Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 17, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 23, 1959 Page: 85 of 99
ninety nine pages : ill. ; page 21 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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Webcor
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Breaks the
Stereo
Price
Barrier!
New Webcor
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Famy Weekiy. Auguat >3, 1959
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Webcor
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Holiday Stereo Hi-Fi
Portable, Only $7995
Nixon's senior-class photo-
graph at Whittier College.
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Here’s true room-wide stereo in a beautiful
low-cost Webcor Portable Fonograf!
Perhaps you’ve been waiting for
stereo fonograf prices to settle
down a little. Well, you don’t
have to wait another day—be-
cause now Webcor offers you a
whole line-up of beautiful, space-
saving stereo portable fonografs at
really down-to-earth prices!
Vice President Nixon
(Continued)
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The new 1960 Webcor Holiday Stereo High Fidelity
Portable gives you wonderful stereo as a self-contained
fonograf through "sound contact" hinges. Or detach and
separate the speaker wing from the fonograf for even
finer stereo reproduction.
The new Holiday hat two wide-range ttereo tpeakert—
powerful dual-channel ttereo amplifier—automatic 4-tpeed
ttereo-ditkchanger. In wedgewood blue and white or velvet
grey and white. Other Webcor ttereo fonograft from $37.95
to $399.95. Pricet elightly hitter South and Went.
FREEI Stereo record included. Selec-
tions from "Stereo-Fidelity" library.
STEREO MUSIC SOUNDS BETTER ON A WEBCOR
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EOM* ' •
Richard Nixon, hit father
(who died three year* ago)
and mother greet the young
Nixon j —daughter and sons of
Don and Clara Nixon (top).
For example, he was very fond of his oldest
brother, Harold, who died of tuberculosis when
he was 33, and Richard was 20. When he heard the
news, he turned pale and very quiet. He reacted
the same way when my youngest boy, Arthur,
died at 7 from tubercular meningitis. Richard
never cried. He only sat in his room and stared
out of the window.
He could take physical pain with the same lack
of outward emotion.
I remember once when the horses bolted and
Richard fell out of our buggy. There was a deep
gash in his scalp and he bled profusely. I raced
him back to Yorba Linda, and a neighbor, with
the only car in town, drove him 20 miles to the
nearest doctor. Eleven stitches were needed, and
Richard was in serious condition through the
night. Yet he never whimpered during the whole
ordeal, nor during the many trips back to the hos-
pital to have the dressings changed and the
stitches removed.
I have often been asked by friends if I en-
couraged Richard to go into politics. I didn’t have
(Continued on page 8)
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Kirkland, Tom. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 17, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 23, 1959, newspaper, August 23, 1959; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1467896/m1/85/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.