Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 157, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 2, 1955 Page: 4 of 12
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WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1955
: : THE DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLE
EDITORIALS AND FEATURES
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By Fred Neber
LIFE’S LIKE THAT
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countles, only where Curler service
months, 66.00; three months. 03.50:
SOME •
PUNKINS.
The Senate ol
Plan for direct
the lobby be greets all men with
“Hi" and whistles at the women.
had thought it would be fine if I
could express my thoughts with-
11 >48
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2:15
530
proved wrong, as the
done well in Denton at
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half of the family. Now, that Mrs.
Bush suffered an attack of laryngi-
tis and can’t speak at all, I find
Jule Ben
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Mn McCune
Mar Rar house
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Greetings
DALLAS, TEX. (f) - An Indian
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"Yes, I am feel
shape now,” said
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oso
And Absolom said to Hushai, is
this thy kindness to thy friend?
Why wentest thou not with thy
friend?—II Samuel 16:17.
To God, thy country. and thy
friend be true.—Vaughan.
yed the Gossett
lection of presi-
again.
With that word, the Air Force
sent a special plane to Lansing
to pick up records and books. .
Yesteryear
Looking Back Through
Record-Chronicle Files
Wu ntT pnem A-p
FLOOR IN TE WALK-UPS!
10:20 4
1,0 4
1
2022 North Locust Street “I was
laid up for a short time with what
might have developed into pneu-
monia, but the doctors with the new
drugs brought me out of it right
quick.”
I
a
. 8
4
a
-
13:38
12:80
13:48
1:00
1:30
3:00
4
TWENTY YEARS AGO
Born: To Mr. and Mrs. Max
Cobb, 111 Bernard Street, Satur-
day morning, a boy, who was nam-
ed Phil Allison Cobb.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Carpenter
were in Fort Worth Wednesday,
• Martin Kornblatt bought the west
half of the Old Wright Building,
North Locust and East Oak St.,
and will move the Boston Store
that
originating i
promised in
official greeter of the ____—
chandise Mart. From his cage in
6145
700
TEN YEARS AGO
Born: To Mr. and Mrs. Bert
Pope, Jr. of Ponder Friday morn-
ing, a girl, in the Denton Hospi-
tal and Clinic.
Mrs. V. Y. Craig, 2205 West Oak
St., left for California for a visit
with her son-in-law and daughter.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Floyd. to
whom a daughter was born Mon-
day night.
Ethel Barrymore was featured
in ’ None but the Lonely Heart”
at the Texas Theatre.
Texas, and many of the lawns of
Denton today are sodded with that
grass. In fact, it appears to have
withstood the winter weather even
better than the native Bermuda.
Many yards here today have green
lawns of the carpet grass, while
the Bermuda has been killed by
the many frosts and freezes of
the winter.
4:13
430
448
5:00
8:15
5:30
1
8:40
8 50
. WM
6:00
Mm65,
ag5. a I
HAL BOYLE SAYS
Stacked, Old Money Smell
1 Two of the "Doyle Sisters” of
Slidell were in Denton, leaving two
at home to do the chores around
the farm. One of the sisters al-
lowed as how they kindo' slipped
off from the others. but one never
sees all four of them here at the
same time. The work must go on.
so always at least one of them
stays on the Doyle Farm.
2:45
8:00
Bports With Bherman
Frontier Playhouse
World Newa
Evening News
Weatherman
Talk About the Weather
Cowboy Thrilis
vening Edition
Sports Today "I- •
Weathereast
The World Today.
FOR/0SA,
BY•4P
Mmaropumztnuhuratupapeepancematd
J .
3:13
830
4300
Blood transfusions for ailing horses are common
practice today, although it was considered a rare
thing only 10 years ago. The normal transfusion for
a horse is a gallon of blood.
Norris Russell, one of the top
golf players here, seems to think
that Loren (Bitsy) McCray might
be his nemesis in that game. In
years back, when Norris was run-
ner-up in the city championship,
he met Bitsy in the last round, and
Bitsy came off victor most of the
time, Norris said. “He was my
nemesis when he was going good
and now that his game is not so
hot, he’s my partner, and I can't
get rid of him, so he proves my
downfall in both ways.”
Valient Lady
Texna Living
Tennennee Einte Show
Clinging To Ancient Ways
Presents Mystery In Africa
The Mall Story
Clmax
Justice
r-Men in Action
Dragnet
Star Tonight
Fora Thaatra
Meet Corlias Archer
Public Defender
Lux videq Theatre
M and MM. North
Name That Tune
City Detective
Famous Playhouse
TexnsNewb’
Final Bdtttoa
Wenther
tuasf
AARLG,MQ
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WEDNESDAY — FEB. 3
4:00 4 Martha McDonald’s
Kitchen
8 Pinky Lee Show
4:18 8 Ann Aldan
4:30 4 Barker B1U Cartoons
5 Tricks and Treata
S Howdy Doody
4:45 4 Variety Pair
8:00 I See Saw Zoo Club
S Kiddle Kamnival
5:15 4 Portia Faces LUe
8:30 4 Party Time
Walter Hagen, many times a golf champ, makes his
- summer home at Long Lake, Mich. Hagen spends a
lot of his time hunting and fishing, but occasionally he
whiles away an afternoon driving golf balls into the
" lake. .
175
The United States government
purchased Florida on February
2, 1819. That's Ground Hog Day
and a lot of land was purchased
on that day, .
r u ' 899
*
One tiny motor used by the U.
8. Armed forces contains almost
Happy is the
» Dallas Mer-
Mystery Plavhouse
Foor Mar Theater
‘/9457
By SMS in Denton and adjoin!
1 not avilable; 60.50 par jear:
qhe month, 3130.
A newspaper and radio station
joined in the campaign. At one
point, the Air Force said it might
not be able to furnish space on a
plane to transport the gifts. Mrs.
Vanderlip offered to pay the $300
shipping charges and then take
WFAA-TV
ROUND
ABOUT
TOWN
By R. J. (BOB) EDWARDS
8
a
1:40 •
5150 5
5:55 8
6:00 4
that I have really enjoyed the
back-talk and argument.”
8 John alya the News
4 Douglaa Edwards New'
n Disneyland
8 Coke Time
4 Perry Como Show
3 Camel News Caravan
‘-2-555
”/202.
“His proposal came so suddenly I can’t decide whether
I misjudged him. . .or underestimated mselfi"
KRLD-TV
4
! in tip-top
loe Bowen,
TELEVISION SCHEDULES
As announced by television stations. Subject to change
"I may have thought it would
be a happy condition in the home
if you could say something and
have no one to argue or contra-
dict.” said A. J. Bush, 111 Hill-
crest, “but I now realize that I.
was of the wrong opinion. Mrs. I
Bush and I have argued to some
B}
NEW YORK (—Money stinks.
Not all kinds of money, of
course. Just old dirty, beat-up
money—the kind a man would
hesitate even to give to a relative.
This worn out currency is accu-
mulated by the Federal Reserve
banks before it is destroyed.
"One of our biggest problems
recently was designing air-condi-
tioning for two Federal Reserve
vaults,” said John Moser, execu-
tive vice president of the 107-year-
old Mosier Safe Co. "They had to
have fresh air ducts to take away
the money fumes.
"Most people like the smell of
crisp new money. But the smell
of stacked old money will knock
a horse over.”
Getting rid of this repulsive fra-
grance is only one of the troubles
with old money. It is also hard
to get rid of the money itself. You
may find money easily burns a
hole in your own pocket, but the
government has found it so diffi-
cult to destroy bundles of old bills
that it now has a money shredder
to chop it up before it la put to
the torch. f
There is so much cash in Amer-
ica today that the care and proper
protection of it haa boomed the
safe-and-vault business into a 50-
to-40-million-dollar-a-year industry.
It has also developed several
new gimmicks to make the chore
of depositing or withdrawing mon-
ey easier for bank customers.
“Banking today is a highly com-
petitive business.” said Mosier.
“Bankers. after all. are salesmen
—they sell money for a price. And
since they generally have the same
price for it. they are learning they
have to offer special services to
get new business.”
One of the new devices is the
“snorkel” for drive-up banking.
The snorkel sits at the curb out-
side the bank and looks like an
asking to go to public schools.
The demand for a new life, for
the kind of life the French have
largely reserved for themselves in
North Africa, has become a move-
ment. an upsurging.
And this winter and coming
spring may see a sharp turning,
for the pressure on Franco in
North Africa has never been great-
er—and France has never been
so badly prepared to deal with it.
Tunisia on the east and Morocco
on the west are at crisis point.
Negotiations are nearing comple-
tion to give Tunisia “internal au-
tonomy” promised it last July by
Premier Pierre Mendes-France.
Negotiations dragged on more
than five months.
In Morocco, there is a near
standstill, with city-bred national-
tots demanding more sovereignty
than France wants to give. Ter-
rorists are steadily raising the
pressure for action.
In between Tunisia and Morocco
WBAP-TV
S
The husband and wife had been
at it again, fussing and feuding.
"Well, why don’t you call me a
jackass! You've hinted at it long
"POUMSbunaradudmt betrun,
she replied sweetly.
"Oh, yeah? I guess my ears
aren't long enough, huh?” he
snapped. - .
"No, your ears are long enough.”
She cooed, “but you need two more
legs and a bettor veice."—Wall
Street Journal
aee
3)
Military Records
LANSING, Mich. u - Local
people, led by a housewife with a
son in the armed forces, have sent
more than 3,000 phonograph rec-
ords to servicemen in Germany,
Iceland, Korea and Alaska. These
phonographs and some 1.500 books
and magazines also were donated
in a "Discs for Doughfeet’’ cam-
automatic vending machine. The
motorists drive up, reach out and
put the deposit or the check they
want cashed into an elevator tray
which descends to the teller. who
is beneath the pavement but can
see the depositor through an over-
head mirror. He completes the
transaction by sending up 0*
bankbook or cash in another ele-
vator tray.
Another device is the pedestrian
window, built in the walls of the
bank. A shopper can do business
without ever entering the building.
The pedestrian windows are prov-
ing highly popular with house-
wives who find it hard to push
their baby buggies through a
revolving door, or don’t feel they
are dressed well enough to go into
the bank.
"Women now are doing moreand
more banking.” said Mosier. ’ And
they ate dictating many of the
changes.”
The latest wrinkle *• ‘‘skytop
banking ” A suburban St. Louis
bank soon will inaugurate this. The
bank is built on a hillside and has
two snorkel machines on the roof.
Motorists will be able to drive from
the hill onto the roof, make a
deposit, and roll down the other
side on a ramp.
"wnEesuon"romhit 280 oet"anan
tter .2 brousht to thetr attention. Ml advertising orders
MMnun or tn AnsoclEo FuEssH -
Four pitchers on the Cleveland Indians are mem-
berg of the “1,000 Fan Club.” To be a member of
the mythical society, a hurler must strike out 1,000
batters. Bob Feller leads the active hurlers in this
organization. He has fanned 2,538. Hal Newhouser is
next on the Tribe with 1,788. Early Wynn has 1,172.
Bob Lemon made it this year. He now has 1,030.
Americans Take Great Pride
In Work Regardless Of Type
Events reported by the Associated Press disclosed
last week that many Americans not only earn their liv-
ings in curious ways, they feel deeply about these jobs.
A Detroit garbage man wept when he retired after
Ei years on the job. “It’s surprising how much you can
find out about people by inspecting their garbage cans,”
o ld he. . . .
Four new city employes earnestly went to work in
SL Louis tracking down pickled pigs feet in taverns.
The point of their job? Tavern operators who serve
pigs feet must have restaurant permits.
New Mexico game wardens take their Jobs so ser-
iously that when they held a convention they kept the
fact a secret They feared that if it became known they
were al in Albuquerque, poachers would have had a
field day.
Surely none earn their salaries in odder ways than
* state legislators. For instance:
The Arizona House has hired the charming lady
speech counselor of a charm school to read all bills
introduced.
A bill limiting the number who can attend an execu-
tion died in the New Mexico Legislature after legisla-
tors forgot to include the executioner.
A bill introduced in the Pennsylvania Legislature
would prohibit political candidates from using old
' photographs of themselves during campaigns.
A bill introduced in the Rhode Island Legislature
would prohibit small type on insurance policies.
A bill introduced in the Ohio Legislature would put
a higher tax on king-size cigarettes. The author of this
bill, by the way, rolls his own.
Speaking of cigarettes, the woman operator of a
small store in Farmingdale, N.J., takes her job serious-
ly. A man came in, laid down a dollar and asked for
two packs of cigarettes, then suddenly drew a gun.
The woman screamed. The holdup man fled. Left both
his dollar and his cigarettes.
Then there was the Cincinnati fortune teller whose
crystal ball was stolen. Apparently he just hadn’t been
able to foresee that theft.
Finally there was an affair in Lexington, Ky, where
' —if you’ll pardon the expression—things kept getting
fowler and fowler. Everett Fowler was arrested on a
warrant signed by Judge Dan fowler and sworn to by
Mrs. Betty Fowler, charging him with failing to sup-
port the Fowler children. The arresting officer was
Patrolman Pal Fowler. Couple, judge and patrolman
are not related.
Suckers Made, Not Bern
“Suckers are made—not born.” That is the moral
of an article by Nathaniel L. Goldstein, who recently
completed a 12-year tenure as Attorney General of
the State of New York, which appears in The Exchange
magazine for December.
jir. Goldstein describes the activities of "boiler
i
I
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THURSDAY — PEB. 8
4 Morning Show
5 8unup
24221283448854 .
nezzszsnsisnbezsyyawsgnzaonamle --eAk .
*.5..__I
Ballet for wrestling? It certainly is, testify a class
of masters who took up the dance on a dare at Ama-
rillo, Tex., and found it just what they needed. The
class consists of Dory Detton, Dick Steinhorn, Tony
Martindale, George Curtis and Andre Drapp. The
teacher is petite Caprice Chantal.
Some 20 years ago or to, it was
thought that the native grata of
the Rio Grande Valley, known at
carpet grass or Australian grass,
would not live in this section of
the state on account of the cold
weather. That theory has been
TELPHOKE C-2561
NeTICE TO PUBLIC:
upon the ebaractar. reputation or atanang at
sorporation will be gladly corrected upon being
a mile of wire and yet to smaller j 11116 4 Love er life - 7 _____ ______
In diameter than n to 4 .6,
then he provides an “investor’s guide” which could
profitably be followed by every stockbuyer—whether
his investments run to small sums or large.
The three-man Cattle Association
met in Denton Tuesday, as per
schedule, and it was the first time
to several weeks that the three.
Crow Wright of Fort Worth, John
Campbell and George Ritter of
Denton, have met. George had
been a busy man to Santa Fe rail-
road land matters and hasn't had
time to meet with the other mem-
bers. Business must have been
good with the Fort Worth member,
as he was wearing a new, semi-
cowboy hat.
4 Agricultural News
4 Morning Show
Local News
By PRESTON GROVER
ALGIERS, French North Africa
UB—Flying from ancient Carthage
westward across North Africa
gave me time to read "King Solo-
mon’s Mines,” that fable of lost
people and a lost diamond hoard—
a story which to many people rep-
resents mysterious Africa.
Strangely, the mystery to still
there, the mystery of people who
have brushed aside succeeding
waves of civilization for more than
2,000 years and still hold , to their
ancient ways.
Only in the past » years have
they really caught on to this new
way of life. Now suddenly they
want it Not all of them, but many.
And they want it right now.
It was to the early "30s that the
change seems to have come.
France, which holds almost this
whole northwest quadrant of Afri-
ca. felt it first in Algeria where
Moslem children began seriously
At least 90 per cent of the coun-
try's schools provide rhythm band
training to kindergarten and pri- from the west side of the square
Met up with Jim Smith, former
drug store operator on East Hick-
ory Street, for the first time in
several months. Jim, in recent
months, has been employed by
Boyd Armstrong Cleaning Plant,
but recently had to sever that con-
nection on account of his physical
condition, and to now doing work
around his home, planting shrubs
and berry plants. He said, "I am
in hopes that I'll be back at work
some time soon, as I feel a lot bet-
ter now, but I realize that I can't
take the hard work I could a few
years ago.”
A nine-foot. 110-pound Sailfish
that decorates the east wall of the
First State Bank, to causing con-
siderable interest. The fish was
caught off the coast of Mexico last
fall by Dr. M. B. Ray, Jr., and a
good job of mounting was done
by some taxidermist it is a fine
specimen of that species of fish.
The guide includes these rules: Make sure you are
dealing with a responsible brokerage house and avoid
glib telephone salesmen; take any prophecy of a future
run-up in the stock as a warning something is wrong-
honest dealers aren’t fortune tellers; get reputable ad-
vice on the prospects of any concern in which you are
urged to invest; remember that oral statements by the
salesmen are not binding; insist on a witness when a
sales pitch is made—the swindler always insists on
talking to his intended victims alone; don’t buy securi-
ties in a hurry on a high-pressure approach—think and
inquire about them.
The securities industry, along with state and federal
agencies, is working hard to expel and expose the few
parasites in its rank. But so long as suckers exist, gyp
artists will be at work taking them to the cleaners.
The reallandlastingcureis intelligent action on the out an argument’trom the better
part of investors themselves. - -- -52 - —
A STRETCAERBENRERS LAMENT.’ mH
FIRST FLOOR, WONT CALLS AMANI SEEM
TOBELGTWEIGM75:
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ublished every afternoon (except Batuntay) and Sunday by: Denton
ublishing Co, Inc, 814 B Hickory St
-T---------
Pntered aa wecond ciaes mail matter at the poet office at Denton, Texas
January 13, 1021, according to Act of Congress. March 3, 1873.
SUBSCEITION EATES AND nozMaTioN
tngles eoplee: Be fur weekdays: 10c tor Sunday-
City Carrier: 300 per weak.
dent of the United States.
Paul Hamilton, who has been a
partner with R. L. Selby, Jr. in
the Selby Floral Shop, sold his in-
ana Mrs. X 1.
Hawthorne of Roanoke, a girl at
the Elm Street Hospital and Clinic.
7:00 4 Godfrey and Friends
S I Marled Joan
730 5 stu Erwin know
8 My Little Margie
8:00 4 The Milltonar
8 Manquerade Party
1 Kraft TV Theatre
830 4 Ive Got A Secret
■ Who Said That
9:00 4 Beet of Broadway
8 Racket Squad
S This is Tour Life
9:30 8 Pasaport To Danger
8 Waterfront
10:00 4 Bd4le Center
S Norby
S Final edition
10:20 8 Weather
1030 4 Facte Forum
S Texns news
8 Inepector Merk Saber
10:45 S Weather Teletcta
10:88 5 News Final
11i00 4 Four Star neater
S Tonight
S Tonig
11:05 4 Hawa
e e e e
February offers one of the best
months of the year for planting
trees and many local people are
taking advantage of the fine weath-
er for such plantings. The sap in
the trees is way down and in that
condition the trees planted now
have a much better chance to live
and grow. Denton has many fine
shade trees, but there is always
room for more.
Talk About the Weather
Cisco Kid
Evening Eaiton
Sports Today
Weathercast
The World Today
John Daly a the News
Douglas Edwards News
Ths Lone Hanger
Dinah Shore Show
Jane Froman Show
2"
Feather Tour Neet
Guiding Light
Council Comae to Call
The Jones Place
Jerry Haynes Show
Musical Hall Varletles
Welcome Travelers
Maggie and Her Frienda
Curtain Call
Mary Carter's Cookbook
Showtime Matinee
House Party
The Big Payott
Greatest Gift
Beulah
Golden Windows
Bob Crosby Show
One Man's Famiy
Heart of the City
Concerning Miss Marlowe
Brighter Dey
Movie Marquee
Hawkins Falls
Secret Storm
First Love
On Tour Account
World of Mr. Sweeney
Modern Romance
Martha McDonald’s
Kitchen
Duchess Playhouse
Ann Alden
Barker Bill Cartoons
Ticks and Treata
Howdy Doody
Variety Fair
Bea Baw Zoo Club
Kiddle Karniva
Portia Faces Ufa
Party Time
Bporte With Sherman
Frontier Playhouse
World Newa
Time for Mago
vening News
Weatherman v
8:00 4 Morning Show
8 Preakft Club
945 4 Local Weather
830 4 Morning show
5:55 4 Local Newt
8 Morntar Devothmal
9:00 4 Garry Moors how
8 Ding Dong School
a Miss Bea
830 4 Arthur Godfrey Show
8 Way of the World
8 Royal Playhouse
9:48 8 Sheliah Graham Show
10:00 8 Home
PAGE FOUR :
--
KDITOmALS
lies Algeria, much bigger in area
than both the others together, but it
to mostly desert or semidesert It
includes part of the Sahara. Its
richest areas are along the sea-
coast
Tunisia and Morocco are protec-
torates. They once were independ-
ent, or relatively so. Algeria, on
the other hand, to a colony which
France has declared to be a part
of herself.
France has tried to one way or
another to absorb this whole re-
gion of North Africa into her way
of life and she has made a sur-
prising amount of progress. But
the odds' were against her. There
never were enough Frenchmen.
After all, the present poulation
of French North Africa is more
than 20 million people. That to al-
most equal to half the population
of France itself. And the popula-
tion in these three areas is in-
creasing infinitely faster than in
France.
Many among the populations in
waterfront cities have accepted the
French way of life, just as they
have sponged up a part of what-
ever civilization came their way.
Inland it to different.
French authority is felt, some-
what, as is French initiative, and
the cool impartiality of French
justice. But little of this has
touched the tough Berber herds-
men in the hills, nor the nomadic
tent dwellers in far south Morocco,
where the girls dance a sexy strip-
tease on their knees. The tents
are not high enough for them to
dance standing up.
In Algeria more progress has
been made than elsewhere to
bringing the country forward.
There are more schools. Thirty
percent of the police force to Mo-
hammedan.
There to nothing like that to
Tunisia or Morocco. There the po-
lice are French. One of the bitter-
est points of dispute in the Tu-
nisian negotiations was how much
police authority to transfer to Tu-
nisians
extent for 50 years or more and I
J
room” stock salesmen and promoters. He points out
“Ta crucial current problem is the securities frauds
in Montreal, where enormous profits are
i uranium and other mineral stocks. And
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 157, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 2, 1955, newspaper, February 2, 1955; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1491387/m1/4/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.