Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 71, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 25, 1959 Page: 2 of 50
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tually impregnable.
e all’s
since the
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unspoken go-ahead.
eight
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Johnson smiled and
left
worthiness of the
ANN TALIAFERRO %
een
Contest Open
7
Thursday will be the last day
ACCIDENT “
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nounced dead on Jarrival at Flow
by Ji
Memorial
Home said
It’s Christianity At Work
s
SPECIAL
a Dallas motor
PURCHASE
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Ph. DU2-256!
Florist
TODAY'S CITIZEN
Borrow Insurance Solutes
FOR LEASE
1
2-STORY BRICK
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I BARROW INSURANCE AGENCY I
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117 South Um
Diol DU2-9621
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QUALITY MERCHANDSE
66
the
the
tween Western
litical planners
100 American
Corporations
LONDON (AP)-A big tussle is
building up behind the scenes be-
. Residential and
Business Building
Formal Reopt
Due At Sange
leaders.
. Lauris
Call DU2-6413—Doys
DU2-6413 After 6
hisdtwashingtok
Lewisville Sets
Halloween Event
I
i
Saturday s activity around the
Taylor Park Church of the Naza-
rene on Denton’s south side was
an example of Christianity at
work, literally.
UNED
muvusrmaar
PLANS
1
two
against
E
.2 n“
3 X
and po-
st Ger-
Strict Art The Fashion And
Hero They Include Blue, Red,
and Autumn Brown! Regulan
And Half Sizes! Patent Belt,
Shirt Style Collav!
You Invest in
United Accumulative
Fuad Shares
a diUCfSifiCii
managed mutual fund with
investments in over
Milit
U. S.
Rayburn announcement, o
One came from the State Re-
publican organization. It said that
Johnson "has finally elected to
TAYLOR P^RK N^Z^RENE
Church’s Building Begun
I
... of Route 1, Denton. The couple celebrated its
silver anniversary last week.
x PROW DUM551
Briefs-Births-Hospital Notes
I
-
to say about it. Nobody in the
know doubts that he has in mind
one frontal action to sweep away
all the bane he considers useless,
outdated or contrary to the Allied
interest.
COMPLETE SELECTION
All Varieties
Linwood Roberson
I on WheP
near hdK
&
Si 25 Initially end
$25 Periodically
rebuilding firm
p-ontea duplicates 'of payroll
checks
Approval has been given on
three occasions, first to make an
Four other men and two women
are charged as members of the
Ring-A-Round
BESTFORM
ga ‘PAINT ktmoven3
8 STRYPEEZE F
gg SPECIAL i
proval. If he has felt it would be
in the general Allied interest. he
has
the Peace W.
trial balloon for his protege a
week ago. g-t-.
His speeches have hit hard at
the U. S. lag in space conquest
They have bristled with matting*
geared to more than n ptte
campaign for reeleetioh. JU
son's augmented publicity W8
steadily pour advance cpies
his speeches and statements 1
national, state and local news 2
tote. 12
Full Companion! Bright
Rayon Jersey Stripe!
Lewisville WSCS
To Be in Charge
Of Special Week
beeem old paint so
• you can,
wash ----
Nd the Ab .
this piece-
mised that
22 members organize four months
ago. He was discovered by n
Record-Chronicle reporter on his
hands and knees dusting lime-
stone.
The outside brick laying was
done Saturday but about three
more weeks of work is needed
before the building is completed.
The congregation has already as-
sembled for three services in its
new home, which contains six
Sunday School rooms, a nursery,
two rest rooms, pastor’s study and
sanctuary. The building is equip-
ped for heating and the later addi-
tion of air conditioning facilities.
dure,"oicut
umN Tan
antitank rocket, then a big naval
training ship, and a few days ago .
MR. AND MRS. J. B. HAISLER SR. ... . 1
Sullivan Rites
Slated Monday
Graveside services and Interment
for Mrs. J. W. Sullivan will be
held in Denton’s IOOF Cemetery
Monday at 2 p.m.
Funeral services will be held
earlier in Dallas at Sparkman's
Ross Avenue Funeral Chapel at
11:30 a m. Jack Schmits & Sons
Funeral Home is in charge of Den-
ton arrangements.
Mrs. Sullivan died in Patts-
burg, N.Y., Tuesday night while
visiting relatives. Sha had lived
in Dallas for a number of years
following the death of her hus-
band. a prominent Denton attorney.
rival. Eagle cheerleaders
changed to their game uni-
forms and things started rock-
By the time they arrived
here, they recognized no bet-
ter football team in the coun-
try.
LEWISVILLE (Special) - A
week of prayer and self-denial,
Texas Conference, will begin at
' First Methodist
was taken to Restland Funeral
Home in Dallas, where funeral ar-
Manhunt On F^.
Houston Forgery
Ring Suspect
DALLAS CAP) - A statewide
search was on Saturday for a
Houstop man accused of being the
iingteader of a forgery gang
which paaoad $8,500 worth of Md
checks la Dallas and $1,200 worth
I lies bluntly he disli
t meal approach. He
r
■
।
Highway 10. Hie 1956
VICTORY
v (Continued From Page 1)
ball exodus. The Santa Fe peo-
ple set the students up in eight
of their best coaches and con-
verted a baggage car into a
snack bar. The United Stu-
dents of North Texas, student
government association, made
arrangements for the trip and
manned the snack bar.
When the train left Denton
at 0:30 a.m., things were rela-
, lively quiet aboard the eight
cars It stayed that way for
about two hours as students
set quietly playing cards, talk-
ing or napping.
many’s fast growing arms indus-
try.
The issue is: Should the Ger-
mans be allowed to make heavy
ships, tanks, guns, aad missiles
again? r
Deep emotional, political, eco-
nomic, and military overtones
cloud the question. _
ad cime
_________ __ reglrt' heaped
on him dufing the first week of
speaking following Rayburn's
formal launching of a’tationaf
"-iWN:L one of these days he’d have more
White House Hopeful!
He rests between speeches at rider Johnson’s local position vir-
him pen.W niAatetnlnlnr maI aW1. A.aII., G.uuuauaWa.
948 rancn, entertaining nCMdilit tually 1nPIegnaDle.
Kelly Funeral
Slated Monday
Funeral services for Herman
Wayne Kelly, 70, will be held
Monday at 10 a.m. at the Grace
Temple Baptist Church. Burial
will be in Roselawn Memorial
Park under direction of Goen
Funeral Home.
Mr. Kelley, retired contractor
who had lived in Denton 24 years,
was dead on arrival at Flow Me-
morial Hospital Saturday at 10:30
a.m. following a heart attack.
He was born in Corsicana Feb.
0, 1889. had worked 10 years as a
contractor and was a member of
Grace Temple Baptist Church.
The Kellys lived at 721 W. Mul-
berry.
He is survived by his wife: one
son, Herman Wayne Kelly Jr. of
Denton; one daughter, Mrs. J. D.
Bornholdt of Cooper, and one
grandchild.
V.h ."
-
MOB TWO
apparently fainted about
miles east of Deaton on
DESPITE ALL DENIALS ----— -
Johnson Acts Like
Obermeyer Rites
Slated Monday
Funeral services for Gene R.
Obermeyer, 18-year-pld eon of Mr.
and Mrs. C. R. Obermeyer, will
be Monday at 10 a.m. in the Jack
Schmitz A Sons Funeral Chapel.
The Rev. W. B. Slack will offi-
ciate.
Obermeyer died Saturday at 4
a.m. in Dallas’ Baylor Hospital
after a long illness, Saturday was
his birthday.
He would have graduated from
Denton High School at mid-semes-
ter. He was a member of First
Methodist Church and had lived in
Denton with his family for three
years. The Obermeyers live at 312
Texas. He was born in Olney,
Ill.
Survivors are his parents, three
sisters, Diane Obermeyer, Phyllis
Obermeyer and Kathleen Oberme-
yer: three brothers. Charles A.
Obermeyer. Bruce Obermeyer and
Ross Obermeyer: grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Mason of New-
ton. Hl- and Mrs. C. A. Obermeyer
of Jacksonville.
The family has asked that if
remembrances are made that do-
nations to the Wadley Blood Cen*
ter In Dallas be considered.
descripsire liter
ation,fill la and
rnnLMINr
LEWISVILLE (Special) - The
second annual Halloween Carni-
val sponsored by the Lewisville
High School senior class will un-
fold in the community center Mon-
day night.
Beginning at 6 p.m., the Carni-
val will include, food and drink
stands and game booths. A talent
show is planned for 10 p.m.
Among stands will be corny
dogs, home-made pies and coffee.
Game end other concessions will
be fortune telling, bingo, country
store, hat sales lady, basketball
throw, cat rack, spook bouse, grab
bag and wishing well.
Watermelons were cultivated in
the Nile Valley in Egypt thousands
of years ago.
gang. They are G. W. Wright, 35;
Lola Fay Duckworth, 10; Anne
Loretta Yarborough, 50; Wipim
Adams, 34; Richard Short,5/22;
and a Dallas man, 29. 077
I said the group somehow
Class Officers
Selected At TWU
Four class officers and two re-
presentatives to the Student Coun-
cil were elected Thursday by the
TWU Freshman Class.
Isabel Garsa, English major
from Mission, was chosen presi-
dent; end Sharon Pickett, health,
physical education and recreation
major from Houston, was select-
ed Nee president.
TIM for secretary and treasurer
arg Nand Rathjen, elementary ed-
ucatioh major from York, Neb.,
and Sylvia McCollum, sociology
major from Chattanooga, Tenn. Fi-
nal decision as to which student
will hold each office will be an-
nounced later.
Representatives to the Student
Council are Margie Crawford,
general major from Houston, and
Patricia Barksdale, clothing and
textiles major from Borger.
The election climaxed two weeks
of door-to-door campaigning and
speeches made by the freshmen.
•YOUR HARTFORD AGENT
THE REV. CHARLES BORN
Lutheran Student Leader
Church Student
Group To Accept
15 New Members
Fifteen new members will be
accepted into Gamma Delta. Luth-
eran student organization, in apo-
dal ceremonies today.
The group, affiliated with the St.
Paul Lutheran Church, will bold
installation ceremonies at the
church Activities Building. 703 N.
Elm, today at 5 p.m. The affair
will be a banquet meeting.
The Rev. Charles Bom, pastor
of the University Lutheran Church
of Austin and coordinator of stu-
dent work for the Texas district,
will be principal speaker.
Installing officer will be Gamma
Delta President Ruth Ann Egner.
The Rev. Alton Donsbach, pastor
of the church, is the group’s ad-
viser.
THE PENTON RECORD
Mrs. Charles Farris of Route 2,
Denton, remains to critical condi-
tioa at Em Street Hospital A Clin-
Ic. With the Exception olherim-
mediate family, no visitors are al-
lowed. She was admitted two
weeks ago after suffering a heart
attack.
Mlaa Genevieve Dixon, diroetar
of the TWU School of Library Sci-
ence is in San Angelo this weekend
to conduct a workshop for the
third district of the Teen-Age L-
brary Aasn.
Mr. and Mrs. Keith 8. Wiliams
of El Paso are visiting her sis-
ters, Mrs. John Atrldge and Miss
Bess Smith at 1130 Moore. . .
Miss Emily K. Davidson, Denton
representative of the International
Sleep Teaching Institute, was a
guest at a meeting of the Red
River Chiropractic Assn, in Me
Kinney last week. She gave a
demonstration of sleep-teaching
methods.
HOSPITAL NOTES
Flow Memorial Hospital
Visitink Hours; 10:30-11:30 a.m.,
3-4 p.m., 7-1 p.m.
Admitted: Mrs. Laura Belle
Carter, Lewisville, medical; Mrs.
Ora Leona Carter. 1001 Johnson,
medical: Mrs. A. E. Harper. 1015
S. Wood, medical; Mrs. Emma
Simmons, 506 Simmons, medical;
Miss Elizabeth Moore, University
Hill Sts., surgical; Miss Lola
Ridgeway, 706 Railroad, surgical;
Mrs. W. E. Smithers, 733 Green-
wood. medical; Kenneth Upchurch,
Carrollton, surgical.
Dismissed: Mrs. V. B. Atchi-
son, Slidell: Jess F. Brown, Has-
lett; Mrs. Mat Calhoun and baby,
Frisco; Mrs. Tom Epting and
baby, 604 Avenue D; Mrs. James
Eskue and baby, Sanger; Jerry
Holtzman, Lewisville; George Kir-
by, University Hill Bta.. Mrs. Sarah
Laster, Lewisville; Mrs. L. H.
Mrs. Gambill Named
Special Census Taker
Mrs. R. B. Gambill of Denton
has been appointed a crew leader
for the 1950 Census of Agriculture.
She will direct a force of census
takers that will cover Denton
County.
Before taking over the chore.
Mrs. Gambin will attend a five-
day training school at Graham. The
field canvass will begin Nov. 10.
Fainting Driver
is Hospitalized
M. R Neyil left a doctor’s office
in Denton Saturday afternoon and
drove home. But he didn’t get
home Saturday.
guests, or attending private par- Only
ties studded with the people who raised
can help to any political cam-
. * . v »’
:emzonIcE
mo to the WEU Council. ziThentathedtonsangp"hAbon
an hour before the Houston ar-
I , -
• (\ i
Bell Funeral
Planned Today
Funetaf services for Mrs. Cora
Viola Bell, 86-year-old widow, win
be held at 8:80 p.m. today in
Schmits • Floyd * Hamlett Funsral
Chapel. Burial wifi be to Creii-
ville’s Old Han Cemetery-
no Rev. John Marvin, pastor
of St. Andrew Pgesbzvertim
Church, will officiate.
Mrs. Bell died Saturday at diso
pm. at her home on RAWaDen
She was born to Gaal aad Nov,
3, 1872 and is the last of. 13 chil-
dren. She married the late W. P.
Bell to Garland to 1894and.yas
a member of St Andrew Presby-
terian Church getnost 4
Survivors include two sons, W.
P. Ben Jr. of Denton and J. H.
Ball of Dallas; one daughter, Mrs.
C. L McKelvey of Denton; two
grandchildren and sew* great-
grandchildren. ‘ K82
-mte
■ A .".r
own Topics
; ..... — -
Mkus.m
have
6
m r-rmam ri i i m
Simpkins and baby, 921 Smih;
Elm Sue Hrepltal A Citato
Visiting hour; 9:30-11:30 a.m.;
2:30-3 p.m.; 7-8190 p.m
Admitted: Mrs. W. D. Cham-
bers, Tioga, medical; L.H. Bplawn,
Boyd medical
.Dismissed. None.
BIRTHS
A boy to Mrs. Sarah Fuller,
Roanoke, at 8 am., Oct. 23 at
Elm Street Hospital A Clinic.
A girl to Mr. and Mrs. A. 1.
Harper, 1010 S. Wood, at 0:50 a.m.,
Oct 23 at Flow Memorial Hospi-
tal.
A boy to Mr. and Mrs. W. E.
Smithers, 732 Greenwood, at 10:01
a.m., Oct 33, at Flow Memorial
Hospital.
In Waco. .2 _
2222.3,2-2 Tussle Building
and 10 about six feet two inches • • . •
“f Over German Ar
The workers, some 10 men
bricklayers on the job at NTSC
during the week, are both non-
union and union men and they
represent several different de-
nominations. They worked all day
from 6 a.m. without pay on their
day off simply for the joy of see-
ing the new church near comple-
tion on McCormick.
At noon, five women brought
them their lunch. The cooks were
Mrs. H. D. Williams, Mrs M E.
Beebe, Mrs. Ruby Hammett, Mrs.
James Cowden and Mrs. Tracy
Sullivan. The Rev. J. W. Dodd,
a Methodist minister, also con-
tributed to the workers’ dinner.
The men at work were M. E.
Beebe. Sunday School superinten-
dent of the church: Jack Landress,
member of the Wichita Methodist
Church living in Fort Worth; Jay
Peel, Asbury Methodist; E. D.
Redfern of Pilot Point; Russell
Snelling, Johnny Graves of Roa-
noke. Jim Cowden, Clemente
Ramirez, member of Highland
Baptist. The boys who mixed the
mortar and dusted the stone are
Donald Beebe, 12. Bobby Arthur,
11, and Durwood Arthur, 14.
It was hard to distinguish the
members from the volunteers from
other churches.
The Rev. H. D. Williams is
pastor and district missionary
who helped the young church of
> 1
1_____
cast his lot publicly with the Tru-
man wing of the Democratic par-
Democratic Action* Democrats."
The other complaint came from
a member of the Legislature, Rep.
Bob Eckhardt of Houston, a
stronghold of the wing of the
Democratic party in Texas which
has rebelled against Johnson in
the past. .
Eckhardt charged that Rayburn
and Johnson are trying to keep
other Democratic presidential
hopefuls out of Texas. Their chief
objective for 1000 should be to de-
feat the Republicans, he said.
"We must let Texas voters see
the greet Galaxy of prospective
candidates, too, Eckhardt pro-
tested.
of 16 and 22 to enter competition
toward becoming Roller Skate
Queen of 1860.
An area queen will be selected
to represent Denton at the state
meet in San Antonio Nov. 1.
Winner of the state meet will
represent Texas at the national
meet at Miami Beach, Nov. 16-18.
with the national queen winning
a 32,500 sports car or the cash
equivalent.
The contestants, sponsored by
the Spinning Wheels Roller Rink
and the Record-Chronicle, will be
judged on poise, beauty and char-
acter as well as skating ability.
However, entries do not have to
be excellent skaters.
Miss Ann Taliaferro, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. R. H Taliaferro at
633 Woodland, became the first to
submit an entry blank to the con-
test. -
Miss Taliaferro is a 16-year-old
Denton High School junior. She
skates "once or twice” a week.
Judges for the contest are Mayor
Frank Barrow, W. C. Orr and
T. W. King.
Ah. i— ^-4 A-neeic ha nham Tama
iM road crossing me OUe IBM
and went down toward a mall
creek bed. Trees stopped the auto,
mobile’s progress and Nevil tried
to back out of the fix he was in.
Nevil, who lives at Route 1, Pil-
ot Point, received minor abrasions
about his forehead, nose and right
arm. He was kept under observa-
tion at Flow Memorial Hospital
overnight. His car was scratched
by the trees and right front wind-
shield broken.
Patrolman John Fletcher who
investigated the accident said that
Nevil was discovered after he had
gotten out of his car and climbed
the low hill to the road. The car
was invisible from the road unless
seen at a parallel angle.
If Johnson is going to have an
opponent for Democratic re-nomi-
nation. or if anyone would dare
challenge his bid for leadership
ty which he intends to serve.
The GOP leaders said the timing
of the Rayburn announcement
with former President Harry Tru-
man’s Dallas appearances placed
it in "a sordid atmosphere de-
signed to curry favor with the
Truman • ADA (Americans for
of the Texas delegation to the 1801
convention, there has been little
sign of it. Texas politicians con-
WADDLLL • HU, INC.
Prineigal Underyritn
remraa Vnm Omi dwr
JOE W. HAWLEY
526 N. Locust DU2-6919
ADDHS8S
on__ -
- I; w
Supreme Allied Commander in
Europe, says, "Yes."
Diplomats, even those in Bonn,
say, "No—at least not until the
outcome of East-West summit
talks becomes clear.’*
So far the diplomats are get-
ting their way. Action to enable
West Germany to become a ma-
jor weapons producer for the West
has been suspended at least until
next spring. Then the prospects
for ending the East-West arms
race should bo better known.
West Germany Is barrod under
tight treaty curbs from making
a wide variety of offensive wean-
ons. These bens were imposed in
1964 when defeated Germany be-
came a sovereign nation and
joined NATO, the 15-power At-
lantic pact.
The aim was to prevent the sort
or runaway rearmament that led
the Germans to start two world
wars.
The restrictions wore written
into a seven-nation alliance known
as the Western European Union.
Aside from giving the Germans
the right to learn, the WEU trea-
ty spelled out weapons they could
not make—the A-B- — atomic-
bacteriological-chemical — weap-,
one. The Germane have stuck to
the bargain.
When they have wanted to pro-
duce anna on the bannod list they
have applied to Norstad for ap-
tation will be Mrs. Perry Mose-
ley. The sarvioe wl u
.m. and will conttou. through a
luncheon and a 1 p m- afternoon
the observance.'
Mrs. Ed K. Sparkman wl.be
Travis Campbril, Mrs. M. B. Car-
ss-skphaa
against putting too much faith
Skate Qu
His busy Austin office, evg his
ranch
Rites Slated For
Pilot Point Man
PILOT POINT (Staff* - Funer-
al services for Frank Joseph
Fangman, 73, of Pilot Point will
be held from St. Thomas Catholic
Church at 9 a.m. Monday. The
Rev. John Untereiner will officiate
Rosary will be said at 7:30 p.m.
today at Beck Funeral Chapel.
Burial will be in St. Thomas
Cemetery. Pallbearers will be Al-
bert Wangler, Frank Boerner, Joe
Boerner, Leonard Berend, Al Hue-
man and Joe Strittmatter.
Mr. Fangman died early Friday
at Flow Memorial Hospital.
offer you investment units
to muhtiple of 82,500 with
SANGER (Special) — Formal
opening of The Wagon Wheel Cafe
in Sanger has been set for Nov.
4. Mr. end Mrs Gene .Morrow,
managers, here announced
The cafe, now owned.by Mr. and
Mrs. W. R Chatfield) (ormperly
was operated os the Feed Born
Cafe by Mrs. Bonnie Gheeho
The kitchen and dining room has
been raderaratsi aad refurnished.
OS- '1.7 r f
contort united vuAyceice.
i "M,
the circular stitched bra
with a young natural look
yttr
Ring-A-Round io the California designed bra
with circular stitching going ’round and
"round the cups... designed for complete,
< comfortable support, whether you’re small,
medium or full-hosted. It gives a lovely lilttag
uplift... beautiful, sharply defined separation.
Styled for your couafort with a tailored
band bottom that never cuta, never binds...
always stays just where you went ill
A cup 3246,8 cup5240,Coup 1441
Style 6003 ip broadcloth, while only... $1.50
JOHNSON CITY yn - Son. Lyn-
, don Johnson (D-Tex) is not an I
avowed presidential candidate but j
he acts like one.
The Senate majority leader la
making two to four speeches a
day underlining national issues. .
His whirlwind 63-date speaking
schedule in the next two months
. has the marks of a hard drive
for the Democratic presidential
nomination.
In the dozen Texas appearances
last week, the lanky, politically-
astute senator has been called "a
man of destiny” and "the next
President of the United States."
Johnaon-for-presideot clubs are
springing up all over the state.
Two Oklahoma tribal chiefs said
they want to line up the Indians
for him.
Publicly and privately Johnson
says be ia only a candidate lor
re-election.
Bul his friends, including Spak.
er Sam Rayburn (D-exoand
other high-level Democrats,.idoqk,
on Johnson’s energetic push as an
“ga
17 »
d.
I fV- A
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Kirkland, Tom. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 71, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 25, 1959, newspaper, October 25, 1959; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1468035/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.