Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 30, Ed. 1 Friday, September 5, 1958 Page: 4 of 10
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-o“ L
t
A
tilt
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than a real
lA
AB
covered
teeth.
ne:
The
v
a
$
"7
-
-Zka
for con-
l.
you
going on a holiday without tobacco.
into wer or melt
at the
the Reds
Bobby Rigzsrof theUnited
and Jack %u>wiS UtAuet
a
of Auatralia.
into
President
ENTERTANNING
tr
Rada in
J
HANDS WASHED-
it
Bel
war with Red China? In
"La
by
au-
those islands necessary for the de-
But Chiang’s forces grabbed and
1
k•
sisted of charged
to
for
(
I
I
panies
THERE OUGHTA BE A LAW
1
manufacturing
NoT
(CU
a
4
3
4
4
the
the recession there
And
"This ac-
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nets
portance
ive-im a new
civic group and
cl
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#
V
-7**.....
t
0
H-
i
b
(1500)
)
ckd
Aad
' is ,
i ago
the c«
in Moscow last
Scott E. Forbush
House has had 435 members and
436 with the admittance of Alaska.
cent increase, while
was down by 6 per
1 We
: let-
la have them without a
persuaded Chiang to
‘s hard
the fu-
■I
■ I
pro-
mw
closest to the shippi
v4h the AMA sees
by Motor Route
$12.50 per year
to “qeuralize" the
it conflict
9-S
UKe
—
r *
r 4
6
this labor
there was
more satis
Ki?.
solar system.
Chiefs Of Pocatello
The United States
hands ot-boshssides,-
1949 the Rods drove
By JAMES MARLOW
Assoeiated Press News Analyst
WASHINGTON (APl-ThU -is an
ABC on the background leading
W- »< • W . ] I
Yankee Initiative
Later this month 65 British men" and women are
high energy
roctions in
Letters must be si
the writer’s address |
reserve the right to
new or better products even while
the economy was taking a breath-
ma clouds probably .
rpral and magnetic storms—if the
clouds are large enough and if the
magnetic field froten in them
when they' leave the sun is great
estate without a fight.
After World War II the
lance.
■ •he reforms didn’t come. The
money was squandered. American
attempts to get Chiang and the
Chinese Communists to work to-
(must be paid in advance)
MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
and Minnesota
erv while, they
mie rayrinteni
with balloons.
the sun is active with flares and
sunspots.
Results obtained with cosmic
ray nucleoric component monitors
by Dr. J. A. Simpson at the Uni-
versity of Chicago in the U. S.
IOY program show a decrease of
singles match between
m ”—1 States
If anything went wrong with
her. youd save dpctor bills You
could fix her with a wrench—or
by kicking her in the control
PThh. -
It seems actually to have
others to increase their
wry companies showed
I drop, down 15 per
engines and turbines
। per cent. Other de-
lude autos, miscellane-
wry, rubber and mis-
glans panel in her bosom,
wr with etot machine i-
' She could be much more enter-
taining than the usual floob-and
blood and yakketyiyak wife. You
enough Through scattering ef-
fects, these clouds probably cause
the decreases in cosmic ray in-
tensity which are observed during
some magaotie Meffc......"
Cosmic rays were discovered
by Victor Hess in 1914. But it
wasn't until about 1932 that ex-
li 0i hiumn
: “Why bother to____
lal wives? Anal the ones
could put a
side, a r
-a“e
aged a 3 .1
auto spend
has been more emphasis on the
development of items that ye
room door
P 7,
H
lAALAI A Al.ok
mother - a loth-
and sponge figure
[hi bulb-was made
vention at Waco returned Wednes-
day night and all declared it the
most harmonious convention ever
held by Texas Democrats despite
the imdortance of the issues up be-
fore it
.It was announced Thursday that
the Women’s Committee of the
Council of National Defense was
|
noarly 25
from suns
DEMOCRATS
RETURN
SEPT. 5, 1018
The Denton delegatee wh(
tended the State Democratic
1 she ever talked buck to you.
you wouldn’t just suspect she had
a screw Mose somewhere. You'd
*2*
BUT NOf IT T(TWEis‘ )
tant to you. you could always
make her more warm and af-
fectionate by installing another
309-WAI5 AAg-U DID 1D HeC ■ 0 1
could even change the color of her -
eyes by switching the acolor of her
know it
Her food bill we
the power and ligh
everybody knows
____-____Chiang ahd
his remaining troops off the main-
land and to Formosa, 100 miles
across the Formosa Strait.
a
Golden Glove*
By SAM DAWSON
AP Business News Analyst
NEW YORK (AP)-The revival
at business activity will find many
Year meetings
month. In it Dr.
gather failed. The Reds grow
-t-onee, smashed Chiang's arm-
SCIENCE
Giant Stride
Achieved in
Solar Work
icy has been to defend Chiang
from Rod attack.
Growing stronger, the Reds be
fan a-steady peppering of the
hiangheld offmore inlnds.rhis
kept up. Early in 1955 President
Eisenhower decided to take a
more positive position than ’the
increases in counting rates at low-
er altitudes.
PlasnIA UluUDS ..
Those electron-containing. plas-
r coot in intensity
minimum in 1954 to -
does, was
Suzat-sda
. Editor’s Note—this is the last in
a series of four articles written
for The Associated Press by prom-
inent U. 1. scientists who attend-
ed the International Geophysical
EDITORIALS
Members Of Congress Should
' - Have Smaller Constituency
NEW YORK (API — I science
can build a perfect dummy moth-
sunspot maximum in 1957.
This writer, at the Carnegie In-
stitution of Washington, estab-
lished the variation of cosmic ray
intensity with sunspot cycle from
continuous observations with ioni-
sation chambers over two dec-
ades. These results show that even
the cosmic ray particles with en-
ergies high enough to reach the
Magnetic Equator ore subject to
challenge to any scientist worth
his tent tubes.
A substitate human wife would
have to be more than warm, soft
and silent
She'd be kind of a combination
of an electronic brain and a de-
partment store dummy — of
all kinds of wonderful machinery
unknown to ordinary wives.
Instead of talking, she'd merely
burn recorded Strouse waltzes
hold a number of islands off the
mainland. They included Quemoy,
the Mateus, the Tachens- and a
number.of tiny Wots. The Rods
pursue Chiang and finish him off.
President Truman was eo dis-
gusted with the whole situation
that early in IMO he said this
country would not get mixed up In
MUIla
money i
_____ ________ Ime ally,
Chiang Kai-shek, estabil_____ _
ble government, make needed re-
forms and win the people’s alleg-
BUSINESS MIRROR
Emphasis On Research
Steps Up In Industry
’1' 0 ■.
5;.,
was
BOTHER WiTW)Sfurt (Md INMR V
4EAQS CRATE ) S—- ----—ge=
Italy in 1876. Itlaaoor-
ory of a lovely street sing-
s-4
"me
RD-CHRONICLE
imtsamr
Yesteryear
kogtagBacnerpua
•quip her _ _________ _
aaras nod do all your gambling
at homo.
But already I can boar acme
long-time old married '
Sgnes mnens
Atap unAnTa nnaltiualv
iking They offern real
erstwhile mem-
gang of four
its! attendants
of the N-yohr-
NOTICE TO PUBLIC
Any erroneous let* ection upon the character, reputation or standing of
any firm, individual or. corporation will be gladly corrected upon
being called to the publishers attention »
by Harry Harlow, a University of.
Wisconsin psychologist.
Heifound that bottle-fed mon-
koys were’completely content with
Since 1912 the
now there’s to be
in the months just ahead, the
success - or failure - of many
of these ventures will be tested
in the market place.
The U.S. government, the uni-
versities and industry together are
spending more than 10 billion dol-
lars this year on scientific re-
search, witb industry’s share top-
ping seven billion dollars.
The recession apparently has
chilled the research ardor of only
a few industries, ft seems actually
ztfrzakalanLu
in 1957 the 833 spent an aver
ago of 2.8 per cent of sales take
an research and development.
AMA reports the biggest in-
crease was by 14 makers of trans-
portation equipment (other than
autos and aircraft). Their budgets
are up by an average of N per
cent The aircraft industry aver-
morrow — sometimes years away.
Thus in their planning maany com-
try as far as possible to
k the less severe uns and
downs of the business cycle.
2,
THE WORLD TODAY
Here’s The Background On
in a study of the busgets of 833
companies, the American Manage-
ment Assn, reports today that 300
while you read
per. I you got_____
versation, you could put two brok-
en records in her in English,
French, German, Spanish or Ital-
TAGE FOVR ».-tt EDITORIALS AND EEATURES
and crush him.
He remained on his own the first
six months of INO. Then the Ko-
rean War began in June. Truman
sent the nh Fleet into the For-
2 *lj
UL BOYLE SAW
Getting Tired Of Wife?
Just Build Another One
companies in a position
on one phase of their
ness — emphasis an r
fense of Formosa?
Very quickly, early in INI, he
had to make up his mind. The
Reds were banging away at the
Tachen Islands, 200 miles north-
west of Formosa. He decided to
the Chinese civil war. This meant
_____Chiang was on his own. Still, the
lish n ste- Reds lacked the means to reach
stated American policy up to that
time.
He asked,and got from Con-
gress:
t:-Approval uf1 s fOSOtUtMr M
thorizing him to throw American
forks into a fight against the
Reds, if-necessary, to defend For-
mosa, the nearby Pescadores In-
lands. and "related areas."
MUTUAL DEFENSE -
2. Approval of a mutual defense
treaty with Chiang. This pledged
the united States to help Chiang
defend Formosa.
But Eisenhower under the res-
olution was tree to decide what.
If any, of those “related areas”
ho would defend or think worth de-
fending So what was left unan-
swered then, and is still unan-
These X "71
irons trapped in
magnetic field.
But even though total spending
by the A33 companies has in-
creased thia year, cost cutting and
picture
let the I
fight an
agree.
swered. Is this, question:
Would Eisenhower, in case of
Red attack on the offshore islands
held by Chiang, use American
forces to defend them and thus
get the United States into a possi-
--esnemomeM
M nde .*■**> WW** MtW- 4,494. :^B^BUN>w
gators at the universities of Iowa up to the preMitt Forme
■ p “ —
Uy at Mdi alttude
s I T ■AmAaS
icture changed abruptly in
-= —61950 yhenethe Redihh
GeSerted to CM dim got into me norean war.
From then till now American pol
Denton Record-Chronicle
TELEPHONE DUpont MUI_______- , ,
Published every evening (except Saturday) and Sunday morning by:
Denton Publishing Co., Inc., 114 E. Hickory St
isn’t out otthe— S01202
Those Who W ear Pajamas .
The Agriculture Department’s always doing some-
thing. Now the Washington boys have announced the
results of a survey they’ve made on pajamas.. They
come up with this report:
-r Fifty-nine per cent of American men sleep in paj-
amas. -
What—If anything—the remaining 41 per cent wear
in bed is a subject resolutely shunned by the depart-
ment. “All I can say is that we didn’t ask,” said one
departmental spokesman.
The survey also showed that the more education and
income a man has, the more likely he is to wear paj-
amas. In fact, only 47 per cent of all men with educa-
tion limited to elementary school reported wearing
pajamas,, compared with a 75 per cent pajama score
for college graduates. Low-income groups reported a
48 per cent pajama record compared with 65 per cent
for high-income men.
And what about those non-pajama men?
The government says flatly it doesn’t know anything ’
- about them and that it’s not about to look into the sub-
ject Which really isn't very sporting of them. .
tion machin
the biggest
cent, with
next, off 2
welated Prose to odea oxchisivaly 5 the use for publication Pocatello Chiefs adoptaa the prod- potential
the loca news prined to this newspaper, su well as all AP dent ofldaho Power Co. into their be know
’ Concentrated activity in one
field of geophysics during the IOY
has already led to unexpected re-
sults of great value in understand-
ing phenomena in another branch.
One example of this was the dis
covery of X rays during auroral
After the 1910 census, when the 436 figure was adopt-
ed, each member was responsible to about 210,000
persons. With the new estimates, the figure will be
about doubled. --- .
Moreover, in 1916 only men were allowed to vote;
now the franchise is not only universal but the mini-.,
mum age has been lowered to 18 and'19 in some "
states.
These changee mean that the average member of
Congress addresses himself to four times as many vot-
ers as he did 50 years ago when the 436 membership
figure was adopted. Even with the advent of radio
and television, the present constituehcy is rapidly be-
coming too unwieldly for the kind of direct and per-
sonal attention Americans want and are probably en-
titled to have.
For comparison, take the House of Commons in
Britain. There the average member of Parliament
has a constituency of about 80,000 or one-fifth smaller
than a member of Congress. The figure is similar in ,
France, under the present.Constitution; in West Ger-
many the figure is 100,000. In the United States the
average per member is much higher, even though the -
American voter often asks much more in the way of
attention from the Congressman than do citizens of
other countries.
amwhywapebuid * pertect
That logically to the next step-
and, some fool, a step already
lonkoverdue
States 3130 per month. SUN per year. •
COMBINATION MAIL AND CARRIER: Delivered to your home by
mail on weekdays and Sunday Morning Delit
where this service to available, $1.25 per mi
t
ian. This to one mere broken rec-
ord than the normal wife today
cm play in any language.
CONTROL PANEL
----- -E-de-m
T, " ;*r* ■ - mPh *- .
,. re -ttwheT ......... -■
—-L—______ 11a
, -
1 &. ■
Mirai.
ejected from ihsun:mt Kai-ehek -
The electrons in these same plas-
discusses 1GY programs in the
specialised fields of geophysical
and solar research. He is with the
Department of Terrestrial Mag-
netism at the Carnegie Institution
of Washington.
By Dr.-scorr E. FORBUSH
Written for The Associated Press
The International Geophysical
Year to concentrating the greatest
effort that ever has been made in
the study of the earth and how it
is influenced by the sun.
Around the world scientists are
making observations and taking
notes on the many different phe-
nomena connect ad with solar ac-
tivity; weather; aurora and air-
flow; ionospherics which mate .
radio transmission possible; mnost
variations in the earth’s magnetic
field; all the known time-varia-
lions in the intensity of cosmic
radiation.
In this simultaneous observa-
tion lies one of the great advan-
tages of the IOY.
RESULTS
BASIC RESEARCH
Some of their spending is for
basic research — that is, pure
science out of which tomorrow's
unknown wonders might spring.
Most of them, however, spend for
applied research — that is, the
search for new marketable prod-
ucts or better mothoda of produc-
«■», Nulicationarlor
. 1
"I
POCATELLO, Idaho um - The pany Ie harassing the power
---------------- . }
known to other Chiefs as "Big
‘Chief Makoum River Work Like
<•
-{
Three out of four companies,
according to one poll of more than
800, have either increased er
maintained their spending on re-
search and development thia year.
Over-all expenditures are running
4 per cent ahead of last year.
Research is s long-term propo-
sition and it aims at a dietant to-
Their vacation, sponsored by the National Society '
for Non-Smokers, will be held at the pretty seaside
1 town of Ryde on the Isle of Wight. People who want
to learn how to stop amc. ng will pay three pounds
(88-40) for a four-day stay -2 a guest house.
To help them give up cigarettes, pipes and cigars,
the society has provided a staff of specialists, includ-
ing chest physicians, psycho-therapists and medical
officers.hr 2
SOLAR CYCLE
Superimposed on the solar cycle
variation of cosmie ray intensity
are large variations which occur
in some, but hot all, magnetic
storms. Such efforts were espe-
daily numerous in 1957. They di-
minish towargsunspot minimum.
. Thus, pre-investigation of time
varlations of cosmic ray intensity,
especially in connection with re-
suite from other IGY projects, will
undoubtedly provide valuable re-
unnan A.m a"uaaau aa
Bill ix i or DUUeI । Uoersvanoing
This experiment, in which the
earth' permanent magnetic field
pleyed an important role, consist-
ed of a worldwide survey of cos-
mic-ray intensity using standard-
ised instruments.
DECREASE
Research has shown that more
cosmic rays fall at the poles than
at the Magnetic Equator, where
the earth's magnetic field deflects
the weaker rays And they are
found to decrease in number when
EVER HAPPEN TO YOU? W.Hk*
Ure support of de
grams in days of__
I activity emphasises I
ance Of joining today'
with a hard look at
Waa ■ ■’
mk' v*' H-nj
•^4 , “se ru
inherited, just as are the color of
cm's eyes.
But this isn’t true at all of
wives. Wives are almost never ip-
herited. They BN> acqulred-just
like a broken ana, a job, sr false
2
The Situation In Formosa 26"
old woman was ver
Eppmnaz..n
■ P
V7 '
Wit
L •2p
HE UPROAR. •
Things quieted down until a few
weeks ago. Again the Reds bom-
barded the offshore islands, parti-
cularly Quemoy, near the China
mainland and directly across the
Strait from Formosa. The Mateus
are n miles northwest of Formo-
sa. But there are a number of
Chiang-held islets near the main-
There's only guessing now as to
whether the Reds will try to take
Quemoy, the Matsui or, just to
wih a little prestige, the tiny is-
lets Equally mysterious to What
the Eisenhower administration
will do if the Reds move at all.
even after Ike’s press conference
Wednesday.
So far the administration has is-
sued what sounded like stern
warnings to the Reds but in lan-
guage so vague that Eisenhower
is free to make up his mind at
the gut minute on whether he
want* to get iftto a fight over the
islands. ........ ' ___- - .
He'd have to fight, because of
the treaty, to defend Formosa
itself.
. " • ' ''
.2
THE RECENT estimates of the Census Bureau
with respect to America's population in 1960 and the - tenwhen necessary,
effect of population changes On apportionment in Con- ,
gress should lead to a reconsideration of the whole mat-
ter of the size of our House of Representatives.
customers d2 to cut costs.
Germantown Cricket lub, Phll
adelphia (B - Donald Budge ef the
United States defeated Adrian
Quist of Australia, 8-6, 6-1, HI I*
his country, whatever the result
periments showed the primary
cosmic rays, which imphge on
the earth's outer atmosphere, coh-
rged particles of very
coming from all di-
ma clouds are responsible for
the extraordinarily high counting
rates registered at great altitudes
by Geiger counters sent up in the
U. S. satellite Explorer by the
cosmic ray group at the Univer-
sity of Iowa.'
Soviet cosmic rsy investigators -Strongrr:
using detectors on the latest Sput- H18
nik observed similar, but smaller, Reds 10
The AMA san that managers
of research and development de-
partmehts report that expansion
research and development depart-
ments report that expansion of the
budgets has been kept in close
relation to near-term income ex-
pectations.
The publishers are not responsible for copy omissions, typographical
errors or any unintentional errors that occur other than to correct
iranrstrssmcceptaran"tnbronansiniyhetir,mttention. Aladverusine Name Power Official
—l
i
Like other corporate divisions,
the research departments have
sought operating economies and
focused au greeter selectivity in
Apparently there is no particular sanctity to the
number 435. Over the years the total membership of
— the House of Representatives has varied decade by
I decade. There is no reason why serious thought should
' not be given to raising the total to afigure which would
substantially reduce the load of members of the House
of Representatives.
Entered as second class mail matter at the postoffice at Dentop, Tex-
as January U, 1M1. according to Act of Congress. March s, 1871
SUBSCJUFTION RATES AND INFORMATION
Single Copies 5c tor weekdays: 10c for Sunday.
HOME DELIVERY RATES FOR DAILY AND SUNDAY . e
BY CARRIER: Delivered to your home by city carrier er motor route
on same day of publication. Me per. week. - . -—
BY MAIL ONLY: In Denton and adjoining counties, 11.00 per month,
$9 $0 per year (must be paid to advance). Elsewhere in the United
*
J W.. da-,-i 44 L
_______ ■ .____, . .I
2."
*'Mt—.....MH. • t e- oor i ""mm-rv- —-e - *
-Em=Lyra-demcm-
... ....
-: i Ft THE DENTON
LETT^^
WELCOMED
The Record-Chronicle wel-
comes letters from readers on
any subject' in good taste.
er. For, in addition to being warm
and ssfi she never loft her babies
-and she never scolded them.
What works with monkeya t M*'
ever, may .Mt work with childen—
One cm hardly foresee much of a
future for artificial humanmoth- ___ _
a good mother can’t be bought,
built or borrowed she’s usually
JOHNSTON LEADS
COKE STEVENSON
SEPT. 1, 104!
DALLAS (B - Lyndon Johnson
lad Coke Stevenson by 1M votes
Saturday night in the Texas Eleq-
tion Bureau’s count from last Sat-
urday’s runoff race for the U.S.
Senate. The count was Johnson
494,150 votes: Stevenson 403.908.
Thirty liquor law violation coms
were filed against 11 persons ar-
rested in a swift series of raids by
county, city and state officers in
Denton Friday night. By noon Sat-
urday fines totaling $2,250 and jail
sentences totaling 180 days had
been assessed in county court.
MRS. BARROW
IS CRITICAL
SEPT. 5, IMS
DALLAS w - Mrs. Henry Bar-
row, mother of two slain diepera-
have increased their allotments
for research, m have maintained
last year's pace, and 108 have cut
The society even has plans for those who don’t want
. to give up the hbit on a vacation. It’s set up clinics
in London where*, so far about 150 have registered, 30
; of whom have given up smoking entirely. Like mem-
bers of Alcoholics Anonymous, those enrolled at the -
non-smoking clinics stiffen their resolution not to
puff by meeting regularly to discuss their triumphs
and defeats.
In fact, “the chance of get-together with others
treading the hard road to freedom is the most effect-
ive part of the treatment,“ says the society’s director.
This all sounds well and good. Let’s hope the Brit-
ish always remember, though, that this matter of smok-
ing began in America. Where else?
cent
Marked increased in budgeting
for research were reported - by
seryice machinery, up 13.3 per
cent; enemacals, up 1Q per cent;
food and beverages, 8.3 per cent;
and stone, clay and glass, up 7.1
per dent.
MACHINERY
Ae 8 group the nine construc-
______________that any young lady wishing to ea-
Would he consider anygor all of list in the work ouldrdo so by
applying to Mrs. J. C. Coit, coun-
ty chairmen, or Mrs. W. O. David-
eon. Chairman of the Home Ser-
vice of the Red Cross.
• *-.
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 30, Ed. 1 Friday, September 5, 1958, newspaper, September 5, 1958; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1467543/m1/4/: accessed June 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.