Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 56, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 10, 1957 Page: 1 of 19
nineteen pages : ill. ; page 21 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
nrte
• r ■■
n
!
N '
■
- -
I
aR
FOR WISE COUNTY
J
r
WTH YEAR OF DAILY SERVICE — NO. 56
Reds Are
On Space Missile
‘,1
Y
-
S33
ee
U.S. Sees No
1
N
Milwaukee Wins 5-0
ISLAND BLOWS TOP
To Grab World Series
as the ship
THE THING IS
ON SCHEDULE
Covington bunted and
out.
the Run
Boxcar Burns
posted
in Wise Yard
WEATHER
IN TbPATS PAPER
i
tried to
take
over the Capitol.
Morganti told White leaden the
Communists hoped to disarm all
The rival leaden met across the
Page See.
fast and easy.
r
f
” I'
7
23268322
Witnesses Testify
In Girard Defense
100 Wind Up
CD Sessions
WEATHER
POSSIBLE SHOWERS
San Marino
Chiefs Meet
‘Sehmitz-Floyd-Hamlet Ambulance
... Phones DU2-2214 and DU2-4M
Ready To
Use Force
Lodge States Talks Can Be
Separate From Arms Debate
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP)_ The United States de-
-SERVICESW-
DECATUR 6.9961
Negroes Surpass .
Goal For United
Fund 1957 Drive
- ' 73®
T Tn ,hcuba A
RATE YOUR
RELATIVES
REMEMBER WHEN
The first motorboat races
were held on Lake Dallas?
2.07
45.57
it.li
o-c Geuge
Noe
53
2.07
54,70
Khrushchev Claims
Russia Must Defend
Mideast’s interests
Sta,
None
was
5
11,
Chairman of the
Welcome W Wiso
administrator.
The final prosecution witness
was Akikichi Sakai, farmer hus-
band of the dead woman.
Classified .
Comtes
Editorials ,
Feed News
Sports ....
TV Log
J
PROSPECT
'We already know that the
RAINWALL
(it Irehes)
. 24 Hours
This Month
Oct, Mormal
This Year
Last Year ...
MAEBASHI. Japan U—The de-
fense of 61 William S. Girard
opened today with testimony from
two of his officers on the firing
range where he shot Mrs. Naka
Sakai fatally on Jan. 90.
One of the officers said he told
the Illinois soldier to guard a ma-
chinegun and the other officer
said a few hours before the shoot-
ing Japanese collecting scrap
brass had to be driven away from
, M
.. ■
Girard admits firing the empty
cartridge from a grenade launch-
er on his MI rifle that killed Mrs.
Sakai. But he contends he was
performing his duty, was trying
to scare her away and hit her by
accideht.
Lt. Billy Mohon, 25, of Cornyn.
Tex., said he told Girard and an-
other specialist 3rd class, Victor
Nickel, to guard the machinegun
about 9 or 10 minutes before the
woman scavenger was killed.
FIRST SATELLITE PICTURE
Russia Released Photo Of Four-Antennaed Baby
Sun sen today at 6 p.m. rises Friday
at 6128a.m. Fishinga Fait,
the car’s entire 132 bales of export
cotton were damaged to some ex-
tent. —
I
I
■
I - .
_
; ,nsck
- ngssesag
: -
- ------
. ,7
men before the practice and told
them it was necessary to keep
the brass ccavengers away from
the exercise.
Mohon, commander of Girard’s
platoon, said he was acting as
safety officer following the troops.
He testified he saw no one fire
empty cartridge casings toward
the shell gatherers prior to the
fatal shooting. Previous prosecu-
tion witnesses claimed Girard
' ci...... '
, 0-* J G-i
Women's News ...... ,6
===-----
WASHINGTON (—Sputnik
stayed right on schedule today,
completely oblivious to dire pre-
dictions by earthbound experts of
changing orbits, weakening sig-
nals and possibly a sudden fiery
death.
Scientists at the Naval Research
1 ;
be, painted today, according to
Knight, thus keeping residents
WELCOME FOR TRUMANS
Former President Harry S. Truman and Mrs. Truman are welcomed to Texas for
the dedication of the Rayburn Library at Bonham. Shown seated in the Truman
private car at Denison are the former president; Mrs. S. E. Bartlev, Rayburn's sis-
ter; Mrs. Truman, and Sam Rayburn. The group later went to Bonham by auto
for the dedication of the library which will house the papers and books of the vet-
eran Speaker of the House. (AP Wirephoto)
' 8888
( "
" - sh.a,. .
■ •
L 4 /2n ‘
U.S. Asks Parley
- .*
Real Chances
Of Top Talks
By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER
WASHINGTON —Top U.S
officials see no present possibility
of practical agreements between
Russia and the West on major
world issues such as international
control of space satellites.
They feel that Soviet Commu-
nist boss Nikita Khrushchev is not
seriously interested in reaching
any' such agreement at this time.
This estimate of Khrushchev
maneuvers in foreign affairs
is based primarily on an assess-
ment of Secretary of States Dul-
Ies' talk here last Saturday with
Soviet Foreign MinisUs Andrei
Gromyko.
SATELLITE
It also is described as taking
into account the positive purposes
of Khrushchev's apparently well-
planned diplomatic offensive in
connection with the launching of
the earth satellite.
In the American view he is
seeking simultaneously to impress
the world with Russia's scientific
■
-
8
SAN MARINO ( - Leaders of
San Marino’s two rival govern-
ments planned to meet late to-
day as some Communist volun-
teers threatened to shoot to de-
fend their hold on government
buildings
Leaders of the anti - Communist
"White" regime hoped to end the
stalemate produced by Commu-
nist refusal to surrender the 38-
square - mile mountain republic.
An earlier agreement brok down
last night.
Zaccharin Sovoretti, a member
of the White 'government, said
that a final decision might be
reached at today's meeting.
Savoretti said that Domenico
Morganti, Interior minister and
strong man of the Communists,
had cautioned patience to avoid
possible violence. He said Morgan-
ti had warned that some Red vol-
unteerswere holding on to rtheir
.........•
-- 9
......., «
4. 5, &, 9
...... 1 2
U. N. Disarmament subcommittee
that the supervision of space ob-
jects be included as a part of a
general disarmament agreement.
Lodge told the committee inter-
national control of the newest de-
vfes of science—outer space mis-
siles—was urgent because they
can either be restricted to peace-
ful uses "or they can be used to
blow us to bits.”
on the progress of the
ali
!
THE NATION'S teenagers. guns and threatening
most of them at any rate, anti Communists triec
would like to mold their lives
after Ike or Grace Kelly.
border in nearby Rimini, Italy,
early today and a Comndunist
official said later. "We hope to
clear things up definitely in fur-
ther talk*." L, ___________
MARKETS on the three quarter
hour KDNT 1410.
prospect of an outer space mis-
sile armed with a nuclear war-
head is too dangerous to ignore,"
he added.---—
Lodge said the United States
would agree to suspend nuclear
tests only after the Russians had
agreed in principle a ban on the
production and stockpiling of at-
omic and hydrogen weapons.
Nearly 100 civil defense officiate
wound up a three-day conference
Wednesday in Denton with propos-
, ate for improving the nation's civil
defense program for natural dis-
asters.
Representatives were present at
the meeting from Texas, New Mex-
ico, Oklahoma, Arkansas and Lou-
isiana.
Pooling the experience they have
gained in natural disasters during
the past five months, the repres-
entatives from a five-state area
joined with Denton Federal Civil
Defense Administration personnel
to form three distinct proposals.
The proposals Included federal
aid in a disaster area during the
alert and extreme emergency per-
iod; development of suggestions for
expediting and simplifying federal
assistance, and development of rec-
ommendations for assignment of
missions to "federal agencies and
the establishment of state govern-
mental counterparts and standard
procedures.
to the scene at 9 p.m. and had the
fire under control within an hqur.
Before flames cbuld bestoppeds
R-C Wise County Bureau
DECATUR — A raging fire
swept through a cotton filled box-
car of a Gulf coast bound Fort
Worth & Denver Railway freight
train here Wednesday afternoon,
damaging, an estimated $5,000
worth of compressed cotton.
Though the fire started1 when the
train was several miles north of
the city, the south-bound freight
rushed into the Decatur yards be-
fore stopping and the blase was
halted by the Decatur Volunteer
Fire Dept.
Cause of the fire, said W. E.
Seideman of the claim department
of the Part Worth & Denver Rail-
way. was the burning of a wheel
Journal on the car
The local fire department rushed
Teenager? How do you rate
with your parents?
Parents? How do you rate
with your teenager?
Two self-quizes prepared by
Dorothy Ricker could help
you. Both are on Page 9, Sec.
9 today.
United States.
The Dulles-Gromyko conversa-
tion impressed Dulles and other
top officiate chiefly by demon-
strating what they now term the
“inflexibility" of Soviet policy on
the disputed problems talked
about. These were mainly the
Middle East, disarmament and
the European situation.
Gromyko, according to authori-
tative information, gave no inti-
mation of any Kremlin willing-
ness to change position on any
of these subjects.
- KRUSHCHEV
Since’ the Moscow announce-
ment of the satellite launching
last Friday, Khrushchev has made
a number of public statements.
He has alternately taken a tough
line emphasizing the strength of
Soviet arms and a peaceful line
stressing his contention that Rus-
sia is trying to gain United
States acceptance of peaceful co-
existence.
He has called for direct under-
standings between Washington
and Moscow which, he said, could
lead to international control of ob-
jects propelled into outer space.
He leaves the implication that
other problems of disarmament
and world politics would similar-
ly be amenable to solution.
President Eisenhower made
clear at a news conference yes-
terday that the United States has
1
1
1
2
• l
- ;
' - Chronicle
« . ■ tV.".
• Denton County United Fund con-
tributions jumped another 9500
Wednesday as the Negro goal was
surpassed on the third day of the-
general campaign.
UF Secretary O. C. Knight re-
ported this morning that a total
of $577.90 had already been turn-
ed in by the Negro community
and Negro spokesmen said that
the money was still rolling in. The
Negro goal was 1500.
Each contributor was averaging
$5 This average was made pos-
sible by the average of $17 each
for teachers at Fred Moore
Schools.
Cash and pledges for the Uni-
ted Fund total 111,000. The giant
Red Feather scoreboard on the
County Courthouse lawn is due to
seen at the lower right emerging from the Atlantic
Ocean. The volcano has caused panic among the
natives and serious damage to property and crops -
. on nearby Fayal. (AP Wirephoto)
RHE
Milwaukee 004 000 010—5 9 1
New York- 000 000 000-0 7 9
dared today it is ready to begin multi-nation talks imme-
diately on steps to harness space missiles for peace.
The statement was made by Ambassador Henry Cabot
Lodge as the U.N.’s 82-nation Political Commitee plunged
into a detailed debate on disarmament.
Lodge asserted the United States was willing to separate
---- the discussion of space mis-
NEW YORK: Bauer doubled. It
wax his 14th straight series to hit
safely. a record. Slaughter was
tagged out. Mantle grounded out.
Bauer held second. Berra walk-
ed. McDougald flied out No runs,
one bit, no errors, two left.
SECOND INNING
MILWAUKEE: Aaron singled.
Torre walked. Mantilla flied out.
Aaron taking third Crandall forc-
ed Torre at second. No runs, one
hit. no errors. two left.
NEW YORK Kubek grounded
out. Coleman grounded out. Col-
lins struck out. No runs, no hits,
no errors, none left.
THIRD INNING
MILWAUKEE: Burdette popped
out. Hazle singled. Logan ground-
ed to Kubek whose throw to sec-
ond pulled Coleman off the bag
and Hazel was safe. An error was
charged to Kubek. Mathews
doubled scoring Hazle and Logan.
Bobby Shantz replaced Larsen as
New York pitcher. ,
Aaron singled to score Mathews.
Covington singled, Aaron racing to
third. Torre forced Covington.
Mantilla flied out. Four runs, four
hits, one error, one left. Two runs
earned.
NEW YORK: Jerry Lumpe bat-
ted for Shantz and struck out.
Bauer flied out. Slaughter bounced
out. No runs, no hits, no errrors,
none left.
FOURTH INNING
MILWAUKEE: Art Ditmar went
in to pitch for the Yanks. Crandall
flied out. Burdette struck out.
Hazle singled Logan got on by
an error. Mathews lined out. No
runs, one hit, one error, two left.
NEW YORK: Mantle flied out
Berra lined to Hazle. McDougald
flied out. No runs. no hits, no
errors, none left.
FIFTH INNING
MILWAUKEE Aaron bunted1
and was safe when- Berra fumbled
the ball. Kubek threw out Coving-
ton Aaron taking second. Torre
bounced out. Kubek threw out
Mantilla No runs, no hits, one er-
ror. one left.
NEW YORK: Kuebk flied out
Coleman singled. Collins forced
Coleman at second. Bill Skowron
batted for Ditmar and forced Col-
lins at second. No runs, one hit.
no erors, one left.
SIXTH INNING
MILWAUKEE: Tom Sturdivant
went to pitch and Skowron took
over at first for New York. Grand-
These recommendations will be
reviewed by Region S officials here
and then submitted to national ’
FCDA officials for possible adopt-
ion as national policy. ।
Passengers on the liner Independence got this view
passed the Azores island of Fayal as the
volcano making an bland nearby again-erupted. Out
of the smoke, steam and dense black ash, 4and can be
DENTON ANO VICINITY; Considereble eloudi-
mu with chances of light, scattered
. ahowers through Friday- Cool. .
WIST TEXAS. Considerable eloudiness
through Friday with scattered ram or driz-
zles.
EAST, SOUTH CENTRAL TEXASt Considerable
eloudiness through Friday.
Denton area teenagers aren’t I. ---.— —-- —
so sure. PUSS. Sec.2. their volunteers today:
__________'________M
NEW YORK UP—The Milwaukee
Braves won the World Series to-
day by crushing the New York
Yankees, 5-0, in the seventh and
deciding game behind the brilliant
pitching of Lew Burdette.
A four-run splurge, highlighted
by Eddie Mathews' two-run dou-
ble. in the third inning, gave
Burdette all the batting help he
needed. Del Crandall added a solo
homer in the eighth.
The righthander stopped the
Yanks cold with seven hits to be-
come the seventh pitcher to win
three games in a seven game
World Series The last man to
accomplish., the feat was Harry
(The Cat» Brecheen of the St.
Louis Cardinals in 1944.
Burdette beat the Yanks 4-2 in
the second game, and 1-0 in the
fifth game, each time yielding
aeven hits. He blanked the Yanks
for 24 consecutive innings also.
The Yanks scored on him last
in the third inning of the second
game.
An error by rookie third base-
man Tony Kubek. a Milwaukee
resident, proved costly to the
Yankees and starter Don Larsen,
is the Braves' big third inning.
FIRST INNING -
MILWAUKEE: Hazle struck out.
Logan grounded out. Mathews
struck out. No runs, no hits, no
errors, none left.
fired at four other Japanese be-
fore he shot Mrs. Sakai.
tct 4— amumberofseheelbeund
motor scooter and bicycle riders
were seen in winter coats a nd
gloves—the first sign of approach-
ing winter. -
An extremely light drizzle fell
for a short time Wednesday at
about 7:30 p.m. It stopped before
any measurement of even a trace
1 moisture could ba made.
NEW YORK • — Nikita S.
Khrushchev has made it clear that
the Soviet Union is prepared to
use military force if necessary to
defend its interests in the Middle
East, the New York Times said
today.
During an interview with James
Reston of the Times, Khrushchev
also accused Secretary of State
Dulles of inciting Turkey to start
a war in the Middle East by at-
tacking Syria. The Communist
party boss challenged the U.S.
Senate to investigate his charges.
MONPAT______
The interview took place Men-
day at Communist party head-
quarters in Moscow. The final
portion was released by the Sov-
iet government for publication
today.
Reston reported that, in what
seemed to be a clear threat of
Soviet intervention in any Middle
Eastern war, Khrushchev said:
"If war breaks out, we are near
Turkey and you are not. When
the guns begin to fire, the rockets
(missiles) can begin flying and
then it will be too late to think
about it. . . . Turkey would not
last one day in case of war."
Khrushchev charged that Dulles
first instructed Loy W. Henderson,
deputy undersecretary of state, to
incite Jordan and Iraq against
Syria on his trip to the Middle
East after leftist officers took
control of Syria's armed forces
last August.
Failing to incite Jordan and
Iraq. Khrushchev said, Henderson
turned pressure on Turkey ‘o
attack Syria Turkey is an Amer-
( ican-armed ally in NATO.
1 VERIFICATIONN
When Reston asked Khrushchev
‘ for verification of the charges, the
Soviet leader replied:
I "Why don’t you ask Mr. Dulles?
• In his speeches he often refers to
I God. Then let him swear under
' oath and tell the truth about the
I instructions he gave Henderson
if he is truly a believer and does
not want to be a perjurer, he will
admit that he did give such in-
structions."
progress and miiltary power, and
to promote the familiar propa-
ganda line that the Soviet Union ,
is -actively seeking peaceful settle-
ments with its power rival, the
le
et
The Blossom Point tracking sta-
tion said Sputnik's radio signal
was the same as yesterday, strong
in the 40 megacycle band and
more of a steady signal instead of
the original "beep . . . beep . . •
beep. . .
A spokesman at the laboratory
said Sputnik crossed over the
northern tip of Maine at 5:90 a.m.
EST today but missed the rest of
the United States.
At 8:32 a.m., EST the time-
table indicated a route across the
Canadian border into the United
States a little west of Helena,
Mont., southward into Colorado
west of Denver at 9:94. across
the Texas-New Mexico border at
8:36 and across the Texas-Mexi-
can border at 9:90.
DIRECTION
•_____________________________/________________________________
A Growing Newspaper For A Growing Area
DENTON, TEXAS, THURSDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 10, 1057
. ... 1 .
( '
—_X_
to fire if siderable cloudiness with chances
of light, scattered showers through
Friday and continued cool
Following this morning's mini-
mum of 58 degrees — coolest since
no intention of Joining with Rus-
All of today's crossings of the sia in any "attempt to dictate to
United States were fh a south-1 the world." < campaign,
easterly direction. Sputnik will re:#----------—.
turn tonight and make several po mmamamaaama
passes over th.' country in a north . * 3 M2 52825445 ' MAm
easterly direction 5823 ' Mzzaa 8
Fog out much of the northeast • A8GhN 3 .....1 m2 d .
U S coos' thwarted ettorts to get P .rAdddh gddd82888d
a visual fix’on he man made sat ; Wk*-' “118232822
tellite early today. a86da
s ■
Nickel testified earlier as a
prosecution witness that there was
no danger that the Japanese would
approach the machinegun.
But Lt William A. Gigante, 25.
of Detroit said about 150 shell
pickers swarmed over the ma-
chinegun earlier, knocking the
gunner from it and raising the
possibility it might fire acciden-
tally.
Gigante also testified that Lt.
Col. Walter C. Sharp Jr. of Beech
Haven, N. J., had lectured’the
all singled. Burdette dropped a
sacrifice bunt. Crandall was
thrown out trying to steal third.
Hazle flied out. .No runs, one hit,
no errors, none left.
NEW YORK: Bauer grounded
out. Slaughter flied to Aaron. Man-
tle singled. Matthews fumbled
Berra's grounder, Mantle stopping
at second on the error. McDougald
forced Mantle. No runs, one hit,
one error, two left.
SEVENTH INNING
MILWAUKEE: Logan singled.
Mathews sacrificed. Aaron fanned.
Covington lined out. No runs. one
hit, no errors, one left.
NEW YORK: Kubek singled.
Burdette threw out Coleman as
Kubek went to second. Elston
Howard batted for Sturdivant.
Howard struck out. Logan threw
out Skowron No runs, one hit, no
errors, one left.
EIGHTH INNING
MILWAUKEE: Tommy Byrne
became the fifth Yankee pitcher.
Torre walked Mantilla bounced
into a double play. • Crandall
homered. Burdette walked. Andy
Pafko batted for Hazle and* fouled
out. One run, one hit, no errors,
one left.
NEW YORK: Pafko went to
right field for the Braves. Bauer
popped out. Slaughter foulded
out Mantle flied out. No runs, no
hits, no errors, none left.
NINTH INNING
MILWAUKEE: Logan lined
out. Coleman tossed out Math-
ews. Aaron pied out. No runs,
no hits, no errors, none left. .
NEW YORK: Berra popped out.
McDougald singled Kubek flied
out Coleman sliced a single,
McDougald stopping at second.
Byrne singled, filling the bases.
Skowron forced Coleman. No
runs, three hits, no errors, three
left.
Laboratory here said the Russian
satellite is still holding, to its orig-
inal orbit and speed which carries
it around the world every 94.1
minutes.
The laboratory's tracking sta-
tion At Blossom Point, Md., report-
ed that it intercepted strong and
clear radio signals from Sputnik
this morning, starting at 4:44
a m . EST and lasting until 7:00.
ACROSS U.S.
That time period included the
satellite's diagonal crossing of the
United States from the northwest
to the southeast over northern'
Wisconsin, across Ohio and out
of the United States north of
Charleston, S. C. Sputnik crossed
over the coastline at 7 a.m., EST
exactly on its pre-determined
timetable.
xilfis from the general dis«
armament debate and pro-
ceed with it independently.
The Lodge delegate reminded
the committee that the United
States 10 years ago had taken
the’ initiative in proposing inter-
national control of atomic energy.
If this proposal had been accept-
ed, he said, widespread interna-
tional anxiety could have been
avoided.
INSPECTION
"We now have a similar oppor-
tunity to harness for peace man’s
newest efforts in outer space," he
said. “We have therefore proposed
to work out an inspection system
that will be a sufficient guarantee
that such missiles will be used
exclusively for peaceful purposes.
"The United States is prepared
to join in this initiative without
awaiting the conclusion of negoti-
ations on other substantive is-
sues."
The United States with Britain.
France and Canada, had proposed
in the London meetings of the
Wilson said. "The widespread
disasters which have occurred in
Region 5 during the past spring
and summer have forcibly brought
out the need tor greater utilization
of government resources at the
local, state and federal levels
He explained that past civil
defense procedures were adequate
for disasters of a local nature, but
streamlining and simplification has
now become desirable so that any
cohditien that arises in the future
nsma
q •
I
i
MeKINNEY’S 1967 United
campaign is underway. Page
3, Sec. 1. ,
BOY SCOUT week starts
next Sunday Be prepared.
FageTSW. 1.—;----------
' ; i
" roi
&
i •
.__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
TEMPERATURES
(Euperiment Station Kemom)
Wig wenesdayer
tew this emernimg ..
Meh vear ata -------
tew year aye
■ • I N
U—J_____"”J.l ......
The Money that slips throgh your
fingers will pay the lean that pays
your bills. Complete personal loan
service. Industrial Credit Cem
pany. over. Russells.
--------------- *
Weather Bureau
Sees Chance For
Showers in Area
X ' > I .
As time for the annual Texas-
Oklahoma gridiron clash in Dallas
draws near, it appears that the
thousands of Oklahomans, who be-
ginning Friday will start passing
through Denton, will‘be driving un-
der cloudy, possibly rainy skies.
The forecast called for am- “
.... - i^- 'HiIgK-. ’• ' ------- - --*-*4 a
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ M PAGES - PRICE FIVE CENTS
cm ba bant
l " • - I
1..1.
k. , W , .a
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 56, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 10, 1957, newspaper, October 10, 1957; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1450048/m1/1/: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.