Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 70, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 23, 1956 Page: 3 of 10
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Leads In Michigan
Political Need
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LINCOLN FOR 1957
F
1.
STORE
700 North Locust
Phono C-4161
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State Park Board Lays Blame
For Three Mired Lodge Plans
AMBULANCE
SERVICE
... a new kind of fast-action Turbo-Drive
transmission ... a new kind of Hydro-
Cushioned ride. And more . . . you'll dis- J
of
tral
1
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2
L.
■
Also Other Materials
Many Other Dry
Flower Arrangements
Michigan towns yesterday. He
argued that Eisenhower was far
better fitted than Adlai Stevenson
to keep the peace in the next lour
years, and that the Republican
Kefauver backtracked his cam-
paign trial into Iowa today in a
new quest of the Corn Belt vote.
He visited the Des Moines area
Oct. 12 and this time scheduled
visits at Waterloo and Mason City.
He told his Waterloo audience
that the "Republican politicians
are banking” on the soil bank pro-
gram "to pull them through the
election after three years of in-
difference to rising surpluses and
falling prices.”
PHone
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n
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----2
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lower
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to make up the deficit.
3. The bond.company
sue the hgafsat’agr
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A MEDICINE
would is-
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senriight
Take a long, long look at this long low
Lincoln—because you’re looking at the
brightest new star in the fine car field.
i Democratic adminis-
Long charged. "The
s of small business have
reduced by 41 per cent under
sadtt'and money market situation
•requires that the bonds...be isstred
at a discount of 5 per cent in-
stead of 2% per cent.
R. L. McKinney of Denison said
the Harvey feasibility report was
wrong and "We can show you Lake
Texoma can support two lodges.”
’He cited the area’s industrial ex-
pansion add said an estimated 8
million people will visit the lake
this year "and would stay over-
night if they had a place.”
--
1 s.
From the new Quadra-Lite Grille—with
America’s first four headlamp design—to
canted rear blades, this is the longest,
lowest, most distinctive Lincoln ever. •
When you drive it, you'll discover that
this most powerful Lincoln of all time has —
a new kind of swift, silken 300 horsepower
thaa with diplon
Texas Democrat
Rayburn made
to Shivers
Meanwhile, at
216
Special Penney payo
i ings on men’s 100%
stretchable socks! PL
fancies in three per
sixes And man. whi
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Long of _
day night the interest rate policies
of the government. He charged
that President Eisenhower "has
plantings of surpl
a percentage of the acreage into
a soil reserve.
the Eisenhower administration
and the rate at which small busi-
nesses go bankrupt has doubled.
“High interest rates of the pres-
ent administration have benefited
few and hurt many. They hurt
small business and do not help
any business except lenders.”
Long speaks in San Angelo
Tuesday night and in Laredo
Thursday night. _____
Sen. Kennedy of Massachusetts,
another Democratic senator push-
ing Stevenson, speaks at El Paso
Tuesday night, at Laredo Wednes-
day and at San Antonio that night.
Sen. Daniel, the Democratic
nominee for governor, will appear
at the San Angelo, Laredo and
San Antonio rallies.
Mrs. Hobby was to speak in
Lubbock Tuesday afternoon, at
Midland Tuesday night and Ama-
rillo Wednesday night.
Speaking at El Paso, she scored
Stevenson for what she called his
"terrifyingly naive and irrespon-
sible suggestion.”
She said Eisenhower has met
the challenge of the hydrogen age
“with boldness and yet with pru-
» ■ l I V,
13
In short, if you haven't yet had a chance
to see —and dnoe—this beautifully new
South Side Squave
PRESCRIPTION
' CHEMISTS
•quotation by Oliver H. Perty
(1785-1819)
copiyright 1936 dowa
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THE PREMIERE COUPS
EN ROUTE WITH NIXON, in
-Miehigan (—Vice President Nix-
on barnstormed through Michigan
by train again today, cheered by
predictions of local Republicans
that‘this pivotal state is in the
bag for Eisenhower
Sen. Charles Potter (R-Mich),
who is traveling with Nixon across
the state, told a reporter he had
advised the vice president that
the GOP ticket probably „will
sweep Michigan by more than the
320,000-vote’ margin of 1952.
"President Eisenhower has
come up awfully fast in the last
week or so,” Potter said. “The
Democratic campaign has gone
completely flat.”
The senator said, however, that
he was not making the same fore-
cast of an easy victory for his
party in the governorship race.
----
administration had given the na-
tion four years of "true prosper-
fty", which might be bet if the
Democrats win Nov. 6.
WATERLOO, Iowa w —.Sen.
Estes Kefauver accused the Eis-
enhower administration today of
using the farm soil bank program
for political purposes.
“The soil bank is being cut and
trimmed to fit the political needs
of the Eisenhower administra-
tion,” he said in a speech pre-
pared for delivery at a fair
grounds ferm-la b o r gathering
here.
“Very little of the money is go-
ing to states that are considered
sure to go Democratic. Not much
more of it is going to states that
are considered safely Republi-
can.”
The soil bank, enacted this year
by Congress, authorizes payment
of more than a billion dollars to
farmers who agree to reduce
$
i
ora
Skelton’s statement said that
“according to the newspapers.
Shivers said that Adlai Stevenson
was ’without common sense or
morals or both.’ ”
"This is in accord with the
methods Shivers has used in cam-
paigns in the past and came as
no surprise to anyone,” Skelton
said.
Johnson was not available for
comment. •
Rayburn said through National
Democratic Headquarters that he
fears the Eisenhower administra-
tion has fallen into a propaganda
trap by rejecting summarily Rus-
sian Premier Bulganin’s latest
proposal on ending nuclear tests.
Eisenhower s harp l y rejected
Bulganin’s suggestion for an in-
ternational agreement to ban the
testing of atomic and hydrogen
bombs. He accused Bulganin of
meddling in the American elec-
tion. - "
President Eisenhower should be
concerned with how “to save the
world from atomic death” more
I
' • -
sv- I
Shivers campaign of smear” in
the presidential contest.
■
in which Democrat G, Mennen
Williams is seeking an unprece-
dented fifth term. He is opposed
by Detroit Mayor Albert E. Cobo.
Nixon. opening the first GOP
whistle-stop tour of the campaign
yesterday, spent much of his
time plugging for Cobo and also
for Republican congressional can-
didates. This gave point to his
assertion that the campaign now
is in the "big mopup" stage for
the Republicans with the main
drive for the final two weeks cen-
tered on. the fight to give Eisen-
hower a GOP-controlled Congress.
Later today Nixon will move on
to South Bend, Ind., for a visit
to Notre Dame Uhiversity and a
major speech at a rally in that
city tonight. ,
Nixon hammered away at two
themes in his train tour of five
a
B*•
9.3
The Associated Press
Texas supporters of President
Eisenhower have challenged pro-
Stevenson leaders to say what
they think about the Democratic
candidate's H-bomb test propos-
als
Gov. Shivers and Mrs. Oveta
Hobby, Houston Post publisher
- and former member of the Eisen-
hower Cabinet. sided with Presi-
dent Eisenhower, who has opposed
proposals-to abandon the H-bomb
tests.
Shivers issued a statement chal-
lenging Sen. Johnson and Speaker
Rayburn, leaders in the Adlai
Stevenson campaign in Texas, "to
say how they stand on Adlai’s H-
bomb plan.” /
Mrs. Hobby, speaking at Texas
Democrats for Eisenhower meet-
. ings in, San Angelo and El Paso,
said Stevenson "seems to urge
that we give up our hard-won ad
vantage in nuclear research in the
fond hope Russia will follow our
example.”
Byron Skelton of Temple, Dem-
ocratic national committeeman,
issued a statement saying that
Shivers has started "the usual
CITY DRUG
P ■ -
_ti
,
ndeivuhdho
It's a Blessing
The privacy of our family room
has been hailed as a blessing by
scores of families we hove served.
. Seclusion is much appreciated when
one is under severe nervous ten-
sion, and our family room was cre-
ated to provide that much-desired
seclusion.
JACK SCHMITZ 6 SON
1 " FUNERAL HOME
• 705 NORTH LOCUST.. DENTON
it
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71 1
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- 11
Challenge
n H-Tests
00. ’ ‘ *■
Kefauver Hits Nixon Told GOP
Soil Bank Asm
Open 7 A.M. to • P.M.
Open Friday Nite Till 8:00
Sub Station No. 1 For Bryants
East Side Cleaners
DOVES WASHATERIA
1021 W. Prairie C-3161
Free Pick Up - Delivery -
G (
-P —
By WHITEY SAWYER I
2. Under present plans, the bond
company said the lodges would be
operated at an annual deficit of
845,250. To offset the deficit, the
252 rental units would be built at
less than 87,500 each instead of
about 811,500 or the profit might
be split less than 60 per cent for
the state and less than 40 per dent
for Harvey, if the company
thought it acceptable. Another al-
ternative would be for the state
. T
•ON RECORD - CHRONICLE
*
SAM LANEY MOTOR CO.
fl
AA
monopoly on it.”
The Legislature authorized the
state-sponsored lodges to be built
with bonds bought by Nuveen, si-
milar to the company’s plan in
Oklahoma.
Considering the present plans
unacceptable, the board indicated
these objections:
1. Exclusion of the Eisenhower
_ project, although Harvey said
Inks Lake* near Burnet and At-
lanta sites “can be operated pro-
fitably."
5J08‛ 12159
Pick up your prescription if
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CORDUROY
SHIRTS
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— •(Author‛r unme oelow) —
Among the enemies we are
conquering are such well known
lestroyers of life as Small Pox,
Typhoid, Pneumonia. Tubercu-
losis, and many virus invad-
ers.
Medical and phara. aceutical
research workers are on the
brink of overcoming even Po-
lio, Cancer, and Cardiac dis-
eases. In our prescription de-
partment. carefully stored to
protect their potency, are the
important medicines your phy-
sician can prescribe.
not tried" to do anythin! about
them.
"The best month of the Eisen-
hower administration has not
measured up to the worst month
.13
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PAGE THREL
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AUSTIN (P-The State Parks
Board placed the blame Monday
for mired state lodge programs
at Denison, Atlanta and Inks Lake
on a Chicago bonding firm and
a developing company, Fred Har-
vey.
Chairman Andrew Howsley said
Harvey’s refusal to consider now
the development of lodges at Tex-
■- oma Lake is not right.”"
He told a board meeting John
Nuveen and Co. of Chicago has
the responsibility to ork out the
plan. Howsley said he has asked
Frank Carr, vice president of the
bonding company to negotiate
with Harvey or H. L. Green, des
veloper of Western Hills off
Worth, or Cecil Warren ofAblene.
The bond company inKgust in-
formed the board Afavored all
three projects. The Harvey com-
pany said “The Eisenhower proj-
ect (at Denison) should await fur-
ther operating experience of the
Oklahoma facilities at Texoma to
determine that there is a demand
for more facilities in the area.”
Howsley said the bond company
was the one which had to be sat-
- isfied by a lessee before the proj-
ects could be built. ‘
"But we may have to open the
market on bonds,” he said. "Un-
fess they show some progress,
I’m going to ask the Legislature
to allow an open market on bonds
0‛a‛
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 70, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 23, 1956, newspaper, October 23, 1956; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1453268/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.