Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 60, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 11, 1956 Page: 4 of 20
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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1956
THE DENTON RECORDAJHRONICLE :::
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Her Memoirs
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(3)
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(4)
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ELECTORAL COLLEGE SCRUB TEAM
HARK TO HARVEY
"About the only sign of rain we
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THE WORLD TODAY
PUBLIC ENEMY
By Bud Blake
BUSINESS
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Letters To The Editor
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Denton Record.Chronicle
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Syndicate, Ine., World rights
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Sister Of
Hitler Writes
Our Situation In Korea
Is Near Desperate Stage
ROUND
ABOUT
Political Campaign Dips
To ‘You’re Another’ Level
saw on a trip to California
around Brownfield. Texas,"
was
said
Naval Forces in the Pacific, dares
to'interrupt a home front politit
cal campaign with the charge that
our position is insecure in Korea,
our sons are in danger, and our
military men "are not allowed”
to do anything about it.
It took a courage born of des-
peration for a man like that to
5
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Entered m eecond clasa man matter at the postotnco at Denton. Texas
January U. 1021, according to Act of Congresa, March 8. 1872.
HAL BOYLE SAYS
' Want To Get Rich Quickly?
aum 4, iekpe mA |> । iiSW as Lguesvpn-dmMspdla huea-m-ew —mvem --e-ee-m < Mlee •e • wa-
Just Remember Old Hairpin
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UH-I-AM- JUST WANT MX 10 '
KNOW YOU DON'T HAVE ID HANDLE
• .HIM WITH KID GLOVES: LeT ME
Bo IKNOW IF HE GVES You AN/ e
■ MOSS TSOUa.fi. MAYBE .HE J
y HEEDS MORE HOMEWORK .
By JAMES MARLOW
Associated Press News Analyst
WASHINGTON (fl — The presi-
dential campaign has descended
from the cloud where it started
and now — at the halfway mark—
the Republicans ran Congress —
....." a federal
-
R5N
225
-
while the Democrats reJected his
particular aid plan, they did offer
one of their own which the Re-
publicans helped kill. - -J
He hath led me, and brought me
into darkness, but not into light -
Lamentations 3-2.
We cannot conquer fate and ne-
cessity, yet we can yield to them
in such a manner as to be greater
than if we could. — Landor..
6%09
5)
1)
."TAAK
"INS'
‘ THAT LEAK IN YOOR ROOF?
DON'T YA WORRY ABOUT IT
LTTLE LADY! I TOLD YA LAST
MONTH I'D TAKE CARE OF IT.
AND I HAVEN'T FORGOTTEN
YA! SOME OTHR 30BSCAME
{OP SINCE AND.,. >
NEW YORK (n—The quickest
way to wealth is to improve some
simple object millions of people
buy or use every day.
Example: The man who first
thought of putting a crinkle in the
old-fashioned wire hairpin - so
it would stay in better — made
a million dollars.
"When you think of the hun-
dreds of. millions of human be-
ings who lived and died trying to
have an original idea, it seems
odd that none thought of improv-
ing the ordinary comb. isn’t it?”
"But no one really had a new
idea in combs for at least 6,000
years.”
No one, that is, until Cosby bent
his brow to the task.
Cosby is managing director of
Kent, Inc., a firm whose fine
-
L
____. NOTIC TO PUBLIC:
Any enrsosous reflection apon the character, repuration or standing of
any flm. individual or corporation will be gladly corrected upon being
celled 1 the publishers’ attention
The pubUahers are not responsible tot copy nmtHtypographicnl
errors or any unintentional error* that occur other than to correct in
MBS Mm after it is brougnt to their attention. AU advertUing orders
are qocepted on thia bais only.
MEMBEN or THB ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associated Preu M enuuea exclumvely to the use for publication of
all e eoni newa printed in this newspaper. M wel as al AP news dU.
TOWN
By B. J. (Boh) EDWARDS
go by without offering 1
aid program. Nor did he
,$
Alameda, Calif., Times Star: “The recent successes
of American popular musicians who have toured Eur-
ope indicate that when our travelers properly typify
. American life and their fellow citizens, they are under-
stood and welcomed."
-
lands and no rain."
Jones was at a dinner party.
He was shy and could never sum-
mon up enough courage to speak
because of his inability to say
something neat All the evening
he had been trying to think of
something nice to say when his
chance came.
"What a small .appetite you
have, Mr. Jones,” said his charm-
ing hostess with a smile.
"To sit next to you,” he replied
gallantly, "would reuse any man
to-lose his appetite,"-Sovereign
Jets,
A grest msny of the dove hunt-
ers have stopped hunting as they
say the game has become so
scarce that the sport isn't worth-
while. Yet, some of the hunters
say they have had no trouble in
getting' the limit. The season is
about over, as the isst day falls
on October 17th. at sundown.
ave Your Life
"I had some polecat trouble at
my home fOr a while.” said L. H.
Barnett "I didn’t know what to do
to get rid of the pests, but I call
ed in Virgil Adams, the poison
man who has rid this county of
thousands of rats and termites.
He had them as dead cats in just
a short time and then I had to
pay my boy to go under the house
and bring 'em out. So the polecat
nuisance is over for us, and I
hope stays so.”
Park City, Utah, Record: “There is no cut and dried
formula for a country newspaper . . We know papers
that seldom print pictures on Page One. And we
know papers that have almost as much art on Page
One as they have copy. . . . Some papers carry over
— stories on Page One. Others never do. Some papers
run hundreds of little items reporting that ‘Minnie
Gooch went across the road for Sunday dinner.' Others
read like small editions of the New York Times. . . .
If you are looking for variety you’ll find it in the
nation’s press.”
per cent, in eight years.
Other industries in which annual
pay tops 95,000 are: motor vehi-
clea and equipment, primary met-
als, and transportation equipment.
Those topping 94,000 include:
chemicals, paper, rubber, electri-
cal equipment,'machinery, stone,
clay & glass, fabricated equip-
ment, instruments, printing &
publishing.
If you've been suspecting the
blue collar worker was doing bet-
ter these days, the averages (re-
membering that top pay is much
higher' should back you up.
WASHINGTON mi-Secretary of
the Interior Seaton has announced
agreement with four utilities for
a pool-type operation of the power
system of the Rio Grande recla-
mation project in New Mexico.
“Seaton said the agreement with
the utilities, which serve parts of
Texas as well as New Mexico.
"Will make more efficient use of
power resources and provide tan-
proved service in the area.”
He said the 25-year pact cul-
minates nearly three years of
Reclamation Bureau negotiation
with the Community Public Serv-
ice Co., the Plains Electric Gen*
eration & Transmission Coopera-
tive. the Public Service Company
of New Mexico, and the El Paso
Electric Co. '
El Paso has not yet signed the
pooling contract, Seaton said, but
has agreed to its provisions.
Signs of progress! The east and
west steps of the court house are
getting a treatment of concrete.
The old rock steps, which have
been to use since 1896 had become
dangerous to people using them,
and, in fact, several people have
sustained bruises to falling on
them.
•00
Jack Rainey may not be going
after the doves, but he’s been
after the squirrels. On one recent
trip, he managed to bring in six
1956-crop squirrels. Some of the
pecan-growers hope that he takes
to hunting in their section, as they
say the squirrels are getting a big
part of the nuts.
"We couldn’t realise that Tax-
es was so dry until we came back
from a trip to Washington, D.C.”
said Mrs. J. L. Pope, who, with
Mr. Pope spent their vacation on
an automobile trip east. “We had
seen green fields and forests to
Arkansas, Virginia and other east-
ern states 'and ran into lots of
police, for any possible emergency.
The smart parent always writes, tells, and shows
the baby sitter to make sure his fire emergency in-
• structions are understood. .
Most folks in Denton probably don’t realize that the
fire department spends much of its time making care-
ful inspections and in other fire prevention activities;
much more time by far than it ever spends responding (
to alarms and actually fighting fires.
Today’s fireman is not only a fire fighter, he’s equal-
ly skilled as a fire “preventer".
One of the likeliest starting places of such a fire in
any home, according to Denton Fire Chief Tom Robin-
son. is the heating and cooking equipment—ranked ,
by National Fire Protection Association estimates as
the number two cause of home fires.
a baby sitter.
Actually, you depend on a baby sitter to take your
own place as a guardian of your children's lives and
well being, also the entire security of your home.
" Point out two or more ways of escaping from
any part of the house with the children.
Got the children out of the house the instant
Mr and Mrs W. A. Taliaferro
have returned from Oklahoma,
where they visited their sons,
Paul. to Tulsa and Weldon to Mus-
kogee. Paul Taliaferro is vice-
president and chief counsel for
the Sun-Ray Mid-Continent Oil Co.
while Weldon is in the legal claims
department of the Veterans Ad-
ministration. He waa recently
transferred from the Denver,
Colorado, office to the Muskogee
Division, which handles all of the
veterans' claims in Oklahoma.
Messrs. and Mmes. J. H. Neb-
lett and E. B. Brown will leave
this week for a short visit to Chi-
cago. leaving here by train. Neb-
lett said, "It isn’t a business trip
at all; we’re just going to see
some of the sights in the big city.”
L. T. Samuel, 423 Sherman Drive
is one of the county’s most ard-
ent hunters, dove, quail and wat-
erfowl. and not only is he one of
the most ardent, he is one of the
most successful. He probably
knows as many farmers and their
land as any man in the county,
so he has plenty of places to hunt.
He said, “I’ve known Denton
County tanks and lakes since 1926
and this year is first time during
those years that I have found
some of those tanks dried up. And,
I don't mean with just a little
water—they’re absolutely dry with
big cracks to the ground.”
f
-------
PARANOID, YOU MUST DO
SOMSTH IN® ABOUT OUR *
alkaloids teacher. dd
SHE’S PICKING ON HM! P
JUST LOOK AT
THIS REPORT T A
CARD/ ASiw
By PAUL HARVEY
Hear this, please:
An American military coinman-
der again is calling out to you
from the Pacific, as General Mac-
Arthur once sought to do, for help.
Having exhausted him self
"through channels,” Admiral Fe-
lix Stump, Commander of U. S.
vg7
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smoke or gas is smelled
How to call the fire department by the nearest
fire alarm box and/or neighbor's telephone
How and where to reach the parents, doctor,
«THL., "
0UT5‘
say a thing like that at a time like
this. Though he is not the first.
Air Force General Nate Twin-
ing, one year ago, announced that
the Communists were moderniz-
ing their Far East Air Forces,
while we are prevented from do-
ing so by the terms of the Armis-
tice. February of the year the
UN Command accused the Com-
munists of bringing more mili-
tary supplies and warplanes Into
North Korea "in cynical violation
of the Armistice.”
. General I. D. White, Commander
of our Army Forces in the Far
East and of the Eighth. Army in
Korea, said last June that he is
"resentful on both military and
ethical grounds that the Commun-
ists are allowed illegally to mod-
ernize their forces in North Korea,
while my own hands have been
tied by the Armistice.”
So we've heard 'from the Air
Force and the Army the same
bitter complaint. Now from the
Navy, as Admiral Stump says
bluntly that “we should no longer
abide by the terms of the Armis-
tice.” He deplores the fact that
military men "are not allowed to
decide” what action to’ take.
The diplomats who kept us weak
and so invited Red aggression in
the first place are now renewing
the invitation. Here are the odds
against which they are betting
your son’s life: Commhnists to
North Korea have 800,000 men.
South-ef the parallel are 7004)00
troops. And their weapons are
now vastly superior to ours. While
our now outdated weapons rust,
lacking even replacement parts...
(Armistice terms specified that
there should be no increase, no
modernization of weapons)
The Reds have imported up-to-
date artillery, rockets. 900 tanks.
The Reds had no air force at the
time of the Armistice. Today they
have 770 planes, 518 of them jets.
The Allied forces, including our
American sons, are being disarm-
ed by the creeping obsolescence
of their weapons, while the Reds
thumb their noses at the Armis-
tice and arm to the teeth and pre-
pare for the kill. And one looks on
and wonders.
Young Men
Might Look
To Industry
By SAM DAWSON
NEW YORK «—The young man
who will be looking for a job one
of these days might do worse than
consider some of the manufactur-
ing industries. Average annual
earnings have been going up
steadily in recent years.
And now in at least four indus-
tries the average yearly take for
a full-time employe tops 95,000.
Four others are so close that this
a um m er ’ s round of wage in-
creases might put them over that
mark next year.
Gains in the amount of capital
invested per employe and aver-
age annual earnings per employe
in 20 manufacturing industries are
reported today by the New York
Stock Exchange in the October
issue of its magazine The Ex-
change. In both fields all 20 show
increases.
The U.S. Labor Department
adds to the picture by reporting,
steady gains of around 3 per cent
a year in productivity, which is
the output of a worker for an
hour's work. In the steel industry
the department reports produc-
tivity jumped 11 per cent last year
alone. .1 ,
The exchange study shows that
the petroleum & coal products
industry leads in both capital and
annual earnings per employe. Its
average capital investment per
full time employe in 1955 was
8102,138—a gain of $51,226, or 99
■'”!T' 1 11 ■' ............................... "
Published every evening (except Saturday' and Sunday morning by:
Denton Publishing Co., Inc . 314 E. Hickory St
IM GOING UPAND SPEAK 10
_THAT OLD CROW MYSELF ? -
( NO TEACHER'S PUSHIN' .
PZ, MY KID AROUND! ru 5
--—t TELL HER OFF i A
d“0",
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20 ’
’ wd ioA 6 2o ' ‘ ■ ha
This is Fire Prevention Week throughout America.
Now don’t turn sway. It’s Fire Prevention Week in
Penan you ever thought about what you should do
if you should awake some night and find a wall of
flame outside your bedroom door blocking your way
out? n — '
Your answer is to be ready with an alternate escape
route from your bedroom. Windows, porch roofs,
ladders, back stairs and outside fire escapes are some
of the means of escape that tan be used when normal
stairways or exite are blocked '
-Itis also important to be careful about obstructing
or storing things that might block these extra exits
It is important, too, for everyone in the family to think
ahead and be ready with a practical and sure way to
rescue the children and any aged and sick members of
the family in case of fire. •
Do you give any specific instructions to your baby
sitter before you go out? You should.. Too many
folks are apt to forget that they are turning nver a
tremendous responsibility to someone when they hire
EDITORMLS ^ND FEATURES
J. R. (Jim) Andrews, who with
Mrs. Andrews spent their vaca-
tion in the West Coast. "The
green fields that we saw on the
trip were in fields that were under
irrigation, and we saw that much
of the farming land in parts" of
Texas and other states are subject
to irrigation.''
Mrs. Byron Brier is fearful that
Denton County may become a des-
ert country. She said, "I’ve
known this county for a good
many years, several of which
were spent on the farm. I have
never seen the farms, as well as
the city, so dry and burned up.”
Here’s the chief’s advice on cutting down the chances
of your heating and cooking equipment causing a
costly, “inconvenient" fire:
Check the location and installation of stoves and
furnaces to make certain that nearby walls, floors,
curtains, furniture and other combustible material can-
not be ignited.
Make sure all types of heating and cooking equip-
ment are placed ‘well-out of normal travel routes to
doorways. •
A fire in your home this winter would be expensive
and inconvenient, assuming your family were lucky
enough not to be hurt in the bargain. Be careful!
' I
rain, she said. but wnen we ner cent since 1947 Annual earn-
cams to Texarkana all that chang- P‘. n sl lremnnupurmr
ed to dried up HHfc and wood-
Four Utilities To ■
Pool Operations
On Reclamation
Is down to eartn with both sides
charging: “You're anothe- “
This is about par for a political
campaign.
After President Eisenhower's
speech in Pittsburgh last night it
became clear he considers three
things — peace, the end of the
Korean War, and prosperity — as
main selling points in his cam-
paign.
He has made seven speeches to
iar. In all of them he has spoken
about peace. Two of his speech-
es. In fact, started off on that
subject: his opening talk Sept. 15
and the one last night.
Directly or indirectly he has re-
minded his listeners in four
speeches that his administration
brought an end to the shooting in
Korea. And he has made present
prosperity a constant theme in his
talks. '
Eisenhower, without mentioning
Adlai Stevenson by name but
leaving no doubt of whom he
meant, complained last night that
the Democratic candidate has
"concealed or twisted the facts.”
In Seattle last night Stevenson
too made a speech in which he
protested — without naming Eis-
enhower. — that the Republican
administration has “not told the
people the truth” about the "cru-
cial facts of history."
It was only a matter of time
before the two candidates reached
this point, once tvenson began
belittling Eisenhower as a part-
time leader who didn't lead and
calling the Republicans a big busi-
ness party.
If Eisenhower thought he could
remain upstairs while the fight
went on in the alley, he soon got
over it.
Stevenson got under his skin.
Eisenhower soon began referring
to the "wicked nonsense" of his
opponent and belittling Stevenson
as a man who talked big about
leadership without -ever having
been a leader himself.
■ All this makes more interesting
reading than pious platitudes.
But while each candidate bela-
bors the other for not stating the
facts, the truth is that neither is
stating all the facts but only those
that make his own side look good.
Stevenson, accusing the Repub-
licans of kilting federal aid to
schools, doesn't talk about the
part Democrats had in that legis-
lative throat-cutting in the House
of Representatives.
Eisenhower last night recalled
that in 1955 and 1956. when the
Democrats controlled Congresa, he
called for action on federal aid
and got none. He didn’t say he
let 1953 and 1954 — years in which
Dr. J. W. Grooms, fishing part-
ner of Earl Smith, has seen to it
that Earl won’t have any more
trouble with broken lines. It
seems that Earl had been hook-
ing some of the big ’uns that
broke his fancy lines. The doc-
tor made him a. present of a line
that looks more like a rope than
a fishing line.
SONOWLET
US LOOK IN ON
PARANOIQ AS _
HE TELLSjfHE
oLDROwOFR
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—uag
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_8PuM
brushes have served the crowned
heads of Europe since 1777. when
George III was trying to give his
American colonies a quick mil-
itary brushoff.
An inventor since boyhood, Cos-
by became interested in combs
during a visit to the British Mus-
eum. He noted that combs found ~
in ancient Egyptian pyramids var-.
led hardly at all from combs in
present day use. Although the hu-
man skull — even among teen-
agers with crew cuts — is or-
dinarily rounded, the combs ap-
peared designed for flat-heads,
“Why should they be?” Cosby
brooded.
So he designed a new type comb,
it is a flexible comb, fitted into
a plastic shell, and bends to fit
the shape of the head.
“With each stroke it covers five
times the area of the old-type
comb,” said Cosby, "and it gives
the scalp a gentle massage.
"It ia particularly helpful to
men with thinning hair aa it glides "
over the bald spot without scratch-
ing. Balding men are physic-
ally aa well as emotionally sen-
sitive."
1 Cosby has a free beauty Up
for American women. Use more
water, fewer glamor skin creams,
on their faces.
“There is no substitute for
water,” he said. "Many men have
better complexions than women
because they don’t cover their
faces with makeup. They use a
shaving brush and soap and water
to stimulate the skin.
“Why do Irish girls have the
most beautiful complexions in the
world? Simply because there is
so much soft rain in their
country.”
By WOLF HEYEN
BERCHTESGADEN, Germany
(—Adolf Hitler’s sister said today
she is writing her memoirs to set
some of the record about her
family straight.
“And the readers will forgive
me if I abstain from depicting my
brother at all costs as a wicked
character, just for the sake of
profit,” she told a reporter.
"I must c o mp l e t e these
memoirs. I owe it to the memory
of my parents to tell the truth.
So many distorted stories have
been written in the postwar years
that I have to set some facts
straight about m y parents, my
youth and my brother.”
Paula Hitler, whose name .was
changed to Paula Wolf on Hitler's
orders in 1936, was interviewed
at her home in this Alpine resort
city.
She said she had been using the
name Wolf for some time before
1936 because "I never liked to
show off.”
“I am a simple woman and I
never had more than two rooms
and a kitchen," the 60-year-old
white-haired woman said.
Since the war she "has lived on
a small pension in one, room of a
drab house here. She said she had
been given notice to move out but
the tenant who needs the room
has agreed she may stay until
she has found a new apartment.
"It’s the first time in my life
that I have been given notice,”
she sighed, glancing around her
simply furnished room. There
was no picture of her brother on
the walls.
553
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EDITOR'S NOTE; The Record-Chronicle has received several
interesting letters recently but has withheld publication because
the letters were unsigned or the writer requested that his name .
‘ be withheld. It is the policy of thia paper to publish only letters
that have the writer’s signature and address attached. The let-
ters win be published on the condition that the names and ad-
dresses can be used.
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COMBINATION MAIL AND CARRIER. Delivered to your home by
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 60, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 11, 1956, newspaper, October 11, 1956; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1453258/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.