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The Courier-Gazette from McKinney, Texas • 2

Location:
McKinney, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Back By DICK TURNEfc a NEA Service st fc SCIENCE By LESLIE TURNER Bail? Cohr ier axttt 1 alley OOP I Q's And A's 6 press ASSOCIATION 7958 (But SEARCH THE COURT ITS COEe SHOP OICE SfflWWMd POOL 15 IN VAIN I 1 ICAWT IMAfilNB HM tr HE5 NOT BACK IN HAL AN HOUR BETTER CALL EASY! THE ARTHER WE GET ROM THOSE 'BACHES THE BETTER TH LIKE IT' ST LOUIS Gen Thorri as White Air orce chief of staff giving wholehearted support to the plan for reor ganization of the Pentagon: "1 have studied the plan and as I understand his pro posals I consider Ihejr implemen tation will be of great benefit to the security of our country" 7 By UNITED PRESS An official oLthe US exhibit at the Brussels World air said the United States: "Certainly is hot worried "that Russia will outshine us So what if they have a huge display 'of heavy machinery? Everyone every where knows how well the United States can machinery What we've got to show is our fS President Ei senhower replying frostily to a suggestion he spend less time on the golf course and visit more small towns suf fering from recession: t' know who the congress man is but tell vou I have probably 1 have visited many many more small towns villages and Xarms than he 7 By DELOS SMITH United Press Science Editor NEW YORK The trou ble with gift of a longer life for almost everyone is that although the life of the body has been lengthened the life of the mind and the personality resident in that body has not been Dr Edward A Stracker was looking scfence's gift horse in the mouth at a recent conference on geriatics the medical science of aging He concluded that jjnless science soon finds yvays of pre serving mind and personality as well aS its lengthening of the life span will become curse rather than a blessing" 1 What is needed is more research and the questions must be pursued sued under high priority The questions are not easy which adds to their urgency or instance what deterioration occurs in the brain with age? He citCd the ex periences of a neuropathologist who dissected the brains of 20 per sons wro died in old age I SAME SIGNS' This investigator was looking for physical signs of deterioration and he found them But he fouryi just as many in the brains of per sons who ha) been mentally healthy in their last years as he found in the brains of those who had been mentally ill "We should not be tod glib about blaming all the behavior manifestations of old age disor ders upon organic brain he continued is not the sole cause Nor should" we: be too glib about linking chronologic age with mental deterioration "Some people manifest deterio ration jn the fifties and indeed there may be profound deteriora tion' in the early forties Yet we know people in advanced life81 Icepting for a tew memory JapseS IMJOC' iff" IB ataMighed March 4 1887 McKinney Texas Local and I emg Distance Phones LI 2 2631 or LI 2 2632 WELL NO MATTER) GOODMESS NO I'M CERTAINLY NOT bOINfci BACK THERE TO IND OUT' QUOTES ROM THE NEWS Crowd Bobs I Lanza note THAT 5 5TKANGSHE5 fiONEl XLET HtW ASLEEP ABJUT ITEEN WNUTS5 A AGO! HE 3OM5 OR AtfALK Ahlng Mr? the kind of Bach that Mrs Van Dither was referring to come in 4 7 bottles or fat I 5 7' 7 are bright and alert PREVIOUS addition to possible physical changes the brain he suggest ed that previous of aged could bring pres sures to bear which "distorted" behavior "The human personality is th? most awesome thing in all the world 7 he said "It is too fluid and far reaching to be confined in a cage of He asked to women the samfe the' day of the week the date of the month One replied ashamed 1 re other said: "None of domn business ind out for yourself "iEach had been like that as a girl 7 Strecker oldester himself ie is professor emeritus of jwy phjatry University of Pcnnsylva and professor of psychiatry Seton Colleke: Jersey City HAMBURG Germany A crowd of 400 disgruntled music fans marched on Mario hotel Tuesday night and booed the cancellation of a sched uled performance" mans oer John Coast said doctors advised him not to sing because 'of a severe CtM The cancellation was not an nounced until the Hamburg City Music Hall was filled to capacity OUT OUK BY HAL COCHRAN DEOPLE who have the things a you want never seem to op predate them like you know you i We read a ifjolf ball leaves the head of the club at 135 miles an hour aboutas fast as the golfer leaves his office ing recitals together On his first day in school in Shreveport the teacher asked him if he could read "Yes" he said can read When he came here in 1954 to compete for the coveted Edgar Leventritt award they laughted when he sat down to play (honest what told by those who were there) He looked like a mis placed basketball player 6 feet 4 ihches but has a mop of cur ly hair that springs up so that he looks about 6 feet 7 He walks with a gangling lope His ipiano style is ns Russian as his dialect is east Texan When he fin ished playing he had won the award Mrs Leventritt decided to five a reception for him' after his irst New York Philharmonic ap pearance She told him to bring along any friends from home who had come to hear him Came the reception' Mrs Leventritt had to fight her way in to the room through a mob of strangers said Van sweeping an arm toward: 75 Tex ans these These here are a few of mah Clibum wak born in Shreveport where his parents founded a mis lion that grew into a church To kebp him quiet when wasa tot his mother used to give him a triangle to bang on during the church music In Kilgore the fam ily joined the irst Baptist Church and Van sang in the choir In New York he joined the Calvary Baptist Church just down the jtreet from Carnegie Hall He has written hymns ani) short pieces for the and com posed a choral setting for a psalm which was sung on the radio here By HAMLD 'f WASHINGTON (NEA) Pres dent press confer ence statement that more nor mal than abnormal for the cost of" living to go up while business lev els down borne out by the statistics Txandgraphs The situation today is that gross national product of goods and ser vices or GNPf dropped from an annual rate of 440 billion dollars in the third quarter of 1957 to 432 billion in the fourth quarter irst quarter 1958 figures arp not are that they will show an annual rate of 425 billion dollars! ''I EDERAL RESERVE index of industrial production has dropped fcom its higli of 145 June to August 1957 to 130 for ebruory 1958 17 In this period the price index or cost of living has risen steadily It was 120 last June and July 100 being ihe 1947 49 average It was 122 in ebruary It takes a book to explain what has happened in full But Ewen Clague the Commissioner of La bor Statistics who supervises the consumers' price index explains it by breaking the cost of living into its three main elements These are foods commodities other than foods like clothing and automobiles finally i services like utilities health entet tainment and rent i Consumer services have been ti rising steadily for 20 years "They wilt probably keep' on rising whether general business levels go up or down Recent in the cost of fruits bad weather in lorida! Texas and AVith golfers rthe most Inter esting game is a matter of course A i no wonder women usu ally look better than mpn Think how much longer it takes them A cncnw in WASHINGTON DOC QUIGG jlinquenclong enough it" might! be well to ponder the fact that la couple of our juveniles arejnter jnational sensations I One is Bobby ischer of Brook Cabfornia Crops have been ruined I who Jhe chess wodd Supplies have Ion its ear by defending grand UPM4at reached tottoti in fi'Semois entolfd 155 hn he mar iSe hM SVUuL farmers it lheir' herdsj This reduced supply Priced The other is Van i Cliburn of started rising through ihe normal I Shreveport La and Kilgore Tex short supply winter season who at 23 set Moscow on its ear I this week by winning the Tchaikov 1 sky international piano competi 7 SO OOD PRICES I tion': This Irish Texan little to do with general business 1 0xth his mother and are levels On commodities other than lrish (jescent) gave hi first public foods there are seasonal fluctua Iconcf jn Shreveport at the age tions just as on foods jof 3 Clothing and other soft goods I was 6 he and his prices usually rise in the fall and motieri a concert pianist were giv Wimer 1UT uout iuvv on hard goods like automobiles al so go up in the fall when new mod els are introduced i This time all increases happened to coincide with the gen eral business decline This is ab normal The United States has be through one major depression and five lesser recessions ip the last 30 years Out of six dips in the econ omy in 30 years prices have de clined with business three times 1929 1937 and 1949 Prices held steady while business declined in 1954 have advanced twice abnormally during' the business declines of 945 and 1958 The clock of the English Houses of Parliament at Westminister cost $110000 7 The Unitod States has 45 per cent of the total coal reserves of the world if' 4 Alt St "Making' Most of Our 7aW 'BARBS 7 WESTON MRS TROY COWAN Corr Guests in the home of Mr7and Mrs Oscar Marshall on Sunday were' MV and Mrs James Mar shall of McKinney Mrs Louise ranklin and daughter Bernice Long and Chuck Druewart of Dal las Mn Oscar Gunter visited her new neighbor Mrs Phipps Tues day afternoon They Jive on the Sims place Mr' and Mrs' John Dickerson atended the wedding of their grand daughter Teresa owler at Gar land riday night i Re and rs Johnny Rake straw and? children of Plainview visited friends: here Tuesday EdMLuscombc has moved a house on his lot just west of the Methodist pasonage Slats Smallwood has moved to the home of Mr and Mrj Mugg to take care of him 1 7 Tn Seeds of the Canada thistle wil live as long as 20 years CAPTAIN EASY 7 A MRS TOM PERKINS Editor Owner General TOM PERKINS JR LL Kswtant to General Manager PERKINS WILSON Publishers I Ollie Smith 77' Mrs Ollie Smith 1 Reporter Society Editor rances Stogddl I Vovn Office Mftnftcer Le tNeal 77 1 Proof Reader limmie BdW Staff Pbotoitrapher Walter Holland Linotype Operator Machinist rank Gurney Slavin' Linotype Operator Hall Stereotyper Scottie Starnes Pressman Entered in McKinney Texas Post Office at Second Class mail matter Bv Mail anywhere in United States $500 per year ISSUED EVERY EVENING EXCEPT SUNDAY (Reproduction In Whole Part Of the Local News In Daily Couner Oazette II Strictly Prohibited Without Permission Of The Publisher) Subscription Rates: Delivered by Carrier in McKinney $800 per year APRIL 1933 7 4 7 I Miss Rebecca Graves of this city student at "Texas Christian University ort Worth will ap pear' in the play "HeWar My ather" at the school next Tues day Rev Young pastor of the Rhea Mills Baptist Church for the past eleven years given a sur prise basket dinner Sunday at the close of the 1 1 o'clock service The dinner was enjoyed at the urr home in that commu 6 i'V rom the files of '1908 Com panies are being organized tor the purpose of drilling test wells in the hope of finding oil in Grayson County" The Karris Bible ha(1 charge of the prayer service at the irst Christian Church Wed nesday Taking part bn the pro 7 Tr Explosions Gause $100000 Damage 4 3 ARDMORE' Okla! (UP) A series of explosions at an oil re finery here Tuesday caused an es timated $100000 damage No one was seriously hurt 7 The blasts occurred at the Ben ranklin oil refinery one and one half miles northeast of here: They began a tank of propange gas exploded A line had broken as the gas was being transferred to a railroad tank car on a siding 7 PRIMARIES: ORECAST LITTLE ipnenn'R 'UDonus which means that from now on Amn tttera 'i will be determining tne lineups iui me governorship races next au: 7 Unfortunately the record shows I country have a habit of paying very attention to tW ImDortantAflective process imd then complaining about the I tn choose from in Noyem I jrthWtfe' from vantage points in Congress or certain strategic Stete houses will exert power and influence mthe 1960 presidential Of the most populous state New York 1 California I i Pennsylvania and Ohio all have both Senate and governship contests Illinois has neither 'v New York nominates in a state convention ramer man a primary Probably the most interesting spring battle will be GOP governorship match between Harold Stassen onetime governor of Minnesota and a regular organ 1 ization candidate named McGonigle Calrforaia a S' ate nomination fight between present GOP Gov Goodwin Knight and San Mayor Christopher I As the roll of primaries begins to unfold it is well to remember that they are not elections in which the two major I rtikar Qnmh whn view and 'aDDraisei these preliminary events insist on trying to make them what! The relative size of the two parties vote may indicate fhoir nrtani7afions It mavl me eonipaidiivc ukiv autumn also reflect the interest stirred by a many sided or perhaps I of a popular national uprising against an incumbent admims mesaure accurately a popularity I ft nrimarioc am nf SOUTCe SO me I i flfcl riCdiUeuuaK Ml victtaiw 1 thing else but even they do not really pit men of opposite I parties against each other at that stage 7 5 Too many complex intfa party factors are involved in pirmary for them to have great meaning beyond I party bounds The big inter party test is had in November To try to I Kxt m3ninp into the nrimar I ies would be like counting Grapefruit League spring training (HEWING THE QUID bal games toward the big pennant races 1HI AP Al UPC mmvuLuuiuu 1 Hf Tn (Texas) TJsdly Courier Gazette Tliurs April 17 1958 er were MfX Hufib McClcllatld Mrs i Goodwin GravesMrs Largent Mrs fCarl Melton Mr's Merritt Mrs Jesse Graves Mrs Ben Oates and Mrs 'S Taylor ris' rebuilding his residence on North College Street Several weeks ago the home was partially destroyed by fircw 7 1 Mrs Wysonj is spending a few days in' Houston? jisy 4 Lockmiller hai bought the old Stokes home earner South College and West Howell Street as a business investment' a A i Mrs" Lovejdy attended the Better Homes in 1 America confer ence in Dallas last week She took part on the program discussing CARNIVAL EDITORIAL do not agree with a word you say but Will defend to the death your ngnt to say MillDurunt THISCALLS OR THE HARD SELL it planned to select an Unknown Soldier for World War Il and he Korean War for burial in Arlington Notional Cemetery? a 1 What precipitated the fa mous Whiskey Rebellion of1794? A federal tax on United States whiskey makers! The re bellion was led by angry farmert (Udi larM PinrtiLlvini'i 5 PriCt dent "Washington sent in troops to yean of agv1 and moiC who I ft'w mmnrv kinse'L nin uown uiv leuuHuu i fA i i I 41 1 I 1 "I II ii I hiiiimi uni rnniN 1 7 '1 i 4 TP YiHrT THar TJf TVs I i' J' A 5 7 i I a 5 i 1 A 4 4 1 7 7 1 5k I 9 t' A a'' psnli I 4 In Til AVt a I rwL 7 I 7 a 7 P7'YY 41 1 4'U ri 1 7 7 1 a 9 A AhPwi MIESLVVTkC A Jff 7 Hi in ar jEgaaahr 5 a ja Kf la TT fv 7 Iffl I HU In 1 1U MM 'ya MUI A 4 kV 5 7 a i Adv 'Vilx? Iy A i A i v''V hp 07 A 17 TMLRfrUXkDa ft tMi NfA fttrvletL IfMk i tty 5AV diOOP 4 1 WHV UH NO? GAVV5H? rZ Jsj ORE 'Mr YOU ELLEK5 WH jwYV)47yrii pel val Janos rt THROWEP HIM 7 3 s7 I LER GOT4 LODGE OUT TH' HH i ri 44 UNPER VUH Dpi 7 WRONG Ali DON'T THINK jB WINDOW? A 5 MISTAKE LIKE I THET WITH OUR I OWN COOK 7 i 8'1 1 i jffwit liaw I RITES WRONG iMtk hLa anieiM tmh ol on l7 i I I 7 1 I it' Sfft 4 'W'ir7 fSkUCUkl lldAV'E wm a jrnwos vw mi trf i HL CALLED EASY TO I PAVE HI TJ Will WW 1 1 1 1 1 I I JT1 II 1 Il IL KI Ml 1 iflB a rrri i Il Lil I ft ml 7 ii ''Ai niK py 7TA ur UAJ I Vi ii KSl I a S5S rf 'Y' rewrmboriAS PgR a I til she ioutcEu hl' $3 lXV rn a KJyl noticed a black ffiga Wl ft WMBiMzn Lx "fy CEISALI I laAlIlUm I 17 4 1 KM I X' 7 KTkWl HRKU MM i vl z1 hLj (J 41 'lx '7 i rs: Lyzly A 1 11 1 sMBSTnel ov iv zwm 7 czxMCTMiMn 'I I Ml Rrt IV? 1 HAPPNED XWbR0Cx24NMa fO ZP wi Mt Ji r'S 1 fyj xl i Nfi iHr I AJxi'Mbr 'ZYZ" BRUTE! zfr) SEEMS LikE rnr i Lx "27k: A9Kg Ah WKit 7 iC Zj7 i OUR WOULD BE OUT BY BULLET STRIKING AX 1 Yr WHICH BOUNCED f) i il hb skull i 1 1 1 i 1 4 1 i a 4m1 7 fy A A A Zl 5 i 4 rL i Ji rri xiiraiw xatiiMn la him Hir int mri iniAMarrtBLft TEXAS 1 1 1 Z'7 1 7 7 7 k' 1 7 I aWir Ute? 6 i Hi.

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About The Courier-Gazette Archive

Pages Available:
418,135
Years Available:
1901-2021