Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. 9, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 13, 1963 Page: 4 of 20
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' PAGE FOLK
TUESDAY, AUGUST 13,1963
EDITOR! AIS
YESTERYEAR
Your Health
And Tobacco
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doubtly would stri
with the scientists.
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uces 52 percent of the
X
JACKPOT
Southern Democrats
Didn’t Get The Message
Fortune Awaits
The Rainmaker
WASHINGTON (AP) --
must disagree " said Vice Presi. tical revolving door on this aw.
to retain the current tax rate of at Aubrey.
without being disagreeable "
to California Democrats already have cost him among Northern with the ‘radical rizht."
AUG. 13, IMS
Negroes if he hadn't
turn if New York's Gov. Nelson about the civil rights hill but Preston said Friday.
sum of $1,000 was ordered held
ROBBER COULD WAIT
and knocking myself out to sup- Ariz
and
1964 ruling tested, again
EDrTOR'S NOTE - What is it Ralph MeGII, publisher of the pared for integration
lke to be a white Southerner to-"Atlanta Constitution, has writ-
For years, the South has been
toes in 1960, while the total U.S far the number of jobs avaflable
birth."
that may tie up ships.
mum
or
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2,
still seems to me that if I were a
the courts must be obeyed.
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The Deepening Crisis
MORE SENSITIVE SOUTHERNER SELF-EMBARRASSED
.Merchant Marine Losing
Out To Foreign Competition
Sen. Richard B Russell of Geor-
gia Mid 'Tin a Democrat but
I have no intention of getting out
Goldwater, idol of the conserva-
the and far right Republicans.
times of emergencies.
On a more cheerful note, the
orders that put individual Negroes
in seme Southern schools, but the
man on the street was not pre-
Sighs of oCr times: This one's
in the Hotel Edison rum house:
A. Rockefeller is the Republicans'
1364 choice to oppose Kennedy
Rockefeller, whose state has a
large Negro population. Is plug-
ging for civ rights legislation,
too. He already is taking swipes
at the one man who seems to
have the edge on him at this mo-
meet. Sen. Barry Goldwater. R-
LETTERS
WELCOMED
The Record - Chronicle wel-
comes letters from readers ee
any subject in good taste.
Letters must be siged ard
the writer's address given. We
reserve the right to edit all
totters when necessary.
tons in 1960 *
why is this:
Well, in general foreign
must come’ Another in a special unquesticnably some aspect of his beid.
Associated Press series on the tn- community life which he rejects
both from the standpoint of taxes and the hun-
dreds of jobs the industry offers, plus the annual
inc me to growers.
If the cigaret is outlawed, the Texas legislature
w ili have to start looking for new cources of taxa-
ble revenue to offset the loss of 151.324.583 Add-
1
Meanwhile, it has beet brought out that there are
in the United States about 62 million cigaret smok-
ers who may soon be lacking for substitutes to off-
set the tobacco habit.
But the problem, if that is the word, goes far be-
yond the habit Several states will suffer financial-
TheScutherners are so mad at
Kennedy for his civil rights ef-
forts that Mississippi gubernator-
F
.4
4
3
■ 21-
gi558
2555
• water.
. / A mysterious ran, who claims some distinction
: at producing rainfall, contends that he was at least
3 •
2 X
NO EA5Y TALK
Even where the effort was made
By JAMES MARLOW - ____..
Aweiaud Press News Analyst Kennedy 1 civil rights bill.
Home delivery by mail must be peid in aedvance) Denten and adjoining
coonties $1 25 per month, $12.00. per yeer, eiseshere to be Ur ted
States $1.50 per month, $18 00 per yar.
MEMBER OF TWE ASSOCIATED PRESS - The Asuociated •rens it en
titled exclusively to use for publication ef eli iocal nens printed
in this newspaper as well at ell AP news dispetches.
MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OS CIcUUATONS
g . %
XEW BUILDING
BY GAS CO.
AUG. U 1933
Lone Star Gaa Company
Eoreign trade carried by ocean in the industry under present con- Taft-Hartley Act so that the Pres-
vessels has zrown from 100 mil- ditions. and the number of jobs ident has more power to act in
ion tons in 1946 to 285 millice is declining year by year."
eg.g
: Unless we miss our guess, a certain Tulsa. Okla.
- man is going to be up to his ears in—of all things—
I
1
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5
32
,497,
G The tobacco instry is watching breathlessly for
me the result of a government-sponsored research
— study which cou d mean a death blow to the multi-
- million industry
Already crippie by a number of similar studies
Unking smoking ta cancer and other diseases. cig-
. * aret makers are brcing for additional and probably
2: highly damaging lasts
• First is expected the report of findings by a spe-
cial committee of xientists working under the U.S.
Surgeon General Appointed t clarify the cigaret
and health controversy, this committee will proba-
bly make its report before the year ends
The American Medical Association is expected to
take a firm stand ence the government-sponsored
. report is issued.
No one knows fot certain that these studies win
result in an all-out, critical indictment of tobacco
ures It is possible, for instance, they will emphasize
the lack of conclusiv evidence rather than the im-
plications that have been made from other studies.
The AMA could takes similar attitude.
However some authorities are of the opinion that
an even stronger case against cigarets makes it far
more likely that health authorities will declare that
the cigarets are a probably cause of lung cancer
and other lung diseases, and that their use contri-
butes to heart disease if that be the case. AMR un-
—The Southerper who opposes position of a Negro I tried to see
integration, but believes in law things Iran this point of view
and order Reluctantly, he says Frankly, it was a shock. But it
Overnight, in effect, he was told azain . _
. day. a man of reason who is ten "Tbe more sensitive South- that he must do a mental about-
- • trapped by his own instincts and erner efter. is self-embarrassed by face change his attitudes and working ageressiyely to attract
past but who knows ir.ttirt’.icn » realization that he has accepted abandon beliefs he had always industry: The businessman kno"s
— possibly from experience—'.rat
"us
sir I
"o1A
*
V2
wucw*
was being built up after * had
been reduced by the heavy con-
sumption.
Denton residents ham been us-
But nonethless. he is a part ok
what he has met, and been. And
tbe past in tales of his grand- nobody can say how many
parents, his great-aunts and un- southerners made h—this was no
des. has been at his ears from
/fussing among themselves a year
before President Kennedy runs
for re-election. Southern Demo-
crats didn't get the message. Re-
publicans won t, either
v ise if the industry is wi
: : South Carolina, which proc
nation's cigarets, will feel the huge financial low.
Getting rid of radioactive
ing to the total tobacco sales in forms other than wastes is one of the growing
: cigarettes, the aggregate reaches 685.869.744_________ problems in using nuclear fuel.
The United States alone has
stored some 30 million gallons of
this dangerous material in under-
ground tanks.
Good deed: One of the best
ways to show kindness to an old-
er person is merely to sit and
listen to him reminisce now and
then. Psychiatrists say that one
of the greatest needs n the aged
is to have an audience for their
memories ' j
12*
.3 1996
sons in the South are deeply
ide crumbling around him? troubled, wrestling with con-
Loneliness
Sure Cure
For Vanity
By HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK (AP, - Tings a
columnist might never know if he
didnt open his mail
A single pd st II has I RI
chance of getting married some
■ ' fh
ft" .28
agreed on a strong merchant
car- feet is vital to this nation. e» committee went on to the times
partially responsible for the recent deluge in the
« ’ Oklahoma town.
Now, on the strength, of whit happened at Tulsa.
: • the man name not given in the release) has grown
very bold He said he’ll produce rain anywhere for
» • a fee, and accompanies the boast with a no-ram, no-
: : pay offer
The release also says the man's batting four for
‘ • four in his rain-making efforts, which is a lot better
; ! than Roger Maris is doing at the present
Convinced that he has the know-how, the brazen
man, after the streets of Tulsa were awash from the
heavy downpour, offered to stop the rain And with-
• ’ in an hour it slacked off to a mere drizzle.
We will have to admit that the picture looks rosy
at this point. But being skeptics on some subjects,
we are hesitant to place all of our money on the pot-
ential at this early date. Meanwhile, perhaps the
rainmaker should be informed that a small fortune
awaits him in certain areas of the nation right at
’ - a moment
MIAMI (AP> - After herding a port the Kennedy admtnistratioa
bakery clerk into a bathroom and next year . .
locking her inside, a robber Russell not on y has voted
waited on three customers before against the President on aEood
roamrf cut the cash rezister. part of his domestic legislative
reported detective Tom Waddail propMaia but will lead the
EDITORIALS AND FEATURES : : : THE DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLE : :
-------------------------------------------
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y
•d out. For instance.
/.)
about the limited nuclear test-ban He had asked the discontinuance on Sept 1. The money wil be
treaty Kennedy recently got from of sprinkling for lawns and shrubs used for building an additional
Khrushchev, for 24 hours while the reserve school room and equipping it.
lion tons a 1946 to 35 million era fthe report notes) exceeds by
_80e*
_--e~FH.2.zs
” 4
: - equal waa tested, and the U.S.
I Supreme Court held it to be coo-
: stitutional
J Some may have felt twinges of
j ' conscience, even to.
• J tegratiod crisis.
By RELMAN MORN
' , ATLANTA (APi-For 70 years
■ • after Reconstruction, every South-
. erner was born into a segregated
. : society.
Segregation was his way of life,
deeply rooted in his consciousness. |
Moreover. It waa legal. In 1896,
the doctrine of ' separate-hut-
dent Lyndon B Johnson, as i He had to be pushed into offer-
cbeering up a debating society ing die bin-by direct action of
5028a
"5,
• NOTICE TO PUBLIC - Any erroneous "eflection uson the character
t J repvtation e' stending of eny fir, individsel - toroofot^ will
' gledly be corrected upon being called to the pubisher’ ettention. The
publishers ere not respensible for copy omissions. rypogrnt*cal erron
l , or any unintenticnel errors that occur other mha» to rorrect them in
। " the next issue efter it is brouht to their ettention. Aft edvert sing orders
f.are accepted on this boss only. .__..
2 again sometime. He wants the rately-
Housebold hint for outdoor
chefs a handful of salt thrown
on the trail in your barbecue pit
ai bwet the flames an! help
keep the steaks from charrinz
Our quotable notables "The
sweat cure for vanity is loneli-
bessThomas Wolfe.
Feel rundown and short of en-
ergy* One of the common causes
of fatigue, health authorities say i
is the simple failure to breathe
deeply enouzh Shallow breathers
lead weary lives.
Advice from the Farmer’s ial candidates ran’last week as
Almanaci ■ A lt ofkneelinz anti-Kennedy men and Sunday,
keeps you in good standing with 7
God." .
One suggestion: change the
I The Court repassed the order
establishing the Corinth election
precinct No. K The order was
passed in June before it was
known that such orders could on-
ly be passed at the August term
He Mid Rockefeller was trying 93 eents per $100 valuation.
to get Republicans to eat Repub’. i
with a fairy tale, "let I disagree Negroes North and South — and cans andcomplained the governor DENTOV WATER
while it win cost him heavily was using the "guilt by associa- RFSFRVFS IP
This was his message Sunday among white Southerners it would Lon" technique in identifying him •-rsl —3 1 I
. ing about 2,000,000 gallons of wa-
its new Denton district rfta andr- summe. , .
ships are being operated under which dealt with squabbles be- errors.
One thing everyone seems
violence will hinder the drive So,
although segregationists, some ad-
vocate accommodation with Negro
demands
The situation for the Southern
college student often is similar to
ea8y tasx that of the businessman. It may
1 ST" ssgrem ^7" SU"
sx g diemn - “
Mharassaszzsecdppasnemna ' — m-
had taken note of a series of court
-The person who says, "We Negro It would be better to try
were all getting along fine until to elevate my own race. Dot tone
n "mi
would go away, the Negroes of Mhanon who deny any
weuld be perfectly happy again " prejudice toward the Negro b
—The man who aays that, since say, "Race-mixing is not the an
the Supreme Court reversed itself swer to the problem For both
once on segregation, it may do so races, * is better to develop sepa
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So
"Drink big"
| The strocger sex Psycholo-
gists say mon are better able to
put up with the small annoy,
ances of daily Irving, but women
are less likely to go to pieces in
the face of a major crisis.
K16Rh 105
a KsdthBa,mmdm5
riers can do the job for less, and pecially in time of war So the when nuclear power may be used
furthermore they aren't as lkely industry’s problems are of con- extensively even though experi-
to be plazed by Labor conflicts cern to every one of us- owor
| The committee came up with 37 ments "ith the atomic ' Powered
Actually, many American-owned recommendations, the chief of Savannah have been a comedy of
Aad at this very moment some Dec ton's waterreserve has been of the court.
/ g ’V.' S-
warebouse bullding Monday. Hal FROM LONDON _ Russian
Dren..district-manazer. announe troop tightened their hold around
3==
of moders desip, wibeotma-Pen rrongstghtng for Bransk
sonry construction with Roman . yro. lTT-l. onni
and face brick front it wi ex- the Mogcoumidnizhtocommerh
tend to feet down the ante of the due zaid.the.Eed.fores.haye
MMVwTMI Ue engulfed the important German
1100 of the front MC- stronghold of Dmitrovsk-Orlovsky
An.iner "an0. pe 36, and 110 populated places south
S "ib exposedEometie and of Karachev, which strad-
and.others,,"i.beeP Cm rr dles the rail line between eaptur.
. Ehooswi rubber- aired or and Bryansk.
I conditioned the front poron of snnidl m nTla KL-L..
taken the town - Chuguev, 2
mercial department mues distant
s, ,, OLD SETTLERS
HEAR DAVIDSO?!
employes were not granted in the _
tentative draft of Denton a 1963- r f * \ ,
M budget Ex-Lieutenant Governor Lynch
The im. requested ranged Davidson was the distinguished
from $13 to s50 a month for po visitor of the,day attheAmeri
lice department employes of va can Legion Picnic and Old Set-
rices dassthications, rod tin a tier. Reunion Saturday and made
month for fire department driv- a speech inwhich he.touched
ers and W and $10 for student upon some, o the ou Uta nd t.;
firemen. problems of the government to-
Three ritv employes will get day. from the picnin: platform in
raises Raises were promised ast the afternoon immediately follow,
va. 2.. tu. mngin.ha e. ing the business sessions of the
year.f and rarbasa aheadssun; Denton County Old Settlers A550-
and J department ciation. The speaker was introduc-
An employe of the street depart- ed by.A.C.0wsley, of
meet wi get sis . month extra the old Seutlers Association, wh
during the four months he works stated that aahough the preaent
as an asphalt man, under the bud- azeisfullo. people who are
loaned and muling around in
5 Woek on the $1,712,752 budget cireles," men like Lynch1 David-
was being completed today by City son are ready to rescue thecoun-
Auditor C. L Aldridge. A pubbe try from the consequence of this
hearing wiH be held Tuesday aimless existence.
night at the City Hall auditorium. * * ’
, , , The 1963-54 budget exceeds the A 10-year franchise was grant-
ed Southern filibuster against of them, retorted that be wasn't budget for the previous year by ed F H. Meier Monday morning
V " “7*"' hi- writing off anybody's vote and $190,361.05. City commissioners, by the County Commissioners
If we Kennedy was caught inapol- accused Rockefeer of encourag- however have tentatively agreed Court for a power and light plant
_ - ""--"nd---“i . political cannibalism."
was .recently admonisbed by WASHINGTON (APi - Sincerezistry in other cocntries be- tween the operators and the work-
Rockefeller who can hardly be 1936 the federal government has cause of less rigid rules and ers
disturbed by the thought that if pad art almost 813 billion m lower labor costs. The frequency and bitterness
hedoesnt watch et ball borane subsidies and rot the merchant The report for the president of maritime labor disputes under-
, —w rodtoei right rnmne atfll face, hard timee. wae made by a maritime evalua- lying serious work interruptions
It' New Yorker aecused the A recent report to President tion committee headed by T V are common know ledge,” It said.
A-ipanlr writ -a off the Ne- Kennedy put the matter bluntly Houser a former chairman for And later there a this observa-
A. 12, L„,Lj“-2-0m . -The'stezdy dompward ourse Sears, Roebuck & Co. tion;
E, Pee “ 1m of US participation in our own They found the industry facing "In brief. It is our view that
Goldwater. Who has made some cargo shipping is deplorable." 12 major problems including high whatever «be >• recommended
-2 iaeais
by U 3 -flag vesseis in our foreign explosive: meat relations which so funda-
trade has declined from 65 mil- -he number of maritime work- mentally affects the entire indus-
tty"
There is no one answer science.
At one end of the spectrum are A divinity student candidly ac-
men like Govs George C. Wal- knowledges that the had been
lace of Alabama and Ross Bar- strongly prejudiced against Ne-
nett of Mississippi, fiercely de- greet After he began studying
fending the old order. A legion of for the clergy, he concluded that
Southerners applauds them. he could not reconcile his pre
At me otner are men aka Hod. judicewith his religion. "It was
ding Carter, editor of the Green- very difficult but J believe J can
vile. Miss., Delta-Democrat, MF now that I have freed my-
Ralph MeGi and others who are self from those prejudice..' he
less well known for their opposi- M- S
tion to segregation. Carter and -n WAS A SHOCK"
MeGill receive bales of letters, A woman commenting on racial
, some favorable, more abusive, disturbances in a nearby city. ■
Between the poles of thought, says • When the trouble, started,
you find 1 tried to imagine myself in the
But the Southerners will have of the Republican leaders in Coe- buit up azain and needed sprink- An election for the Litsey School
trouble deciding which way to grew have been cautious not only ling may be resumed. Mayor Lee district for a bond issue in the
7838
MPe 1
3BS
Denton Record-Cbronicle
Teiephene 382 2551
Pub shed every o-tr ng except Seturday end oo morming by
DENTON PUBLISHING cOMPAMY
114 East Mickory
Entered at second class mail tr the post affice at Denten, Texas,
-enury 13, 1921 according to Act of Ccrg'OM. March 3, 1872.
BAsiC SUBscRIPTION um
Sing’e Coo et Evening 5 cents, Sunday 15 cents.
Home Delivery on same day of publicaticn by city tarrAr 0* by mator
ro:ira 40 cents per
. "\tL.g g5 ,
Lu "3
- • 4
d p--
H-e4
time ■ her ide At 30 it drops
to 553 per ra» At 38 to 411 per
cent At • fo a 1 per cent By
the time she reaches 43. the mat
rimonial odds are about 91
against her
Only people get dog-tired and
old before their years The Pet
Food Institute says that, thanks I
to better nutrition and care, the
average dog has added five more
-filled years to his life span.
The suspicion is growing that
women aren’t doing their fair,
share of worryoig in this ram-
try Or, if they do. they aren't
paying the penalty. Women have
only about a fourth as many
peptic ulcers as men
This is National Sandwich
Month. It is also one of the
months when you an most likely
to be struck by lightning.
TgFF
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. 9, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 13, 1963, newspaper, August 13, 1963; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1517670/m1/4/: accessed July 1, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.