Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 95, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 23, 1960 Page: 3 of 8
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PAGE THREE
Wednesday, November 23, IM
THE DINTON RECORD-CHRONICLE
Bayou State
. 0-
Teachers’ Pay
"_030- •
6
p
; II
Glazed Carrot Strips
Giblet Gravey
Fluffed White Potatoes
Toasted Almonds
Green Boons
1
50
fetone
ARE MORE COMING?
applied on sound tire bodies or on your own tires AN
$2 DOWN
08
22
W
I
9
.10v
03
0-60
b.
Barbara
Point;
acem
James
2for9 60
Judy
CLOTHING
Krum: Dorthy Trietsch and
«
24
6.70-15 tr 7.50-14...Tubeless or Tube-Type, Black. ALL SIZES LOW PRICED
PRICE
A
SALE
—u
—
WALL-TO-WALL
H
DRESSES
PANTS
New Batteries
I
from 9
exchange
v
zfegpsegnmmmezzremm
2.50
6.50-20-00
SPORTSWEAR
699
STORE
TIRE CO.
MISS HENDLEY-S
218 North Elm
Call
700
k
Retailers’ belief in the selling
DU2-4161
N. Locust
1508 W. MULBERRY
1323 OAKLAND
1
r /
1
f
l
(
SAM Laney! Firestone
Krum Girl, Ponder Boy Get
Top 4-H Awards AtBanquet
puts a pair on
your car NOW!
Aoto Rug
$3.99
SECOND AND THIRD
President Eisenhower has
cided that the second and i
alternatives are necessary.
Wherever you drive, with our guarantee,
you ride content with the knowledge
that if tire trouble comes along you will
get prompt and courteous attention
from any of the thousands of Firestone
service centers along your way.
Other awards:
ACHIEVEMENT
‘SHOP
CODE
MARK
RUNAWAY HEIRESS
OFF SOCIAL LIST
McReynolds and Sandra Gentle.
Sanger; Paul Pels, St. Thomas
Enis,
Er-
The next category is overseas
spending under military programs
—a $3.1 billion item last year.
In this area, the administration
has ordered the gradual return of
more than half the 484,000 wives
and children who accompany U.S.
servicemen to overseas posts. Be-
cause these people spend millions
overseas, the action is being taken
Community Club at Pilot
Bill Rainey, Mayhill.
AGRICULTURAL —
; de
third
despite its effect on morale.
Also, the government will try
to shift more military spending to
the United States and persuade
the Europeans to pay a larger
share of European defense costs.
Two other deficit-reducing pos-
sibilities have so far been by-
passed. Nothing has been done to
reduce Amercan private invest-
ment abroad or outlays by Amer-
ican tourists.
I rack of Dresses — one or
two piece. Cottons, Wools,
Blonds. Shos 7-1 5, 8-20. Bog.
12.98 to 39.98
Firestone
[QuaHtyi
N TREAD//
► j
4
Do Your
Christmas
Shopping
Hero
Ju-Cy Pig Restaurant
410 N. LOCUST
FUTURE MOVES?
These, then, are the areas in
which the government can act to
reduce the deficit and stem the
loss of gold.
Some say the administration has
already done more than is nec-
essary. Others believe more will
have to be done in the future.
It’s a debate which will con-
tinue in the months ahead; a de-
bate on which the future of the
dollar and the free world econ-
omy may depend.
Have Thanksgiving Dinner With Us.
Cranberry Juice Cocktail
ROAST TURKEY and DRESSING
I
Hi
We're
Santa Claus
Approved
Deluxe Cranberry Relish
Hot Rolls
Pumpkin Deluxe or Mince Pie
neremmmmpmmuamaaremnenemnngmeempmmmas
Many Steps Already Taken
To Stem Flow Of U.S. Gold
Mestene
OwafiyA
Ball Point
Pen
Nothing to buy.
Drive in, get yours.
Limit one per person.
■
Quick winter starting
at rock-bottom prices
I
8
OPEN
THANKSGIVING DAY
9 A.M. TO 1 P.M.
1323 Oakland Only
289
T;
5
Denton C. D. Jeffrey, Mgr. DU2-5433
Cotton Cords, Corduroy. Buy
now and save during this
speciat sale.
i
V
mmemnrunamim
..............
. Wetkit and Pants Set
0
Sizes 7-8, 15-16. Regular
12.98 Value ..................
Solons Tackle With Kenton
FREE!
#mjF
Contoured fit. right over
front floor "hump.” ™
Choice of colors.
funds to meet the $1.9 million pay-
roll due for 4,500 teachers, prin-
cipals and other school employes.
Davis said checks will be pre-
pared today and delivered by the
end of the week.
Public schools in New Orleans,
the state’s largest city, were in-
tegrated Nov. 14 when four Negro
girls entered first-grade classes in
two previously all-white schools.
The system is closed this week
due to a statewide teachers con-1
vention at Baton Rouge and the :
Thanksgiving holidays.
RACIAL BARRIERS
The dropping of classroom ra-
cial barriers touched off a wave
of riots and violence in New Or-
leans and a boycott of public
schools by many students.
Classes are scheduled to resume
Monday.
I The school board is awaiting a
to get the best buys, follow the
news and advertising pages of your
daily newspaper Last year. Ure
news and advertising pages of your
daily newspaper Last year. tire
and tube manufacturers invested
over $9% million in national news-
paper advertising, and local Ure
dealers put 70-79 per cent of their
promotional budgets into their lo-
cal papers.
achieved next year, particularly
if Europe’s boom levels off.
Another item on the plus side
in 1959 was the repayment of $1
billion in government loans by
other nations. These repayments
are made according to regular
schedules and not much can be
done to increase them.
In 1959, foreign visitors spent
$900 million in the United States
The government is trying to pro
mote the * visit U.S.A.” idea.
Finally, foreigners in 1959 in-
vested $500 million in the United
States on a long-term basis it’s
questionable whether the U. S.
economy is growing fast enough
at present to warrant much of an
against the New Orleans school
system.
But afterwards, the school of-
ficials said a legislative resolution
“directing banks and business
firms not to do business with the
school board has made it impos-
sible for us to borrow monies to
meet our operating costs.”
—Denton Record-Chronicle
DENTON COUNTY’S TOP 4 -H CLUB MEMBERS
Gold Star Winners Miss Schluter and Fletcher
Schon and Jerald Pelzel, St. Tho-
mas; Howard Haggard and Mas-
on Haggard. Mayhill; Rodney Zel-
lers, Little Elm: Ed Yeary, San-
ger; Ronnie Hilliard, Lewisville
BEAUTIFICATION OF HOME
GROUNDS — Marilyn Haggard,
Mayhill.
BEEF — Steve Mallow, May-
hill: Tommy Barnes, Lewisville;
DeWayne Pedigo. Pilot Point;
Ronny Klein, Blue Mound.
CANNING — Carol Jean Klein
and Gayla Wilkinson, Blue Mound;
and Barbara Haggard, Mayhill.
NEW YORK (AP)-Runaway
heiress Gamble Benedict has
been dropped from the new
edition of the Social Register.
But her grandmother, Mrs.
Harper Benedict, who used
every possible legal means in
an unsuccessful attempt to
keep Gamble from marrying
Romanian-born Andre Porum-
beanu, still is in the 1961 Who’s
Who of Society, out Tuesday.
decision from a special panel of
three federal judges on a request
to delay desegregation until dif-
ferences over sovereignty can be
ironed out between the state and
federal government.
Dr. Redmond said he was “ex-
ceedingly pleased” that the gov-
ernor found a way to make money
available to the board.
FULL ALLOTMENTS
In announcing that teachers
would be paid, Davis said that
the Orleans board was advanced
its full allotment of state funds
for November on Oct. 25. “while
a number of parishes have not
yet been paid for October.”
Davis took exception to an ear-
lier statement by Redmond that
the state was discriminating
7,8
N
High, Northwest.
TRACTOR — Tony Schertz, San-
ger.
PUBLIC SPEAKING — Doris
Barnes, Lewisville.
Something for every mem ,
ber of the family... selected
gift items from the world’s ~
foremost manufacturers.
NOW is the time to buy.
Denton County’s top 4-H Club boy
and girl were honored at a ban-
quet at TWU’s Hubbard Hall this
week and 52 other club members
were recognized for outstanding
4-H work during the past year.
Receiving the Gold Star awards,
the county’s highest recognition,
were Donna Kay Schluter of the
Krum Community 4-H Club, and
Jimmy Joe Fletcher of the Pon-
der Community 4-H Club.
Miss Schluter is the 16-year-old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. August
Schluter of Krum. She has been
active in 4-H Club work for seven
years with sewing, cooking, can-
ning. frozen foods and beef calves.
CLOTHING WINNER
She was a top county winner in
1939-60 in clothing and has been
cited for her leadership. She is
now working with young 4-H club
girls in her club’s clothing pro-
gram.
Jimmy Joe, the son of Mr. and
Mrs. H D. Fletcher of Ponder, is
14 and is engaged in his sixth
year of club work. He also has
been active with swine, gardening,
poultry, beef, sheep, goats and
home management projects.
FAIR EXHIBITS
He has exhibited his projects at
the Denton and Wise County Fairs,
winning the showmanship award in
1956 at the latter. Since winning
an essay contest in 1957 and re-
ceiving some starter turkeys as
prizes, he has been raising both
swine and turkeys. He has won
prizes at the State Fair of Texas
and in 1958 won the Texas Turkey
Demonstration.
A recognition award, the ruby
clover pin for 30 years of adult
leadership, was presented to Mrs.
O C. Robison of Lake Dallas by
Al Petty, county extension agent.
s
BATON ROUGE, La (AP) -
The Louisiana Legislature went
back to work today after Gov. Jim-
mie H. Davie tossed into the law-
makers’ lap the problem of paying
New Orleans public school teach-
ers.
The teachers faced a payless
payday today in the wake of leg-
islative efforts to cut off funds to
the Orleans Parish School Board
to stymie federally directed inte-
gration
Late Tuesday night, Davis said
the teachers would be paid.
But the balladier-governor left
it up to the legislature to provide
the funds.
NO MONEY
Earlier, Dr. James F. Redmond,
"New Orleans public school super-
intendent, said there were no
of
We Firrstntequnis"rTaadkaiyton
and the shop code mark, to be free
from defects in workmanahip and mate-
rials. If examination by us or any
Firestone dealer or store discloses a de-
fect in the tread or cord body, it will ba
repaired or an adjustment made on the
cost of another New Tread, prorated on
tread wear and based on the list price
current at the time of adjustment
5 MMgawana mi —1 ■ By---
Wk..,. i
Marv Stamm of Memphis, Tenn.,
prize * winning trumpeter with the
NTSC Laboratory Dance Band,
will play a two • week guest en-
gagement with the Stan Kenton
band starting in Chicago tonight
Kenton phoned to request
Stamm's services as a temporary
replacement for a regular unable
to appear with the group. Kenton
became acquainted with the work
of the NTSC Lab Band and of
Stamm at last spring’s Collegiate
Jazz Festival at Notre Dame Uni-
versity.
Stamm was chosen as the out-
standing instrumentalist and out-
standing trumpet player at the
festival. The band was named the
best big band and the outstanding
group.
In August the Lab Band was the
featured demonstration group for
Kenton’s National Band Camp at
Indiana University.
During his temporary duty with
the famed Kenton band, Stamm
will take part in a recording ses-
sion for a U.S. Treasury Hour
radio program.
Stamm, a senior music major,
also plays trumpet in the NTSC
Symphony Orchestra.
power of the daily newspaper was
which work to reduce the pay-
ments deficit. There’s room for
improvement all along the line
here—but you can’t throw a
switch and expect dramatic re-
sults.
On the deficit side, the biggest
item in 1959 was the $18 8 billion
which Americans spent to import
civilian goods and services. One
way to reduce the deficit would
be to restrict imports through
quotas or higher tariffs. However,
that would inspire retaliation
against U. S. exports. The gov-
ernment has done nothing in this
area.
The next largest item last year
was $3.3 billion in government
loans and nonmilitary foreign aid.
Here there are at least three pos-
sible courses of action:
1. Eliminate or reduce the aid
and loan programs.
2. Insist that those who receive
aid or loan dollars spend them in
the United States whenever pos-
sible.
3. Urge other nations to bear
part of the aid burden.
JACK HODGES
DU2-6224
204 E MeKinney
===---==
i
1
Lab Band Man
opments in tire design and where
5 WS
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2
MMlMmMfuMMMMuuuMdlma
GUARANTEED TREADS
COMPLETE DINNER
POULTRY — Kenneth Blum-
berg. St. Thomas.
SWINE — Charles Monschke,
Krum; Tom Rainey, Mayhill; Jim-
my Joe Fletcher, Ponder; Manual
By FRANK CORMIER
WASHINGTON (AP>-For more
than a year, the Eisenhower ad-
ministration has been fussing
around the edges of the gold prob-
lem. Now it is getting down to
brass tacks.
Why the sudden emphasis on
emergency action when Uncle
Sam still owns $18 billion of gold
—about half of the free world’s
total supply?
It’s largely a matter of arith-
metic.
First of all, $11.5 of Uncle
Sam's gold is tied up by law. It
can't leave the country because
it backs up part of the U. S. mon-
ey supply.
That leaves $6.5 billion of gold
to meet foreign demand -the de-
mand which the United States
must satisfy at all times if the
dollar is to remain “as good as
gold.”
FOREIGN BUYING
Since Oct. 1, foreign nations
have been buying gold at an an-
nual rate of more than $5 billion.
Obviously, Uncle Sam's gold
stockpile would run dry in a little
more than a year if buying on
that scale continued.
To guard against such a devel-
opment, the Eisenhower adminis-
tration has invoked controversial
new policies which have two pri-
mary objectives:
1. To dispel any foreign uncer-
tainty about the dollar by demon-
strating that this country will do
whatever is necessary to make
sure the gold stockpile doesn't run
out.
REDUCE DEFICIT
2. To reduce the deficit in the
U. S. balance of payments. It is
this deficit—$3.8 billion last year—
which gives foreigners the money
with which to buy American gold.
If there were no deficit, there
would be no gold problem.
Critics say something must be
done to reduce, and eventually
eliminate, the payments deficit.
It's a question of how to approach
the task.
The deficit can be pared either
by spending fewer dollars abroad
or by collecting more dollars from
foreigners.
The best way to collect more
dollars is to sell more goods and
services in foreign trade. Exports
in 1959 brought in $22.5 billion.
And the administration’s first
thought, a year ago, was to boost
exports in 1960. Exports have ad-
vanced sharply since then but
they still fall far short of elimi-
nating the deficit.
EUROPE’S BOOM
Many people doubt that a sim-
ilar export increase can be
nestine Trietsch, Blue Mound;
Judy Dalton, Mayhill.
DAIRY — Mike Hovenkamp,
Sanger: Charles Faught, Justin.
DAIRY FOODS DEMONSTRA-
tion 8 Venita Irick, Aubrey
DRESS REVUE — Beverly Me-
Reynolds and Connie Hall Sanger:
Judy Emmons. Blue Mound: Ruth
Meadows, Barbara Haggard and
Camellia Haggard, all of May-
hill; Donna Graham, Linda Bris-
coe and Donna Kay Schluter, all
of Krum; Anita Sue Earles, Pon-
der; Sara Marie Ford, Pilot
Point; Nancy Pearson, Lewisville.
ELECTRIC — Paul Day and
David Day, Lewisville.
ENTOMOLOGY — James John-
son. Lake Dallas.
FIELD CROPS — Jerry Ted
Emmonds. Blue Mound.
FOOD PREPARATION — Bar-
bara Parkey. Krum Mildred Ber-
end, St. Thomas; Martha Dalton,
Mayhill; Myrl Yeary, Sanger
GARDEN — Larry Duessen,
Justin: Kenny Klein and Sammy
Schertz, Blue Mound .
HOME ECONOMICS — Carolyn
Schertz. Blue Mound; Judy Karen
Easley and Mary Ellen Cook, San-
ter: Linda Briscoe, Krum.
HOME IMPROVEMENTS -
Linda Sue Brown. Mayhill.
LEADERSHIP - C R Salmon,
Argyle: Sherry Cross, Lewisville.
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-21050203721
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Kirkland, Tom. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 95, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 23, 1960, newspaper, November 23, 1960; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1475546/m1/3/: accessed June 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.