Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 69, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 22, 1959 Page: 2 of 16
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Town Topics
MARKEFS
Not Allowed
for consultation with
Commission chairman Dr. Har-
missi
charge of arrangements.
(,
2: Mrs. Alda Jones, 321 S. Elm.
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Your stomach can churn acid
YOUR
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KOSCTNA“CANKLE
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TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
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McKinney.
7
DREAM AWAY In our
Linwood Roberson
Ph. DU2-2561
Florist
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LEGAL NOTICES
I(B)
LOREN HUI
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(A)
vusav a •
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the show that
I
TODAY'S CITIZEN
GuyMADISON-VirginiaMAYO
3 95
$
1 ing o
"PETLINDSAY
PRICES — 25- 50- 70c
I BARROW INSURANCE AGENCY 1
1
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“YOUR HARTFORD AGENT"
117 South Kim
DU2-4721
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2,$
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JMH
Feeual
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FT. WORTH HIGHWAY
DU2-6663 OR DU2-7391
Horse
Shows!
Wednesday at a joint
with City Council mem-
Shower
of Stars!
Dr. Killian will i
8:15 at the Dallas
early
State
SE
RS
KIRK DOUGLAS
JEANNE CRAIN
CLAIRE TREVOR
Texas
anternational
Trade Fair
Ice
Capa des!
/P4 A 4 3-
in the skies!. non-stop
MAN-WOMAN TENSION AT
MILE-A-SECOND SPEED!!!
NT Science Profs
To Hear Address
By Aide To Ike
Several NTSC professors will
hear an address tonight by Dr.
James R. Killian, special assist-
ant for science and technology to
President Eisenhower.
two
Denton
Johnson, Joyce Huschke and Lau-
rie Bradford.
n
hours, and finally offered a bribe
to spy for the Soviets. He turned
it down.
Aubrey; one sister, Mrs. Josephine
Kearney of Fort Worth; two broth-
ers. John Hampton of Aubrey and
Shelton Hampton of Durant, Okla.;
and seven grandchildren.
$
5’ «
‘Mn
t
0′24
dl
Coffee is Costa Rica’s princi-
pal crop.
9 ■ ■
■
officials
irtty officer at
■UAW
ueo
AST
Paralysis—-
Won’t Stop
Med Student
COUAW Dalma •MmndsUTED[ATSIS
_ ALSO _
LEX BARKER
k ANNE
Mh.BANCROFT
•vANDONm
PRONE DU2-2551
Briefs-Births-Hospital Notes
516 N. Lo-
iart. Route
I ■
I
I
fehnicodra
Also Starts 8:40_
-H’dindem
QhAsumAKda
Larry Horst and ba
cust; Mrs. John P.
“2
•15
Now Thru Saturday
—Stavts 7:05 8 10:10—
MIN FOUGHT HIM...BUT
wopipwT
WOMEN
LOVED HIM
...BUT
COULDN’T
HOLD NURI
--
MAN WITHOUT
A STAR
SOUTHWESTERN LIFE
AGENT
COMPLETE SELECTION
All Varieties
&%
•4:1
•,9
4
Dr. Violet Dorris
announces the association
of
Dr. Agnes Austin
in the practice of
Optometry and Visual
Training and the removal
of their off ice to the
North Side of the Square
West of Tobin Drugs
Hours: 9-5:30; Thurs to 8
$ 1
77 If A
iW
cur FLOWERS
CORSAGEg
r
।
।
।
।
F.INE ARTS
I
I
N.E. *
b,
COMING NEXT
"ROOM AT THE TOP"
stxTUNG DRAMASTUUNGI PRODUCED AND HLAODt
RAREIY HAS THE MOTION PICTURE CAMERA
PROBED SO DEEPLY INTO A WOMAN’S HEART!
"I
I
I
I
lampton both of Aubrey;
aughters, Mrs. Smith or I
NOW
Open 12:45DU2-326
1
apeak tonight at
i Memorial Audi-
-
a*, wuu
‘TT
1
lets
Zoning Commission at Denton
City Council meetings when a zon-
ing question is scheduled for dis-
cussion.
That was the decision of the com-
nrnffiirf
George RAFT-llona MASSEY
Co-starring
GDD• ponEAnV .A‘14 frr .
Cattle 1,500, calves 800, fat cow $15-
“2 24.30, com
2i M ! I." J
WASHINGTON (AP) — Russen
A. Langelle, central figure in a
bizarre dtplomatic incident in
Moscow, returned to Washington
■W—n^masw i ■ ■■■ lupnes w ......
ONLY 54 SHoPPINQ DAYS 'TIL CHRISTMAS
Begin your shopping edrly . and start by open-
Hampton Rites
Scheduled Today
AUBREY (Staff) - Funeral ser-
vices for Willie W. Hampton, 61-
year-old Aubrey resident, were to
be held this afternoon at 3 in the
New Hope Baptist Church with bu-
rial in Below Cometary.
The Rev. O. R. Looper, pastor
of Aubrey Baptist Church, was to
officiate with Schmitz-Floyd-Ham-
lett Funeral Home of Denton in
NE Comer Squdre
•WARI^NmSWYNNSMWERSIk
the Wk —hwy in Moscow, was
expelled by the Soviet on espio-
nage charges.
But his ’version of what hap-
pened--which is backed up by the
State Department—is that he was
seize by five Soviets at a bus
Ceatoci UNITED FINANCE CO.
for a loan to refinance your ear or
to consolidate your present bills.
NERVOUS
STOMACH?
7"
Km Street Hospital A Clkale
Visiting hours: 9:30-11130 ml;
2:303 p.m.; 7-8:30 p.m.
Admitted: None.
Dismissed Dobra Jean Daniel,
Dallas; Mrs. Thomas Arnold and
baby. Dallas; Mrs. W. E. Forres-
ter, 908 Welch.
Planning Board
Member To Attend
Council Meetings
CAMPUS
TODAY THROUGH SATURDAY
• Pilot Point High
h Junior Play Slated
RUOW ON HEAD
htj
ir\
s'
M , i
I". . ’
• k lang lasting
a your ussarling it Sto- Dealor abou
'sunn PAOOF Mou Paint today.
POST WORIN (A) - Mogs 200, deady
mixed $1314.
Sheep 500, stendy» good to choice tambs
$18-19.50, atock mto mudium .19 ami
1416, ewes $5.50% yearling wether 313,
Naw Thur Saturday ,
Features: 7:15 -9:20
QUINTS
(Continued From Psge 1)
12:22 p.m., a 42 million to one
medical rarity that had news
channels of the world spinning un-
til the quints’ deaths.
The last of the five girls died
Wednesday morning at 6:40 a m.
Her tiny, toylike sisters died
Tuesday at 5:40 p.m., 6:10 p.m.,
9:25 p.m., and 10 p.m.
Newsmen and hospital, attend-
ants joined the parents in prayers
that they might live. But desvite
the facilities of what is described
as the Air Force's finest hospital
here at Lackland Air Force Base,
the tiny girls died one by one.
k- v ,
Leopards are now extinct in
Europe, except in the Caucasus.
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EAnANTIC
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torium. His topic: "Education for
the Age of Science.”
Faculty members planning to at-
tend are Dr. L. F. Connell, direc-
tor of the physics department; Dr.
H. C. Parrish, director of the
mathematics department, and
Dr. J. V. Cooke and Dr. George
Cobb of the math faculty. They
will be accompanied by Dr. E. H.
Hanson, former director of the
NTSC math department and now
chief of the technical staff for the
Pacific Missile Range. Land-Air
Inc., Point Mugu, Calif.
For Hurt Tot
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. CAP-
A six-year-old girl lay on a hos-
mal Kaa touloM &u aJzot.At J|
pi tai dm today 1 critical condl-
tion after undergoine a ser'ous
brain operation without the blood
transfusion doctors said she need-
•d.
Linda Jean Yourinko didn't get
the transfusion because her par-
ents refused to grant permission
for religious reasons.
Mr. and Mrs., Joseph Yourinko
of nearby Absecon Highlands are
Jehovah's Witnesses and they be-
lieve in the biblicel tenet: "Ye
shall not eat the blod."
Linda Jean was struck by a car
Tuesday and was taken to Atlantic
City Hospital. Doctors said she
suffered a compound depressed
fracture of the skull.
Dr. Harry Subin. the hospital's
chief of surgery, said Wednesday
night’s operation was essential and
that the girl would probably die
without it.
Linda Jean's distraught mother
told the newsmen she was too up-
set to talk and added: “We must
do what we must do."
17; medium ts good caives 422
moner $1420, medium ts good
calves $24-28.30, helfer calves r
1955 INTERNATIONALLY R-100 Pickup,
overdrive. On« owner, DU2-2971, 1402 4.
...
BRITTIAN LUMBER & HDW.
2 MJET-HOT,
cSyeeue/
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•Ke
36 I
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042
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McGuire Sisters
a
“Star Light!
k Star Bright!" ,
SCHOOL
(Continuea Fiom Page 1)
the new school ready for use at the
start of the 1960-61 school term.
School officials this year moved
the eighth grade of Junior high stu-
ents into the high schoftl pfdnt Hi
order to make room for an increas-
ed elementaty school enrollment.
Enrollment at the elementary
school, which was completed less
than three years ago, now stands
at 740 students. The building was
planned for only 700 pupils.
At the high school, which now
has five grades, the enrollment
is approximately 350, or 50 more
than it was originally built to ac-
commodate.
With those enrollment figures
overcrowding classrooms, school
officials said a second new ele-
mentary school will be necessary
wiithin the five-year period if the
community experiences its predict-
ed growth.
An additional high school or sep-
arate Junior high school also will
be needed within that period, the
superintendent said. At least, the
present high school will need ex-
pansion to handle the expeeted en-
rollment increases, he added.
Consulting engineers have pre-'
dieted a population of 13,000 for
Lewisville within the next five
years, more than doubling the
city's present size.
' The council asked for the joint
meeting after discussing a zoning
request at the last regular council
meeting. The property in'question
— a tract of land on Highway 10
— was recommended for rezon
ing as business property by the
commission. The owners, J. L. Gin-
nings and Joe Nichols, want to
build a shopping center there.
At the last’council meeting the
recommendation was tabled pend-
ing a meeting with the commission
so councilmen could find out how
the commission reached its deci-
sion.
Mayor Frank Barrow told the
commissioners the council doesn’t
seek to reverse the'recommenda-
tion but merely wondered how the
commission reached its decision.
. PILOT POINT (Staff) — Annual
Junior Play, "No Men Admitted,”
will be presented in the high
school auditorium Friday. No
evening performance is scheduled.
Members of the three-act come-
dy cast are Mildred Fischer, Ber-
bers Pelzel, Jan Smith, Rebecca
Beaty. Beverly McNeal. Dbris
Nortman, Agnes Gross, Barbara
*d*
bFromemron ia r Farmar -
7
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33
r 4
Soft, cozy, conducive to
sweet slumber . . . our
flower-freshened flannel-
ettes have charming vic-
torian airs: colorful cro-
et lace trimmed yokes
1
3
stop -Wear the embassy. He saidbers.
he was taken to a nearby build-
ing, questioned for nearly two
4*41 * if E4
e
Borrow Insurance Salutes
JOSEPH L STURM*,*
... The 19-year-old soldier stationed at Ft. Riley,
Kan., was part of the honor guard at ground-
breaking coremonies for the Eisenhower Library
in Abilene, Kan. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Edward A. Sturm of Route 2, Pilot Point.
' \ ■
THEL.DENTON RECOHD-cunoNICLEs
ADVERTISEMENT FOR SIDS
Bids will be received on Nov. 12, 1959, at
• p.m. at th* Office of th* Superintendent
of School* In Lake Dallas, Denton County,
Texas, for the construetion of Gymnasium
and Clatt Room* for th* Lake Dallas inde-
pendent School District.
Plan* and Specifications may b* obtained
from J. A. Pitzinger, Architect & Engineer,
Sult* 200 to 201, 209 Browder Streef, Dal-
Im, Texas.
No deposit is required but Plans a Specifl-
cations must b* returned to Architecfs Of
fice after closing of Bids.
Should Bidders require more than Ona set
of Plant & Specifications, they may be ob-
tained from the Architect A Engineer, at
a reproduction cost of 410.00 par aat and
this amount will not ba returned, and the
Plant & Specificatioms thall remain the
of the Architect & Engineer, -----
r kid Band, Cmhlar'a or Certified Check le
the amount of 3 parcant ef Bid will be re-
quired with each Bld Proposal.
The Owner reserves the right to reject any
or all Bids, and to waive any formality.
Stephen A. Howard, President,
Lake Dallas Ind. School DIst.
Danton County, Texas.
*
center, in the commission's opinion,
will fill a public need.
Barrow asked for a commission
member to be present at council
meetings when a zoning recommen-
dation from the commission is on
tap. That way, Barrow said, such
joint meetings won’t be neces-
sary.
In the past the council has just
had a written recommendation for
the commission.
The council will take action on
the recommendation Tuesday
morning.
CHICAGO (AP)—Ronald Fraier
has wanted to be a doctor for as
long as he can remember.
With the years of pro-mod study
and the many rejections, from
crowded medical schools it was a
long struggle. But on Sept. 28 the
23-yearyold Flushing, N.Y., student
entered Chicago Medical School
seemingly on the last leg of a
lifelong dream.
A week ago on the West Side a
vicious, senseless blow on the
head may have brought Ronald's
plans and hopes to a stunning
halt.
He awoke in the University of
Illinois hospital, his skull smashed
and his left side paralyzed. He is
regaining the use of his log but
faces the possibility that his left
arm may swing uselessly at his
side for the rest at his life. Ronald
is left handed.
"L was just walking along, go-
ing to lunch," he recalled Wednes-
day. "This fellow came up to me
and said 'are you with that guy?’
I still don’t know what he was
talking about. He had a crowbar
in his hand but I didn't think he
would use it. I said ’no’ and
walked away. He hit me-once.
That's all I remember.”
A burly, part-time car washer
Ernest Le Grone, has admitted
the attack and said it was a case
of mistaken identity. Le Grone, a
Mr. Hampton died Wednesday at
4:30 p.m. in the home of his daugh-
ter, Mrs. Geneva Smith of 713
N. Bradshaw. He was born in Den-
ton County. Aug. 11, 1898 and had
lived in Aubrey 30 years. He was
a member of the New Hope Bap-
tist Church.
Surviving are three sons, D. Her-
man Hampton of California, Billy
Joe Hampton and Kenneth Wright
- . ’
UShnny
TDARK
CURTIS 9 pipar ununin
Consolidate your paymenta. DU2-4054.
REGISTERED German Shepherd puppiee; one
male Toy Fox Terrier, «II from fine stck.
Booking orders for registered Toy Fox Ter-
rim, lift** duo won. DU2-2757, DU2 -4482.
&NOX Wheat, 42.50 bushel. Mustang Oti,
90c bushel. Prosper, phon* 4441, or 2803
1. f. McDonald. ,
MATCHING Buttcnx, 5c'doi«n; 1700 yds."
Thread, 29c 2“ lace, 5c, Fabric Shop,
721 S. locurt. ______
two-Story houw to ba raised, lots of first
class material, contact C W. Whitlock, or
J. A Bovill._______________________________________
iUl-Trada duplex In tl Faw for property
in Ft. Worm. Dallas, Danton. Not 2-bed-
room* each, doubla qarage, sprinklers, rock
enclosed back, 3 lofs, stove refrigerator..
aarpoh 3720 Fornr; TT Taw, ld+i 288.
G.I. EQUITY ON ROBINWOOD
CARPETED, 3-bedroom brick homa. Cvelone
fenced yard. 4% percent loan. 493 month,
total payment. Owner moving from Danton,
must 1*0.
PRATT & CROUCH, Realtor
DU2-2285 801 N. Locust DU2-2295
when jou”re upset. Cany Tums
for fast, effective relief. 4 ‘ Director of the play is Miss Bes-
wonINO WMKS UKg TUHtt sje Walling, assisted by Nelda
4 I ridges and Ernestine Worthy.
#sa=-
7rri
Mrs. Sullivan
Dies In East
Mrs. J. W. Sullivan, the widow
of a long prominent Denton attor-
ney,is dead
She died Tuesday night in Platts-
burg, N. Y., where she was visit-
ing relatives.
Her body will be returned to Den-
ton where her late husband Is buri-
ed. Exact time of funeral services
and burial here was not known to-
day
Her husband was a tongtime Den-
ton attorney until his death. Fred
Minor, a Denton attorney who was
notified of Mrs. Sullivan’s death,
was associated with him.
Survivors include Mrs. Mark
Wade of Dallas, four grandchil-
dren and several nieces.
After her husband's deatK,Mrs.
Sullivan had lived in Dallas.
7 JIT-HOT
72/ .
■
Z- -
Faced with the bleak possibility
that he may never use his arm
Ronald said: "I couldn't be a sur-
geon without a left arm. But I
still could be a general practi-
tioner.”
As to his plans when he is re-
leased from the hospital Ronald
declared, “I'm going right back
to Chicago Medical School. I
fought too hard to get there to
give it up now."
Le Grone appeared in Felony
Court Wednesday on a charge of
assault with a deadly weapon.
His case was continued to Nov. 20.
About 1,000 See
‘Atoms At Work’
On Denton Square
Nearly 1.000 persons. including a
number of students, today know
much more about the peaceful uses
of atomic energy than they did
Tuesday.
That many people have toured an
Atomic Energy Commission mobile
unit which came to Denton Wed-
nesday. The mobile unit, using the
theme "Atoms At Work” has been
stat toned on the Dorth side of
Denton's Courthouse Square. The
unit was scheduled to leave Denton
late today.
A group of Denton Junior High
School students viewed the dis-
plays and heard an explanation
of peaceful uses of the atom this
morning. Steve W. Cochran, a
graduate of the University of Ten-
/ 1
1959,M-tonInternafional Truck, 100 Series,
41375. Branch! Trim Shop. 200 Blount
*h*r 5, 1101 Panhendle.
WAnIIDi Expettienced waitress,fllor par
time. Apply Jucy-Pig Restaurant, 410 N.
Locust, Denton.
Wanted Bole Pullers, 5 miles Southwest
0*nton, R. R. tHnton.______________________
foil Will lik« WoMrlp'i Automobile Fln*nc
ing and Refinancing Plan much better.
With matching buttons and satin bow. Rosebud
Hint in pink or blue or white.
A.- "Cranny Gown," size 32 to 40; 42 to 48 S3 95
1. Pocketed Pajamas, size 32 to 40 .... $3 95
Rites Held Wednesday
For Ex-County Woman
Final rites for Mrs.’ Mary Jana
Holmes Thomas were held Wed-
nesday afternoon at the Jack
Schmits & Sons Funeral Chapel.
Interment was in Belew Ceme-
tery with the Rev. Homer L. Cof-
fey, pastor of the Aubrey Christi-
an Church, officiating.
Mrs. Thomas died at her home
ih San Angelo Sunday morning.
She had lived in Denton County
35 years ago.
Pallbearers were Frank Pow-
ledge, J. W. McNall, Tom Tice, Eb-
er Robertson, Ralph C. Kilings-
worth and Billy Lanford.
A JIT-HOT,
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Student Theatre
NOW SHOWING
AJbak _ ----.a
MAMNE:HOLDEM
dr52i6455 FORD’S
a 4 THUNDERING
029229 SPECTACLEI
Dial DU2-9621
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iant CHARGE ACCOUNT with us.
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Wednesday, Octoher
pyir,,
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'alll
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CzWdv
SbWondou
T. W. KING, JR.
DM«.Tnii 6nfjlleres Ph. DU2-9362
a "$,H
12
.k 1.3
Mrs. W. N. Rowell of 2312 Pah
mar haa received word of the Wed-
nesday death of her nephew, W. F.
Hyder of Wichita Falls. Mr. Hy-
der, a native of Lewisville, was
the son of the late Mr. and Mrs.
P. R. Hyder. He died following
surgery at a Wichita Falls hospi-
tal. He la survived by his wife.
Mrs. B. B. Rice of 912 Avenue B
was to undergo surgery today at
Dallas’ Gaston Hospital. She is in
Room 201.
HOSPITAL NOTES
Flow Memorial Hospital
Visiting Hours: 10:30-11:30 a.m.,
3-4 p.m., 7-8 p.m.
Admitted: Mrs. Willie Clark,
Fort Worth, medical; Baby Kathy
Ann Davidson, Lewisville, medi-
cal; William C. Smith, 2515 N. Lo-
cust, surgical.
Dismissed: MrseAnnelle Brown,
1918 Eagio Dr. Apt. 17: Mrs. C. C.
Carroll, 1111 Ector; Mrs. C. L.
Davidson, Lewisville: Mrs. Addie
Molloy, Roanoke; Ira W. Garrett,
Ponder: S. A. Green, Aubrey: Mrs.
nessee, spoke to the group. He is
manager of the mobile unit on its
swing through the Southwest.
Students at Denton High and
Fred Moore High were scheduled
to see the exhibit this afternoon.
The mobile unit is co-sponsored
by the National Extension Assn,
and the United States Junior Cham-
ber of Commerce.
Codwan will take the' unit to
Decatur Friday.
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Kirkland, Tom. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 69, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 22, 1959, newspaper, October 22, 1959; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1468032/m1/2/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.