Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 78, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 1, 1956 Page: 1 of 19
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""907
A
A
RAKE IN FALL PROFITS
WITH WANT ADS
DIAL C-2551
- 54TH YEAR OF DAILY SERVICE— NO. 78
DENTON, TEXAS, THURSDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 1, 1956
PRICE FIVE CENTS
B
f
British, French
y
12
1]
25
88 $
Ve
• :
I
I
City Property
. i
UH AT IT HE A XS
E
ously owned by Johnson and the
his special radio TV report to the some parking lots and other Den-
Of Dilemma
HUNGARY BOWS
Power Pact
L Between Citv
OUT OF PACT
9
CALLED STUDY
nited Nations
bright sunshine and many people
were out in the streets
the Westen
zkion.
intervene.
a m.
followed the British announcement
tion.
\
another Egyptian warship
N.
provoked by Egyptian alions
en
they
rang
as
the
Despite repeated pleas
Israeli
forces
withdrew
from
covered in the budget
pest against the Nagy regime
The department announced also
Uniot were among those
FOR REPLY TO IKE
favorable
to be named to confer with Hunga-that by its cotpit 4.878 Americans
Stevenson Asks
whole country
Plan Hits Only
Land I ease
Equal TV Time
policy wilLgo into effect," he ex-
Only lands used for agricultur-
ent problem than government-own-1
ed lands around the Lake Dallas'
W E A T II E R
:4
i
the City of Dallas, we leased the*your bills. Complete Personal lean
t
--*
$
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V
■ *4
k
q!l "3
r
M
Ike Speech
Focuses Idea
Another Norther
Heads For Texas
Soviet
casting
vital
Dixon
Members said the poles are not
high enough to throw the light
Cd from the City of Dallas a year
ago, there are no previous own-
ers to have preference over the
tracts, and necessarily the Corps
has to establish a leasing policy.
"When we purchased Lake Dal-
las and the adjacent lands from
man said the Egyptian frigate Do*
mint went down under the guns
of the British cruiser Newfound-
feet only those lands adjacent to
the present Lake Dallas arm, the
Fort Wort office of the Corps of
The Money that slips through your
fingers will pay the loan that pays
fore being evacuated from Egypt
with other Americans. < P Wire-
photo via radio from Cairo)
President, Group
Plan Strategies
excess lands for a year, and ex-
tended that lease recently for three
remained It said the Air Force
and unity of the 6th Fleet are
i aiding .in the evacuation
area The front was expected
cross Texas by Saturday
... 73
... 46
... 84
ce
-
k
the
As-
for
"1.2
i
Sehmitz-Floyd-Hamlett Amhulance
. . Phones c-2214 and C-447.
,-9,
built MIG airforces on the ground.
BRITAIN DOWNS 14
' British pilots said they had de-
1 British planes with cannon and
, rocket fire were reported in offi-
bdnd
He chided Britain. Franye and , sider recommendations to U.
Israel but addl'd that all had been
i Russian tanks and infantry had >
-apparently been withdrawn from |
REMEMBER WHEN
Winter had alwys arrived
by Nov. 1’
votes, further
grave split in
At Lake Dallas. ------ -------
thal said the government purchas-
, ures to be one worth approximate-
ly $160,000.
i Suez, at the southern approaches
i to the canal. An Admiralty spokes-
Continue
but other comnerce. industry and
transport were dead
------------------| sewers, hunting members of the
done the attack, the people of the
Middle East will have no reason
Attack
U. S. PROPOSAL
The U. S. resolution which they
vetoed now will become a propo-
posal for action by the assembly.
High Wednesday .
Low this morning
High year ago .....
Lew year ato
■' 5 • 1
Thursdays high was 73 and this ! drawal of Russian troops from the
morning » low was 46
las for block lease when the pres change' in that policy
ent leases expire Dec. 31, 1956. He At Lake Dallas, wifch Rosen
said officials did not know how
many blocks of leases would be
issued for the 50 tracts, but add
ed “We are studying the problem
now "
The tracts now are leased to
farmers and ranchers on single
3
> 05
.9
Te
Courtney requested permission to on Texas today
install reflector type street lights; The Weather Bureau said, how
along Glenwood between Emer [ ever that this norther isn t likely
A SMILE
FOR SAFETY •
An unidentified American young-
reservoir poses an entirely differ- al purposes are involved in the
•on Dr and Mistywood He said to tot.ch off rains
the estimated cost of $467 88 was 1 earlier this week
2
, -
-3
722
*--t
“c?
peace" resolution of Nov. 3, 1950
The United States got that resolu-
tion adopted in the Korean War
days to enable the U. N. to act
against aggresfiot despite the So-
viet veto in the Security Council.
The council call for the session
said "a grave situation has been
I against Egypt" and the council
had been unable to act because of
the British and French vetoes.
.....4 Fu8
Omission Costs
13,000 Ballots
multuous audience in Pittsburgh's
Hunt Armory to support "efforts
to end the war between Egypt and
Israel” but said "I cannot promise
to support or respect a foreign
policy that has bluffed and blun-
dered the United States into a
shattering diplomatic disaster "
"It has brought the whole world
to the brink of another war that
Mr. Dulles (secretary of state)
may not have planned but which
he did a lot to cause," he said.
An audience which fire depart-
ment officials estimated at 13,500
gave him a roaring recept6n./
He hammered away at Republi-
can foreign policy in rallies in
New York City during a day in
which a steady downpour of rain
cut down "s street crowds and
forced him to do his spanking in-
doors in halls of limited capacity.
of the tact with copgressional leaders
govern- A few hoyrs before Eisenhower
Egypt. ; fou
Unless they can be convinced that ___
" i "‘te •it J___ . con- had been sunk in the Red Sea off
Changes in leasing policies of as possible If block leases are is additional months. The extension
government-owned land around I sued, he said, they would be done expires Dec. 31, when the new
Garza Little Elm Reservoir will aL, on a public bid basis w _
The information officer declared plained
: that property adjacent to the new
Security Council Gathers;
Sinking Ship Blocks Suez
Co-Op Studied
ish-nd‘‘French. But the United irocxet nre were reported in o1.
States needs its two allies, as cial announcements here and at
they need the United States. for. Cyprus, their base. Jo be striking
a.c.. . r* hard At fivp H ovntian airfiolHe in
defense against Russia.
• .
1 sler manages a smile as he sits
I on suitcases in the American
CHIDES MADE
in his speech to the nation last '
night Eisenhower tried to keep the
way smooth for retaining the alli-
ance He chided the British and
Fiench for what they did. But he
Yugoslav Delegate Joza Brilej.wrek’byhthetprncnana’Brittbi;
i who acted like the colonial powers
Because one Democratic nom
ine’s name was omitted from the
official ballot that wasto be used
during the genera) election Tues
day. Denton County is having 13,
000 new ballots printed. County
Judge Jack Gray said today
The omission, found Wednesday
afternoon, affects the constable ‘s
office "of-Precinct 5 Nominee
C. C. (Bih Carter of Sanger was
omitted from the ballot
Judge Gray said absentee bal-
lota already cast are valid
the Red inspired answer to
the Western alliance in the
North Atlantic Treaty Organi-
er divulges its deliberations. )
Eisenhower ruled out last night |
the use of American armed forces 1
in the present situation brought
; 4 1
'; 1
a I ]
. • al
h-1ee
■" * ----
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13 60 inches Thia time last 22.54
1 inches. -
Denton Record - Chronicle
A Grotving Newspaper For A Groicing Area
__
interests of
owners if
u.. ----- ua. . . . N. Sir Pierson Dixon of Britain and the United States doee not
members for collective measures, I Louis de Guirangaud of France!
The latter aimed squarely at
Britain and France.
C o,'
4, *
7^
canal users.
like the one
E•
ri
d vi
day would be a full-dress review
of the Middle East crisis It got
under way, with Eisenhower pre-
Suez Canal zone and halting the
Israeli-Egyptian fighting
Less than 24 hours earlier Brit-
ain and France had vetoed U S.
nan officials on complete with
nation
1 To rely first on the United
Nations for a solution to "this tor-
menting problem
2 To do all within the United
Staabs own power "to localize the
fighting and to end the conflict.
One matter certain to come in
| for major attention at the Security
Council session was American
strategy in the t' N General As-
sembly. called into special session
But the Arabs have ears too No !
Arab can ever be expected to
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Eisenhower met for
two hours today with National Security Council, expand-
ed to include military and civil chiefs of the armed ser-
vices, in a full-dress review of the Middle East crisis.
The session of the nation’s top strategy board opened at
the White House at 9 a.m and broke up just before 11.
Presidential press secretary James C. Hagerty, in-an-
nouncing the end of the*-------
meeting, said he had noniy • A
statement to make. EDallaqta (dafe
The Security Council nev- ,
the Western alliance.
The emergency session is
first ever called under the
sembly s so-called "uniting
ever to trust a Western power
which they were and are
Already the Russians are accus-
ing the United States of being in
cahoots with the British, French
and Israelis in the attack on
The group gaye unanamious ap Press, the cold front was due in
proval to the project but rejected the Panhandle and west Texas
had been
same four
be watching the United States
also.
This country attempted in the
U.N. Security Council to block the
French-British attack this week.
The French and British blocked
the United States with a veto. Now
the case goes to the U.N. General
Assembly.
for It was limited, they said, to in-
effective antiaircraft fire and a *
lone fighter which attempted to
WEATHER
: C ■ i - 1 s u-uti
COOLER
emphasizing the
Egypt "as soon as possible.
Budapest radio said Nagy s govithat 1.888 Americans
I the capital to their bases. But
there were reports that the Rus
' sians had thrown a cordon about
the capital, some 10 miles outside.
Vengeance squads of young rev-
7%
yesterday in response to ques- /announced
tions, that the Council session to--
Acting City Engineer Robert
amount of federal tax paid on the embasay compound in Cairo be-
conveyence, the transaction fig-
country's top strategic planning
about by the Israeli attack ah An estimated $160,000 transac-
Egypt and British F rench inter- i tion conveyed ownership of build-
vention 1 mgs housing three large Denton
But the Security Council — the business firms into the hands of
s'rvice. Industrial Credit Cam
pany, over ussell's.
i*. 73
, A. e 829 + “-hi ' . 55a '
According to the Associated
BUDAPEST P — For the first
time in nine days no gunfire was
hoard, todoy in the center of Buda
pest Foodshops were operating
’
The buildings.
Grocery. Safeway
, '
■
I 1
8. """9
2a.
hard at five Egyptian airfields in
the Suez zone and Nile delta in an
- effort to destroy Nasser's Soviet-
hated Hungarian Communist se-
cret police
When they found them in the
sewers, they shot them and
dumped their bodies When thy
found them in the streets, tMey
relations with
The air strikes, beginning at
dawn after a night of British and
French bombing attacks. were
aimed at the airfields of Abu Su-
eir, Fayid and Kahrit in the canal
zone; Inchass. 35 miles from
Cairo; and Kasfareet.
The reported sinking of the
Egyptian warship in the canal.
around Garza Little Elm reservoir the original property
According to Rosenthal, the they want the land, and that Po-
Corps will put up approximately licy will continue," he said "At
50 small tracts around Lake Dal- present, there is no contemplated
put a spotlight on this country s
critical dilemma
But it is only part of the prob-
lem unleashed by the British-
French attack on Egypt
Top government officials are
privately very angry at the Brit-
did not speak harshly of them. - ----- -----.------
And, while criticizing this coun- fighters. The pilots said they had
try’s friends, he also blamed ' encountered almost no resistance.
gw. m2
7772 2
A8
lease transactions. Rosenthal con-
tinued He said 30 leases are held
by ranchers for livestock grazing
purposes, while 20 leases are held
by farmers for cultivation.
Congressman Frank Ikard said
Wednesday previous information
was confuting, and blamed what
he termed a "poor Army release"
for the misunderstanding.
He said he did not know what
effect, if any, the correct "infor-
mation will have on planned lefts'-
lation to return lands adjacent to
the new reservoir to the original
property owners.
olutionaries still prowled the
streets of Budapest and the city’s siding, shortly after 9
hung them up by the 1eet W . .
they shot them in the streets, they He sand he has ng-pan to call
. ^poured gasoline on their bodies a special sessionof Congress. But
trick or treat "nd burned them . promised to naintain close con
another norther was bearing down
housing A&P
Grocery and
. were previ-
crisis French sources said Pi-
neau outlined France’s position.
They added that plans drawn by
military officials are proceeding
on sehedule and that no diplomat-
ic intervention has altered the
French-British operation. \
tract basis. Rosenthal said the
block leasing would affect a large
amount of savings to the crops by
eliminating as much paper work
DENTON AND VICINITY; Widely
scattered thunderstorms Friday
mainly in east. Turning e o o l er
Friday.
EAST, SOUTH CENTRAL TEXAS:
Fair thia afternoon, cooler Fri-
day.
TEMPERATURES
(Experiment station Report)
By JAMES MARLOW
Associated Pres* News Analyst
WASHINGTON p _ Eresident raSairlarhspatohndeasaid carotp
Fise nhower * attempt to balance to early afternoon, and Egyptian
e .fiddle East picture — by military headquarters claimed six
criticizing the British the French, British planes were shot down
the Israelis and the Egyptians - over the Nile delta.
Troop* of the two Western na-
tions had not showed up in the
area of operations, but their land-
1 ing on Egyptian soil was expect-
ed _
Jordan brok e
France.
City commissioners met in
exec utive session Wednesday night
to study the Structure of a pro- ;
posed contract between the City
of I >enton and Brazos Electric
Power Cooperative for the sale of
electricity to the company.
f City officials indicated that the
sale of surplus power would be
profitable to the city and ulti J
mately help balance the budget
Negotiations are expected to be
resumed Monday afternoon w in n
representatives of the Brazos co-
operative are scheduled to meet
again with city officials.
It was reported that terms have
“ot been reached on the contract
prkes.
Routine business was conducted
and long range problems were dis |
cussed at a makeup meeting of I
600D. HI T NOT GOOD ENOUGH
Judy Brady ard Jerry John Crawford, members of Class 8B at Lewisville Junior
High put in a lot of hours on their class window mural for Halloween, but it failed
to place in the Chamber of Commerce’s "best picture" contest for Spook Night
(Additional photo, story on page 10, this section ) (Record-Chronicle Staff Photo by
Norris Jackson)
FULL DRESS REVIEW
Presidential press secretary
James C. Hagerty told reporters
today for an effort to end the
fighting.
PATH FOL ND
"In the past, Eisenhower said
last night, "the United Nations
has proved able to find a way to
end bloodshed. We believe it can
and will do so again
iv people who frequently attends Security
But they /Council
meetings, stayed in New
I were out for food, trying to find | Yogk City for the Assembly ses-
i relatives and to pick up the I sion. Vice President Nixon, who
I threads of their lives torn by the seldom misses a council meeting
anti Soviet, anti-Communist civil was absent.
! war
Less drastic steps could include
‘condemnation of Britain, France
and Israel, a cease-fire call, or a
request that U. N. members pun-
ish the three with diplomatic and
economic measures
and Soviet resolutions in the coun-
Esenhawer said the I N Gen- cil for a cease-fire in Egypt and is a joint aggression of Israel,
era! Assembly should be able to I withdrawal of Israeli troops. France and Great Britain against
; bring the "opinion'of the world Under the resolution introduced Egypt." He said this mean the
to bear on the Middle Fast situa- by Yugoslavia. th* special session most serious crisis therk. N yet
I of the 76-nation Assembly will con- had seen
i again.
. , .. I The people of Africa and Asia. , .
added that they would see that the newly freed from colonialism, will land.
20822
5
Hif
over the houses and into the
streets.
"We wouldn’t be doing anything
but lighting the alleys and we can
use our money in better ways." ;
L. A < Bill । House said
The commission also approved
the purchase of an accounting
machine for $6,550 In other rou-
tine business, the group approv;
ed the purchase of electrical and
plumbing supplies and envelopes.
Looking toward the future, the
commission studied possible solu-
tions to future water drainage
problem* Action was deferred
until further study is made
,1 purpose of protecting the Mideast waterway from fighting
M swirling between Egyptian and Israeli forces in the Snai
Peninsula.
The Egyptians gave out no official information todav on
• the fighting with Israeli troops But the Israelis claimed
■ Egyptian troops were in retreat and would soon be cut off
and valuable considerations.”
However, according to the
69 SURVIVORS
"The Domiat was carrying
mines with the apparent intention
of laying them in the area," said '
the Admiralty announcement. It
added 69 survivors from the Do
miat had been picked up by Brit*
ish ships.
The British spokesman said at-
tacks against Egyptian airfields
were expected to go on throughout
the day and gave this picture of
the raids:
British bombers dropped de*
layed action bombs with fuses of
different lengths on Egyptian
fields last night. He said the fuse
devices were used to give Egyp-
tian personnel a chance to get
away safely.
The first word of the break in
Egypts relations with Britain
came from Cairo. The British For-
eign Office took simia action
against Egypt a short time later
and a similar move was expected
from France.
French Foreign Minister Christ-
ian Pineau called in U. S. Ambas-
sador C. Douglas Dillon for a 20-
minute talk on the Middle East
Britain and France voted
against the resolution to convene
the Assembly, contending it was
illegal Australia and Belgium ab-l
stained The United States and the
the City (ommissjon Wednesdary Althourh Denton and Denton I
night. All members were pres County children had comparative-
ent except Vice-Chairman Char I iv mild weather — "h— —"
Ie* Floyd doorbells for a
..4 A
■ -A
Ag.A
a plan to install lights in several1 Thursday night A freeze was fore j
city alleys cast for ’he Panhandle upper ernment had sent Moscow a note evacuated from the
South Plains and the El Paso demanding that Soviet delegates ; counties bv later afternoon, and
in the Sinai Peninsula,
Even before Egypt announced
blocking of the canal, shipping
was reported turning back from
its approaches tbecause of danger
from military iterations /
Egypt asked bther "rab states’
to block another source for Middle
East oil—the pipelines from the
I main production centers to Medi-
terranean ports.
RELATIONS BROKEN
Egypt broke off diplomatic re-
lations with Britain and France.
stroyed 14 Egyptian planes on the
ground, including Soviet MIG 15
es affects in no way the land the new reservoir are leased to
ton properties owned by the two.
Mrs. Evelyn Lee Pereira, for-
merly Evelyn Lee Little, and hus-
band Victor E Pereira, of Los An-
geles, Calif , signed the property
over to Johnson "for and in con-
sideration of $10 and other good .
4
introducing the propos for an ex-
traordinary Assembly kseion, told
the council, "What is Eking place
Stevenson seemed confident the '
time he sought would be granted ,
under f ede r al communications 1
regulations requiring equal time i
for candidates between conven-
tions and elections. “
Last night he asked a tu- .
IN TOD ATS PAPER
. _ Pige"Sec. *
i 5
1 Tk,4
i o 4 2
i.
1 -.78
PITTSBURGH IP - Adlai E. I
Stevenson canceled three upstte
New York political talks todly,
■ He prepared to fly to New York
City and seek free radio and tele-
vision time to further his conten-
tion that Eisenhower administra-
tion policies have “brought hte
whole world" to the brink of war.
The hostilities in Egypt virtually
crowded out all other issues in the
Democratic candidate’s strategy
as he entered the final stage of a
campaign in which he is seeking
to take the initiative on the "peace
issue."
His campaign staff announced
the cancellation of political talks
in Syracuse, Rochester and Buf-
falo. N. Y.
Stevenson has (asked "equal
time" to reply to President Ei-
senhower’s 15-minute talk last night
over major TV and radio net-
works concerning the Middle
East crisis.
Cancellation of the upstate New
York talks apparently was dictat-
ed by the availability in New York
City of nationwide TV and radio
‘network facilities ।
UNITED NATIONS, N V. IP—’ It calls upon Israel and Egypt (1)
The U. N. General Assembly was to cease fire at once. (2) upon
called into emergency session to- Israel to withdraw its armed
day to decide what to do about forces from Egypt; (3 upon all
military attacks by Britain. I U. N. members to withhold mili-
France and Israel aon Egypt. I tary. economic and financial aid
The U. N. Security Council vot-, from Israel until she pulls back. . _____ ______
ed 7-2 last night to summon the! and (4) on all U. N. members to Egyptain President Nasser
Assembly after Britain and refrain from the threat or use of aggravating them.
France launched air and naval force in the Middle East. ; REDS ACCUSE
operations against Egypt with the — -......
1 aim of occupy eg the
reaching far outside the purely | Wednesday,
military into coordination of dip- l
lomatic and economic action. I
HOW TO GEAR I P ' Sears and Roebuck,
Thus its apparent task was to , , . - . . ,
plan how to gear US activ Ities 11heirs of D. A. Little, a former
generally to the major pledges business partner of Johnson. )
made by Esenhower last night in Included in the transaction were |
★ k ★ ★ ★ 20 PAGES
officer for the district office there,! arm
said the new policy of block teas "Government lands adjacent to
VI ENNA • — Premier Imre
Nagy of Hungary called in the
Son let ambassador today and
gave notice that Hungary was
withdrawing from the Warsaw
Pact. Radio Budapest an-
nounced I tie Warsaw Pact is
Communist - dominated
ment of Premier Imre Nagy, no- spoke, the State Department bar
body was back at work in the fac- ned travel by U, S citizens into
tones There was no public trans Egypt. Israel, Jordan and Syria
port Nearly everything was, still except where a trip is determined
at a standstill j to be in this county s "best in-
Resentment mounted in Ruda- terests "
R Murray Johnson of Dallas ,
U.N. MEETS IN
:.........2
Feod News ......4,5,9
Football Contest ........
Pieture WarM ..........1
• Sports ............V1’1
TV Log ...........X...3
Women’s News ......
4" 1
including "the use of armed force: said, their countries’ forces would
when necessary ” occupy the canal zone only tem-
porarly to safeguard
LESS DRASTIC
Sun sets today at 5:86 pm; rU-
es Friday at 6:46 a.m. Pishing:
Fair.
Danton County rainfall so far
this month: Non*. So far thia year:
Lake Daikis Arm, U.S. Says
Engineers said late Wednesday.
Al Rosenthal, public information
T,4002
---—
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ouuc28
EE.
"1
a
■?' hucdf
Ha set up no specific plans for
. , this countrys individual actions
The revolution . scarred capital Henry Cabot Lodee Jr U.S
on the Danube was bathed in ambassador to the
LONDON (AP) — British and French planes carried on ’
monster attacks on Egyptian airfields today and Cairo an-
nounced attacking aircraft sank an Egyptian warship in
the Suez Canal, blocking traffic and cutting off oil ship-
ping lo Europe.
Cairo said British and French warplanes raided Egyp-
tian troops at crossing points along the canal and in the
operation sank the Egyptian warship Akka in Timsah
Lake just south of Ismailia, midway point of the canal.
Britain and France launched military operations against
President Nasser’s regime last night with the declared
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 78, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 1, 1956, newspaper, November 1, 1956; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1475424/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.