Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 137, Ed. 1 Friday, January 9, 1959 Page: 4 of 12
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Miners In Trouble
About 150 Welsh coal miners went to London Thurs-
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Three Cheers For The USA
Is Big Star To Steer By
Walter Reuther, president of the
ed States.
an
the
of industrial parks across
ister is in bad shape
regular monthly meeting.
EVER HAPPEN TO YOU?
By Blake
♦
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Most other sections can point
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THERE OUGHTA BE A LAW .
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errors or any
the
examples in the East are
news
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sand painting, one. of the' rarest
art displays shown here this year.
He had a star to steer by ■ I
Down in Havana President Batis-
State Of Union's
Business Climate
Called Excellent
Yesteryear
Looking Baek Through
Record-Chronicle Files
pretty much the Soviet line
Reuther argued, as the State De-
t •
1 4
L
brisk winds of the
the dust of the past
trian’s eye
l-
JUSFPFEMINFTHEREP
with last weens-so
YOU CANFIND‘EM(F J
I CALL!
AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
NOTICE TO PUBLIC
U.S. Unions
Show Unity,
On One Aim
NEW YORK (AP)—The look of I he can hear life whistling by in
i-t-td d Ahdamina“ "anidlu ; the wind outside his window. And
LETTERS
WELCOMED
The Record Chronicle wel.
branch and Americans, who should
krn het’er. th’nk he means it.
On Wall Street, defease, stocks
san ped.
Merely because this errand boy
604•
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7(356
By SAM DAWSON
AP Business News Analyst ,
eC
152a
reserve the right to edit let- .
tars when mrsasary.___________
II
Denton Record -Chronicle
TELEPHONE DI peat 22351
" 7 ..
24Mdi22amummaM
fast growing industrial
the Now England
1. that Massachu-
partment does, that Berlin is part
and
(a was scoffing, laughing, actually
making jokes about the lean, young ■
United Auto Workers, and Joseph
A. Beirne, president of the Com-
munications Workers of America.
he enjoys do not compensate the
indoor man for what he has lost.-
HARK TO HARVEY
What United States Needs
municipal history.
Landmarks are being torn down
and buildings are rising as the
cuperating with the loss of an eye
and serious injury to the other. The
gun - toting farmer who shot Hod-
ges to in the county jail charred
with assault with intent to murder.
The farmer, Joe Allen Goforth,
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
tod Press Is endUed exclusively to the use for publication
local news printed in this newspaper, as well as all AP
the cash register and got into a
fix instead
The cash drawer stuck Bruce
_____________lustry to the South.
Concern also has been expressed
emroHfita - -—■——---
Hard Work Still Necessary
Before Honors Are Bestowed
postwar years to
age caused by t"
of the textile Indi
LN HOSPITAL
JAN. 9. ISO "
As the smoke of Friday's gun
battle at Krum cleared away Sat*
jan. 9. 1939
An exhibition of Navajo Indian
handles the muscular work of
clviliuiton, and ha gm see the____________
result of his tabors in visible
growth—a stand of waving wheat,
a new road through a swamp, a -
=-
wow! de MUT <
LVINGNNE5
sV
So. while no problems were
solved, the memorandum said the
most important result of the lunch-
eon was to show the unity of
American trade unionists on Ber-
ba and a unified Germany.
Have any suggestions? Ad-
dress Strictly Speaking, earn
of the Record-Chronicle. Box
451.
1
rebel whom he considered more a
PeNothan, Deput, Fixer Gets Into
under the open sky. , fact, and as a result he always
Watching a couple of steel- feels he has a clear and definite
workers nonchalantly stroll across । edge over the indoor man. The
a girder hieh overhead, ene offica humblest hodcarrier cannot help .
peasant turned to a friend and looking down on a lawyer—that is.
"TewpN.rTGETsALONQ
_"3 Be NOuR MIMO NAT
That WMERV T AMBULANCE 16 OOI
(T GET THERE I NTiN RAT-
suitable plants and find a com-
pany Interested L -gemE
them. Or the company may bo
found first and the new plant tail-
nation is accented today by a new-
comer - Neu York City - and
the report of a survey by the New
England .Eouncit showing that its
six states now have 113 estab-
"Eris-msastcenas $us0s "emStiheiVi the un
HAL BOYLE SAYS
Vah2
42y1 '
2(0Ca
PAGE FOUR
---—=
gray dismay of civilization, often
finds it hard to see the importance
of his work— whther he merely
shuffles papers, sells neckties,
arranges divorces, writes tooth
paste ads, or answers the tele-
phone for someone else above him
in the office hierarchy.
He often has a trapped feeling.
He has left nature too far behind.
New Slave Of Civilization:
The Man Who Works Indoors -
. ICAUEDFQRAN
AMBULAN Ve
AHHOuaAaa-1
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/22
the Peace Z. D. Lewis-on a com-
plaint filed by Chief Deputy E D.
Davis. Goforth wns wounded twice
by a pursuing officer.
SA ND PAINTING
DISPLAYED MERE
Yea
2'423
)
1
He neither sweats nor freezes at
his job. He is usually just, Iuka-
' warm— and he kneu « it.
Maybe Someday
The Dallas Symphony Orchestra, which Denton knows
Mawnhudr-“hesmptuzroroPidh
greatest face-lifting program in
In both New York City and state
of late because its industrial
growth wasn't keeping pace with
that of the nation as a whole and
compared badly with some of the
7,1
56
road (militias often are stressed,
takemsoveipanazuyatgptnduston
the site. Often local development
bridge across a river, a new
building in the skyline. He to co*
sential, and he knows it
inside every indoor man, home-
sick for nature. to an outdoor
man yearning to be free But only
old age or enfeeblement wil drive
the outdoor man indoors, and ha
is never again as happy.
put his hand inside a door on the
side of the register to open the _________________________..
a 1 has been placed in the Little Gal-
Some of the cogs grabbed his lery of the Library at the Teachers
and held on — for three College and will he on exhibit for
hours. the next two weeks
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, reputation or standing el
any firm, individual or corporation will be gladly corrected upon
being celled to the publishers attention
The publishers are not responsible for copy emissions, typographical
_ “ tzst errors that occur other than to correct
in next issue after it to brought to their attention. AU advertising
adders are accepted m this basis only.
Real Tough Fix
olive LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Bar-
tender Gene Bruce started to fix
r ORGANIZE ME
( POLICEANDWE J
\ GOT IT MADF 1 2
A« g
‘( oB
o.
79,0
PUs,5
-9
KLze
for a dictator uses such, words as (
"veace" and “disarmament." ma-fdrawr.
for a dictator uses such words M -
ny American are ready right now'
62
---- — prisons; and re-
fused to discuss Hungary on the
ground It would take too long.
But when the unionists criticized
Soviet policy - particularly they
accused the Kremlin of stimulat-
ing crises around the world ML
koyan said the Americans were
prejudiced and didn’t know the
facts of Soviet policy.
Associated Press News Analyst
WASHINGTON (AP) - Ameri-
can labor leaders and Anastas I.
Mikoyan had lunch and a hot dis-
cussion.
But the Soviet deputy premier
didn’t reveal any secrets while be
was the guest of the unionists.
They later gave their account
of what happened in a memoran-
dum prepared as a record of the
conversation.
STAY-AWAY
One notable stay-away was AFL-
CIO President George Meany. But
James B Carey, a long-time fight-
er against Communists in Ameri-
can unions, was there. He said he
thought a frank talk with Mikoyan
might have done some good,
couldn’t do harm.
TRACY CITY, TENN., GRUNDY COUNTY HER-
ALD: “We cannot think of two more important and
co-related factors in the American way of life than a
growing city and its newspaper. This statement was
taken from an advertisement in a Virginia, Minn.,
newspaper. The ad was unsolicited. It was paid for
by a merchant who wished to show his appreciation for
the part the newspaper had in building up his busi-
ness.
9 "
pedal long of the administration I These <_____... 2----- _ -
to balance the bttdget with the only a part of a general, move,
aid of tax collections go record duplicated at least in countless
profits. ' V . , I communities and most regions. .
bor camps; guaranteed that an
American trade union delegation
visiting the Soviet Union would
have complete freedom. Including
freedom to visit
parcel of Germany and that
two Germany* should be re-
united in free elections, which is
what the Soviets don't want
parks or districts. For both the
growing sections of the land and
the older and more static ones,
the .Idea offers two chief gains:
New payrolls boost the local econ-
omy or offset previous losses;
local and state governments col-
ied more taxes
The idea works this way:) The
planners find either large unused
plots in the cities or run down
plots that often have been taken
over by the city for unpaid taxes;
or they seek wide open spaces on
city outskirts, and sometimes in
its suburbs.
Such a site becomes an indus-
i repair the dam-
the flight of much
By PAUL HARVEY । compromises that left it almost un- had nothing with which to fight but
, . distinguishable from the other kind, an underfed, unwashed, ill-equip-
Americans, in their beginning. Eventually it was possible for a pod ragged army of nondescript
peasants, . .and one more thing.
vporGUN‘ITINK)
• foaot moEns 15 d
1245202832
Baro I1
COMBINATION MAIL AND CARRIER: Delivered to your home by
mail on weekdays and Sunday Morning Delivery by Motor Route
where this service to available. $1.25 per month. WB per year
imust be paid in advance).
•aid: "They are men. They are if he isn’t in the lawyer’s office.
The indoor man does the paper
work of civilization and most -of
- a mixture of his problems are nervous ones,
admiration and wistful envy — a He is essental hut often. doesn’t
conscious expression uw reali-1 feel ha is. The outdoor man
zation that in the aristocracy of
bargaining.’’ some of their fervor one.
evaporated. When I was writing this column
Eovemimenetbsruitertad xhmusah tom Premier Sukoyan vlatting ths Untt
, j He arrived waving
t ions how they intend to dominate,
the world. Their spokesmen boldly I
spell out for us the technigue of
strategic retreat, eautious advance,
zigs and zags and subterfuge and
bald - faced lies and smashed pro-
. t
Hshed and others in the PtOfbodtes build what they consider
climbing new skyscrapers are sur-
rounded by pale-featured office
peasants. They are fascinated by
the sight' of 'their fellow men earn- ----- _
ing a living by the sweat of their । • CLEAR EDGE
brow and the use of their hande-d""Fhe euldeerman realises-this--
__raising crops, the sailor taking a
esent blow ship across the sea, the Corester
the pedes- quelling a timber fire, the brick-
layer raising the wall of « new
2
H-N
(8
however bloody or hungry, always gdless dictatorship to take Ameri-
held fast to the noble objective of can boys from prison camps and i
individual dignity and self-govern- distract and divert and destroy1
— ment. I their allegiance.
Workers,, others present included But when “‘individual dignity" Because any star to steer by v. as
became subservient to “collective better than none; even the Red
Published every evening (except Saturday) and Sunday morning by:
Denton Publishing Co., Inc., 114 E. Hickory St
—........ .......... । *■■ ■ ...........- ..... .....
' Entered as second class mail matter at the postoffice at Denton, Tex.
as January 1921, according to Act of Congress, March 3, 1872.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES AND INFORMATION
•ingle Copies: Sc (or weekdays: 10c (or Sunday.
WOMB DELIVERY RATES FOR DAILY AND SUNDAY
BY CARRIER: Delivered to your home by city carrier or motor route
on same day of publication. Me per week.
If profits reach a peak of 48
' billion dollars, that culd inspire
I labor leaders to raise their sights.
I With prospects for labor-manage-
Hmentstrife this year Already
I strong, this could increase the
threat of major strikes.
He can control —his climate by Anrg.,,
turning a knob at home or at the ONES HODGES
office. Sometime* as he does this
E«(e
FRIDAY, JANUARY 9, 1959
- urday, Denton County’s new sher-
iff W. 0 (Ones* Homes. WM rs*
amada-e
■ ' > ?
the wealth and high standard of
living of the American Workers
and constantly used this as an in-
centive and example to the Soviet
workers to improve their produc-
tion
The labor leaders not only sup-
ported this country's foreign pol-
icy but naid the average Ameri-
can worker did, too.
FAITH, TRUST
Belroe chimed in: He said it was
impossible to develop faith and
trust in Soviet talk about the self-
determination of peoples after
what the Soviets did to the work-
ers of Hungary.
And Beirne asked: Would the So-
viet Union guarantee absolute free-
dom of movement to any trade
union delegation visiting that
country? Would such a delegation
be permitted to visit prisons and
labor camps and talk to workers
on the Job at home?
Mikoyan denied there were la-
t
Besides Carey, president of the
International Union of Electrical
I
Enough of those for long dura-
tions could play hob with the ex-
FASCINATED . home.
At lunch hour, parucularly tn The greater creature comforts
filr weather. the sites of the * —* -- - " **“
■ operating tn mises and whatever means may be
■ i required to effect the world revolu-
That Berlin he made a free city
—with free access to it from East
and West—and Its freedom guar-
anteed by an international com-
emission, with all countries remov-
ing their troops. This has been
he knows he to missing something.
The indoor man mises the joy
of natural achievement that comes
to the outdoor man—the farmer
e*nl
tJuaty police tried a cutting The North Ward Parrot - Teach-
or HuMir. torch. When that got too hot for lers Assn will observe "Dad's
I Bruce, they usd a crowbor. • Night" Wednesday in the school,
i Bruce is all right, but the reg- it will take place instead of the
NEW YORK (AP) - The state
of the Union’s business today to
good. It's so healthy that Presi-
dent Eisenhower wii ofler a M-
oral budget based in part on the
expectation that corporate profits
in 1959 win reach a. record 48
billion dollars.
This compares with the 31%
billion dollar annual rate in the
first three months of last year.
Many industries have climbed
back from the slump in output
remarkably fast.
What Congress will ds for and
to business this year to any one’s
guess. Involved are such things
as taxes, labor legislation, anti-
a., a mA e L Bl . I _
U USl inquire, monetary POIIcies
bearing on inflation, foreign
trade.
Some think that what business
will do for and to fself to still
more important.
The rapidity with which profits
are bouncing back may open up
a pandora's box of its own.
BUSINESS
Industrial Areas Beef Up
Local Economy, Government
to disarm
trial park when a developmental It is a frightening demonstration
group,, civic or private, has it of the effectiveness of Rusias
...... .nT .20.“ __a zoned for industrial building and long range plan and of America's
NEW.YORK CAP —The spread installs adequate facilUes - ac- almost total lack of any.
cess roads, water and gas mains, Marxists have declared in public
electricity and sewer lines. Rall- and to writing and over two genera.
°Net York City's industrial park
will be its first under public spon-
sorship — a largely vacant 100
acre tract in the flatlands of
Brooklyn. (A private industrial
park in the same general area
was approved by the city last
year.)
The proposed one Illustrates the
gains cities expect from such
projects: The land to now asssesed
at 2 million dollars and yields
the city about 140,000 a year in
taxes. The city expects its devel-
opment to cost as much as 20
million dollars (to be regained by
sale to concerns that settle there),
afford jobs for 3,000, and bring in
$700,000 a year in taxes.
The New England Council's sur-
vey reports the 113 industrial
parks in those six states have a
recorded investment of 30 million
dollars for promotion, land ac-
quisition and construction on the
sites. It estimates that unreported
investments would bring the total
to around to million dollars. „
The industrial park idea haa
been pushed in New England in
28847/57
AETHRow g--
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, yc
EDrrORIAIS AND FEATURES rut TRE DENTON RECORD^HRONICLE z::!
.................. .. -*■ -------- ------------ - —- ....... - ' - ■ G ' '■ -4- ----------------------------- 1
day to protest that their village has been condemned to
death. They came by train In their Sunday suits and "
their cloth caps. They marched to union headquarters,
singing their Welsh songs and demanding action.
26. was filed on by County Atty.
a W, K. Baldridge with Justice of
Other communities are doomed to die. they said,
and the executioner is the National Coal Board. The
’ board operates the nationalized mines. It plans to
close 36 unprofitable pits.
The miners ask a reprieve for the village of Cwmlly-
nfell in the Swansea valley of Wales. It has a popula-
tion of 3,000. a mine and a few merchants to serve the
miners. Nothing else.
The mine is scheduled to be closed next month. The
miners say there just won’t be any reason then for the
continued existence of Cwmllynfell. Older miners re-
called the gloomy days of the depression in the early
80s when men idled away their days sitting on curbs,
waiting for relief. Now the sickness of the coal indus-
try could result in new depressed areas in a country
otherwise prosperous, the miners said.
The harassed National Coal Board, which estimates it
lost about 10 million. pounds/($28,000,000)— in 1958,
held out little hope for the pits. “We are facing a
struggle for the life of coal in Britain," said the chair-
man. Sir James Bowman.
Many mine union officials say they appreciate the
board's difficulties and do not oppose closing pits
which lose money. But they want other jobs, close to
their homes in the doomed villages, to be found for
miners facing unemployment. They want government
support for plans to shift industries to suffering areas.
Wonder what the situation would be if the coal mines
■ were operated by private enterprise? 4 '
' The unionists attacked Soviet
mAniL policy on Berlin, which the Soviets
nntt want left defenseless in the mid-
" 5 die of Communist East Germany
—but Mikoyan responded with this
proposal:
>TGETNDAMIGNAP 2 L
Cog snumwie mh wires) M
NENTUALUY THEY GET TMERE .19
CBuTNOT BEFORE TIL HEARSE 2
o--_2—-2.
AedeVA
--- manheed 4ho outdoor man ha* -an
edge over the Indoor man.
The wife of the indoor man may
(eel that her husband la superior
• in some snobbish way to the
rugged outdoor man. but the in-
door man himself has no such
illusion. He often feels his white
__ collar is more of a badge of
slavery than a svmbol of success.
GRAY DISMAY
The indoor man, caught in the
Carey. Reuther and Beirne are
also vice presidents of the AFL-
CIO.
In part, this was the account of
what happened:
Carey blamed the Soviets for
trying after the war to dominate
the World-Federation of Trade Un-
ions. when American unionists got
fed up and walked out.
MISTAKE ADMITTED
Mikoyan admitted the Soviet
trade union movement had made
a mistake but Mid the Americans
had, too, in that post-war period.
And he added: Two neighbors who
had made a mistake shouldn't jet
a mistake dominate their future.
_ Reuther critictood the Soviet
propaganda Uno that pictures
Amarican warkarg Aa uadlalauaa.
WMWBewwww'WwwSM’WWi
Carey went into detail on the evo-
utionary improvements to the
American labor movement since
Mikoyan was here to the 1930s a
STRICTLY
SPEAKING
* By CECLL.PRESTON, •_
Recgrd-Chronicle Staff Writer .
< - Copwright 18
THE WBONG WORD
A reader wrote: My “in-laws"
make those mistakes. I can' cor-
rect them. Please write about them
insyour column.
The following errors are not the
ones sent in by the writer, but ।
they are errors made by some
one's in - laws, no doubt.
He is a tall dark - complected
boy. (Should be "complexioned";
there is-noword "complected").
I am enthused about my part in
the play. (Should be “enthusias-
tic''; there is no word “enthus-
ed").
She was wrenching out her hose.
(Should be “rinsing," pronounced
“rin sing,” not “rinsing").
He was borned in this county.
(Should be “born." The principal
parts of the verb "bear" are: bear,
bore, born; there is no form ''born-
ed.") '
tion. Thus, they say, they will take
over the world.
And we sit transfixed, hyp-
notized, and watch them do it.
Professional hypnotists will tell
you that you are not vulnerable,
that you cannot be hyonotized, if
you keep your own mind fixed on
another subject.
If you refuse to stare at the
hyonotist’s pinpoint of light, if you
refuse to listen ot his soft talk, he
is powerless to make your will sub-
servient to his.
If the Russians now appear will-
ing to wage an "economic war" in-
stead of a military one, then this is
the time for us to keep on keeping
on. This is not the time to change
course. It is the massive retaliatory
might of our defensive line that
has forced the Reda to try this
biden baH play around left end.
But they have not changed goals.
We can survive only, if we keen
that line tight; we can win only if
wo keep our own goal in sight.
(Copvricht 1999, General Fea-
tures Corp.)
- el the nation reporting a sharp rise in ticket salei and
attendance during the first pari of the 1958-59 season.
The Dallas orchestra reported a 37 per cent increase
over last season. The improvement over last year of
the orchestra, with its new director, Paul Kletzki, has
apparently paid off, even though the group will almost
certainly lose money again this year.
It's an unfortunate situation, and almost a blight on
our civilization, that the arts can't seem to pay their
own way even with attendance increases as healthy
as the DSO’s.
ALL OF THE DENTON AREA is pleased to extend
" its fight hand of welcome to the visiting officials and
Jaycees who'll be here Saturday to honor the Texas
Junior Chamber of Commerce's selection of the five .
outstanding young Texans of 1968.
Certainly, the honored five exemplify the kind of
spirit that, even if it is trite to say so again, has been
largely responshle for the spectacular growth in the
right direction of the United States.
Part of that same growth can also be traced to the
spirit that’s duly noted in the Jaycee creed: "Economic
justice can best be won by free men through private
enterprise."
All of the five to be honored in Denton Saturday
night have shown enterprise and initiative as well ss
just plsin hard work in reaching their present positions.
Van Cliburn didn't become a great pianist without prac-
tice and hard work: Fred Chandler’s farm research
didn't just happen nor did Dolph Briscoe’s wool and
mohair company evolve out of the air. Bob Hollings-
worth and Dan Krause didn’t see their companies grow
by taking four 15-minute coffee breaks every day.
Yes, Denton to pleased to be these young men’s host,
but Denton is even more pleased that all of us live
in a country that recognizes hard work as an honor
that must come before other honors are even consid-
ered.
TheAsg
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' TV
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i1g
Aag-ha
A mF
SyndTate,Ine., World right* resesved.
comes letters from readers on .
any subject in good taste.
• Letters must be signed and
the writer's address given We
" " T " - - T—. — y --- 4a
--
Seed. 7hanhat
" On 0#9
By JAMES MARLOW
setts now has 59 parka or districts
with 3 more proposed; Maine has
22 with 7 more under considers
tion; Rhode Island has 10 and
talks of one other: Connecticut
has 9 with 3 ry.g.
Hampshire, 7; and- Vermont, 6
with 2 proposed.
The sites range in size from a
3-acre one in Cambridge, Mass.,
to a 1,724-acre one in Sturbridge,
Mass. One at Stratford, Conn., has
four buildings already erected at
a cost of five million dollars. A
900 acre one at Sanford, Maine,
boasts an airport and an expan
sipnable building.
1: Now
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 137, Ed. 1 Friday, January 9, 1959, newspaper, January 9, 1959; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1453438/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.