—for food, for
money, for the thousand and one
things that would be needed if
atomic bombs should start falling.
Happily, these calls for help are
not real. They're just a practice
run-through, in the fourth day of
Operation Alert, of what the gov-
ernment might expect at this
stage of the game had last Fri-
day's simulated strike, at 73 U.S.
cities been real.
Operation Alert, the biggest civil
defense exercise ever held on this
continent, winds up Wednesday
but this emergency press center
operating with wartimelike se-
crecy more than 100 miles from
Washington break* comp today.
Many of the 10,000 key govern-
ment worker* who took refuge Fri-
day at 44 relocation sites outside
Washington are moving back to
the capital.
Since Friday the aides have
been going through the motions
necessary to keep the nation mov-
ing in case there were a real nu-
clear attack.
Saturday brought a mock tryout
of a sweeping freeze of prices,
wages and rents. Means of gov-
erning devastated areas and of
---I -ST ".'"IT’S
*
Reds Freeing
Jap Official
HONG KONG w — Communist
China says it is freeing Rokuze
Takebe, Japan's top civil official
in the former puppet state off
Manchukuo. 1
Takebe has been in-jail 11 years.
The announcement by Peiping
radio that the 63-year-old Japanese
would be sent home came just two
davs after a Communist military
court convicted him of a long list
of crimes and sentened him to
nine more years imprisonment.
The broadcast Mid the sentence
was suspended because Takebe is
in ill health
Takebe’s release was taken here
as a sign Red China is trying to
win favor with Japan.
pAGE-TnEE
—- - —
Stewardess School
money for his program for veter-
an’s bonuses and higher pensions.
"The money for my program has
to come from taxation,” O’Daniel
said. “I never did favor a Mies
tax and would veto one.”
O'Daniel asserted what he call-
ed the "communistic newspapers"
of Texas “have tried to conceal
the fact that the little junior sen-
ator, who now wants to be gover-
nor. wm involved in th* veterans'
land scandal."
Ralph Yarborough. who tours
with the other band, said he plan-
He is opposed to all unnecessary____________________
regulatory or restrictive legis- Doctors had not decided last
totion by special interest groups.
He is for statewide Water and
A NORMAL BOY
Mike Sibole, 4, who sacrificed sight for life, starts
playing immediately after returning to his home in
Orlando, Fla., from the hospital where his left eye
was removed because of cancerous growth. His father,
the Rev. James W. Sibole, who says Mike is “a normal
boy . . . except for his vision," looks on. (AP Wire-
photo).
$ industry. Mid he was ' sending
• copies to members of Congress
V and the Cabinet, among others in
Mn the statement, he said:
" "Material* costs since 1947 have
g0 risen about 28 per cent but steel
I price* in the same period have ris-
B en 78.2 per cent—an excess of price
06 increases over cost increases —
bboth labor and material together
■ — of nearly three to one.”
area generally unfrequented by
sun bathers
"My curiosity was aroused be-
cause of. this and I watched her
steadily for a few moments. Then
I noticed a man, bare-chested and
carrying a white shirt over his
arm. He apparently was sneaking
up on her through a dense under-
growth in the area.
DRAGGED OFF ROCK
“I called my wife and she
looked. We both decided it must
be a game of some sort.
Even when the guy threw his
shirt over her head and dragged
her off a rock into a clump of
bushes. I wasn't astonished. I still
believed this couple was playing
a game of hide and seek.
“But when the man started hit-
ting her, driving his arm into her
again and again, we knew it
wasn’t play and we rushed out of
our apartment to locate a police-
man.
“We didn't know the procedure
for telephone police and we
knew a motorcycle policeman was
patrolling the area. We found him
immediately and directed him to
the scene "
WASHINGTON UN — The chair-
man of a House investigating sub-
committee said today he “never
heard of a sloppier arrangement"
than the government's procedure
for renegotiating contracts.
Rep. Hebert (D-La) Mid that
after studying financial informa-
tion submitted by 12 major air-
craft manufacturers he cannot
understand how the renegotiation
board cleared some and assessed
others for allegedly excessive
moneymaking from the govern-l
ment in 1952.
Government contracts not let by
competitive bidding are subject to
review by the board. Until it has
taken its second look, th* com-
panies' profits are not final.
The House Armed Services sub-
committee. which has been study-
ing airplane makers' profits, made
its report last night. Hebert fol-
lowed that up today with a state-
ment commenting on th* report.
Hebert Mid companies which
had contracted with th* Air Force
were holding more than 200 million
dollars for possible refunds and
Navy contractors were holding
more than 150 million.
The subcommittee in its report
said it is "inexcusable to allow
statutory renegotiation to be four
year* behind." It made an “ur-
gent recommendation" that Con-
grew review the laws and require
"more specific rules or guid-
ance."
The Defense Department, it said,
should set a "reasonably conser-
vative” level for executive com-
pensation and not permit salaries
and bonuses above these levels to
be charged as costs against eon-
tracts. If the companies want to
Five more students have been
awarded scholarships of $100 each
for study at NTSC ia the 1956-57
school year. Vice President A. M
Sampley has announced
The grants came from the Will
C. Hogg Memorial Loan and Scho-
larship Fund and the McAtee Trust
Fund Fourteen students had pre-
viously been given similar awards
for next year.
The latest scholarship winners:
Paul Charles Palmer, Vernon; Wil-
liam Stephen Hale. Clarskville; Ann
Adelaide Anderson. LaMarque;
Robert Ralph Briddick and Pa-
tricia Ra* Hughe*, both of Dallas.
Fatal Beating
CHICAGO « - A scientist and
his wife, whose diversion is scan-
ning Lake Michigan with binocu-
lars. told police they watched hor-
rified from their 15th-floor apart-
ment as a brawny, bare-chested
man beat a woman sun bather to
death Sunday
The woman's body was found
minutes after Arthur Kirk Besley.
33, and his wife Adrian, 47.
“2MPhs...:
s 1
• i
A
——-e- “
,________ T Francine, She * only
three My wife. Sue, had her ap-
pendix out three years ago.”
othu
"-39
Report* of these snd other make
•believe actions have been given
out, along with some real-life gov-
ernment announcements, at this
test information center.
Also, there has been some infor
mat ion (and, most newsmen would
agree, not a little double - talk)
about the readiness of the Federal
Civil Defense Administration and
the country in general to cope
with an atomic attack.
The situation could fairly be de-
scribed this way: quite a lot has
been done. Vastly more would
have to be done. Hutus Civil De-
fense Administrator Val Peterson
put it, nobody in the world really
is capable of dealing with a hydro-
gen bomb.
Summing it up. Operation Alert
1956 seems in the eyes of the peo-
ple running it, at least, to have
been more effective than last
year'a operation. More people took
part, more knew what they were
doing, communications were bet-
ter. foulups were fewer, more
may have been learned
--
. •
2.1,3
H9 3
Furniture Far:
BABY?
ANDERSON FURNITURE
219 W. Oak Denton
11 ........ 1
ELECT FLOYD
BRADSHAW
YOUR DEMOCRATIC
STATE SENATOR
Floyd Bradshaw, a candidate for
State Senator in District 22. is
a 47-year-old Veteran of World
War II who has proved by his
four terms in th* Texas House
df Representatives that he is
• interested in th* type of laws
that give th* average person
what he ia entitled to. Brad-
shaw is a businessman and for-
mer teacher, married, wife,
with four children He Iras lived
on a farm all his life and know*
the needs of farm and rural
people.
Bradshaw is th* author of two
Insurance Reform Law* in 1953
and five in 1955.
He to the author of the law giving
TexM Service Men the right to
vote.
He to the author of laws repeal-
ing several hundred tow* that
hampered operation of county
government.
He is opposed to Federal interfer-
ence in business, schools, and
local Affairs.
He is opposed to mixing races in
any form or fashion.
He to opposed to General Sales
’ Tax, State Incom* Tax and any
further Tax on Homes and Land.
Far some jabs to your
office, the Remington
Rand Aecounting Ma-
chine make* the biggest
saving. Far ' others,
Kardex Visible euts
umsi deeply into clerical
costs. Came aad see
them both today.
KING S RADIO & ELECTRIC
•WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL
WEST SIDE SQUARE i , D
SIGNS
TRUCK LETTERINC
ED BRECKENRIDGE
815 N. Lccust C-6297
at
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 304, Ed. 1 Monday, July 23, 1956, newspaper, July 23, 1956; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1453189/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.