Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. 14, Ed. 1 Monday, August 19, 1963 Page: 4 of 10
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PAGE FOUR
r
EDITORIALS
"*•2:
Oklahoma Town
In 1849
Sets A Pattern
8-3
2
u
s
s
cut and dried.
treaty.
P
B
$66
W, PAKISTAN.
INDIA
more far-reaching agreements, al-
hearings and debate.
You And Your
THAILAND
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-A-A--A3
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9,42
EceEe22e.
MPNewsfeatores
voluntarily refrained from testing
the position they will take.
The treaty isn’t complicated. It without any agreement at all.
Yesteryear
IN WASHINGTON
the Senate.
I
across Lake Dallas to the east
early next year, he added.
T
#
4
Laundry
Problem
nese to increase pressures around
the perimeter of Asia, nol only
as a result of Chinese frustration
the pro-mail would go to the the meaning of the treaty is de-
White House the anti - mail to bated It is the second point that
Railroad Commission Apt
To Get Attention In 1964
ends meet is our own responsibi-
ty.“—Arnold H. Glasow:
mother. “You should see the pic-
tures.”
Odd laws it s illegal to carry
a concealed slingshot in Mary-
partment, conferred here with
members of the Court.
If approved, the entire exten-
land Or to turn a wild hare loose
in Connecticut;
Worth remembering: "Destiny
shapes our ends, but making
INDIA
Threat
of
renewed
hostilities
8e£ec
2—4-4---
A
Eeme
S.VIETNAM-LAOS
Increasing
* Chinese-supported
guerrilla
attacks
The Test Ban Treaty
And Opinion Of Publie
S.KOREA
Gaerrilla attacks
attacks through
demilitarized
zone
eueesee~82*
FORMOSA
Renewed threats
of attacks on
Chiang Kai-Shek
stronghold
“Cut And Dried’
Ition, while the rest of the world
heard and watched their talk and
it is doing its share to set the action in motion bv
rating the post otfice propoMl. I Our quotable notables: al
was paid only $500 and the use
of a rent-free campus home.
Ees.
these men hope that there Is a munist hegemony— perhaps Chi-
it a half - inch rain fell and since
side of the lake, a distance of
six and one - half miles.
FM HIGHWAYS
EXPANDING
AUGUST 19, 1953
Nearly 44 miles of new farm-
to-market highways are in the
process of construction or are de-
EDITORIALS AND FEATURES : : : THE DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLE : : f-
□ —— —:—
Red Chinese Communists,
Troublemakers Of Asia
| that time nothing more than a
Jew very small showers have
fallen here.
This summer’s drougth was one
payments deficit and the danger -the Communists would have an
ous drain on U.S gold? enormous impact in Asia and con-
This Is also the reason why {tribute much to establishing Com-
X
1
VagtHmcAPANL
82V
•leS.KOREA
Coffee Drinking
If your coffee cup takes on a price hike in the
coming months, blame it on the weather, and not the
grower, wholesaler or retailer.
Word comes from Brazil’s coffee producing region
that cold weather inflicted severe damage to coffee
trees. While the extent of the loss will not be known
until after actual harvest of the bean, some fear
that damage may prove as great as in 1955 when the
output dipped 50 per cent from the preceding year.
Meanwhile, however, a surplus of coffee will prob-
ably prevent any major increases in the on-the-shelf
price to the consumer. The department of agricul-
ture, according to a Washington press release, indi-
cates that at the end of June, there was a carryover
from previous years of 80 million 132-pound bags.
Brazil alone had 50 million bags, or enough to take
care of world import needs for 12 months.
Prior to the cold wave, Brazil’s coffee output was
estimated at around 30 million bags The current
estimate is fixed at around five million.
If the United States government (the people) lis-
ten to the reasoning of the Kingfisher, Okla.. Cham-
ber of Commerce, and follow a similar path, a great
savings could be affected—far greater than the ad-
ministration’s proposed tax slash
The Oklahoma body voted to ask Uncle Sam not
to build a half-block long post office in their home-
town. and to use the money earmarked for the pro-
jec t to whittle down the huge national debt.
Kingfisher isn’t exactly growing by leaps and
bounds, and the present post office seems to be fine
for the purpose, the chamber contends, pointing out
that “someone has to take the initiative to stop the
constant taking (of handouts.I”
Kingfisher is right in being worried about the
national debt, despite the taxpayers cheery assur-
ances that it is really all right because “we owe it
to ourselves,” and it isn’t as large in proportion to
what we earn as it once was at the height of our
biggest war.
As Rep. Jensen of Iowa pointed out recently, each
American family now pays $15 a month in taxes to
pay the interest on the national debt. Without
cutting into the debt itself and paying only interest,
the national debt costs each household more than
is paid for utility bills.
Any concern for thrift will have to start at the
grassroots level. Kingfisher contends, and it feels
By HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK (AP - Things a
columnist might never know if he
didn’t open his mail:
: If a man’s hair is falling out,
neither science nor money is us-
ually of much help. Some 95 per
। cent of male baldness cases are
permanent and incurable.
Kids who wear glasses former-,
ly had no hopes of a professional
baseball career. But today a doz-
en major leaguers wear specs. I
The way to get rich is to dream
up a new ice cream flavor that
children will go for. Here are a
few flavors that were tried and
failed prune, kumquat, licorice--
and chile con carne.
Long wash day: Laundry was
a big problem during California’s
gold rush in 1849 it had to be
shipped to Hawaii, or sent back
east, and often a miner had to
wait six months to get a clean
shirt.
i Educators have always had a
salary problem In 1834 the first
president of Pennsylvania Col-
lege (now Gettysburg College)
Home delivery by mail (must be paid in advance) Denton and adjoining
counties $1.25 per month, $12.00 per year, elsewhere in he United
: ways wished I could do something
with my hands. Never could.” —
Joe Louis, ex-boxing champ.
Prosperity note: Sending away
box tops has become a great
American industry. But the pre-
miums are getting bigger Next
month, a firm that produced
deviled ham has announced it
A rain measuring 1.07 Inches
which fell here during the morn-
ing Saturday broke a drougth of
more than two months dura.
1 tion and was the heaviest precipi-
tation since June 10. On June 13
...p^
roiiF
By RALPH deTOLEDANO 1 t The treaty is historic and of|nation‛s horse - trading Instincts, with the Moscow policies, but as
Pierre Salinger, the president’s tremendous importance as a first ’Without it, other thoughts come” means of embarrassing and
press secretary, has shown no step” toward an understanding to mind. punishing Premier Khrushchev,
shyness whatsoever in informing with the Soviets It will “reduce Foryears. Americans have been. SHARP CONFLICT
the White House press corps that tensions’’ and may lead to an end repeatedly told that they must One way of this would be to
mail on the test ban treaty with to the cold war, keep their guard up, that the resume pressure on Indias bord-
the Soviet Union is running 13- Many Americans can be lost in NATO, CENTO, and SEATO sys-ers. The Chinese already are in
to-1 in favor This may well he. the morass of scientific contro-tem of alliances must be main-sharp conflict with the Russians
though it could be predicted that versy and military inhibition astained at all costs, that under over policy toward India. For a
his Omar-the tentmaker suit long time the Russians have been
MWW.E5 -
FORMOSAE--
' has an agreement and an but.
It prohibits nuclear tests in the
'atmosphere, outer space and un-
der the sea. But it permits con-
' tinned testing underground. Ken-
, . . ie. ... nedy said this country will go on
Peking s rift with Moscow seems testing that way. So will the Rus-
increase the dangers all around ■ j l.
clear umbrella it they take off Asia. But so long as the Red S
LETTERS WELCOMED
The Record-Chronicle welcome letters from readers on any
subject in good taste.
Letters must be signed and the writer’s address given. We
reserve the right to edit all letters when necessary.
Their strategy, therefore, will denly announced they would re-w. H Bruce wil deliver p
the United States. The Soviet in- likely be steadily increasing pres- sum* But that was only a vol- dress and approximately 175 two-
ion does not seem to regard For- sure to achieve their long term untary moratorium. year diplomas will be award,
mosa of sufficient value to war- goal1 of expelling tne United States it lacked the formal agreement ed
rant help for such a Peking pro- completely from Asia, and per- of a treaty. The United States The program Sunday evening
ject, when nuclear war conceiva- haps eventually expelling the Rus-, knew all this history when it will be held in the stadium o
bly could be the result ___ sians. along with the Americans, signed the treaty. ___the college campus. It will begin
at 8 o'clock.
will return a mink stole certified
to be worth $595 to lady shoppers
who mail it three canned-ham
wrappers—-and $345,
| Mother tongue: Americans and
Britons use the same language
but differ in their pronunciation
of about 28 per cent of the words.
Incidentally, you must be at
: least 17 to get an automobile
drivers license in England, but
yon can fly an airplane at any
age you're able.
; Maternal pride: Dorothy Sar-
, noff. strolling through the park.
. looked in a perambulator and re- I
' marked to the young mother that
her baby had a beautiful face.:
“That's nothing.” replied the
against the treaty is surprising, the treaty by some Senators For when they are conciliatory.
but not because there is little op- if it leads to a non - aggres- These admoitions have sunk in
position There has been no anti;ision pact. as the Administration- and now the Administration
treaty leadership yet visible and seems to hope, the American peo- wishes to delete them from thel‛ .
no anti - treaty formulation pre-ple will be up in arms. One of
sented Most of me mass media the letters offered to the press by stitute what key legislators on sure toward India 4 borders event- It is certain that Chairman'
comment has been favorable with- Salinger for its inspection points both sides of the aisle in Con -ually: although notto the point of Ben Ramsey of San Augustine
out quite saying so Many people, this up: gross believe is the entering starting any prolonged military and Commissioner Jim Langdon
moreover, are confused by the “If a non - aggression pact is wedge for a non . aggression confuict , . of McCamey will be running for
manner in which the treaty is be- signed with Russia, I guarantee treaty. Similarly, Pehings anger with re-election, Ramsey will be up for
Ing presented by the Administra- that I’ll vote straight Republican . .. Moscow may lead the Chinese lo-
tion to the public The sales pitch in every election even if they run ; such a treaty; they argue. Wi ward more reckless thrusts into
simultaneously follows two lines: the biggest crooks in town.” ring about aslac ening ° vigi Indochina It would be no sur-
l The treaty reai.'v is meaning- Other letters in opposition urge ance an cause o ubble UP sub prise if the Chinese now. with
less and will change very little that the United States demand as merged antagonisms which can the hearty cooperation of Ho Chi
-if anything. Hie United States the price of any treaties with destroy.the structure of our mili Minh’s North Vietnamese Commu-
wasn’t testing in space, the at- the Kremlin a withdrawal of so-tary alliances once ratified: « nists. tossed overboard complete-
mosphere, or undi rwater, anyhow, viet troops from Cuba 'and the non ‘ asgression Pas "" * a ly the careful strategy of Mos-
and 'for the time being' neither captive nations' and the tearing to the obyious propagandistic cow with regard to southwest
were the Soviets what then do down of the Berlin wall Such a question: Why do we need these Asia, and stepped up the Red er Ernest O. Thompson, has been
wefosee Sot then X pr thuowould"satisy .J military alliances if the Soviets drive to envelop bothsouth Viet......... ......- -
_ have renounced war in a solemn Nam and Laos. ’
Record-Chronicle Austin Bureau it can hurt him more deeply than inesscs it controls Because
.gioi i just a fine—it can put him out of shows the state of a tidy profit.
< » AUS iere are possibi 1-. business by cutting off his pipe- During the state fiscal year
'source of v kwar'embarrass- tiesthat. exans Wi e Eivingline connections. which dosed last Aug. 31, the
merte embarrassimajor attention the The commission also mol*. Rallroad commission got mm .........
With Tibet as the staging area, wholnt pers nnetofu Mat, railroads, trucks, buses, gas from general taxes, and trans- of the most severe ever known
the Chinese Communists can be Pottnt and. Railroad Comsisutilities and liquefied petroleum ferred $1,092,278 to the states' _ h Texasthe continued high
_________ • _______ ------— IS "ne icxas mon "o gas dealers, general revenue fund to help sup-1 temperatures during most of the
port other activities of state gov- two months accentuating the ser-
POWER ENDLESS ernment. iousness of the situation.
Nikita Khrushchev carries an ar- ardently com ting the Indians, and
most clearly worries people and senal of hidden weapons, that ,
That there is any mail at all may be the cause of votes against the Reds are most dangerous sister Communist power is
get the rate set for the haul in part of its business, and the rail- as now approved, is from Dentnn
th f qirpeton rnad industry ie trying hard tn n--A-- l -l- n-1-i a .i
terminated after he had taken us, been investing something like a This three-member commission^ * i c 'make it even less than it is now.
for $11 billion in what we term- half billion dollars annually in has strong regulatory control ov- Everything the HaiiroM com- They have sponsored bills in the
ed Lend - Lease. -Some of that the attempt to keep Saigon's pro- er seven major lines of business, misson does is imam ea ny lees Legislature to do away with the
money, if repaid, would go far Western government afloat. including the biggest one in Tex evied, against the lines 0 DuS i tedious system of having a
to help our critical balance of The fall of South Viet Nam to as—oil. ness it regulates, except the rai:cial hearing on each pair of
n ’ " " It decides how much oil a pro- roads. Its transportati “ ratedi places a specific commodity is
ducer may bring to the surfacevision is financed.byan appro-to be shipped.
and sell each month how much pri ion " . . ' > Instead, in a bill sponsored by
pipe he must put into the well, rom genera ax u . Sen. Franklin Spears of San An-
whether he may spill his waste But its other divisions bring in. tonio, they proposed that they be
the ground, how in fees and special enforcement allowed to file rates, and if the finitely scheduled for Denton Coun-
Besides questioning those for hair-splitting, the United States
and against, any skeptical sena and Russia hardened themselv-
tors in search of gimmicks can es self - conscious with their -
quiz administration officials on announced desires for a test ban
every verb and comma The ad- agreement.
ministration says they are no The United States, therefore, is
gimmicks, in an awkward position to back
- Some senators in both parties down now, particularly since for
• have hemmed and hawed about three years, from 1958 to 1961, it
)A‛CHA* AEM3
r X/-**'*'
It meant abandoning this coun- midway in that time, the Russians
try's historic isolation. And the give three months' notice of inten-
United States wasn't ready. It tion to resume testing, they will
took another world war to do that, have a three months’ start on
But there are none of those dif- this country if it then wants to
ficulties in the nuclear test treaty, resume, too.
NO TIGER’S TEETH But this chance of duplicity has
This country has preached some to be weighed against some other
such agreement for years. This factors.
doesn't mean there are not some PRECEDENT
problems. But they are notl so The test ban not only will save
full of tiger’s teeth as those of the world from some radioactive
1919. Good evidence is the attitude fallout but will be the first nuclear
of the Kennedy administration, agreement by the United Statee
; It shows no signs of anxiety'and Russia since the war and
about the outcome. Democrats after years of talking about how
and Republicans are expected to to take the first step.
team up to provide the necessary This is a first step, If nothing
, two-thirds Senate vote after giving else. It could lead to better Ameri.
the treaty the full business with can-Soviet relations and even to
E8 2=5e
‘ - X 5
1 f V____
y CHI NA
- A ‘-a-" “22
COMMENCEMENT
ESCAPE CLAUSE RITES SET
This is the out: Any nation sign- AUGUST 19 1923
, . . .• The annual summer commence-
by giving three months not.ee nt exercises of the North TeX.
, avensps w aaverave i umuda enurmous manpower . ’ nyna ion W ic 1 cancels wi on as state Teachers College will be-
How far will tne Chinese go where Nationalist Chiang Kai- China has suffered years of good reason willhave world opin- gin Sunday, August 19, when th.
Will 1 heY risk opet and direct hus- Shek’s government is entrenched damage to her economy over the: ion against it, it that matters. baccalaureate service will be held
tiliiies with tiie l nited States? But it is likely to be little but years of Communist Party rule didn’t to the Russians in 1961, and the sermon will be preach.
The changes are against it, even noise and experimentation. Economical- .That year “ after they, the ed by Dr Paul Preston of Dal-
though the Chinese today seem, DANGERS INCREASED ly, the Chinese are in no condi- Americans and British had ab- las. On Wednesday evening, Au-
more anxious than ever to nail Any overt attempt to take For- tion to mount any dangerous hos- stained voluntarily from testing gust 22 the commencement ex-
down their claim to dominating mosa would threaten to involve tilities on their own, for three years-the Russians sud- ercise will be held when Dr
influence in Asid. the Red Chinese in hostilities with " ’ “ "del" ---------j "......nd "
But Peking's troubles with the
Kremlin can impel the Red Chi-
BURMA X-i.
U A LAOS
ve gG-B--A. JAA-a"e.t 2 • -- -A
SeePH! LiPP! NE 5
deca55
-255695
S. VIE TNAMEHEVN
3 When the Senate wrecked Presi- True, the escape arrangement
S dent Wilson's treaty for putting might benefit either side which
? the United States in the League wanted to play sneaky.
of Nations in 1919, there were sev- For example:
eral reasons, political, personal if it takes six months to pre-
L' and this: pare for an above-ground test and.
By JAMES MARLOW I The escape clause may be high.
Associated Press News Analyst ly useful to the United States or
WASHINGTON (AP) — Voting Russia in a few years, if they
for the limited nuclear test ban need it. For instance, if one or
treaty is a little like being against the other gets fed up with testing
sin. The Senate figures to approve by the French or Red Chinese,
, it. As of now the whole thing looks neither of whom will sign this
By WILLIAM L. RY AN jforce. The Chinese lack assurance1
„ . . c , . of protection under the Soviet “
AP Special Correspondent I . '
If the Soviet-Chinese Communist . u.. L . ,
split persists, Peking can be ex- on such a dangerous military ad- Chinese lack assurance of total
pected to throw Its weight around venturontheir.on t . Soviet .support, the dangers can the agreement can cancel it
in Asia, even to the point of gen- The Chinese can be expected 10 be contained. The Chinese on their I. ----------- -t. |
.. , , i make noises about their pending own can do little, despite their
erating danseroui-looking crises tattempts to liberate Formosa enormous manpower.
LIniv ,fa, t ■ II 4Ae I hinnen nhe • . _
President Kennedy arranged to though no one is betting on that,
send the treaty, signed last Mon- But to suggest the Russians
day with Russia and Britain, to may have some unperceived ad-
the Senate later. Then today vantage out of this agreement—
the Foreign Relations Commit- to the disadvantage of the United
tee begins two or three weeks: States—is to suggest American
of hearings Debate on the Senate officials are stupid
floor is expected to last about a For the better part of a genera-
AWEM8L°oP THI ASSOCIAHD MISS*- Tht Associated oress is en real outpouring of mail critical nese hegemony alone—over all
titled exclusively to use for publication of all local news printed of the test ban treaty — letters southern areas of the continent salt water on — ______
in this newspaper as well as all AP news dispatches. to Senators and newspapers The The Chinese could make dan- far apart he must drill his wells, taxes, far more than it costs to Railroad Commissien does not like ty, a survey of the county's cur-
MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS mail will stiffen the backs of gerous-looking feints in Korea, and whether he can pool his in them them, it can call a hearing to rent road - program shows.
NOTICE TO. PUNIIS- Any erroneousflection upontheatharactetsome in the Senate leadership who’Fheir eurrent propaganda goes soterests with his neighbors on a review them. Work on approximately 22 miles
gladly be corrected Upon being celled to the publishers attention. The wish to take a stronger stand far as to suggest that they are voluntary basis. It has a pile of SHOWS TIDY' PROFIT I But the Legislature balked, and of ne* road now is under way.
publishers ere not responsible for copy omissions, rypograsn cel errors against the treaty but fear it will on the verge of moving into South regulations two yards wide when , , can « the Spears bill died So the tight County Judge Jack Gray has an-
er any unintentional errors that occur other than »o correct them in hurt their party without accom-Korea to "liberate” it from the typed on paper and stood on edge. n lact the aoa ° misregulatory system remains in ef- nounced. The other 22 miles are
the next issue after it is brought to their attention .All edvertising o rd* r plishing anything — Copyright,'United States. They are unlikely And if an oil or gas operator*'0" eould well be termed a prorfect, just as it was in Hogg's on the agenda for this fall or
oregacceptedonthiibasisonyhu------------[1963, King Features Syndicate, ine. to move in with any significant violates one of those regulations, i fit-making enterprise, like the bus- (day.
week.
NO GIMMICKS
" WORLD TODAY
Test Ban Looks
mmeg$p,
K• 2,
6,2230*} v a
•)
Ggeese ■ A
F •EEe W.C'-. 4
RMNGORAN
dw- J .
E* 49 A
in all these fields. Its power Its “profit " runs right at $1,000 - HIEHAy 9
and attention to detail are end 000 every year. It may be loweri•,, ,
less. during the new fiscal year which EXPANSION
a full six-vear term tangdonwini For example, if a truck line or starts Sept. 1 because the Legis- AUGUST 19, 1943
1 ■ < .L f . ” railroad wants to haul salt from lature loosened its purse-strings a, The possibility of the proposed
"pela this sorinc aminer; show its books as to cost gave the commission a little more lin County line, east of Lake Dal-
of operations, and justify a pro-money for its operations. las was discussed Wednesday
THOMPSON ILL posed rate for that particular This is not to indicate that all is when T. E. Huffman, district en-
... . , . . one-way haul. The rate is then happy in the Railroad Commis- gineer for the State Highway De.
The thirdmember. Commission; set in cents per 100 pounds, and sion’s family of businesses. ------------ - -
ill and able to attend to business the trucker must charge that, no, SEr UP BY HOGG
I nce i nallv in th* last 18 more and no less I - ——
L--------------------------------------------I renyt hi ir of . v & COMMITTED mhua am tmre"dmeadam-cmamings *^0 X ’si^en’k^^ iim *Z Penanut, mmuenuniy
Denton Record-Chronicle y •mna *stis a wTpp.moraa out inmi ".asna Earmmaadamms-dMrmsuitpahi‛ramt"Na Eatnsamams," £ adi
---- ----- men. They see using on he hot- over all southeast Asia eventual- of who ha!l rent hearing and railroad regulation . minorwill be The extension.
Telephone 382.2551 zon another period like the war- ly. has committed 12,000 U. S. the, t W° Yeas ", Ch ' "'Jremain - -- -K ----------------
Publshed every evening excepr Saturday and on Sunday morning by time honeymoon with Stalin— troops to South Viet Nam and has 0 ls term on an. ,
DENTON PUBLISHING COMPANY .terminated after he had taken us, been investing something like
314 East Hickory Ia- tit hillirn in "het w- term-h _ * ** »n
Entered at second class mail at the post office at Denton, Texas,
January 13, 1921 ccording to Act of Congress, March 3, 1872.
BASK SUBSCRIFTION RATES
Single Copls: Evening 5 cents, Sunday 15 cents.
Home Delivery on same day of publication by city carrier or by motor
route 40 cents per week.
road industry is trying hard to
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. 14, Ed. 1 Monday, August 19, 1963, newspaper, August 19, 1963; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1517675/m1/4/: accessed June 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.