Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, August 24, 1956 Page: 11 of 12
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.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
T
rN.birr-niam.iMj
rett and daughter.
ly. .
■■ Me.
News Briefs
1
Special to the Record-Chronicle
-t
1
11
e
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Sitzes of
1
y
G
$
■ \ '
1-43
823% g 88
•‘7
22
central
trees, near
I
)
Lot- far Sale
L-4
for the special session of the Leg-
islature that convenes Monday.
. Suburban Properiy
AcnES
mately too foot highwa
k
L
freely to come
maneuver
62
First State
Bank
Of Denton
Member F. D. I. C.
his TOP is a hothead, and we
•Washes A Full Load - Or Just A Few Pieces"
Rapid Dry Spin
L
With Float Over
Washing &
Rinsing
Regular Price
$229.95
1
Our Price
88
e
--
•nd your old washer
KING'S
Radio and Electric Co.
A vote for Yarborough is a vote for the people of
Texas.
a
(Paid
I
RIGIDAIR
I
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur F. Chance
were recent guests in the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Chance.
or passing over, most (the ma-
jority) of unsuspected obstacles is
just what a tank is built for. It
may mean any number of things
besides efficiency. And many work-
ers at cluttered up desks are higiy
Most important, Yarborough promises to finance
his program by a small natural gas tax such as
Naw York and Indiana hava, rather than a sales
tax that hurts small consumers.
Ralph Yarborough is a Christian Gentleman,
A long time Sunday School Teacher, one of the
most Aspecteg and ablest lawyers in the South-
west, and he has a deep seated desire to be the
governor of the people. .
arson who
adroit" is
Mr. and Mrs. Don Hall and son.
Dennis, of Lufkin visited relatives
here last. week-end.
• 4
Mrs. F. W. Hayden, is visiting,
her nephew, Brian Witt, and fam-
ily in Baton Rouge, La.
k
Mrs. D. M. Tate and son. Don,
moved to Denton this week
k
k
Garrett. of Illinois were guests in
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Dolph
Burch.
privilege of taking a failing sub-
ject over again.
lion. and at the same time make .The October call is Texas share force is in a "tight situation it is
possible a fairly complete segre- of a national quota of 17,000, all in such a poor position that it can-
.. AM ... • WM— •Aann ie- - ■ MNeTM
. THE DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLE
RESIDENTIAL LOTS
IN SEQVOLA PARK Sub-Diviton
BANK
BY MAH
on tNbdM Drive'
A
Continued From Page 1
Explanations for Puzzle No. 19
are as follows:
EXPLANATIONS
The Rev and Mrs. Harry Gar
One-Day Service on Request
XV Aa.,
K| Mi
BBSS
or further events, are unlikely to
deal you a better hand or improve
it. efficient.
DIAL c-6423
EASY BUDGET TERMS
■ '
e”
Pezgy
The parents of Glenn Moore,
minister of the Central Christian
Church, were here from San An-
tonio last weekend.
Several tiny villages on islands
off the coast of New Foundland are
being deserted as all inhabitants
move to the mainland. Pinchard’s
and Cape Island were abandoned
in 1954.
I
L
Furniture Fer:
BABY?
ANDERSON FURNITURE
incentive to all who hope to ac-
quire such a dog. It would be
absurd to put up a mongrel aa a
prize, especially a good prize.
(Copyright 1956, General Features
Corp.)
disasters the special study of bank-
AUSTIN (—The State Selective ers. Since * bank’s obstacles can.
s.mic. Nena NN.J aoniin.the most important form, be
Service.asked today for 847 men only financial or related troubles.
inOctober, largest draft all since they cannot be "unsuspected "
December. ! 6. FRANK is right. If a smaller
The October call is Texas' share force is in a "tight situation it is
HELD IN HOAX
John Harvey Wiggins, front center, walks with FBI
agents after his arrest in Greenville, S.C., charged,
with using the mails to demand 810,000 from Mr.
and Mrs. Peter Weinberger, of Westburg. Long Island,
whose son Peter was kidnaped a short time ago. (AP
Wirephoto)
IIKE New 2-bedroom FHA houne: i IB
---- ---- " --
Hit opponent has made much to do over the re-
sults of two voting boxes in the first primary. He
does not mention that Daniel carried Duval
‘ county 5 to 1 with George Parr support.
• *
Not once hes enyone ever said Ralph Yarborough
was anything other then a Democrat. Senator
Daniel has voted Republican in the U. S. Senate
41 2/9% of the time.
Yarboroughs program of progress is now common
knowledge.
-=—eaumtemmsdinee
PAGE ELEVEN
Mr. and Mrs, Billy Branum of
Fort Worth visited relatives here
recently. , .
Ne/A,
FOOD LOCKERS NOW AVAILABLE
Buy Your Frozen Food & Meets "RIGHT" From
DENTON FROZEN FOODS
Across Sireet From Post Office
N T
avoidable, and the alert, adroit
person will be able to work his
way out of it.
2. PAW to right. In the sense
of being a hand, a paw is a
clumsy one, and not to be relied
on generally for any careful or
delicate work. A PAT hand, in
cards, or in a figurative sense, is
usually far better than one can
expect and is generally worth
playing as is. for even the draw.
11. SWAIN is right. Girl who is
trying to keep a trim swain is
making a worthwhile effort to hold
on to a fellow who is really quite
a nice beau. Girl who is trying to
keep a trim WAIST is greatly con-
cerned over staying slim, but that
doesn't mean she takes the same
care of her general appearance as
a girl will who feels that a poor
appearance can make her swain
depart.
12. WORTH is right. If a gam-
bler's THROW, cast of the dice, is
honest, it is perfectly easy to esti-
mate. Just add up the spots on '
each cube. It is the honest worth
(the personal integrity or value
he has) that would be hard to
estimate. Gamblers are not the
easiest characters to interpret
correctly
13. HAUNT is right. Snobs rwho
haunt their acquaintances are very '
likely to become 'pests and thus
minimize their chances of being
made welcome into the Society
they long for. Snobs who have the
grace to THANK their acquaintance
es should have a somewhat better
chance of breaking in.
14. KNOW is right. We can nei-
ther say that the things (hobbies,
skills, pleasures) people know or
WORK very well would be their
sources of income. That is, they
would not definitely be making
their money from such things.
Some people would, but if most of
us did 60, it would mean that most
of us have the ideal job. This is
obviously untrue. Many people
have jobs for several reasons: the
amount it brings in; the availabil-
ity of such a job: the necessity
for a job as such. So we must take
this phrase in another sense: peo-
ple know very well what their
sources of income would be. In 1
other words, they know very well
how they make their money, where
it comes from.
15. FAIL is right. Students who•
FALL in their averages may easi-
ly have fallen from excellent av-
erages to very good ones, as out
of the 90s into the 80s. They are
still doing very well. In the other
meaning of fall (to fail complete-
ly). then they have no prospects
left whatever. Since we have said
that they don't stand "too good a
chance," we know that they still
have a chance. So it is fail that I
is right, for students have the
Newt Richardson and Galen
Shipley have returned from a trip
to Arkansas.
’ c..,
__
3- BIDROOM home tile bath. near
Htghway 24 shopping center,
owner Accepting posftion elsewher
and will Mil equity. immediate poa-
session,
THE EWING AGENCY
_______C-2715
■
9
F
cannot pass over every such ob-
stacle. but nobody expects it to do
so. A BANK can surmount many
obstacles, but we can hardly say
they are unsuspected (unimagin-
ed or quite surprising) obstacles.
Every conceivable obstacle in
banking, including runs, robberies,
mergers, etc., is a known factor.
Centuries of banking experience
make all financial possibilities and
ctbyStlehehav."on a* spedior signment plan is now shping up
can't be sure he can control this
action, or even if he tries to do
so.
• 8 CHAMP is right. A champ or
champion could have a fine dis-
regard for disastrous consequenc-
es. as indeed he must each time
he meets a dangerous challenger.
To act like one, to remain a
champ, he must expose his title to
danger.' and a real champ may
do this with a fine display of sang-
i froid. A CHUMP, or blockhead, is
usually unaware of consequences
I11H 66
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Waters and
son, Jimmie, of Dallas visited
here this week. ■
His opponents accusation that Yarborough is
backed by Reuther and the NAACP is an in-
famous lie. Refusing to meet Yarborough In on
open debate clouds all of Daniels slanders.
3. KING is-right. Royalty, used
as a collective noun here, as shown
by the words "Royalty . . . could
have a very peculiar ----
means all the persons connected
by ties with the royal family,
dukes, duchesses, princes, etc."
Because of this collective sense,
we must rule out KINK, or pecul-
iar quirk, for all the royalty would
not have the same kink. On the
same grounds we must rule out
KIND, for they all would not be
peculiar in such kind, for that
would be having the same kink,
also. It must be king who is pe-
culiar, for he alone has the power
to impose a standard of behavior
on the royalty he controls as king.
4. TRAP is right. A person who
has had a successful criminal ca-
reer is one who is done with it.
His PAST, as a past, cannot hurt
him except if it be used by some-
one. as wth threats or blackmail
on grounds of exposure, and this
would be the equivalent of a trap.
A trap must be set and sprung by
someone There is nothing the
IM '.WItU
".‘8 Warama
High School, near bus lines. IdeAl
tor school famuly or retired per-
sons 0-7710.
’SSS 2xqarbomomnplotal
oversizes garage- 800 Cordeil, C.
8044
AfR Conditioned briek. 8-bedrooms,
2 bathe. large paneled den-kitch’
i
nation for the Army, not w ____
But Gov Stanley has waaed a 1 Col. Morris Schwartz, state around and strike the FLANK or
steady campaian Aeainst teNuni draft director, Mid about half of side of a larger force in a better
m * nmen? J S it PrP the boards will be position. Tight means constrained
. PUI> _ ^/-^ jaaked in October for 1.416 men tol°r restricted, unable to move
I take pre-induct ion physical and freely: or else it means desperate
mental examinations for future or critical. In either sense, the
calls He said the boards not re- only hope for the smaller force is
ceiving a quota for these examina- • frank, unequivocal, attack. As
tions in October already had been long as the situation is tight, there
caped, upon to furnish men for is no time for maneuvering into a
examination in September more favorable position, and no
.Local board quotas will be mail- rormFor°is°hight. Player who
enAu& J .2 blows his pot is one who loses his
The October quota calls for men; winning chance by some foolish
who are 22 or older, With the ex-1 move. Because he loses the money:
caption of delinquents or volun- involved, you can be sure that the
leers who may be younger. Sch- next time he has a pot and a sim-
wartz Mid he expected the call ‘ ilar chance at it he would try to
to be filled by volunteers and men be more careful. Player who blows
i without children. * * ....
1. FOG is right. A
is "especially alert an______ _
most unlikely lobe caught In a
BOG or swamp. But fog is un-
o i Loan — Ansel, Thompson, Ft. I permitted assignment of pupils for
WaorthPexa2-*148, 801 - ***** reasans other than race
—— -----------—- Advocates of this plan said they
felt it would meet the Supreme
Court decision outlawing segrega-
■ ■
dee ifeiM-
yon BAU: J-rOSM bouse, corner r _
lot. 110 00 weekly, no down pay-; m
ment. 8508 West Prairie c-2045. I M
Restrieted On Highway 24, East
D B BOYD
legislative session—in his fight
against any racial integration in
_____________ Virginia public schools
PRATT REALTY CO -mmeerad rtLeSEm Draft Call
th.
== F6rt Worth visftod u. vX home oft
Mr. and Mrs. O. 0. Stizes recent-
M agreed 19 to 11 to back the gov- pt Ah ■
AINrer J ersor’s program of no state money H or I Dotoher
mately 100 foot nghwa) Prot- for schools that integrate. I VI VUVWVI
, A.0A-
718,0 38 EroR toke‛ imeghafion: a pipiSet At 847
tom land. Rhome — 146 acres has assignment plan. This would have'
H MO 00. C-MB7. __
-ROOM house, bath with21 acres
has city water. North side of
road on East McKinney C-9400.
Roy lyiey.
OWNER jedvinf town. 2-bedroom
house. 8650.05 equity. Take up
850.00 monthly par menu on FHA
approved loan 1414 Snyder C-8271.
FOR SALE:3-room houne and lot'
2202 Stella Street. Bargain, c-
9004 ___ ____ '
* REDECORATED Rome, walking die-
tence NTSC duplex possibities
Some furniture optional, A good
buy C-M18. _______
FOR SALi by owner: 81eoo revenue
on 2 furnished apartmenta with
6 rooms to live in Redecorated
119 Fry
EXPLANATIONS “
—-g=
• . ,I V, .
Miss Tot Burk of Dallas visited
her brothers. Frank and Orb
Burks, last weekend.
------
=—-==
Pilot Point
C-273_.._______C-2049
Kt*IbTRTtAL lots for tale Near
219 W. Oak Denton
16. PRIZE is right. It is per-
fectly possible that a mongrel with
special training (a performing
dog) can be put up for a good
PRICE. Indeed, mongrels are
noted for cleverness and trainabil-
ity. In the offering of a dog as a
prize, it is consistent with good
sense to offer a fine example of a
popular breed, as this will be an
Ave. E&W. Prairie C42341
I Political Advertisement)
»
until too late. Being less than
1 human, we can’t say a CHIMP
) has any regard for consequences.
9. CASK is right. We cannot
claim that SACK, a dry white wine
, popular in the 16th and 17th cen-
turies, can still hold Its own. For
' one thing, the term is now almobt-
exclusively historical. But if you
prefer to use it as if it were a
, current term, you still cannot say
it can hold its own (compete suc-
, cessfully against) other wines pre-
. valent today. It is perfectly safe
' to My a wine cask can still hold
, its own. for wine is still put in
! casks.
। 10. DECK is better A clean
, deck gives ample evidence of a
H well-run vessel A clean DESK
J,E\\“FftA i-bedroontNear high I
school. Paneled kitchen Attic' I
Fun I
PRATT REALTY CO. j
c-2285____801 N. Locust c-5375 1 1
HUSE andlot in sanger, only I
81,700. See g. A. Nall,"Sr. at Nail I I
pAdtW. Danton _____.
BaICK HOMEBcripture Street. I |!
Call owner. C-4579.
10 homa. 675.00 month in-1 l
come, I block N.T. Ona cheat of I a
carpenter tools. C-2816.
Rier i-bedroom home, excenlent I
condition. 2310 Fowler Drive. ! I
Shown by appointment. Joe W 2
Nichols, -9606 _________ I
Stanley Wins Victory in
Anti-Integration Battle
C man can do about his past, it is
RICHMOND, Va. UR-Gov Thom-1 ognizes integration in principle. | wntbang able., “ sthere is no use
A major fight over the pupil as- 5. TANK is right. Surmounting,
"FMDu
.gje
oLu
wm SI sUANw. Serviee What We Sell"
--------
•11 _____ 6282302
PRATT REALTY CO-- g
S-nSr"“tiME"OrkEREoaze L
A
J
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. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, August 24, 1956, newspaper, August 24, 1956; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1453217/m1/11/?rotate=90: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.