Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 139, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 12, 1955 Page: 3 of 12
twelve pages : ill. ; page 21 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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Me-
%
THE DENTON RECORD.CHRONICLE
-
out
I
f
GOOD NEW
producing
power plant
A
Allowable For
4
I
WASHINGTON • — Southwest-
L
suuuw3
$
DELUXE
25;
?
due to
%.
OO,
since 1943 ,
*
VV
TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE ON YOUR OLD TIRES
®e
• What has happened to
Thursday Special!
service during that same period of time?
' !
’ at
•LACK SIDEWALLS
WHITI SIDEWALLS
sin
SIZE
same ■
50'
' up 50%
See Roddy's answer elsewhere on this page.
SERVED 11 A.M, TO 7:30 P.M.
THE BIG SWING IS TO PLYMOUTH I
Other sizes proportlonattly low
AMERICA’S BEST-BUY LOW-PRICE CAR
Your Old Tires H Terms As Low As
IJ
Will Make The
\
‘A
r 99.00
amosm
«
•WWW
On The Spot Anywhere In Denton fir Denton County
I•
and its 167 hp gives you the
O MOTOR TUNING.
• BRAKE SIRYICI
mowenAn
e EXPERT MECHANICS
g
\*
SAM LANEY TIRE COMPANY
no
FIRESTONI-LINCOLN-MERCUAY
NmmC41SI
,1 2) „nur68
700 N. Locust
lg
Befrr#
V/AK..2
Ba
QUANTITIES LIMITED
. . TRADE TODAY!
Creel, Elliott On
Power Plant Tour
6.00-16
6.50-16
6.40-15
6.70-15
7.10-15
7.60-15
8.00-15
8.20-15
Army Set For
Swift Moves
6.00-16
6.50-16
6.40-15
6.70-15
7.10-15
7.60-15
8.00-15
8.20-15
sections of other
states to secure tax
All Sizes including Super-Balloons
Both Black and White Sidewalls
MANY OTHIR SITS
Priced from $25.00
CONVENIENT TERMS
WORLD-FAMOUS
irestone
/
{
SPECIAL
TRADE-IN
PRICE*
The BIG swing is to Plymouth
COME I N TODAY I
SEE IT, DRIVE ITI
Depletion In
Water Asked
e TIRI SIRYICI
• MECHANICAL SIRYICI
• WASH s LUBRICATION
• BATTERY SIRYICI
REGULAR
NO TRADE-IN
PRICE
One Vegetable
Salad
Candied Yams
Coffee or Ice Tea
Pumpkin Pie
g
a
Riley Woodson. Black and Veatch
engineer in charge of the Denton
job, was here Saturday and said
construction at the power plant
site was on schedule.
$16.24
' 19.99
16.99
17.81
19.73
21.56
23.70
24.71
$19.88
24.49
20.81
21.83
24.15
26.40
29.03
30.26
bility arose Mon-
Croslin of Lubbock
YAUP
Plymouth
eesler
hendquartensforgalue
$26.50 ,
32.65
27.75
29.10
32.20
35.20
38.70
40.35
tary control to undisclosed •'ha-
vens.” Individual cars would not
be permitted to travel out of
convoy.
r The
Original
Equipment
Tire on
Amerloa'a
•Finest ‘54
- Care
Most frogs catch only moving
prey.
==:
I
$21.65
26.65
22.65
23.75
26.30
28.75
31.60
32.95
RAY’S CAFE
BAKED TURKEY, DRESSING
1
n
JACK HODGES
Central-6224
Back of Post OvFice
"My bunine
let of driv
E
That sleek ew styling
made me switch to the
Plymouth this year. It
looks like a dream on
SMcCiay s
. •.9 J-
West Side Square .
the cost of living
has gone UP
1 64%
the fact that their water supplies
are being used up faster than they
are being replenished.
This, he said, drives the value
of the land down.
Appearing with Mahon were Ray
Lawrence, accountant for the wat-
er district: Joe Greenhill, Austin
water lawyer for the district; and
Rep. George Mahon.
Croslin estimated the annual in-
flow was J to 10 feet short of the
annual drainage and irrigation
pumping flow. Water levels thus
are dropping 2 to 10 feet each year,
he said.
City Native Gets
4th Army Post
Maj. Gen. Samuel Tankersly Wil-
liams. a native of Denton, Monday
took over as deputy commander
of the 4th Army at Fort Sam
Houston in San Antonio.
General Williams was welcomed
with a formal ceremony, includ-
ing a 13-gun artillery salute and
a review of the 4th Army head-
quarters troops, In the quadrangle
at Fort Sam Houston.
Until recently, he was command-
ing general of the IX Corps in
Korea. He had previously com-
manded the XVI Corps in Japan
and the 25th Division in Korea.
highest standard ^8 horsepower! Also available: 157 hp, 177 hp with optional PowerPak. Your choice of new Hy-Fire V-8's
or the now 6-cylinder PowerFlow 117. This year of all years, look at all 3, and youll Job the swing to Plymouth, too!
FROM COAST TO COAST PEOPLE EVERYWHERE ARE CHOOSING PLYMOUTH AS •gEST BUT
.1
equipment for the-new
it buing built in Denton.
CHAMPIONS
. .
for Denton Motorists!
erners, especially drought - con-
scious Texans whose underground
water supplies are shrinking, may
get the same sort of depletion al-
lowance for water now allowed on
oil reserves.
Such a
day when
HUNTED-BARE FACTS
These two swimsuits of jaguar skin pattern featured a
“Female Animal" line of bathing togs at the opening
• of California’s Spring Market Week in Los Angeles.
At left Janice Wells models “Bare Facts," a two-
piece swimsuit with matching coat and cap; at the right
Mollie Sinclair models the conventional one piece suit
“ labeled "Hunted." (AP Wirephoto)
—
",
69.
"Plymouth’s new Power-
. Flow 6 engine has power
to spare for my driving
reqnires a
need
f® $
SPECIAL
TRADE-IN
. PRICE
: )
h,
“Mur I looked at "all 3*
there warohtony dopht
Dorothy L Boucher, Nnr
Orleans, Louisiana.
PLYMO
Plymouth ia the biggest, longest car of the low-price 3... with the only honestly new styling
■omi sad gives me a _________
bonus of roek bottom wheel*, sad that's the way
iceeowy besides," W. B. it rides." Mary Rooney
Cook, Jr, Nashoille, Taw. HiUiker, Denser, Colo.
...------ Kom---3-
$100
■ * Per Week
Reds Planning
Atom Blasts
To Make Sea
By EDDY GILMORE
LONDON w-There are good in-
dications that the Russians are go-
ing to um nuclear explosions—on
a scale unmatched in history—to
blast out a Central Asian sea that
may change the weather o f
Europe.
Western diplomats have brought
back reports from Moscow that the
Russians are planning to create
such a sea as part of a long-term
program to change the physical
surface of Siberia and the waste-
lands to the south.
Last autumn the Soviet Council
of Applied Sciences in Moscow
published an outline revealing
plans that an area in Siberia larg-
er than North America would be
irrigated and criss-crossed by a
system of canals and dams.
This, said the. Soviet experts,
would change the weather in Si-
beria. making the winters and
summers milder. Western meteor-
ologists say this probably would
have a profound effect on the
weather throughout Europe, also
making winters milder there.
Returning diplomats also report
1 — •
SAH Green Stamps issued on
Breaks Dairy Home Delivery
A COMPLETE SERVICE FOR YOUR CAR E
In Emergency
FRANKFURT, Germany, w —
The U. S. Army is ready for
swift evacuation of American fam-
ilies from target cities in West
Germany in an atomic war.
It has worked out emergency
plans to move Army wives, child-
ren and civilian workers to safety
areas across the Rhine and tn
France. All American-owned pri-
vate automobiles would be com-
mandeered.
Newly revised instructions from
Army headquarters caution
noncombatants that "these plans
may have to be carried out under
dangerous and adverse conditions
during any Mason of the year.”
However, the Army adds, the
evacuation plan "is a purely rou-
tine and continuing matter and is
not inspired by any development
of the current international situa-
tion.”
In event of attack, the alarm
would be given by sirens. Non-
combatants would move to as-
sembly areas in automobiles or
on foot with minimum baggage.
From the assembly areas, they
would move in convoy under mili-
REGULAR
NO TRADE-IN
PRICE M
. i
Down Payment f
' 7a
b * j
[ V { i
to
water would not fall under the
"other natural deposits” section of
Section 611 of the new internal
revenue code.
The code provides that an in-
come tax deduction shall be al-
lowed for the annual depletion of
"mines, oil and gas wells, other
natural deposits, and timber."
Croslin, for the High Plains Un-
derground Water Conservation
Dist. 1 of Lubbock, spoke specifi-
cally in behalf of such an allow-
ance for Marvin and Mildred Shur-
bet of Petersburg, Tex. The area
produces cotton, wheat and grain
sorghums.
Croslin said the commission's de-
cision, which isn't expected for
some time, could make it possible
for a large number of farm oper-
ators in West Texas and scattered
PIITSBU
Kroge
Rricilla
, .__1 .__.
The power plant is to be run-
ning June 15 to overcome a pre-
dicted power shortage forecast bar
Black and Veatch.
Bids on equipment for the plant
were accepted after the passage
of a $7-million plug bond election
in September. All bids were taken
on a strict delivery schedule to
assure completion of the plant by
June 15.
While visiting manufacturing
plants of major electrical com-
panies, Creel and Elliott are sched-
uled to see equipment such as
will be used here actually in op-
eration in several large power
plants.
The “old” power plant located
on East Hickory Street here will
be used as a standby after the
new power plant assumes the full
power demand in Denton.
The new plant will be a steam-
turbine generator plant. The old
power plant used gas-diesel en-
gines for supplying Denton power.
• ..
. 1f
• Pta tax and yew present iceppable fire •• Has tai
, r,n. W
, . ■ 173
’ ■ 0aa
1
PAQ1
Soviet plane to divert two of Si- have privately revealed they hope plosions, in which
beria’s big rivers, the Ob and the to be able to make these water- armed forces a
Yenisei, both of which flow north ways flow southward, forming a ic and hydrog
to the Arctic Sea. Central Asian sea. be used to bu
They said Russian scientists The diplomats said nuclear ex- land areas.
Best buy new; better trade-in, too!
UTH ’
9
) down 26% •
fal-u. • ,
. -. 2 " . . -
' "o' * "u2.l.av1kr0x.
». • N 0" < 3 "3 / •
L\•
City Engineer Grady Creel and
Power Plant Superintendent W. T.
Elliott are touring several states
on the east coast this week with
representatives of Black and
Veatch, Kansas City engineers, to
determine progress of factories
)
—-t--WednesdegrJanuarz.12,.1955 u,
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 139, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 12, 1955, newspaper, January 12, 1955; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1491369/m1/3/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.