Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 59, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, August 11, 1961 Page: 4 of 12
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the same rays which coincidental-
ly also make you tan. As your
keep out some of the rays.
can
who to ultraviolet rays. This is hard-
are more
sensitive to the sun than brunet-
has between two and three mil-
think that these glands put out vis-
ible perspiration only when
sun, particularly when the sun
more
directly overhead the sun is
creasing your exposure time as
enriched by the passing of a dis-
got suspicious. ‘Sign nothing,’ I
is made up of dead cells. But less
I
Editorials
tain that fashionable women, who just as likely to ruin as to en-
hance the character of its recipi- lawyer finally returned after the
around the spectrum you know
that it is the short ultraviolet rays
owed by the Cuban government hijacked and forced down in
lehs)—"the angels"
re la Reina de lot Angeles de
sounds so simple? The State De-
Poreiuncala,n a name which
planes hijacked in the future.
re-
were angry shouts in Congress, retaining the plane in Cuba. Cas-
United Nations about the hijack-
Denton Record.Chronicle
manded the Electra, asked for an
aKi
A)
314 East Hickory
the unexpired term of J. J. Ro-
are Vaughn,
1
g
Castro's reply in some other way
.J
Swiss Embassy in Cuba to please
S
Ones
i
} e
Tire}
I
t
I
6
5
I
f
I
I
. I
)
CRASH HURTS
DEyTON PAIR
Hal Boyle
On Inheriting Money
ty over the planes the American
court most likely would have re-
Reno (REH-noh)—“reindeer”
Lot Anfelet (Lohs AHN-heh-
CLUES ARE FEW
ly BLAST CASE
Meanwhile Cubans fleeing Cas-
tro hijacked or flew 24 of his
planes to this country. The United
^LANGUAGES
in the NEWS
By Charles F. Berlitz
World Today
Premature Hotels Dangerous
countries to crack down on him.
No one has been working harder
will drop from the sky like a ripe
plum. Even orphans, gypsies and
spire about a quart a day.
In addition to temperature reg-
ulation, the skin performs a va-
riety of other useful functions.
Most people for example, have
heard that the top layer of skin
BOW TO GET A SUNBURN
Just Roast And Roast And Roast Some More
didn't know how he could do that,
or he didn’t think of it, or per-
haps he couldn't find a lawyer to
represent him here.
But that's only the beginning.
Wednesday a French gunman,
over Mexico and at gunpoint,
forced the pilot of a Pan Ameri-
can World Airways plane with 81
persons aboard to fly him to Ha-
er threats to health.
Another little known skin func-
tion is performed by highly spe-
cialized cells in the skin that pro-
duce a pigment—menlanin—which
is responsible for darkening the
skin. Oddly, though many people
tant relative or, for that matter,
a total stranger.
It is a heartwarming hope to
us all that somewhere, somehow,
someone has mentioned us fav-
orably — and remembered us fin-
fused to make the deal.
Cuba placed the Electra under
the jurisdiction of the United Na-
tions Security Council—although
ones that permit tanning.
The dematologists do not rec-
ommend carrying a parasol to pro-
tect you from sun the rest of your
life. Their advice is: get a sun-
tan gradually, over short periods.
And they note that suntan lotions
provide considerable safety. A sun-
tan lotion, to be effective, must
selectively screen out the short
ultraviolet rays and allow the long
rays in.
Knowing something of how your
against sunburn and for good rea-
son. For the injury the sun can
do is remarkable, when you con-
sider how people rush to get a
suntan in the summertime.
Prominent dermatologists main-
to a Miami businessman.
And if Castro had used his head
he probably could have gotten the
man was incoherent and had no
connection with Cuba.
Before all this was known there
land him in Cuba. Castro let the
passengers go but kept the gun-
man and the $3.5 million plane.
He still has it.
The biggest goof of all came
Aug. 3 when an ex-convict and
his son, both Americans from
Arizona, tried to hijack a plane
and head it for Cuba. Instead, the
pilot said he didn’t have enough
gas and brought the plane down
in El Paso.
Castro meanwhile proposed to
turn the Electra back to this
country if the United States would
promise to return any Cuban
GREEDY WRECK
“I tell you I was a greedy,
grasping physical wreck when our
forced down in Havana.
If Castro had tried to hold him
there would have been a Latin-
American explosion. Castro's gov-
ernment lost no time in announc-
ing .it was releasing the plane
right away ‘in deference to ‘he
Colombian minister. Castro even
went to the airport to see him.
The first hijacking was done by
a Puerto Rican who used a steak
knife and pistol to force the pilot
of an American plane to land in
Cuba. Cuban police released the
plane and led the hijacker away.
He didn't sound too bright. He
called himself by the name of an
ancient pirate. That was May 1.
Castro got sore and on July 5,
By HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK (AP) - If you
have not inherited any money
lately, count yourself lucky.
You may be better off.
Most of us tend to think the
other way. Few of us shrink in
AUG. 11, 1921
Two Denton men, Kinney Cal-
whose wife received a letter from
a lawyer notifying her she had
inherited a small bequest from a
relative. The letter contained a
form for her to sign.
SUSPICIOUS
“At first I was tremendously
By JAMES MARLOW
Associated Press News Analyst
CURE-ALL
We all have the idea, too, that
an unexpected inheritance would
in some mysterious way solve all
our problems and cure our pres-
ent defects of character.
Yes, it would enable us to be-
come patrons of the arts and sci-
ences, and give us the leisure to
pursue learning for its sweet sake
om Ne ve ** T "
Needle In The Hay stock
___ ___________ . T............
: FRIDAY, AVGVST 11,
Yesteryear
Looking Back Through
Record-Chronicle Files
1is
Cuba.
His chance came July 24.
when a lone gunman—the natur-
8
id
Y..T4IS is
COMING •
lion .sweat. glands Many peopletsasndaneopletithdanyspersonsclods can disperse the rays, but
II
your skin thickens. And you get
a thicker skin and increased pig-
l and Robert Strumpen-Davrie
Every time a TV or radio, an-
nouncer mentions “Canaveral”
the ears of Spanish-speaking peo-
ple recoil in horror. This is be-
ly know how the skin works, why
skin problems arise or what to
do about them.
A
*,3
Eh
K-s
f.
Progress Vs. Inconvenience
Some Denton streets, including Avenue A, art
blocked or partly blocked as inadequate water lines
are replaced in preparation for street improve-
ments. Replacing the small water lines with larger
ones will provide Denton consumers with increased
water pressure.
More streets temporarily will be impassable in the
weeks and months to come as portions of 12 streets
are resurfaced and parts of 52 additional streets are
paved under the assessment program. The block-
ing of these streets will cause some inconvenience.
Progress, however, is seldom achieved without
inconvenience. And it will be worth undergoing
this temporary inconvenience if the end result is
smooth riding on Denton's now-bumpy streets.
So wait with patience. It may be difficult to vis-
ualize but someday even Bell Avenue will be with-
out axle-straining bumps
body needs to be cooled, but ac-
tually the process is more com-
plex.
Most of us are probably al-
ways sweating. Scientists call
* “imperceptible perspiration"
which cannot readily be seen.
We also sweat in reaction to emo-
tional situations, like unger or
fear or excitement.
Sweating caused by high envir-
onmental temperatures is more
familiar to most of us. When the
temperature is high enough, blood
in the skin becomes heated, and
heads for the temperature-regula-
tion center in the brain. There
a message is sent to the skin: in-
crease perspiration. And increase
it does as the sweat glands go in-
to action. The process is continu-
ous, even though we aren’t always
regard a deep brown suntan as
essential, should be informed that
sun can cause premature aging.
They also blame a dry, coarse,
and leathery appearance of the
cause as it is a regular Spanish
word meaning “sugar eane field”
and should be pronounced
Kah n* yah-veh-RAHL
Many other American cities of
Spanish origin are pronounced
quite differently in their native
language and have interesting
meanings as well:-
Amarillo (ah-mah-REELyoh)
-"yellow"
Boca Raton (BOH-kah Rah-
TOHNJ—“mouse mouth”
I Palo Alto (PAH loh AHL-toh)
-“high stick"
El Pato (Ehl PAH-soh)-"The
pass”
PaLtmar ( Pah-loh-M AHR) —
“house of doves”
Pasadena (Pah-sah-DEH-nah)
—“strolling place”
I
eAsi
jacked American planes, look at
the record. It’s a dizzy, almost
incredible story, compounded of
confusion.
So far as the record shows Cas-
tro initiated none of the hijack-
ings. There were four. Three of
the four planes were forced to
land in Cuba. Castro immediate-
ly released two, kept one. The
fourth got detoured to El Paso.
None of the five hijackers in-
volved was a Cuban citizen. Two
were Americans from Arizona,
one was a Frenchman, one a
Puerto Rican, and one, a waiter,
was bom in Cuba but had be-
come a naturalized American citi-
zen.
to penetrate.
1 Use a good suntan agent,
3. Do not over-expose yourself
55E‛
? O
told my wife. ‛We‛ll hire our own
lawyer.’
“My initial feeling of gratitude
had been immediately replaced
by one of doubt and mistrust. I
suspected a plot, a conspiracy to
cheat my wife of her rightful due.
“My whole nature had changed
at the mere possibility of inher-
iting money.
“I hired a lawyer and sent him
out West to investigate the situa-
tton. Each night I tossed sleep-
less in my bed, wondering how
wealthy we’d be. I grew greedier
and greedier and greedier.
“I became suspicious of pan-
handlers in the street who asked
for a quarter, or friends at the
office who wanted to borrow a
couple of bucks for lunch money.
Had they somehow heard of my
wife's inheritance? Were they try-
ing to muscle in on our windfall
before we even got to count it
ourselves?
er than you think. The rays
can be completely reflected back
to you by water, sand or snow.
BASK SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Single Copies. Evening 5 cents, Sunday 10 cents. I A, ,
Home Delivery on same day of publication by city carrier or by motor A-G 1 1951
route 35 cents per week. Denton County sheriff
NOTICE TO PUBLIC - Any erroneous reflection upon the character, Hnddee enid tadaw
reputation or standing of any firm, individual or corporation will |r|ues in the killing of Dallas gam-
gladly be corrected upon being called to the publishers attention The Ller HerLert NOL1. NALISGN
nshlichere are nnt reennneihia 4 fit rnnti nmieeinne tn---hi- errors D.e MerD ‛ ’ MoDe Moble WAS
to the
ent.
Let me cite the terrifying ex-
perience of a friend of mine
Ki
"e;
Your Amazing Skin
You Have 17 Square Feet Of It
Friends visiting? Have a
new grandchild? Death in the
family? Going on a trip?
That event may not sound
important to anyone else but
your friends are interested in
what you do. And your friends
read the Record - Chronicle.
Why not call the Record-
Chronicle (382-2551) ask for
Town Topics. There’s never
a charge for an item in Town
Topics.
answer.
Then this happened: In Cuba
this country is represented by the
Swiss Embasy. Castro's govern-
ment gave its reply to Rusk to
the Swiss Embassy. The note was
dated Aug. 4. Instead of sending
the reply directly to Rusk, the
embassy took the long way
aro
It sent the reply—by mail—to
its own foreign office in Berne,
Switzerland. The State Depart-
ment—which still doesn't know if
the mail reached Berne—heard of
•z %'W
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5554
o> • 225239 W
~ - >3 78288 85
32 6012*
85228
Liberia’s position as an Afri-
can nation is unique in that it is
the only country in Africa's 12
million square miles that has ne-
ver been dominated by a European
colonial power.
states returned 14 of them to him. Amerinpane hidckeaoMdyth, that cause burning, and the long
The other 10 were seized under threatened to hold any other
a court order to be sold for a debt American plane which might be
your blood pressure goes up, .
thinking of Fidel Castro and hl- minister.
At Long Last
There isn’t any such thing as a popular tax. For
that reason, there wasn’t any dancing in the streets
when the Texas Legislature at long last came up
with a tax bill to get the state out of the red. The
legislature, moving on little snail’s feet, passed an
eleventh-hour bill calling for a two per cent sales
tax which exempts food, feed, medicine, fertilizer,
farm machinery and certain other items.
Most Texans, long since resigned to the inevita-
bility of additional taxes, viewed the legislature’s
action with a “so what” attitude. One Denton mer-
chant summed up this attitude by saying: “It made
no difference to me what sort of tax they came up
with. I knew the tax money had to come from
somewhere and I guess this is as good a way as
any.”
Many Texans, however, were glad the legislature
was able to reach some tax agreement if only to
bring to a halt the eternal bickering which has
been going on in Austin for so long. Maybe with the
tax controversy settled, workers of the legislature
can work together instead of against each other for
a change.
There is one thing wrong with a sales tax, how-
ever. if the experience of other states can serve as
a guidepost. This is the fact that sales taxes, when
once adopted, have a tendency to increase nearly
every time the legislature meets. From two cents,
it goes to three and four and so on. And soon the
exempted items are also taxed.
Perhaps, this won’t happen in Texas. But it will
unless the state government cuts every corner as far
as expenditures are concerned. Strict economy is
the only way the legislature can hold the line against
taxation.
these dead cells. They can’t be
easily infested, and therefore
I ’
is high in the sky. Getting tan i___.
properly is simply a matter of potent and the higher you are.
moderation—exposing yourself for the closer to the equator you are.
short periods and gradually in- the clearer the day and the
The embassy sent the Castro
__________ ________ . , . 1 - hijacker at this time, note by cable. But there must
Publishers ere not responsibiefor copy omissions, typographical errors bler Herbert Noble. Noble was The truly ludicrous touch came have been something wrong with
sr any unintentional errors that occur other than to correct them injblown to bits by explosives as here: the wires. When the cable arrived
next issue artar it is brought to their attention. All advarising orders he stopped at the mailbox of his instead of trying to chastise from Cuba it was so garbled that
are “ccepted on this basis only. ranch home in the southern part Castro directly, the United States the State Department still doesn’t
of Denton County._____________1 ia anxious for the Latin-American know officially what Castro laid
aware of it Even during the cool-
er months, our sweat glands per- horror from the prospect of being pleased,” said my friend. “Then I
trying to make the United States and, through channels, asked the
look like a villain. He made al ~
M,X
A a
If you are average, you have color of your skin—its pigment
about 17 square feet of skin which can keep, out some of the rays
weighs a little more than six This is why blondes and red-heads
pounds. Its thickness ranges from and people with freckles, 1
wth to 1-32nd ofaninch.Theskinhave light pigmentation, are more
send an agent to Mexico to cap-
ture a Pan American'plane. Pan ing of Cuban planes Rusk de-
the must still limit their stay in the they don’t absorb them, which is
why you can get burned on a
misty morning. The rays are more
vana. After it was all over an of- Secretary of State Dean Rusk
ficial of the airline said the gun-
rt and Riley Ballew, were seri- But Castro would not have had to tro registered a protest in the
ously injured when their car
crashed into a ditch on the San-
ger Highway.
_FIVE IN RACE
g d Telephone 382-2551 F()KaTYpOST
Entered at second class mail at me post office at Denton, Texes.
Jan 13, 1921, according to Act of Congress. March 3, 1872. AUG. 11 1941
Published every evening except Saturday and on Sunday morning by
DENTON PUBLISHING COMPANY .Absenteevoting has begun In
the race for commissioner to fill
#!
0}
estate was settled.”
“How much did you get?"
“Well, after paying -off our
lawyer,” my friend replied, 'My
wife and I found we were out
exactly $137.42.
“But I learned a good lesson:
Beware the possibility of inherit-
ing money. It not only can des-
troy your character — it also can
cost you dough!”
So the next' time anyone tells
you you’ve inherited a million
dollars, back away fast.
It could ruin your whole life!
Earn your own living and stay
normal.
partment spokesman said: If Cas- whose wife said he had been act-
tro had invoked Cuban sovereign- ing strangely-forced the pilot of
an Eastern Air Lines Electra to
well known is the great value of ancially - in his will, and that in
“ the fullness of time the money
American is the only American
airline still maintaining regular
flights between Cuba and this
country. So if Castro wanted to,
he could have helped him
self to some Pan American planes
on the ground in Havana.
But this would have been the
worst possible time to hijack an
American plane. All the Ameri-
can nations are meeting right now
in Uruguay here the United
States has offered 120 billion in
Latin-American aid.
One of Castro's chief lieuten-
ants. Ernesto Guevara, is there.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Before to get just this crackdown on Cas-
tro .. ′—* "
--
skin, pigmentary changes and
wrinkling on too much exposure KEEP VP WITH
to the sun.
The villian is the sun's ultra-\YOUR FRIENDS
violet rays. If you know your way
again* bacteria, viruses and oth- Bowery bums ding fondly to this
hope.
would be even harder to say over partment spokesman said this
---■ --- -- was the answer: He probably
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS - The Associated Press is en- berson. Candidates c
K,,T.'xi,'.’.^,T.srrsou news printed Rollie Payne, Harwell Shepard.
Home delivery by mail (must be paid in advance) Denton and adjoining ”• Brown and " A. Moore,
counties $1 per month, $9 50 per year, elsewhere in the United States
$1.30 per month, $15.60 per year
PAGE FOUR: t i : THE DENTON RECORDCHRONICLE t tit EDITORIALS AND FEATURES t t t
It's the body’s largest organ- akin works and the injury you can
one of tlw moot Ingeninua codec- suffer from too much sun can _ —---- _
tions of "equipment" on the lace help you both require a tan and ment from the ultravioletrays
of the earth—yet few people real- prevent being burned. th “ ‘ -g
Here's bow; ly also make you tan. As your
1. Getting a tan helps—but is skin thickens it becomes harder
not always highly effective. The for the burning ultraviolet rays
than the. Colombian foreign
Ayala. And Castro knows it. By the body’s resistance to sun. ac-
chance, the minister was on the tually 1)16 thickening of the skin
plane hijacked Wednesday and is also responsible. In fact, a
- - thick skin is an excellent defense and dedicate ourselves
- Any erroneous reflection uponthe character. Hodges said todays there were few he m send ‘ by cable.
service of mankind. We would au-
tomatically become nobler, kind-
er, more generous and open-
hearted.
But would we, really?
Actually, inherited money is
65)
P A
A ,,o
serve as an invaluable shield
namha
,328
)22
yyepycs g) ' 78
5.2#
p
(29
10 back, too. How? A State De- alized American from Cuba,
ANWeR5
V
TV than "Caaveral." «u
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 59, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, August 11, 1961, newspaper, August 11, 1961; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1491724/m1/4/: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.