Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, August 5, 1960 Page: 3 of 12
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Friday, August 5, 1960
ESPECIALLY IN ASIA, AFRICA
A long-range forecast issued by
The forecast called for above
and Dr. Max Pachar of Orange.
Denton C-C
guarantee.
•Reu. U.8.Patom
AUGUST
O I
Taylor’a
A
STRONG STAPLE COTTON MUSLINS!
3 3
LABORATORY TESTED! PERFECTS!
I
53
An 18-year-old
DECATUR
THURSDAY THRU SATURDAY
2
2
full 81 by 108 inches, full Sanforised (R) fitted ....... 1.63
42 by 36 inch pillow case.....
. .. . 78c pr.
174
.... Special
Reg. Price 25c ... .
NATION WIDE PASTELS
7
... 2.15
. . . 1.97
98c pr.
17
Special
Reg. Price 25c
i
AND SAVE
BUY NOW ON
LAYAWAY
k
,"t
we ore pleased to announce thot
BRUCE C. COATES
i.
I
L
1 .
SHOP FOREMAN
“FR
t,
For Guaranteed Service
we invite you to come by
22 by 44 inch bath size
AT
DICKSON MOTOR CO.
Ar/
Hand size, 44c; wash cloth, 15c
DU26737
505 N. EIM
7
N
V
S
A
Lr
Kefauver Surprises
With Landslide Win
State Department Claims
Foreign Aid Needs Growing
Little Longer
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Mosaic Pattern
Fringed Terries!
Bend Completed
In Wise Gas Well
Decatur Couple
Off To Hawaii
SPECIAL BUY! STYLISH
EASY-CARE HOBNAIL!
Valley View Woman
Wins Linkletter Prize
Greenwood Girl Reigns
As Queen Of Reunion
Yes. these are the famous Penney sheets your grandmother stacked in her
closet with pride! Years of quality-control make Nation-Wides as fine a modern
muslin as you could want! Every-inch perfect! Firm balanced weave (no weak
spots) for years of wear Sturdy selvages and hems! Crispy-cool, smooth
finish. Buy now and save!
ly in Asia and Africa. and to meet
the expanding economic challenge
BRUCE C. COATES
Shop Foreman
In a report to the Senate For-
eign Relation* and House Foreign
Science Shrinks Files
New Way Without Surgery
to none in West Texas and light
to locally moderate in East Texas
and Central Texas.
Meanwhile, scattered and brok-
81x99 inches
twin 72 by 108 Inches
twin Sanforized (R) fitted
•T
Russell Stover Candy Jar Chocolate
"Choos* the Center you Prefer"
3
9
August Heat
Wave To Last
Russell Stover English Caramels
"The Perfect Summer Candy"
A
$
Ever expect such style at Penney's
price? Red, pink, brown, maize,
blue yromT7~gotd, ta rigor mo;
TME CARS WESEtt WE SERVICE
I
t ..
i -
,e
; • •
y
aa
N-- Yovk, N. T. (SpeeiaD) - For the
first time science hex found a new
healing subatance with the aston-
ishing ability to shrink hemor-
rhoida, elop itching and relieve
pain — without surgery,
in case after cane, while gently
relieving pain, actual reduction
(shrinkajre) took place.
Mont amazing of all-yenults were
- eharnueh that nufTarers made
BROOKS DRUG
• BROOKS DRUG STORE, 222 W. Hickory, DU2-2565
• BROOKS PHARMACY No. 2, Scripture at Bryan, DU2-2563
• BROOKS PHARMACY Na. 3. S33 Locust, DU2-2300
79€
i ‘ ‘ #3
I
.....
90 by
t
h..
WHITE 4
has Returned to DICKSON
MOOR CO. and is serving as our
stronghold—began coming in.
Even in segregation-mined West
Tennessee. Kefauver received a
substantial vote. He held a narrow
lead in the Ninth (Memphis) dis-
trict. Taylor carried the Seventh
and Eighth districts, but not by
the wide margins he had hoped.
NEGRO VOTERS
In two west state counties—Fay-
ette and Haywood—Negroes voted
in the primary for the first time
since reconstruction days. There
were no incidents. Negroes out-
number whites in both counties.
About 90 per cent of some 400
registered Negro voters cast bal-
lots in Fayette County and nearly
all of some 200 voted in Haywood.
838 ■
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2:.
392-42! ’w
Tomorrow 9 a.m., stock up,
buy all you need during • • •
u
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NASHVILLE, Tenn (AP)—Sen.
Estes Kefauver won a third term
with a stunning landslide victory
in Thursday's Tennessee Demo-
cratic primary, in which civil
rights was the overriding issue.
The race, billed as the tightest
of the lanky 57-year-old senators
career, turned into his greatest
triumph as the state s voters made
it unmistakably clear they pre-
ferred his liberal philos phy to
that of Judge Andrew T. Taylor,
a strong advocate of segregation
and states rights.
Kefauver, the Democratic vice
presidential candidate in 1956, led
500
s""e.
0
•' Aidd
—
■ 3
,"g
n.rwi mnpt.p.e in .11 nn. greater effort is needed to fill
normal temperatures in all part growing requirements, particular-
of the state and precipitation light .. -
Baptist Temple
Has New Pastor
I.
I .
-ugsed s
32
auu,
gg,
IF 8
• world-famous researeh institute.
This substance is now available
in nuppoaitory or ointment form
under the name Preperation H.*
At your druggist. Money back
full 81 by 108 inches, full fitted .....
h twin 72 by 108 inches, twin fitted.....
" pillow case........... .......
Tennessee districts
committees released
2*,. I
"gpga.-
4 44444 #r \ ।
en cloudiness today extended The Denton Baptist Temple at
from the Gulf Coast inland to the 326 W Hickory has a new pastor,
Austin-San Antonio area. Except , the Rev. G. E. Parker.
for some high clouds around El, The Rev Mr. Parker and hi»
Paso and in some Panhandle sec-. wife, Kathrine and daughter. Di-
llons. the rest of the state was ane, 2, are now at home in the
allegiance of Americans every-
where.”
DECISIVE MARGIN
Despite the decisive margin
polled by Kefauver. Taylor went
to bed without actually conceding
defeat. The soft-spoken circuit
judge from Jackson admitted only
“there are two strikes on me.”
Kefauver swept across the state
from East Tennessee with such an
overwhelming vote even the most
ardent of his supporters were
surprised.
He carried or led in all but two
counties in the six congressional
districts east of the Tennessee
River. So complete was the rout,
his renomination was assured be-
fore reports from the three West
clear.
Pre-dawn temperatures today
ranged from 69 at Dalhart to 81
at Dallas, Fort Worth, Galveston
and Palacios.
Thursday's maximum tempera-
tures ranged from 109 degrees at
Presidio to 89 at Corpus Christi.
Between were Wichita Falls with
105 degrees, Laredo 103, Childress
102, Cotulla, Fort Worth, Mineral
Wells and San Angelo 101, and Col-
lege Station and El Paso 100.
Hie Denton Chamber of Com-
merce will hold a retreat for the
families of board members divi-
sion chairmen and other key work-
ers in the chamber over the Labor
Day weekend. Site chosen for the
retreat is Camp Fern at Marshall.
The group arrival time is from
1 p.m. to 10 p.m. on Satvrday,
Sept. 3. Only recreational activi-
ties will be scheduled for that day.
On Sunday, a "woodsman break-
fast” at 7 a.m. will head activi-
ties, followed by a community ses-
sion at 9 Coffee and a “retreat
} j M la
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1138
You get years of smart wear at Penney’s
low pricel Almost lintfree viscose rayon
tufts on cotton — nuwhin* wish medium
set.
rink, white, cocoa, turqvoise, butter-
scotch, rose.
.N .000
Denton Optimist
Clubs To Host
Zone Meeting
The Denton Optimist Club and
the Denton Breakfast Optimist
Club will serve as hosts to the of-
ficers and committee chairmen
ol the Optimist Clubs of Zone K,
District 7 of the Optimist Inter-
national at an all day meeting to
be held at the Pat Boone's Coun-
try Inn Sunday.
The lieutenant governor of Zone
K, Leslie Echols of Paris, will
preside. The principal address
will be delivered at a noon lunch-
eon by District Governor Robert
Newkirk of Fort Worth,
Other district officers scheduled
to,take part in the program in-
clude C. J. Harkrider of Fort
Worth, district secretary; Frank
Granot of Vernon, lieutenant gov-
ernor of Zone A; and district com-
mittee chairmen Dr. Lloyd Lake
of Gainesville, Dr. L. D. Lynch of
Tyler, Noble T. Lee of Sherman,
Joe Devaney of Dallas and Wheel-
er Worley of Fort Worth.
The presidents of the two Paris
clubs, the two Sherman clubs and
the two Denton clubs also will be
featured on the program.
The purpose of the zone meeting
is to share among the different
clubs and individuals ideas and
experiences encountered in carry-
ing out the program of boys work
and other projects to which Opti-
p
Elsewhere in Tennessee, Negroes
have voted for years.
Kefauver seemed certain to
carry the state's four metropolitan
counties. Hamilton County (Chat-
tanooga), where he lives, gave
him a 5,863 vote majority, while
he led in Knox County by a four-
to-one margin and in Davidson
(Nashville) by better than two-to-
one.
VALLEY VIEW (Special! — A
Valley View housewife—or more
correctly, her husband—won one
of the prizes on the Art Linklet-
ter show this week.
Mrs. Bert Martin, vacationing in
Los Angeles with her husband, got
onto Linkletter’s televised show by
answering some questions. Part of
the act was to keep talking to pre-
vent her husband from "getting a
word in edgewise.'
Mrs. Martin talked herself into
the prize money, which Linkletter
promptly gave to the harassed hus-
band.
But the State Department say* summarized aid totals since 1954
from 15 industrialized nations of
BRIDGEPORT (Staff) — A Bend
conglomerate gas discovery has
been completed one mile southwest
of the one-well Southeast Becknal’
Caddo conglomerate pool and four
miles west, northwest of Bridge-
port as Charles H. Featherston
Wichita Falls, No. 1 Edith Hanna,
James L. Cobb survey, A-240.
The new pay opener rated a cal
culated, absolute, open flow of 5,-
500,000 cubic feet of gas daily
through perforations at 5.351 to 5,-
371 feet
At last report, operator was in
the process of re-cementing pipe
to perforate and test an upper
zone in the well.
State Department said that total
government long-term loan and
grant outlays from th« industrial
ized countries of the free world
to less-developed areas have "in-
creased substantially over the
past few years ”
from the outset and quickly
grabbed a two- to-one margin
which he maintained throughout
the night.
NEARLY COMPLETE
With tabulations from 2,881 of
the state’s 2,635 precincts, the vote
was:
Kefauver 433,097
Taylor 218,981
The outcome had been watched
nationally for an indication of the
depth of Southern reaction to the
civil rights proposals adopted by
the Democratic National Conven-
tion. Taylor sharply criticized this
platform plank, while Kefauver
said only that it went a little too
far.
Kefauver. termed his victory an
i emphatic answer to "the detract-
OUR FAMOUS NATION-WIDE " SHEETS GO ON SALE AT NEW LOW PRICES
-9 ■
the Free World. The report con-
eluded "efforts so far have not
been adequate to fill the require-
l ment '•
The United Stale* has supplied
two-thirds of the economic as-
distance covered in the report for
a total of $12,025,000,000. Fourteen
other countries, including Britain,
France, Canada. Australia. Japan
and West Germany provided
)3 "
L
h
Wh.s
63.
8 m
SB
given 13.800,000.000 in credit* and
grants for economic and military
assistance to 20 less-developed
countries.
"Since the modest beginnings in
1954,” the pamphlet said, "credit*
and grant* extended by the Soviet
bloc to Free World less-developed
countries have increased almost
steadily year by year until they
attained a rate of about one bil-
lion dollar* per year during 1958
and 1959 "
The pamphlet described the
Communist use of aid as a means
of making other countries sub-
servient to Red policies and pur-
poses
In its report to Congress, the
Stops Itch—Relieves Pain
astonishing statements Hke "Piles
have ceased tn be a problem!"
The aecret is a new healing sub:
stance < Bio-Dyne* -discovery nt
the Weather Bureau today indi- dounrriesohavo, pouromsdabilionorthe soviet communistb’oe
cated the August heat wave grip-underdeveloped nations during the
ping Texas will continue at least past six years The AmericanAffairs
five more days, total was over 12 billions Thursday night, the department
mist Clubs are dedicated, said
Harold Bogan.
Bogan is president of the Den-
ton Noon Club and Earl Chandler
is head of the Denton Morning
Club. Ebb Reeves is chairman of
arrangements for the meeting.
THE DENTON RECORD.CHRONICLE
Greenwod girl reigns as "Miss
Wise County Reunion" as of a
beauty contest staged at the Re-
union grounds.
Judged most beautiful of 12 en-
tries was May Maxwell. Second
and third place winners, respect-
ively, were Sharon Denton of
Bridgeport and Shirley Matlock
of Boyd.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The,
United .Steles and other industrial'
i a
-_4
j 33 275535
“*4,523 !
L
"dh
i "b
loans, grants and other assistance
totaling 85,904 000,000
The report to Congress em-
phasized that the United States is
doing everything possible to get
the other industrialized countries
to increase their aid Rui il said
that in view of the vast needs
such increases could not be count-
ed on to bring any reduction in
the U.S. effort.
The State Department also re
leased a pamphlet on the Com-
munist economic offensive stating
that by |; April the Soviet Un-
ion and other Red nations had
m- ors of the South, who tried to say
DIauc 6W.+,..+7 that we are a backward people.”
hlans Kctrcat "The South will continue to
i move forward in the main stream
TT NN 1 11 of American civilization," he said.
Near VEargia 11 The senator, who skyrocketed to
-‛•"F -v-e-D-o--national fame as a result of his
crime-busting investigations in the
early 1950s, said Tennessee by its
vote showed the Democratic
presidential ticket, headed by Sen.
John F. Kennedy, “will win the
parsonage at 110 Piner.
The Rev. Mr. Parker comes to
Denton from the Plauz Road Bap-
tist Church in Bakersfield, Calif.
He and his wife are natives of
Texas, having been raised in Paris.
They attended the Southwestern
Theological Seminary of Fort
Worth
Prior to his pastorate in Califor-
nia, the Rev. Mr Parker was pas-
tor in Beaumont and Gainesville
churches He’s been in the minis-
try 12 years. , •
<
I . f t e " .
session" is slated for 10.
At 11 a.m. participants will
swim for an hour, if they so choose.
A chapel service in the woods at
12 will precede Sunday dinner.
Two hours of recreation or rest
is planned for the first part of the
afternoon. A third retreat session
will be held at 3 p.m.
Time for swimming, canoeing, ar-
chery and tennis will be available
from 4-6. A picnic supper is sched-
uled at 6. The program for that
evening is yet to be determined,
said Si Ragsdale, manager of the
Denton Chamber of Commerce.
The "community sessions" will
be conducted by Jack Lacy, exe-
cutive vice president of the Ama-
rillo Chamber of Commerce.
A bon voyage breakfast on Mon-
day from 7-9 a.m. will precede
breaking camp.
Every member of the family will
be welcome on the outing. Appro-
ximately 815 per adult will be
charged, which includes five meals,
coffee breaks, use of cabins and
equipment at the camp. An addi-
tional 812 will be charged for each
child attending, which will include
meals, use of camp facilities and
supervision.
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Remuned To Board
AUSTIN (AP__Marvin Nun
of Fort Worth has been renam
chairman of the Texas Water t
velopment Board Gov. Price Di
lel also reappointed W. E Tinsi
of Austin a beard member Tu
day.
Nichols i* a member a fu
which acts as a consultant
Denton.
J. T. Canales of Brownsville w
named to the Angel of Goliad en
mittee, taking the place of the li
Joseph Wearden of Victoria.
Appointed to the Board of Vet
Inary Medical Examiners wi
Dr Victor Kothmann of Mai
hmB L *
ao-
Buar .. •
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DECATUR - Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Hardesty will leave Sept.
28 for a week in Hawaii. The trip
is a gift to them from Gibson Ap-
pliances, whose refrigerators,
stoves and freezers they handle
at their Decatur furniture store.
Approximately 5,000 other dealers
will make the trip. In order to
be eligible, a dealer must sell at
least 80 Gibson appliances in a
year’s time. Mr. and Mrs. Har-
desty sold enough to merit three
of the 8700 plane tickets.
They will fly from Dallas to
Honolulu on American Airlines’
first non-stop flight from Dallas to
Honolulu.
Last summer the Hardestys won
an all-expense paid trip to Puerto
Rico.
SPECIAL! DECORATIVE
COTTON PILE SCATTERS
Little-priced color accents for halls, bed- a . mu
room, dorm — or to protect expensive •D G E
carpet where wear it heavy । Skid .4 zor *P2D
resistant. A big buy! ,rn"”.
Sandalwood, white, rate, hunter, grey, each 27 by 80 Inches
S3acma,
ape
8*-
Efeo
Ks<s
HSSmes2
5.
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Kirkland, Tom. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, August 5, 1960, newspaper, August 5, 1960; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1468729/m1/3/: accessed June 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.