Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 12, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 16, 1956 Page: 3 of 20
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.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Thursday, August 16, Mm *
THE DENTON ,RECO RD.CHRONCLE
PAGE THRKB
JIM DAVIS
ecema, ringworm. insect bites, loot
over 60 years. Ask for new, large, economy
•IM and save money. Get Doan’sPills today 1
r
LEGAL NOTICES
15 a w—kl r
the
Open For Your Convenience Until 8:30 Tonite
•‘MaSVMSCSa.
___ ~ _____J - M-* --
(Sea))
and
publicans had crippled
thu tate for the
in 1951 the average income of
rise of 160 per cent since 1929.
(SeaD
HEAR FRED H. MINOR
S
41
BP
GOVERNOR'S RACE
KDNT, 5:30 P.M., FRIDAY, Aug. 17
(Paid Political Adv. by Friends of Price Daniel)
1
I
r
j
•1:
•XeJo
2
44
P
with Marvelous Magnetic Door
$19995
W
WASTEBASKET:
am
FOR 3 DAYS ONLY!
1
99$
ebeskettefsbimtor
$5.00 DOWN DELIVERS
at low prtee.
L
GOODFEAR
1,
Phone C-3131
+
M
ma,.2
-
f <
B40
700
riTRIT
•Full Width Freezer •Adjustable
Shelves •Adjustable Door Shelves
High-Ups Accused Of Capers
STOP THAT ITCH!
IN JUST 15 MINUTES,
Jim Davis Is
New District
Scout Chief
greater dissemination of informa-
tion of government operations.
income tax exemption. This would
save low income taxpayers about
MO a year in taxes. It criticized
SfZM3to6xand7*o 14
from SI M to $7.98
Enter
Youcanwi )
VSflOOk
PAY AS LITTLE AS
$1.25 WEEK FOR FOUR
a boy can
8 years of
years and
-
ON
77
ce st
t.
Denton Honesty
Honesty in Denton certainly
made an impression on a family
of newcomers Wednesday.
Mrs. B. C. Cheatham and her
daughter were in Wyatt's shopping
when they dropped a $10 bill which
SERVICE STORE
BOB YOUNG, Mgr.
mJ**
pau
BEASELAMOKA"EFF.VEEAASOLPANY
GOODFEAR
AUTO and TRUCK TIRE SALE!
•nd your
•Id refrigerator
Scrubbed faces . ..
shining eyes ...
and ready for kKooL
in their new
TINY.TOWN
DRESSES
Kini-litt,
capacity
retoa fer $175 Ge wverel far
wiiMm. genes. —d
t J
less of sex.
FINANCIAL AND TAX POLICY
—Tvrund an increase of 8200 in
More Tens Are Hauled On
Goodyear Truck Tires Than
On Any Other Kind
Terms as law as
$1.25 par weak
Ease Bladder
Irritations
t complied
conditlons
• in this
LOWEST PRICE EVER ON
HI-MILER RIB
3-T TRUCK TIRE
t"‘“hrat
In Black or White
Sidewalls-
- LION.
REGULAR $299.95
t, 13 tirt
A ' ■ h 1
“X-A."atement
itch or other surface itch. Easy to ,
um day or night Now at
SHRADER DRUG STORE
Denton citizen and former Speaker of the
Texas House of Representatives
Chisholm Trail District of the
Longhorn Council.
Ten Spot Sells
Newcomer Oii~
T.
"DENTON’S
'BIG FAMILY', 10 Cu. Ft. SIZE
■ \ • I
I
-—H—#
■ r
■ ide : .
Headquarters
FREE GIFT WRAP
Get Wonderful Soothing Relief
From That Restless Uncomfomtable Feeling
"CHECK WITH ME FIRST"
FOR BACK YO SCHOOL!
- Shadow check trimmed
. with white collar and
h cuffs — a brass medal-
A lion sparks the neckline.
# Patent bolt. Sub-teen
• sizes 6 to 14, in assorted
" shadow chocks.
.\ *9”
three girls.
Erlena, Alls and Tsnya Were in- r
dignant st first, but later named
the three other youths ss some-
time party companions. The Ka-
banov boys told of drinking bouts
LUES
its South Elm
Dial C-4136
nnn -
and
i SHOP
CHILDREN'S STORE"
gos
.. at
offie an
above writien
«Seab
A
E6g
HIGHLIGHTS- OF
DEM PLATFORM
gt... . .
. 2
—=
cuandvcnvoebi"
SIZE 6.00*16
Similar Savings
an other sizes
tool
Sons, Daughters Of Soviet '
5
8
PLENTY FREE
PARKING
Haw General Electric
REFRIGERATOR
The kids whooped it up in lux-
urious city apartments, Komsomol
Prayda said, while their promi-
nent parents vacationed at plush
country homes. It charged the
girls turned to burglary to keep
the party going.
-id.mxazrahsat
parents of another young man, were influenced by Amerian
Beris-Marlamov feunditheir apart-moviesfand rpresented a survival
m ent. had.been burglarized They. of. prerevolutionary life. However,
called in the cops. Teen-age Boris. no postwar U.S. films have been
spilled the works about the apart- I shown here
ment partying and involved the 1--------------—---
A $3995:
Reg. $59.95
Davis explained that
join the cub scout at
age. the scouts still
explorers at 14 years.
..
I
It not pleased, your 49c back at
any drug store. Try instant - dry-
ing ITCH-ME-NOT tar itch <
Manginat J
KETTI
SUeTEEN
“There won't be any changes
since the only thing I can do is
go after more boys, because Ed
had this section operating right on
down the line," Jim Davis said
Uiis week after replacing Ed Ball
as boy scout executive of
GOODYEARS
150,000
3-T SAFETY SWEEPSTAKES
Write or set1 us for your entry blank now1 Nothing to buy! 575 chances to win!
Ban left the district, which in-
cludes Denton and Wise counties,
to take a similar post in the Yucca
District in Fort Worth.
This is the first "professional"
scouting assignment for the 25-
year-old Davis who recently re-
ceived his separation from the Air
Force.
Originally from Lansing, Mich.,
Davis was a star scout, patrol
leader. junior assistant scout mas-
ter and assistant scoutmaster of
Troop IB in his hometown
Davis explained that he is proud-
er that he was scoutmaster for
the troop at the Michigah School
for the Blind than he is of his
other accomplishments.
In August, 1952. the new local
executive was presented with the
scooter award, known as the scout-
master's eagle
Holder of the ordeal honor,
brotherhood and vigil honor in the
Order of the Arrow, Davis served
for two years as scoutmaster of
Troop 50 in Harlingen while a first
lieutenant and instructor at Harlin-
gen Air Force Base.
Davis, who holds a BA degree
from Michigan State University in
elementary education, was also a
neighborhood commissioner in Har-
lingen and received explorer wood-
badge training at Philmont, N.M.,
and national training for profes-
sional leaders
Davis said the Chisholm Trail
District curently have 36 scout
troops, 25 cub pecks and IB ex-
plorer units which have a com-
bined membership of 1350 boys
"But there sre 4,300 boys of
scouting age in the two counties
at the present time and we are
going after them," the new execu-
tive said
tukhov is minister of the heavy
engineering industry. Both are
members of the Soviet Commu-
nist Party Central Committee.
• Komsomol Pravda gave this
#dteea
Crtdats yi^as. , Ka, M*
8 fEmmf#"
mzezsumeee
"3-""
at Auiti*. ___
abov written
Our new collechon of
fomows Thy Town lash tone
has everything to delight the
heortofotitti miss Forty plaids,
velvet -suspendered dresses with
crisp white blouses, adorable
empire styles - and many others
- in the smartest new fabrics and
colors. A root treat ini selecting
her doughter’s new school dresses .
awaits the discriminating mother.
In the meantime, Mrs. Oma
Roark, 1618 Scripture. found the
bill and tried to turn it in to store
manager Herman Moore but he
told her to take the bill on home
and if the owner asked for it he
would have whoever lost it contact
her.
Mrs. Cheatham, who lives at 826
Anna, contacted Moore then Mrs.
Roark and reclaimed-the straying
bill.
"She wouldn’t even take a re-
ward," Mrs. Cheatham said, "and
that certainly does make a good
impression on nwcomers like us."
The Cheathams formerly resided
in Pilot Point.
platform as adopted by its nation-
al convention early today;
CIVIL RIGHTS-Sidestepped en-
dorsement of the controversial
Supreme Court decision outlawing
racial segregation in public
schools, but pledged the party to
advance individual rights and lib-
erties of all Americans. It de-
Glared the party recognized deci-
sions of the court to be a part of
the law of the land, but declined
to pledge itself, in so many words,
to carry out those, decisions.
FOREIGN POLICY - Charged
that American ties with friendly
nations have been weakened by
Eisenhower administration poli-
cies of what it called "bulster and
bluff" without "dynamic action."
It claimed also that these policies
are increasing the rish of war in
the Middle East.
BOLD LEADERSHIP
The plank promised "bold” lead
ership to strengthen non-Commu-
nist countries against expansionist
moves of Russia.
It called for supplying Israel
with defensive weapons to offset
what it called an arms imbalance
in the Middle East caused by
Communist munitions supplied to
Egypt. And it declared support for
the principle of free access to the
Suez Canal under suitable interna-
tional control of the waterway.
DOMESTIC POLICY - Charged
that the Eisenhower administra-
tion is stunting economic progress
and failing to provide prosperity
for farmers, small business men,
low income workers, old people on
small pensions and inadequate
savings, and young persons seek-
ing an education. It asserted also
that the administration is using
public revenue to "benefit the
few " it promised to “release the
springs of abundance" to help all
AGRICULTURE - Condemned
Republican “failure" to halt de-
cline in farm income. and prom-
ised Democratic program to re-
store “full 100 per cent parity"
which it said agriculture received
H. Texas. July M
‘ Concern: This IS
U . Your Bock-To School
wildlife and fishery resources. .
ATOMIC ENERGY—claimed U. "
S is lagging in nuclear energy
field because of alleged failure of
Republicans to use power of the
government to speed development.
FREE ENTERPRISE—Charged
that the present administration
has allowed big business to dom-
inate the economy to the detri-
ment of small enterprises. It
pledged aid to the latter in form
of more credit, tax relief and more
government contracts.
GOVERNMENT OPERATIONS
—Promised extension of the civil,
service merit system, incressed
efficiency in the postal service—
which the platform said the Re-
publican flexible price supports
with 90 per cent price props on
basic crops. It also would use gov-
ernment payments, purchase of
surpluses, production controls and
other measures to achieve the
goal. And it would develop support
measures for hogs, cattle, poultry
and other perishable commodities
not now under price guarantees.
Surpluses would be channeled to
low - income groups at home
through food stamp plan and to I
needy abroad through relief agen-
cies.
LABOR—Pledged repeal of what
it denounced as “the vicious anti-
union “Taft - Hartley Labor-Man
agement Act, and enactment of
new legislation based on principles
of labor laws enacted under Presi-
dent Franklin D. Roosevelt. It
called for an increase of the
minimum wage rate from the
present 81 an hour to $1.25, and
fast pain-relteving action on naguing bpek-
ache, headaches, muscular aches and pains.
y- a- wonderfully mild diuretic netion thru
of : the kidneys, tending to increase the output
ot 1 of ths 15 miles of kidney tubes. Bo. get the
name happy relief millions have enjoyed for
3. EaTOXnSAVNPEBSa
Eugene and Mikhail Kabanov,
sons of “Minister Kabanov”; Ser-
gei Petukhov, son of “a minister";
Erlena Kuznetsova, daughter of a
Red,army major general. Alla
Maximova, stepdaughter of a se-
cret police lieutenant colonel, and
i
DISCUSS THE ISSUES IN THE
account:
The "Bacchanalian orgies”
The youths were identified as I were uncovered when the wealthy
Here’s seating comfon for thPSum-
mer montha chead. Porous, open:
weave cover on fexible coiled
taring wire keepr •* eirculeting-
Xr«h fibue.Jeatherettetim.
newspaper accused sons of two — —
Soviet Cabinet ministers of drunk- Tanya Andreyevs, daughter of an
en escapades with daughters of air force colonel.
high army, air force and secret' Ivan G. Kabanov is minister of
police officers. । foreign trade Konstantin D. Pe-
Sonatruetion
* A,
th* present WW-a-year personal went unnoticed until time to pay
— “ for the groceries.
CHICAGO ( — Here are high- eua pay for equal work, regard-
lights of the Democratic party’s *
Now Thru Saturday
GM This Npw G-E
Roll-Around Cleaner
- Mera
Komsomol Pravda didn't dis-
close the outcome of the affair,
but L. asserted the youngsters
-2
Aea Moldsup tome
» erdinery medelt Se
Eisenhower administration in-
creases in Interest payments on
government borrowings, contend-
ing this policy benefits the few at
expense of taxpayers in general.
It promised to reduce the rates.
GENERAL WELFARE -
Pledged the party to expand and
improve Social Security and other
social welfare programs which it
claimed the Democrats fathered.
It charged that the GOP has op-
posed proposals to strengthen
these programs. Besides greater
aid for medical education and re-
search. the plank promised ex-
panded public housing programs,
and financial aid to schools.
NATURAL RESOURCES
NATURAL RESOURCES-
Claimed GOP administration has
not safeguarded natural sources,
and pledged doubling of govern-
ment efforts to develop and con-
serve hydroelectric power pro
jects, forests, grazing .land, min-
eral resources, and recreational,
-1137:
madypupaermes-amk
j
Ceuinset Fauzin.. ComenyNe.D
moara O. Insurance ( ommassionrrs OT lire
""TWisCrgFE,sURAXCE
MINEAFOLISMINNESOTA
han accorgine to ayorn statement complied
with the laws ot Tegas u condiions pre-
cedeqt to its doina businese la this sthte.
and I have isyed to mM company a Cer-
cate ft uthoft from thu otne en-
thing It to de buaines in thi tat tor the
^vS-a^ur^ my -.nt
'•Keo at Astin, fexat, the date Slit
ebove written
it restlesa nighta, with naguing backache,
headache or museular aches and pains due
to over-exertion, atrain or emotional upset,
are addinu to your misery — don't wait -
try Doan' Pilla,
Doan’s Pills have three outstanding ad-
vantages- act in three ways for your apeedy
. return to comfort. 1-They have an easins
soothing offset on bladder irritations. 2-A
GOODYEASGE
-E'R ES.
9
L_______________. ' .' ■
•tv 1 '
in the country and an auto jaunt From That Restleas Uncomiontable Feelint
2"-,
apartment loot. feel Festlena, tenme, and uneomfortable Aad
MOSCOW (Ji—Another vivid ac-
count of flaming Soviet youth at
high levels has been unfolded in
the Communist youth newspaper
Komsomol Pravds.
Emphstifing such, terms gg
"orgies" and “Bacchanalia." the
under Democratic administra-
t ong l I-- -
PRICE PROPS physicians. before office end pro-
This rrrN oia rOlinc, Ra fessional expenses, was $22,298, a
This program would replace Ke- rise nf 1en ner cont sinc. 1029
Other sizes of Hi-Miler Rib Low Priced, tool
Levant price ever for exclueve Good roar 3-r Cord Truck Tires! The
famous Hi-Miler Rib gives you a big. Bat, busby tread for bettor trae-,
eom . . . 3-T Rayon Cord for sutra st rue (th. Oct she Hi-Miler Rib
today sad be (ore of truck tire eatiefeetrion aS a new low prist!
siu
. Air.co»loJ for $s
graattr effort X
| $10.00 DOWN | | $1.50 A WEIK
3-T SUPERCUSHION
L Net juur “another sals” on no ordinary tire; it's • 3-T SALE
I fearuring famous Good v ss r Tires at rock bottom priest! Built
1 with 3-T Card that's Triple-Tempered ia Goodyear'* excluvive
f process involving Tension, Temperature sad Time for •xtra
V irrength, durability aad safety! POPULAR 6.70*13
-» SzE FOR ONLY
..... ■ ... . A, ... ' ,
■Aw
SEAT
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 12, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 16, 1956, newspaper, August 16, 1956; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1453210/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed June 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.