Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 259, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 5, 1958 Page: 1 of 20
twenty pages : ill. ; page 21 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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CHRONICLE
HOT
IFITIS^T
UTH YEAR OF DAILY SERVICENO. 259
------
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Tornado Toll Rises To
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Bi
-Associated Press HM«
unleashed its full fury on th small
minately.
RESIDENTS
-*
maul homes on the community’s
be given to those who have not
engaged.
A year later, in 1939, war came.
fore he could wed Alba, he was
Guard Stops
vest season.
—3
requiring the fullest study.
House Rejects Eisenhower Wants
Separate Aid Bill
De
ocratic party leaders are openly
IN TODAY'S PAPER
=-
I.
an
aid
The
6 2
4.6
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7
Judge Jon Wiig finding the crew
guilty of violating his injunction
tornado cracked
isconsin Wednes-
The vicious twi
town of Colifax.
1
1
The Money that slips throngh your
fingers will pay the loan that pays
on would
be deem
Man Returns
From ‘Dead’,
Weds Ex-Nun
1
6
M aw*
Mm
l
6
T.V. CHANNEL
PEE A DENIED
matorms theough Friday
. ' - vuwpanarynus
(Euperiment Statien Reper)
PAPER ON PORCH!
LET VS KNOw
puCavge
back rebels whom he praised as
courageous. This was the pro-
pram:
Within three months the nine
million Arab and Berber Moslem
Algerians and the Ite million Al-
except one. That was Atty. Gen.
Edmund G. Brown.
Republicans think they can win
again next November. But Dem-
presumably meaning negotiations
on Algeria’s future relationship
with France/
"Ways must be opened which
until now have been closed to
many," he declared. "That means
that the means of livelihood must
Oats market prices currently are
19 cents below government loan
prices, and are scheduled to drop
even' further as the harvest pro-
gresses. Barley also is about 30 to
25 cents below government loan
levels.
Although wheat loan level has
not been officially announced, mar-
ket prices for that grain already is
more than 10 cents below anticipat-
ed loan rates.
spearheaded the revolt. It de:
mands independence as the price
of peace.
Constantine was the second stop
CHANGES MIND
Slayer Who
Wanted Death
Loses Plea
. Houses were smashed, trees splintered and stone
buildings pulverised as the cruel storm, carrying torrents
of rain, skirted the edge of the Colfax business district.
Bodies of 11 persons were recovered from the debris .
there. Another 35 residents of the community of 1,000
---------------------- trwere hurt.
there was no doubt the general
captured and fired the imagina-
tion of Algiers residents more
than anyone had done in a long
time.
."I open the doo£ to reconcilia-
tion," de Gaulle proclaimed in of-
fering a program designed to win
More Than 100 Injured As
Twister Sweeps 90 Miles
imary -cam-
a was nu he nendedfer
the Republican gubernatorial nom-
The funnel carried such force
it not only blew houses and barns
down, but strewed boards, 1 *
7 fixtures and furniture
Regents during commencement
weekend at the school.
The new faculty will up the
evaluation of the present medical
center to about 70 million dollars.
emmmeememe--emmmmm-mmmmm
change.
There's no doubt the primary
showed a definite party resur-
...
14
-
I
9 the three quarter,
f “0a '
Sweeping out of the north-
west, the tornado spun across
four counties before blowing
itself out southeast of Eau
Claire.
Rural areas near Meno-
monie and Chippewa Falls wore
hard hit. . .2
al
' ■
9 ' ■ '• .
Classifled .....
Comies ........
Editorials .....
Food News ..
dammaa
BWT•B,
Town Topics ..
. Women’s News
knocmemaunisetionscodaPo"forang
rescuers to make farm-by-farm
visits to check for casualties and
damage.
After its destructive northside
touch-down in Colfax, the twister
the business distriet to
REMEMBER WHEN
Bob Whites were so thick in
Denton County no bird dog
was needed?
Thus the question of credits be-
come a key issue in any L--.2
trade arrangement which might
.1
""" e
One relief worker said "just 10
minutes is all it took.” The blow-
ng.
... a *
I
■■
L.
California, the Senate Republican ‛
leader, reported the President’s
stand after the weekly White
House conference of key GOP
members from the Capitol. ”
Knowland himself is opposing
an amendment, offered by Sen.
John F. Kennedy (D-Mass) to put
into the foreign aid bill a section
allowing the President to spend
money in satellite countries if he
finds it would help or encourage
them on a course independent of
ATaaE- - — - ——- -. ..........
MAOSCOW- n.o. .. A h
* odoh.....M
■ 1
. -2
■
„ -18
■ ya
GLOBEMASTER CRASHES
This is the wreckage of an Air Force C124 Globemaster which crashed shortly aft-
er takeoff at Travis Air Force Base, Calf., killing six of the eight crew members.
The plane was on its way to its home base at Techikawa Air Force Base, Japan,
with 20,000 pounds of general cargo.
1. '
J J
TWU Nursing
Program Due
Big Expansion
gerians of French descent will
join with 45 million residents of
sent off to Greece.
Word came in a few months that
Rinaldo was dead. Alba, grief
stricken, entered a Roman Cathol-
ic convent and took the vows of a
cloistered Benedictine nun.
Rinaldo, however, was not dead.
Wounded, he was shuttled from
hospital to hospital. In 1948 he re-
turned home to learn Alba had
entered a convent.
Eventually he arranged to meet
her in the presence of the mother
superior of the convent. Alba de-
cided to ask to be released from
her vows.
Last November, came the word
when the Coast Guard caught up.
Huntington was arrested on the
return to Honolulu.
Because of the doctrine of hot
pursuit it made no difference
that the ketch was nabbed out-
side the limit at United States
jurisdiction, said Asst. U.S. Atty.
Edgar D. Crumpacker. The doc-
trine holds that a criminal can
be pursued across a border and
that his capture in such cases is
legal.
PREVIOUS ATTEMPT
are paying for a big mistake
in 1956. See The World Today,
Page 4, Sec. 1. .
TODAYS YOUNG PEOPLE
are concerned about American
education. Page 7, Sec. 1.
' Page Sec.
I it. That means that dignity
must be granted to those whose
Multiple Reasons Given For
o Upsurge in California
— Assoctated Press Phote
GENERAL MEETS GENERAL—Premier Charles de
Gaulle gets a handshaking welcome from Algerian
military chief Gen. Raoul Salan on his arrivial at
Algiers from Paris for his fateful meeting with the
French insurgent group. De Gaulle, clad in his
French army general’s uniform, receives a tumultuous
welcome from the huge crowd on hand to cheer him.
By MORRIE LANDSBERG
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-What
happened in California's primary
election Tuesday? Why the big
Democratic splash?
draw up.
At some future date all .Algeri-
ans will ballot on a single voting
list for "representatives to the
public administration."
"With these elected representa-
tives we will see how to do what
must be done,” De Gaulle added.
* •
Partly cloudy endwarm wftkchancesof
isolated late afternoon mW nighttime
The announcement came in an
exclusive story by the Houston
Chronicle and was supported late
thia morning by an announcement
from a TWU official.
The nurses college, unnamed as
yet, will virtually double the pres-
ent TWU Nursing School program
and will make it the largest in the
state. The new facility is being
financed by the Good Samaritan
Club of Houston. The program
wlU be conducted in conjunction
with the university's present pro-
gram at Parkland Hospital in Dal-
las. _
l
I I
h
De Gaulle’s On Tour;
Rebels Reject Plans
Denton Reco
, 0
See No Wide
-- ... . , V, — i ..
Trade Deals
WASHINGTON ( - The
Communications Commission
rejected today proposals that
it no longer reserve TV Chan-
nel 1 as an educational chan-
nel at Denton and set aside a
UHF channel- for educational
use there.
Last September, the com-
mission announced a tentative
decision to retain the educa-
tional status of the proposed
station and today's announce-
ment appears to be the final
decision on the matter.
The proposals were submit-
ted by Gregg Television Inc,,,
composed of Longview busi-
ness men, who wanted the.
channel shifted to Longview
for commercial use; and by
Harwell Shepard, operator of
Denton Radio Station KDNT-
AM-FM, who wanted to estab-
lish a commercial Channel 2
station in Denton.
lican race for the U.S. Senate. But
Knowland outdrew him. More im-
portant. so did the Democratic
nominee, Rep. Clair Engle of Red
Bluff.
Just about everyone cross-filed
in hopes of winning both nomina-
See REASONS, Page t
WASHINGTON ( - Adminis-
tration officials saw little possi-
bility today of granting lare-
scale credits to finance Soviet
purchases of industrial machinery
and consumer goods in the United
States.
They also said privately they
think Soviet Premier Khrushchev
has greatly exaggerated the pos-
sibilities of increasing trade.
— But they did not rule out any
chance of a buildup in U.S.-Soviet
trade. They said that most, per-
haps all, that Khrushchev says he
wants to buy here could be’sold
without any violation of Allied
agreements which prohibit the ex-
port to the Soviet Union fo stra-
tegic or potential war material.
Khrushchev told President Ei-
senhower in a letter this week
that trade between the two coun-
tries could run into several bil-
lions of dollars in the next few
years.
He offered to sell a wide variety
of raw materials and some ma-
chinery to this country and he
asked to buy considerable quan-
tities of industrial equipment and
consumer goods to speed up ex-
pansion of the Soviet economy.
He said the deal would help over-
come the U.S. recession.
He offered to exchange Soviet
products, largely raw materials
such as furs, ores and lumber.
V
' De Gaulle spoke only in gener-
alities that left Algerians in the
dark on details of his plans for
ending the 43-month rebellion. But
initial study of the Khrushchev
message, estimated that the value
of raw materials which Moscow
could sell here would be far less
than that of American goods
which Khrushchev seeks to buy.
Neighbors complained be-
cause the dog's owner, Mrs. ____ . .
Nancy Ewing, 56. blindfolded against the trip. He
______ e gave them
suspended sentences and put them
on orobation for a year that time.
Other crewmen are Orion Sher-
Pacifist Crew
and individuals. Waldrip’s, DUt- f
.Stateh.
HOUSTON — Announcement was
made today that TWU has affili- ing
ated with what is expected to be- “r,
come a seven million dollar nurs-
es' college and home in Houston.
A bmnmu
° (la tmehen)
Sto. Geum
Last 24 Haun
---- Thia Month _
► June Normel .
> . This Year
s. • Mas tear tca
ing rain that accompanied the
blow came down the street like
a wave, she said.
GUARD
Gov. Vernon Thomson ordered
three companies of National
Guardsmen to duty in the storm
area for rescue and rehabilitation,
work.
Striking just after the supper
hour, the twister caught many
families unaware as their houses
wore flattened about them.
Communications and power
lines were torn out and extent of
the catastrophe was slow in be-
coming known. Officials used a
makeshift network of police,
sheriffs’ and civil defense radios
to marshal doctors and nurses at
hospitals in the area.,
They also summoned ambu- '
lances and made appeals for sta-
tion wagons and covered trucks to
carry the injured to hospitals.
The funnel tore into Wisconsin
at Woodville, just east of the St.
Croix River, and caused destruc-
tion as far as Ludington, in Eau
Claire County to miles to the east.
It covered parts of St. Croix,
Dunn, Eau Claire and Chippewa
counties. - '
With electricity out, rescue
parties used hand torches and
headlights to probe the tangled
wreckage for victims. Hospitals
over the area were crammed with
the injured, some reported criti-
See TORNADO, Page 3
Farm Wheat
Storage Set
For Region
Denton County wheat growers
have been placed on the eligibility
list for on - farm storage of their
1958 wheat crop, Shirley Taylor,
manager of the Agricultural Stab-
ilization Conservation office in
Denton, said today.
"Authorization for the on - farm
storage in rodent and bird - free
facilities, was made by the state
committee late -Wednesday," he
said.
Major requirement of the on -
farm wheat storage will be that
the wheat must be in the bin at
least 30 days before inspection by
the ASC office and it must test 12.5
per cent or less moisture content,
he said.
FUMIGATION URGED
He aso recommended that grow-
ers fumigate storage facilities in
order to protect grains during stor-
age.
All grain - producing counties in
the state are eligible for on - farm
storage of oats, barley, wheat,
grain sorghums and corn that will
be sold to the Commodity Credit
Corporation under government
loan provisions.
Oats, if the grain tests 13 per
cent moisture or less, may be in-
spected as soon as the grain is
placed in the bin, Taylor said. Pre-
Iron Curtain countries.
Knowland has offered
amendment to strike the pron
from the $3,712,000,000 foreig
bill now before the Senate.
Knowland devoted only 14 days in
RUSSIA'S LEADERS today the state to his
DENTON ano VIEINIT ana an of Texasi Knowland told a wwe eeefer«
encethat Eisenhower would sup-
port such a proposal if it came
up as an amendment to the Battle
Act. That law bans US.laidto:.
Many Moslems were among the France in votingon the eonstitu- had
thousands who lined De Gaulle's tional reforms he is pledged to mus
route from the airport into Con-
1
A northside residential district .
In Colfax was all but wiped out
Some newly built homes were re-
duced to piles of debris atop their
foundations. Others were just '
blown away.
Automobiles, twisted Into gro-
tesque shapes, were tossed like
toys
ment crop loan pnovisions this har- enurPtdsthshthnssedoverAimenen
veet enacen authority over insurgent French
colonists and military leaders and
to launch a new drive to end the
k ''
;b
returned to their old independent ocratic party leaders are openly
voting .ways. They ignored party talking about a landslide. They
lines. Every Democrat running for feel the voters are ready for a
statewide office was defeated —
vious reports were that the grain
...------- .-----.- . would have to remain in the bin at
Rinaldo was called to arms. Be- least 30 days before application for
that Pope Plus XII had granted
. .her the release. It was a long
actual time to wait, but the church con-
siders such dispensation a matter
DOG HAS TO
FACE EVIL
PASADENA, Calif.—King
Boy, a German shepherd, has
to face life today just like
tbs rest ot~w;
Cut in Army
WASHINGTON (AP)_By a rol
call vote of 224-158, the House to-
day rejected President Eisenhow-
er's plan to cut the Army's
strength to 870,000 men during
thernext12 months. It then passed
a $38,409,561,000 defense appro-
priation bill.
The roll call vote nailed into the
measure an amendment to fi-
nance a 900,000-man Army during
the year starting July 1 at an ad-
ditional cost of 99 million dollars.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi-
dent Eisenhower wants authority
to spend foreign aid money in
Iron Curtain countries but wants
It separate from the mutual secur-
ity bill now under Senate debate.
Republican congressional leaders
said today.
Sen. William F. Knowland of
...........■■■L '■■■"Til?......
WEATHER
,__________________
Probably no one reason can ex- l
plain. A number of factors appear
to fit into the complex pattern of ।
California politics that background
the election figures.
Something similar happened in
1964. It didn’t create the same
stir, however, because a national
zigurelikesen, Wiiam F. Know-
land wasn’t involved. And the
Democratic margin wasn’t as
great..
Four years ago, the California
ballot began to identify candidates
as either “Dem” or "Rep." for
the first time. Democrats — who
outregistered the Republicans 3-2
• — harnessed their big vote and
nominated a full slate for state
nfAnma •
Qincers.
But in November, Californians
-4%
: %7e
20 PAGES PRICE FIVE CENTS
POINT OF THE MOUNTAIN,
Utah (AP>—The young kilter's
hands twitched. His smile flick-
ered nervously. He was asking for
his life, and he lost.
Barton Kay Kirkham, who had
sneered at the idea of mercy,
asked for it Wednesday. The State
Pardons Board listened to his plea
for life imprisonment and mental
treatment and rejected it.
Saturday the 21-year-old slayer
is to be hanged. He is the first
condemned man in Utah in 46
years to choose hanging for his
execution instead of the firing
squd.
He said he did so because the
noose would bring more publicity
and would cause the state more
trouble.
For two years since he fatally
shot a man in a grocery store
holdup and fled with 150, Kirkham
had assured fellow prisoners and
anybody else who would listen.
"I'm not afraid to die."
"Im -a loner,” he told the board
Wednesday.
Over and over, the board mem-
bers asked him why he had killed,
what he thought of dying, whether
he felt remorse, Kirkham said:
"No sir, no remorse or anything
like that."
But then be launched into a
disconnected, nervous plea for
mercy. He said he'd rather die
than spend his life in prison. But
what he really wanted, he said,
was confinement outside the pris-
on for a life of psychiatric treat-
ment.
The board said no.
"N A
J '
Passage of the bill was by a
389-0 vote which sent it on to the
Senate. 4
Today’s vote on the issue of the
Army’s size upheld a tentative de-
cision made Wednesday without a
roll call. This question was the
onlv controversy in the bill. " ,
The group favoring a big Army
won an initial victory when an
amendment carrying the 99 mil-
lions was approved tentatively by
a 109-79 vote.
dignity was contested. That means
that the motherland must be as-
Affiliation with the college (to wu n
be built in {he Texas Medical Cen- sothside
ter in Houston) was unanimously --T-
approved by the TWU Board of
MENOMONIE, Wis. (AP)—-A deadly
like a bullwhip acron northwestern WI
day night, leaving a mounting toll of at least 30 dead and
more than 100 injured.
30 Dead In Wisconsin
uonna. 4 . , . z - 4......l euchan. - - . we
A previous attempt to sail was
made May t That resulted Hr
... 1, I
.... • 1
.... 4 1
4.7,9 a
.. 1,2 J l
enir
lapospnwheni
' ' u-uh
eru v '
But he proposed that the Presi-
dent consider financing Soviet or-
ders to U.S. factories by large-
scale, long-term credits in order
to speed up trade expansion.
Administration officials, after
wood, Poughkeepsie, N.Y., and
James Peck, New York City.
Bigelow, Huntington and Willough-
by are Quakers. Sherwood is a
Methodist. Peck says he is a non-
religions pacifist.
.Purpose of the trip was to pro-lyourbila, <
teat nuclear tests by the United
ery, equipment for making
synthetic fibers and plastics, pa-
per and wood processing machin-
ery. textile equipment, food pro-
cessing machines, automatic vend-
ing machines, and equipment for
the manufacture of building ma-
terials.
_
dtosaaniaueesedaw
_ L ___.
) . >7 " ' j
FLORENCE, Italy (AP) _ A 1
man who returned from the dead
has wed a nun who obtained the
Pope’s permission to marry.
Twenty years ago in the cen-
tral Italian hill town of Falciano,
Alba Guidotti, a pretty girl of 15, ,
and Rinaldo Matesini, 16, became
On High Seas
HONOLULU CAP) - Coast
Guardsmen stopped pacifists from
sailing the ketch Golden Rule to-
ward the Atomic Energy Commis-
sion's test area again yesterday
- this time on the high seas.
Albert Smith Bigelow, Cos Cob,
Conn., the Golden Rule's skipper,
was arrested before the ketch
sailed on a charge that he con-
spired to violate a federal court
injunction against the sailing.
William Huntington, St. James,
Long Island, N.Y., returned to
Honolulu, providing a navigator
just in time to get the 30-foot ves-
sel under way.
OUTIDE LIMIT
George Willoughby, Blackwood
Terrace, N.J., one of the crew,
said the ketch was well outside
the three-mile territorial limit
sured to those who doubted they
had one."
But there was no suggestion of
an independent Algeria. "In all
Algeria there is only one category
of inhabitant," De Gaulle de-
clared. "There are only French-
men of one sort.”
MOSLEMS
With Moslems outnumbering the
French'settlers almost 9-1, Alger-
ian voting has been heavily
weighted to give the French the
dominant voice in the territorial
government. De Gaulle apparent-
ly offered the Moslems a chance
to submerge the French in a flood
of votes — a prospect the mili-
tant colonists were certain to op-
pose strongly.
He gave no due to the basis
on which future Algerian repre-
sentation in the National Assem-
bly in Paris would be allotted.
Few in Algiers believed it would
be on the same population baste
as for France, since that could
send a massive bloc of more than
100 Moslem votes to the Assem-
bly.
U.S. ’ Officials
gence in California. One test, is
the huge vote rolled up by Brown,
leading his ticket as the Demo-
cratic candidate for governor.
Republicans, pointed out that
Denton Stores Will Re
n ■ ( % • ' ‘ a-AeT°
"ten Wednesday wunw....wac to
tow this mernimg , -..wa 69
High year ege •...... • n
tow veer ae» w.a.n.. Xm... .. - M
Sun Mt* tutor at 7132 p.m.; riams Ftidey
at 5:19 a.m. Fiihing Poor. I
stantine, the mountainous, rebel-
lion-backed eastern sector’s chief
city.
Nationalist sources in neighbor-
ing Tunisia said there will be no
halting of the 3%-year-old rebel-
lion.
NO ACCEPTANCE
In Cairo, spokesmen for the Al-
gerian National Liberation Front
<FLN) said they could not accept
De Gaulle’s program for integrat-
CONSTANTINE, Algeria (AP)
—Premier de Gaulle flew to east-
ern Algeria today for another en-
thusiastic welcome. Elsewhere,
spokesmen for the nationalist
Moslem rebels rejected his pro-
gram to make them first-class
Frenchmen.
43-month-old nationalist rebellion.
The massed thousands in Con-
stantine cheered as De Gaulle
declared from a flag-decked bal-
cony, "All men here have the
same rights—the same duties.”
The brief address was essentially
the same as the one he delivered
to a cheering throng of about
100,000 in Algiers Wednesday
night.
GENERALITIES
wui • \ \ . . ■
" '■ ' 4 r-
Until 8:30 Tonight
’ w 0 V""‛ • 'U A -Z"
az
.g6)) 1
ba ■ t
77," , d"
"1 4028888608928888 j a x 8888888888888888888888888888888888888522
brheyosata"any move to grant
credits to the Soviet Union would
involve serious political and policy
issues. The initial reaction within
the administration appeared to be
against any extension of credits.
The things Khrushchev put on
. his shopping list included machin-
ination. It’s true. But Brown, who
barnstormed for weeks, -walked-off
with the high popular vote by
more than 900,000.
Gov. Goodwin Knight cam-
paigned strenuously in his Repub-
mpma .
• -
WEATHER
' 1 1 .1
7 " reB • ' ■■ 7
" .g
government loan could be approv-
BARLEY, WHEAT
Both barley and wheat, howev-
er. must remain in storage at least
30 days before loan application can
be made, Taylor* explained. Bar-
ley must test 40 pounds per bushel
or better and wheat must carry
12 5 per cent moisture content, or
less, he added
Inspection fees of 1 . cent per
bushel or 93 minimum will be
made for each grain placed in
government loans in farm facil-
ities.
Present price trends point to
to widespread use of govern-
A Growing Newspaper For A Growing Area
DENTON, TEXAS, THURSDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 5, IBM
---
the animal when she took him
for walks. Officers told her,
"No more blindfolds."
VI just didn’t want King
Boy to see all the evil there
fit in the world,” Mrs. Ewing
said. "I didn't want him to
see bad people.”
Easier car financing, for Dealers
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 259, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 5, 1958, newspaper, June 5, 1958; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1453409/m1/1/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.