Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 88, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 12, 1958 Page: 1 of 10
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boss did
only the Soviet
and
a2sd
I dnaalukdl
IT VETERANS DAY FETE
No More War is
ing
was accepted under the that most cities have mere than
Old Vets’ Hope
Dis-
zone, for instance, he must secure
clause has
served as part of Den-
g ordinance for more
than 20 years and it to entitled to
served.
U.N.'s
+
outi
titicat
there won't be another
"I
J
the path the commission
datio
ceo
i
Street Hall.
tlhMt
TROUBLE IN SPACE •
M
Nov.20,
.. F
service Following the
elite
Ambassador
was
Visits Denton
Val
a
And It vaa Davis who seconds
after the
The
ten certified
i
wrong-
aviation
sile
and wee-
how to solve intricate
E
nt that
it said in an
center
a
istrative assis-
■NaM an almost
tween the altitudes
only
and ether
city at
-tar
TICKETS .
J
id
I
Ito his
EDNT
d.g NE
I
godn-
—hmA
7
Big Space Capsule
Ordered By Agency
EAGLES D
williamson's
Zoning Ordinance
Change Approved;
Petition Accepted
Some rescue
trolled er to
MM be-
125 and ito
ordinance nentnlnad 10 or more
classifications. . .the M per cent
a meeting at the
search Center near
a Oak
the master plan to made If
doesn't want to discard it. Holt
Talks Reported Near
On Troop Withdrawal
tha
unti
rope.
of the
Scientists Mull
Rescue Missions
k- X
2—E
The -
day and
Gomulka
al of Soviet tro
But the East
the earth. Your own
ets won work. But
for future
armament
be Planning
owner -who
nge fails to
rs at
Re-
Va,
PAPER ON rORCBT .
' LET VS KNOW
irrrisfrr
mm toe ion
Board a
Last September the
hired the Fort Worth
United Staten an*
unart and former
Board.
But if a prope
wants the zoning
U.S. SEEKS
MOON BASES
2
measure by Charles N
Denton contractor w-
2
admeat wm authoriz-
ight presented a writ-
tatement to the com-
The Soviet
Dep. For
Au"-etrm-"seSWur
SAN ANTONIO. Tex. (AP» —
Your apace ship to oB wares and
out of control.
In 16 hours, it will collide with
N 3, ■■
sw ' "
, - -gane E===
the capsule will contain
uments for measuring
■ and deceleration, ve-
NOTHING NEW
ocust-Highway
to of abrupt
off. reentry
pehare and
-3 !
way down in
tings after
Tirvedal
I
-
.u
came from
A.
take tor reach a
ezu -iMr
INTODAY* PAPER
EVERY HUSBAND ahould
mi“muhdypog“e
matter, which
with the ordi
at
streets may have been taken Tues-
day night
vrrrr EXPANSTON
wm signed Mon-
Tuesday after
for Warsaw.
NEW WORDS OR NOT, THE IDEA’S
THE SAME-YOU’D BETTER PAY
Warlof, 1898 Rowlett,
at 617 S. Elm, i ",
won and nine months
new ordinance that wasn’t even
scheduled to be signed until today.
This to what happened:
Under Denton’s ■ present mo-
Two of Denton County's five old
est veterans are hoping there won't
be another war.
L F. Rowlett, 82, and Richard
All the indictions here were
that Russia and Eact Germany
were about to launch a big diplo-
matic offensive to force the West-
era powers to acknowledge the ex-
istetce of the Communist, East
German government which the
West roton eg to recognize on the
ground that It to a Communist
puppet without popular basis.
I in East Berlin.
Beat German Foreign Minister
Lothar Bolt, however, told the
same news conference that Soviet-
the Western Allies withdraw from
Berlin.
At a news conference, Grote-
wohl said a new settlement re-
garding Soviet troops would be ne-
got iated
He added immediately that he
hoped thia settlement would en-
courage the United States, Franco
and Britain to take the same steps
regarding their own troops in
West Germany.
Asked if the settlement would
last Friday,
NASA asked the companies to
submit bids by Dec. A and said it
would award a oantrort for the
peinjonsingtyraramanogh
a useful evidentiary purpose un-
der the soning ordinance. . while
II to tree that meet cities do not
have such a rule it also to true
REJECTION
William C. Foster, U.8. delega-
tion leader, rejected discussion of
disarmament as outside the field
of the talks, which are designed
to toy the technical groundwork
a hotly political,is-
sue in world relatins.
three zoning classifications. It can-
not be ignored that changes and
amendments have a far more dras-
one,” Wood said. "It can stir up
in a day or two, but I don’t think
it will. If it does, weH be too old
—but we both have offspring who’ll
be ready to go." „
And Rowlett pointed out that
their offspring have already fought
tag ordinance. If a proper
or wants to get hie land <
from a residential to a business
1
ise facilities in England,
Denmark, Sweden, Gor-
in three wars—World Wars I and
II and the Korean conflict.
The two man honored at the
brief ceremonies Tueaday morn-
ing are veterans of the Spanish-
Mt’s opinion also a
LWS'.x*
era? StotDeStee* Adndatatratton.
who wore unable to attend Tues-
day’s ceremonies, are Ashly Da-
vis. H. F. Palmer. both of Denton,
and Jessie Forbes of Lewisville.
Ex-Marine Capt. Lon Rowlett,
ana of the Spanish-American War
veteran, was to charge of the
REMEMBER WHEN
The Deaton popcorn vendors
with their huge, four-wheeled
popping machines, attracted at-
tention with a high-pitched
----
__________wayofstreets
and how much it w* coat, the
commission decided to invite Clar-
ene Crow of the Dallas investment
firm of Meall, Parkhurst a Crew
to Denton to meet with the com-
had not even been
at to be sign id i
commissio
tion and i
Russian Proposal
Follows Usual Line
Not Accepted By U.S.
MOSCOW (AP) - The Soviet
Union sought today to discuss dis-
armament with the West at a
summit meeting, at the Geneva
talks m surprise attack aad at the
United Nations. .
The Western powers have on
previnoa occasions opposed the
form of talks proposed by Moscow
as more likely to produce propa-
ganda than progress.
The Kremlin renewed Ms off-
again, on-again summit confer-
ence proposals in a joint com-
unique ending talks between Pre
mier Khrushchev and Polish Com-
munist boss Wladyslaw Gomulka.
It’s Time To
Get Started,
Council Told
By TOM KIRKLAND
Berard Clrenitis Staff Writer
The City Commission Tues-
day night finally came face
to face with the decade-long
problem of doing something
about the condition of Den-
ton’s streets
it may be a long process and, as
almost everyone knows, the pro-
ject will be costly enough to re-
quire a bond issue. But the com-
mission took the first stop toward
that end Tuesday night by asking
for a meeting with an investment
firm representative.
BOW MUCH?
How much will it cost? No one
knows yet no one including the
city commission.
BERLIN (AP) - Premier Otto
Grotewoht indicated today that his
Communist Bast German regime
shortly will open negotiations with
the Soviet Union for the withdraw-
Davis" pet-
to toe City
PRICE EIVECENTS
nemooppepopen.
Curley waa a Democratie lead-
er for more than half a century,
serving four terms as mayor of
Boston, one term as governor of
Massachusetts and four as a con-
.""TT1 -- . -/
. 2
On n third front, the Soviet Un-
ion tried to introduce an aspect
ef disarmament ino a UN de-
bate in New York on peaceful use
of outer space A Russian resolu-
tion called for both a baa on using
space for military purposes and
if a street paving bend issue to
proponed iota *
- ene
-
manned flight into space, but will
not be n true apace craft.
The agency presented Ma pre-
liminary specifications to M mis-
long-term developme
space capsule after J
NASA told the mew
the first at the veh
er more from later i
Other rescue satellites might
circle far above the earth to aid
interplanetary travelers, Petersen
said
ateg Beard conducta publie her-
tags on the request and then de-
cides whether it thinks the zoning
change to justified. It then pmom
the petition back to the City Com-
mission which normally follows the
torney. prepared the letters on part of the cit’s new drive to col-
lectdelinguent personal end property tenon Rutirinshowed.the :
letter to the comminsion Tuesday night. Cm nitoslmte Tom Neel
ansFnak
v ' ..'i? . X
m-nemam
....... —
WArMD
tWEAIHEk
________________-__
a direction of disaster' relief
ile overnor of Nebraska set a
Boston Bossr
41* ' ' A
. 2, ■' 1 g
gets those
_________w_____to toe petition
Ezjcmzigmpacvn
mission supposedly determines if
the signatures are valid, than
has ripped away part of your
space ship. Most of your food sup-
ply wass lost. What to der
Space rescue ships are the an-
swor. noy ending to your 806 Or
racing out on their own when they
the city wil need to raise its pro-
perty tax valuations, "W you re-
member," Interrupted Commission-
er Tom Noel, "that's what I sug
Eergdan he first meotteg l weft
Before
nrors n
to from 1
and 18
Is The
—
dor wm to arrive in
I
' 1-E
'I !
11
e
settlement." He toft open whether
revBtona of Berlin's Matus would
Curley Dies
BOSTON CAP-James Michael
Curley, last of the big city polit-
ical bosses. died today at City
Hospital. He would have been M
City Takes First Step
•/ I
Toward Better Streets
satellites must
circular orbit
ty ruining requeta will be
Mew to the City Planning_____
Art’s the property that was the
agreements over
resumably be re-
e scope of a total
Slowly failing health had marked
Curtsy’s tart yearn and he was
long under treatment for diabetes.
Death came a tow hours after
a team of seven doctors per-
formed a 55-minute emergency
operation in an attempt to dear
He underwent survery Nov. 4-
Electiog Day — for in itestinal
cur to an phases of space opera-
tions, said Col. Paol Caaspbeil of
the School of AviatiosMedicte.
--------------
making satisfactory progress un-
tn Tuesday night. Earlier Tues-
day he had walked the hospital
corridor and had paced for news-
paper pbotograpbers. gg 1
Tuesday night, M. Curley and
Curley’stwo sons, the Nev Fran-
cto X. Curley, S. J., of Holy
Crees College and George J Cur-
ley et Bouton, were summoned.
Father Curley gave his father the
last rites of the Roman Catholic
Church.
He wm election to the highest
offices to Ma home city and state
firm of Freese aad Nichols to stut
dy the needs of the city's water
and mm Wte^ta minted to
serving the new Denton State
School. The commtanion already
knows too areomt sewage treat-
moot plant to what City Engineer
Bob Courtney calls three years bo-
hind thetimes, n would need ex-
pending even V the city didn't '
gerve, .T* Dunton State
Ns anybody's route how much
it wil cost to extend water, sew-
age and electricity t the new
taaetoae also could cost as much
an $100,000, band ea estimates
made earlier this year by Court-
ney. The city has almot $57,000
Zorin told the committee the So-
viet Union could not agree to any
2 program for the
__uses of outer space un-
the United States pledged it-
eelf^to^liquidate all its foreign nul-
mnarereptad baa^os*the use of
। Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles
and other space weapons as an-
in space experiments such as the
United States to urging.
The key to the whole problem,
he said, is to adopt measures
1 which will take into account the
security of all sides on an equal
baste.
Zorin quoted Sen. Lyndon B.
Johnson (D-Tex), Senate majority
leader, as saying. "Control over
cosmic soace means control over
the whois world" He noted that
Johnson was expected here to
I take part in the U.N. debate on
apace control
Chief US. Delegate Henry Ca-
bot Lodge said the US position
would be set forth in detail later,
but he accused Zorin of distorting
the U.8. poritten. He charged he
l wm deliberately trying to mislead
amendment alter receiving a 13-
page total opinion tar City Atty.
Lee Holt ea the validity of the N
per centclause. Holt prepared the
opinion after the commission wm
asked about the legality of Me
REDS CLAIM
East Gerfan
Berlin would
vised ’within
REDS ASK
AGAIN FOR
ARMS TALKS
By VERN HAUGLAND
Assoclated Prom Aviation Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Notional Aoreanutics aad Space
Administration has asked the mis-
site industry to design a one-ton
space capsule capable at orbiting
the earth tar as much m M hours.
NASA plans to launch the cap-
ante from Cape Canaveral, Fla. to
the sum of aa Atlas intercon-
9 mission. Mayor Jack Bryson wm
4 instructed to arrange a meeting, .
M with Crow
Thus, the first stop toward new
trucks or l
Or they
they could __ .____
or swoosh up to a higher mb*
intercept ead rescue people an
"Caiuf IM
morning. : 1——. for two ,
not make it dear whether a Soviet
withdrawal would hinge on the
West's following suit
Grotewohl’s announcement fol-
lowed weekend demands by Soviet
Premier Nikita Khrushchev that
got to per cent of the property own-
ers within 200 fort to sign the orig-
inal petition, nothing can be done.
That pert of the city ordinance
is what wm authorised to be
amended Tuesday night.
AMENDMENT
Under the newly approved
amendment, if .it is signed as
5^0. “rdnkaq"nn
is unable, after reasonable ef-
fort. to obtain the necessary signa-
tures on a petition tor a change or
amendment because of the erbit-
rary or unreasonable attitude,of
the surrounding resident er be-
cause of the physical location of the
property." the City Commission
wif forward the petition rod the
certificate to the City Planning
2 Denaqjbd"pendisnuma
51 Presbyterian Chute'S
‛Nu
Street immediately east of a gro-
cery store at’Oak ai *
across the street from
tic impact upon surrounding pro-
rty own- party. . .when an ordinance on-
changed tains only three zoning classifica-
tions than would changes if the
Communist bloe with headquar-
given by the Bev. Tho- tors in Moscow.
__-_---
5 cr'otn...
elimination of foreign military ___ ______... ______. ________
“X to b 2mneigty.#Easlsgs20
that advance preparations indicat-
.................I
Town Topies
TY Lag ............ 1
Womem's News ............
F
-
3 gj s
months ago when it first wort be
fore the City Planning Board and
the City Commission.
It WM that zoning change that
bud already bronnuiodre^ both
prbuns when property owner, in
the area discoverd that the orig-
inal Davis petition failed to have
m M wt WM ry
Co. E. Wood, who lives at 414
Maple, served for throe years in
the 4th U.S. Infantry, tbs list
US. Infantry Md the Mi U. S. to-
-We were to the same brigade
in the Philippines,.” Wood sold,
“but we didn't meet each other un-
til we got back to Denton."
Both Rowlett end Wood recalled
m their moot harrowing experi-
ence in the war a long, night
march through rata siohsd. steam-
ing Philippine jungles far a dawn
attack against Spanish troops in
southern Luzon.
Denton County’s other three
Spanish-American War veterans.
tag good results must precede any
summit meeting. Khrushchev
broke off ambassadorial talks in
Moscow last spring ea a summit
MATTERS AT HAND
Both at Geneva and in the U.N.
the West contends that disarma-
meat is art part of the business
at hand aad Ra Injection only com-
plicates discussions without offer-
EAanced, ertective disarmnament.
While calling for disarmament,
the Soviet Polish communique also
said it is necessary to strengthen
the Warsaw Pact. This to the mili-
taro to Wichita. Page 4.
Page
Classified 8
m e" m“maium -aem
_ Board as if Ltherpetition r contained
• the signatures.
The commission agreed to the
' 1 ’ .
- •
, MTH TKAB OF DAaT SERVICE—NO. M t
-
.,0 .. , 1, . ,, 2
after Commissioner Frank Barrow
told the commission he thinks “it's
time we got started in this thing
—we've art here long enough aad
it's time we found ent just what
"Maybe we ought to plan far
orreedspioreprsonteadandwhump -
tility bond isuelBut one things
certain, we'vo got to get busy
MW,” said Barrow. ----—.
TAX VALUATIONS
Commissioner Charles Orr sug-
seated that before anything cm be
done in the way of a bond issue.
g. imae
WEATHER----
*■ (),
CLOUDY AND coAT. --7
.0,4
food to the withdrawal of Soviet
troops, he replied: “Yes, I in-
terpret the weekend speech of
Khrushchev to mean that the So-
vtet Union will re-examine the
question with the aim of pulling
out Ite troops. Perhaps there
would have to be a proviso that
the Western Alitos take the same
"SRhere were no immediate indi-
cations to Berlin whether a new
agreement would concern all So-
viet troops to East Germany, or
It said a meeting at the summit
should “examine and solve the
most pressing problems of dis-
armament."
RUSSIAN NOTE
The Soviet Foreign Ministry
handed a note to the U.S. Embas-
sy here asking that the Geneva
talks be “coupled with definite
stope in disarmament,*' Moscow
radio reported.
“Without these steps it to use
less to consider the question of
preventing a surprise attack.” the
note said
When the 10-nation technical
talks on problems of preventing
surprise Mt arks opened Monday
in the Swiss city, Soviet Deputy
Foreign Minister Vassili Kuznet-
sov demanded disarmament with-
out going into controls or guaran-
toes.— ------;--------
aao0 I
MMMU ..
SgBM -
24"
X, ’ . ' * ! , " 1 ■ •
f . . . -A • '
'I------
Denton Recgsid Chronicle
A Growing Newtpaper For A Growing Aron
I
DENTON, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 12, 1958
mas J. Talley, rector of Deaton's
St Barnabas Episcopal Church.
Robert W.Speake commander of
the Deaton Veterans of Foreign
Wars Port No. 2205, placed a
wreath at the fort of the court-
house flagpole.
The flag wm flying at half mast.
A bueler payedjthe traditional
"Tsps" and a four-man firing
squad fired a three-volley salute.
- sun met
WOOD, ROWLETT, RIGHT, CONTEMPLATE FLAG THEY FOUGHT FOR
______AS VFW Men Raise Emblem In Veterans Day Ceremonies
united Nations; N.Y. (AP}
—The Soviet Union charged today
the United States has "nightmar
toh” plans to set up military toises
on the moon to launch massive
attacks on Soviet cities.
the signatures of at least tt per
cent of the property owners within
IN fort of hpjpcopes-
72 ■
" t,pemmmmga
bo part of the now settlement m
Soviet troops.
Grotewohf told O news confer-
ence that, by this step, the Com-
munist powers hope to force the
United States Britain and France
to withdraw their troops from
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 88, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 12, 1958, newspaper, November 12, 1958; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1467683/m1/1/?rotate=270: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.