Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 27, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 3, 1959 Page: 3 of 24
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any one of them by the time taxes,
delivery charges and a minimum
conditioning available early in
SAY FLORIST RESEARCHERS
they don’t jam, Soviet
will have an unparalleled
Slipping
June’s
American radio.
As Bride Month
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Red Chief To Be
Guest Of NY City
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hint of a tint—
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him Manhattan’s tra-
hotel.
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so flattering
Khrushchev will "be escorted
for fall! the
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LOOK
Clarl 9 He Ra
in crisp
✓
UGAL HOTICK
Caprisante
119.98
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at * point that is 287.34
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331.06 feet
$
MATCHED ACCESSORIES
PRINCESS GARDNER
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THE YOUNG DERBY
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rto "Firhay-.......
December
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1958, recorded in Volume
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$3.98
MILLINERY
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from the seacoss.
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INriumm.
ARM
Sailors Get Real
Shots For Polio
and Valiant will be in the same
range. But it will cost the best
A. FRENCH PURSE.........
B. CIGARETTE CASE ....
C. CIGARETTE LIGHTER
.u
from Pennsylvania Station where
he arrives by train from Wash-
ington, to the Waldorf-Astoria Ho-
tel. He will be formally Wel-
comed by Mayof Robert F. Wag-
ner in the Starlight Roof of the
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068
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2. If
listeners
At birth a kangaroo is about the
size .of a bumblebee, says the Na-
tional Geographic Society.
rer steering and brakes, will
available, at least in the be-
Arrangements for the luncheon
were announced Wednesday by
Richard C. Patterson Jr., com-
missioner of the city’s Depart-
ment of Commerce and Public
Events. Patterson said about 750
persons would attend.
On the night of Sept. 17 Khru-
shchev will make a major ad-
York, a group of business leaders.
More than 2,000 persons are sched-
uled to attend the dinner.
On Sept. 11, the Soviet Premier
will speak before the United Na-
tions General Assembly. It will
wind up his two-day stay in New
York.
about
' dition
dress in the
the Waldorf at
*
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442,
number of accessories are includ-
ed.
All three will offer automatic
transmissions as well as straight
stick models. But almost none of
the other power options, such as
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WEAR NOW ... PAY LATER
WITH A REVOLINC ’
CREDIT ACCOUNT!
Texas,
feet N.
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2 ..1 gwhgon t • •
( .r 2 . • ।. .. . —
THE DENTON 1KCOKD■CH10NICLK v
J- i
,*5,
So perky and*
youthful and
fashion new - •
rolled brim,
round crown
felt derby - •
bowed in back
- - - to .wear
jauntily atop
your head with- "
your new fall
fashions.
SHOP TONIGHT TIL 8:30
Asteroids are minor planets, none
exceeding 300 miles in diameter.
* m
Made to GO together, GIVE together, USE together. Prin-
cess Gardners Constellation purse accessories twinkling with
rhinestones cushioned on glowing Luster Cowhide. In black,
bronze, gold, Bone, sky blue, red or green.
NEW YORK (API-Soviet Pre-
mier Nikita Khrushchev will be
the guest of the city of New York
at an official luncheon on Sept.
17. But’ nothing has been said
1960. 0- ‘ ■
Ford claims 30 miles per gallon
performance for the Falcon with
standard transmission and at least
50 per cent better gas mileage
than any current American car
with any transmission.
raise these possibilities:
1. If the Soviets continue to jam,
they will be open to worldwide
ridicule for clobbing the voice of
their own leader.
»■ 4 ••
L I PLACE OF BEGINNING, containing
- B otroe of land, more or less,
W. D. Buttrill
City Secretery
City of Denton, Texas
SeptembyA 1959.
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mt
er plant. Registration weight on
test cars in Michigan has been
2,400 pounds. •
The six - cylinder Falcon engine
of cast iron, is rated at 90 horse-
power. The Corvair probably will
be rated slightly more, as will the
Valiant. The Valiant, like the Fal-
con, is using a cast iron six-cyl-
inder engine mounted in front.
No prices have been announced.
One report thi week said the
cheapest stripped Corvair will list
as just over $1,800. The Falcon
ticker tape parade up
Broadway.
U.S. officials hope millions of
Russians will tune in and come
to the conclusion that the Voice
of America doesn’t Me after all.
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M
Two Japanese Sworn
Chester W. Nimita,
two valuable iwdi
Japan as souvenirs <
H, is sending them
The wartime conui
Nichots and Ginnings
on" by deed dated
"Constellation"
.................
............13.95
............ $2.50
grand ballroom of
________________ sponsored
by the Economic Club of New
zo Sato, who came to the Unitod
States seeking historic swords tak-
en at war’s end. *
Sato, who represents the Japan-
ese Sword Preservation Asa;
left for Tokyo Wednesday:
Big 3’s Economy Cars
To Be On Market Soon
v ,
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Soviet Union at least two major
speeches by Premier Nikita
Khrushchev.
Slated for live broadcast in full
by Voice of America transmitters
are Khrushchev’s addresses dur-
ing his visit here to the National
Press Club Sept. 18 and to the
U. VN. General Assembly in New
York Sept. 11.
The best fashion news comes in
"1 your favorite basic dress topped
with a becoming jacket, that
quickly covers-up for business
luncheons — politely bares for
cocktails and on! Both styles
are fashioned of Capisanti, a silk
textured rayon/acetate fabric.
The Bolero style costume with
fringe tie collar in bronze, blue
or green $19.98. The box jacket
style over scoop-neck, belted
sheath in blue or brown. $19.95
The Khrushchev broadcasts
riod.
The Corvair will be the first of •
the new ones Into the market- *
n..,
/ . - ■■ - *
sions included weddings; funer-
als, birthdays, holidays and so on.
The survey covered 12 selected
florist shops in Michigan and im
eluded sales made during a period
of a year.
New told a reporter that nei-
ther he, the colleagues nor the
florists could say with any cer-
tainty why the brides are swing-
ing away from June.
He said there was a time when
August ranked away down in the
marrihge date sweepstakes.
"Maybe it’s just a tendency to
get away from doing things ac-
cording to traditon," he said.
"Although it has been suggested
in circles outside the scope of our
research that maybe youngsters
who might sentimentally want to
be married in June put it off until
August so as to defer for a couple
of months the first payments on
the future."
WASHINGTON (AP)-U^. pro-
■gfatoy. The Falcon will have air apparent can’tdose "proposition by
— tie et — • deciding to beam back to the
$
,‛k
Communist jammers so far ________ _____________
have clattered full tilt against opportunity to tuna in on the
Russian language programs
aimed their way by the Voice 16%
hours "a day. The Reds say the
Voice lies.
D. EYE GLASS CASE..................$2.»5
1. KEY OARD ............................$2.95
Mot showni
Matching REGISTRAR* BILLFOLD $5.95
। Al Plus Tom •
second of the Big Three’s new partat 12,000toget delivery ?
economy cars went into produc- one
tion today as Ford Started build-
ing Falcons at Lorain, Ohio.
Chevrolet has been assembling
Corvairs at nearby Willow Run
since mid-July. Chrysler’s Valiant
will roll off Detroit assembly lines
within another month.
The three cars represent a sharp
reversal in thinking by Detroit
automakers who have been on a
longer, lower, more/expensive
trend throughout the postwar pe-
place, making its public bow about
Oct. 2. The Falcon will go on sale
Oct. 8. The Valiant probably will
be along about Nov. 14.
Vital statistics have been re-
leased only on the Falcon. These
came Wednesday in a 21-city
closed circuit telecast for news-
men.
The Falcon is 15 feet, 1 inch
long, against 17-4 for a 1950 Ford;
4 feet 6% inches high against 4
feet 8 inches and 5 feet 10 inches
wide against 6 feet 4 inches. yt
weighs 2,366 pounds, compared
with 3,570 pounds for the lightest
1959 Ford model.
The Corvair will offer America’s
tat rear-engined models, using
a flat six-cylinder aluminum pow-
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Face Pawder... > j
hand-blended for your"
coloring...or whim! 4
81 JO plus tai.
"EF“"
p-
M g gaumd hgn f ' ‘
to a. iw
no hint of a seamiTT
new darker stockings
Rich wonderful fall shades to sheer they’re just a pretty
shadow on your legs. SubUe smoky colors of QUICKSILVER,
BARELY BLACK and TOWN TAUPE to wear with blacks
and greys. Warm burnished tints of TOPAZ and SOUTH
• PACIFIC to wear with browns, greens and vintage reds. la
a complete hosiery wardrobe of styles - - - the reinforced
sheer, the demi-toe, nude-heel and the all - sheer sandal foot
PROPORTIONED SIZES 8% to 11
$1.50 to $1.95 pair
HOSIERY —Main Floor
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. (AP)
—Take it from the florists—June
is losing out as the favorite month
of brides, a flowery bit of sci-
entific research disclosed today.
August is looming as a strong
threat, and even September and
November are coming up" fast,
though these latter are still below
the average of other months ex-
cluding midwinter.
Midwinter wedding still appear
to be unpopular both as to inci-
dence and the money spent upon
flowers when they do occur.
These and other facts came to
bloom today in a report made to
a horticultural session of the an-
nual meeting of the American in-
stitute of Biological Sciences on
the campus of Pennsylvania State
University. . . . •
Researcher Earl H. New and
several colleagues of Michigan
State University’s horticulture de-
partment described results of a
study they made of retail flower
sales variations both seasonally
and by "occasions." The occa
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cmi
NORTH KINGSTON," R.I. (AP)
—Sailors at naval installations
here are truly getting shot with
anti-polio serum.
Instead of a needle, a medical
gun is used to shoot serum into
the arm painlessly, the Navy said
. Tuesday.
The gun shoots a jet of serum
-----about the diameter of a human
hair. High velocity makes it pos-
sible for the serum to penetrate
the flesh.
. The Navy said that with the new
system one man can give shots to
about 1,000 sailors an hour.
"-rt —— -2 -2. v
^forfy, You Have
The Wrong City
MONTPELIER, Vt. u - The
Chamber of Commerce in Ver-
mont’s capital city . strives to
please. But it has' one request that
fast can’t be handled—a letter
Page 213 of mW Deed Records,
-TMENCE eong the East line of mW
3.305 Kt» tract N. O deg. 01 min.
48 secondg E. 499.99 feet the -
Northeast Corner of mW Feirhaven
treet, * steel pin in the North
line 0> M|d U ** acre tract, 300
—MI N. 88 <Me. 38 ton. U from
its Northwest corner,
nUNCIatong Iha Itorah Itoa
told 11.95 acre tract, N. M deg.
36 mln. E 658.04 feet to the
Vom a New York City woman ask-
ing for information about house
1os in Montpelier.
The lady specified she wanted a
lot with frontage an the Atlantic
Ocean.
” Montpelier is some 150 miles
Mice Could
Answer Space
Trip Problem
, DALLAS (AP) — Two tiny white
mice now living in a sealed glass
jar at a Chance Vought aircraft
laboratory may show man how
he can breathe and eat when he
makes long vo yages in space
or explores distant planets.
The mice. named Yoke and
Zebra, and four quarts of life-giv-
ing algae and water make up
the experiment which Chance
Vought’s space medicine scien-
tists hope will show them how to
build a sealed chamber capable
of producing vital oxygen food
and water for space travelers.
The mice have been in the
sealed jar for 17 days and Dr.
Russel O. Bowman of the re-
search team conducting the ex-
’ periment says they are thriving.
In an earlier experiment Yoke
lived in the jar for 292 hours.
Troubled with patchy fur when he
entered the jar, he now is in ex-
cellent condition. Dr. Bowman
said.
To the jar containing the mice
Bowman has attached—by a sys-
tem of pumps and tubing—a nar-
row, four-foot-high, flourescent-
lighted, double-walled plastic tank
holding the algae and water.
The algae provide oxygen for
the mice and the mice supply car-
bon dioxide for the plant.
Currently the mice are being fed
laboratory food in pellets. Later
they will be fed algae to which
certain salts and nitrogen-yield-
ing urea are added.
' ■ -
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E ’). 11
. NOTICE or PUBLIC HEARING —
The Planning end Zoning Commisslon of
the Clif of Denton, Texas, will hold • pub-
lit hedring mi September 18, 1959, af
4 00 8 to the Council Room of the .City
Holl of the City of Denton, Texas, » Icon-:
sider the petition of Joo W. Nihls and J.
L Ginnings for an amendment in the pres-
ent zoning ordinance of the City of Don-
ton, Texas, and the Zoning Bhd Use Map
therein referred to to os to chenge the
designation of the following described pro-
party at a part of the Dwelling District and
cause the same to bo elassified, shown and
designated at a part of the Neighborhood
Business District M the City of Danton,
Texas:
All that certain tract of land, to
the City and County of Denton, •
Taras, in the Joseph Cartar Survey,
Abstract No. 268 end the N. H.
Meisenheimer Survey. Abstract No.
811, and being e port of • certain
11.95 acre tract of land described
as the "first Trect" in a deed dat-
ed December 23, 1957, from Ed-
win B. Braly end wife to Joe W.
Nichols end J. I. Ginnings, record-
ed in Volume 434, Page 289, of
the Deed Records of Denton County,
Texas, more particularly described
by mates and bounds st follows,
to-wit: I
BEGINNING at a etool pin to the
ground on the West side of Sher,
man Drive in the City of Denton,
wr1
• A * ■ 2 ‘
Russia Will
Hear Nikita’s
US. Speeches
.
- ■■ Asanelalad Praen Pha4a
PREPARING FOR HIGH ‘G’ RIDE
Flanagan Gray of Levittown, Pa., volunteer civilian employe of the Navy Aviation
Medical Acceleration Laboratory in Johnsville, Pa., climbs into the test capsule for
a gravity force test He bore a pressure of 31 gravities while dunked in water. The
mask makes breathing possible during the test. This device may be the forerunner
of protective capsules for space travelers returning to earth’s atmosphere.
deg. 10 min. W. and
I It 2 deg. 40 min. W.
and 958,04 feet N. 88 deg. 36
mln. E. from the Southwest corner
of Mid Jbseph Cartar Survey, said
point being the Northeast corner
of Mid point being the Northeast
corner of laid 11.95 acra tract of
land, -
THENCE Southwesterly along the
West line of Sherman Drive as fol-
lows. t. 27 deg. 30 min. W. 575.74
feet, a stake, 3 28 deg. 65 mtn.
W. 174 96 feet, a stake and 5. 45
deg. 40 min. W. 139.52 feet to a
steel pin at the most Easterly cor-
ner of a 2,927 acre tract of land
conveyed by Nichols and Ginnings
to the Presbyterian Church, U.S.A,
by deed doted April 4, 1999, re-
corded to Volme 445, Page 555,
of Mid Deed Records,
THENCE along the most Southerly
. North Line of Mid 2.927 acre tract
1. 87 deg. 30 mln. W. 190.48 feet
to on inner ell corner of laid
2.927 nores, a steel pin for corner,
THENCE along the East line of Mid
2.927 acres N. 3 dog. 39 mih. W.
132.8 feet to e iteko to the South
line of sold Carter Survey end the
Nomh line of said Meisenheimer
Survey, end N. 3 deg. 10 min. W.
118.4 feet to a steel pin at the
most Westerly N.E. Corner of said-
2.927 Kra treet and being the
Southeast corner of a certein
3.305 Kra 'tract conveyed by Mid
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Kirkland, Tom. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 27, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 3, 1959, newspaper, September 3, 1959; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1467920/m1/3/: accessed June 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.