Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 223, Ed. 1 Monday, April 20, 1959 Page: 1 of 10
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has remained al*
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be
ah
Himself After Failure
must be done in a
the speaker told the
announced the defeat of members
SUMMER’S HERE
r
BUT NOT LONG
reactions from
In TWU Hall
GUARD REMAINS
OVER INMATES
and only a few
and that the
and workers had
WEATHER
ige is the main oppo-
lowest since Wednesday.
ac-
2
It started
edge of the Pi
Victor Aramayo. whose large tih
t
willed in 1952. Aramayo now lives
Ntionalization of the tin mines
Ina *• Geuge
CASINO OPERATORS LIKE IT
day after an
(
about a dozen members
San Francisco.
| What do casino operators think
NO FEES
"Two or more members get to- about it?
" think it’s a good organiza-
Aw •* eno. AR lit Am p,all AvAnisla
fees.
What enpns a compulsive gam our patrons to treat gambling as
, entert ainmenL.
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Legislators Urged To
Take Quick T ax Action
rightist
governr
THESE PAPERS REPRESENT 300 MILLION DOLLARS IN TAXES
House Sergeant-AtArms B. L. Parker Gives Tax Bill To Pages
d
1
LA PAZ. Bolivia (AP) — The
leader of Sunday's short-lived re-
volt committed suicide after his
ro said pt
joined the
Last 24 Mours
This Month
April Average
Thit Veer
Last Year
lent to this time. I hereby renew
my request and I hope he will join
i me in supporting to this extent
Las Vegas, Of All Places,
Hopes To Aid The Gamblers
hAon
least 22 persons were slain, and
more than SO were wounded in the
course of the attempted coup.
The government of this poverty-
home tor what may be their last
talk with the voters. Committee
A
a
of a twister
showers.
I
Childs’ Death
Tied To Mom
CINCINNATI. Ohio (AP)-A 23-
Lew $unday
Wigh Sunday
Le * this mernin
Migh year
Lew year ag•
Neummmfee
' ’ 3 iitwAh
REMEMBER W HEN
A man on horseback was as
famaliar a sight as a man in
an automobile is now?
r C
i A
e
lip
ling was crushed, the
announced today. At
I
I
Showdown On
Critical Bill
Delay On
Debt Is
a
A
SC Gauge
None
n
J MJ
3.53
10.76
Carr said two bills were ahead
of the tax measure on today's cal-
endar. One was Gov. Price Dan-
lel's abandoned property blU—also
a revenue measure. It has been
passed on second reading, and
laces third and final reading.
controlling U
The Falan
None
.35
3.93
2.52
8.16
E.
ivrr
\
year-old woman who police say
shot and killed her two young
daughters is in critical condition
at St. Elisabeth Hospital here to-
►
The speaker said he hoped
Mito could be .....
Ri
. 1
mt':
INTERVIEWS
Powell said he expects to con-
duct extensive convict interviews
to pinpoint the cause of the vio-
lence that began last Thursday.
Three members of Atty. Gen.
Forrest H Anderson's staff were
says. It is not concerned, with tnosr sharing of confession
who gamble for entertainment. Me .
Dr. O'Connor explains that Gain* । bling addiction?
222
00
approval last week of the huge,
deep-slashing
stirred up the
sition to Silos Zuazo’s Nationalist
Revolutionary Movement (MNR,
which led a successful revolution
seven years ago and won mere
than 80 per cent of the voes in
national elections in 1956.
REVOLT
The president in a broadcast
Sunday night said the revolt was
planned by Flanage head Oscar
Unzaga de la Vega and Carloa
w
90
. M
7
C-C Banquet
Set At 630
These warnings expired Sunday
night with po
! Although cool weather was the
word today and cold weather may
be the word Tuesday. Denton Coun-
ty got its first taste of summer
weather Sunday.
The mercury Sunday bit 90 de-
grees for the first time this year,
la ekm hnbami anamek. atan.
it wm ine nOLUSC Weatner since
Oct. 9, 1958,
■ The climbing mercury indicates
that 100-degree temperatures are
just around the calendar corner.
Average date for the first 100-
degree temperature to June 29,
although last year, the first such
temperature didn't arrive until
July 25. some to days late Aver-
age number of days on which the
mercury climbs to the three-digit
temperature or above is to.
Meanwhite. thia morning's mini-
mum temperature was 53 degrees.
3
been digging when National
Guardsmen burst in under a tover
of bazooka, rifle and machine gun
fire.
Myles and Lee Smart. it. re-
treated to the prison’s northwest
tower. There, Smart apparently
killed his companion with a rifle
shot, then took his own life as the
tronoe closed in.
- The other victim of the revolt
the tax . measure immediately.
Carr aaid today he would preen
for quick and erderly action on
the tax MU.
"Nobody to going to be eut off.
I want everybody with a tax idea
to have his chace," Carr said
“We have as much time left to
this session to work ent a tax MB
as we would have to a special
seasion. Let's ds it now."
<
i
l
government militia in
those cities.
station and municipal offices.
Government forces broke up the
attacks and then began a cleanup
of Falangist rebels.
Many of the wounded were re-
ported to be bystanders caught in
the crossfire between government
forces and insurgents Scattered
shooting was still heard. but reb-
els were reported turning in their
arms.
Two Insurgent leaders were cap-
tured: Rafael Loayza. a retired
colonel, and Luis Saenz,
A government radio station said
Sites had declared a state of siege
—modified martial law—through-
out the country.
OTHER CITIES
There were no reports of trouble
outside of La Pat. The govern-
ment said it held control of all
provincial capitals. Official re-
ports from Cochabamba and Oru-
-o-
a
gram, but the tin nationalization .
particularly has not produced the!
prosperity the party anticipated. I
i k X ,
. . ann-
oe"
‘eie
IN TOD ATS PAPER
MAN’S INABILITY to suc-
ceed can be traced to his fail-
ure to follow his religious be-
liefs. Page 3.
ITS NO TIME to back down
on standards for Texas teach-
ers Page 4.
Best Of The Western On The Conn
West Shew. 1:00 P.M.. KDNT. AM
a FM.
Afternoon temperatures gsarad
into the Ma, meanwhile, in South-
west Texas The mercury Nt 97
degrees at Laredo. to at Cotulla,
91 at Brownsville and Presidio,
and st at Dalhart Other top
marks ranged down to 72 at Dal-
hart.
Just before dawn Monday, the
readings varied from 32 at Perry-
ton to n al Coltego Station.
capital in which he had hidden.
His bodyguard. Juan Gallardo,
also shot himself to death, the gov-
ernment announcement said
President Hernan Silaa Suazo
aR,ja ■!
r gf2ad
I
- They demanded the resignation
of Benjamin W Wright as direc,
tor of the Montana Board of
Pardons.
Wright said he had submitted
his resignation three weeks ano.
He made it effertive immedintelv
during the revolt in an effort to
pacify the convicta.
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him with a rifle shot in the back.
18 OFFICIALS
The rioters took captive 11 pris-
on officials, inchiding 17 guards,
and five convicts described as
stool pigeons. Two of the prison
employes were released Fridav.
The others were threatened with
death time and again before their
rescue. .
The convicts complained of poor
prison sanitation lack of segrega-
tion for vounw nffenders a«d nrim-
92;
quickly diMWNd^f •
plagued nation said Oscar Untaga
de la Vega, head of the Falange
AUSTIN (AP) — Speaker
Waggoner Carr urged the
; House today to meet the tax
problem headon and write a
budget balancing measure as
U quickly as possible
la a speech to the House, Carr
aaid "It should be abundantly
clear that eur fiscal risi will not
Sun Mh today it 6157 p.m., rises Tues-
day et 5155 e.m Fishine: Bad
rAINTALL
NSg
AN
ku 4 t auonenea
pmaeo- "
POSSIBLE I
omnibus measure
cording to the U. B. Weather Bu-
reau, it may go lower Tuesday.
The forecast called for possible
showers and a tow Tuesday of
N to 41 degrees. C
Meanwhile. snow fell la the Tex-
as Panhandle early today, the As
sociated Prose reported.
The first report of snowfall
came from Perryton to the north
Gamblers Anonymous is non- . . . . .
sectarian. There are no dues orfzethier and help strengthen each. ' . _ -------
..... other.'’ says Dr 9‘Connor. "It to tion.” says Milton Prell, executive
it takes no stand lor or against simply the old. old principle where director of the Sahara Hole "We
legalized gambling Dr. OTonnoi two or more indulge in mutual don’t want anyone to gambl
savs. It is not concerned, with tnosr sharing of confession " more than he can afford. We want
IC n. Houao.
Revolt Leader Kills
1 , ’ ’
414 f
Page
.. to
... s
... 9
... 4
... s
... 1
?
prompted special a tert s against
severe thunderstorms or tornadoes
over about 70,000 square mites
within the state.
prepared for the annual meeting
of Die Associated Press
SPENDING HIT
He rejected arguments of some
administration critics who want to
stimulate the economy through
greater federal spending.
“We must not, as we come out
of a recession. seek to force the
economy into a quick boom which
can later injure our long run
capacity to produce,” Anderson
said.
The national debt now stands at
286 billion dollars — the highest
point on record.
“To ignore the obligation of pay-
fog off some part of our debt dur-
ing prosperous times Is contrary
to all oi our American traditions
of good faith and performance,"
Anderson said.
“Failure to reduce our debt
when we can means passing on
the problem of the debt to another
generation, which we have no
moral right to do.”
BALANCED BUDGET
Anderson said he rejects talk
that "efforts to balance the bud-
get are without hope.”
He recalled that last January
the administration estimated fed-
eral revenues would total 77 bil-
lion dollars in the 1960 fiscal year
that begins July 1.
"Today," he said, "I believe
there Is even more evidence to
support this estimate than there
was last January
This statement conflicted with
a recent estimate by the House
Ways and Means Committee staff
that revenues will fall more than
a billion dollars short of the ad-
min ist rat ion’s target
SOUND SPENDING
On the spending side, Ander-
son said the expenditure level pro-
posed in President Eisenhower's
budget "continues to be sound"
The Treasury chief emphasized
the administration's concern that
inflation may develop during the
current upward swing of the busi-
mm cycle.
“However unpopular, we must
be willing to exercise at such a
time the restraints which changes
in monetary controls, government
fiscal policy and the maintenance
of budgetary surpluses can bring
about,” he aaid.
"I am confident that this nation
is not now going-to adopt a philo-
sophy that Inflation is a necessary
part of the price of progress “
Inflation would hit everyone’s
pocketbook, he said, but "the rich
and those with the cavacity for
self-protect ion would suffer least.”
For the first time ’ in several
days. however. there waa no men-
tion of thunderstorms with their
frequently implied threats of a tor-
nado or two—in forecasts for ev-
ery part of the state.
Fog and low clouds cloaked
most of East and Central Texas
early Monday, and a light drizzle
fell at Beaumont. In West Texas,
skies were clear except for clouds
over the Panhandle
Turbulent weather that brought
a baby tornado during the week-
end moved on eastward out of
Texas Sunday—but not until it had
SUBSTITUTE
Carr said the substitute one-
package tax proposal worked out
by the governor and ready for
submission to the House today
"wiA probably be of material aid
to getting definite action.” regard,
leas of whether the governor's tax
plan or some other to finally ap-
proved.
Carr aaid he had asked Gov.
Price Daniel Friday "to join me in
urging the House membership to
support whatever to the final prod-
uct” of the House on a tax mens-
ure that can be sent to the Senate.
Growing NetspeperFerAGrewing
DENTON TEXAS, MONDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL H, 1MB~
Lending his back for support is Robert H.
tion circulator. The Aldine schools, near
closed when the district failed to mieet its pa
the board Saturday raised the tax rate to $
the 400teachers and 9,000 students were back
today.
LAS VEGAS, Nev. TAP1—Gam- biers Anonymous is for the porson "Most of us sense a deep feeling
biers Anonymous is playing for "who gambles because gambling of rejection, of insecurity." one
big stakes in this legalized gam- is an addiction he cannot stop or member says. "I wanted to be a
bling center. control '* " 'big shot.’ r couldn't find how to
It is trying to rehabilitate the “I realized the need," he says, do it so I turned to gambling 1
admitted compulsive gambler, "because I have seen many wanted large masses of wealth.
Dr Donald R O'Connor. pastor homes broken by this disease, the material things of the world,
of the First Methodist Church, Some people simply cannot live I lost my car gambling I stole.
started thetas Vegas unitofthis close to gambling."-------- i borrowed. This was inaaadty."
Gamblers Anonymous. There are The group works in much the DOZEN MEMBERS
--- ----- . " "1----"*he" .----i The new Las Vegas chapter has
+*
party, took his life Sunday night
a house in the outskirts of this
_ of the Falange party who tried to
in seize the city hall Sunday,* at-
tacked as army barracks and
marched on the government radio
DEER LODGE. Mont. (AP)-
I jn discipline behind their cell
dzors took the place of a 36-hour
madness for 433 inmates of the
Montana State Prison today.
Armed National Guardsmen
whose early morning blitz foiled
a convict escape try and rescued
>1 hostages continued on duty.
The soldiers and prison guards
began a search of the prisoners
Saturday. within hours after the
uprising was quelled. Two convict
ringleaders died in the furious ac-
tion which ended the worst prison
incident in years. A deputy warden
was slain late Thursday.
■ Warden Floyd E. Powell ordered
the convicts to their cells. with-
out privileges, they are being giv-
en sandwiches and coffee in their
cells.
DENTON AND VICINITY: Partly cloudy to
cloudy through Tuesdey Possible scat-
M-M showers tonight. Cooler with" low-
M» 38-48 tonight.
WIST TEXAS: Patly eloudy * eloudy with
scattered rein * Penhandle. Lowest about
freezing in northern Pannandle.
TAST SOUTH CENTRAL TEXASt Partly
cloudy through Tuesdey and cooler with
chance of showers Tuesday
remPIRATURIS
(Enperiment Statien Reper)
attempt.
Officers said Esther Detisch of
Covington, a Kentucky community
across the Ohio River from here,
killed the girls, Cynthia, 6, and
Kathy. 5. Sunday as they slept. A
short time later she shot herself
in the chest, police said.
Mrs. Detisch apparently was
despondent over losing her job last
month as clerk in the Covington
city assessor’s office, authorities
Md. She was fined $125 for
breach of the peace and resisting
arrest after refusing to move her
car from a parking lot reserved
for city officials.
She was suspended from her job
March 24. and resigned two weeks
ago as the time neared for a Civil
Service hearing in her case.
SHARP REACTION
Lawmakers returned to the Cap.
—-altol after a weekend recess at
I
arily, the difficulty of obtaining other chapters in Los Angeles and same fashion as Aleoholic - Anony
paroles. " “—---
k.\
\
56TH YEAR OF DAILY SERVICE— NO. 223
LSd “suleide was Dept. Warden Ted Rothe, *
unsuccessful suicide Smart is believed to have kined
whatever your decision ea taxes
may be." Carr aaid
“Lot's atop talking about a soe-
eial session to-do this fob. . . Thia
spirit of com-
- )
>
as sleet just before daylight and
turned to light snow, but still
enough to whiten the ground.
Forecasts called for light rata
through the day in the Panhandle,
and arrival of the latest cold front
indicated a possibility at snow
elsewhere in that section
ITS A LONG WAY TO GO '
Venetian Gino Forato, left, and his sailing companion Per Christianson of Denmark
are shown on their 36-foot raft the Lone Star in Galveston Bay prior to starting a
22,000 mile trip around South America. A rip in the sail and lack of funds forced
them to be towed in at Freeport for repairs and more funds. t
— “n . r +i ' ' ' t ~ : . ____
Renton Record - Chronicle
" ' 0.
" ■ ■ 1 .
- ’ -
-Me%ie
E ‘ f e (., sifmrn
here, too, to determine whether
criminal charges will be brought
against any of the surviving rebel
leaders. -
Anderson commented Saturday
that the prison offers 19th century
facilities for 20th century hood-
lums.
Gov. J. Hugo Aronson noted that
Montana is planning construction
of a 10-million-dollar institution on
prison ranch property near here.
IS CONVICTS
An estimated 13 convicts were
said by officials to have planned
and executed the revolt. Warden
Powell described the rebellion it-
self as a clever cover for the pris-
oners' efforts to tunnel to safety-
an effort that failed when the dig
gers ran Into an underground con-
crete slab.
The troublemakers, Powell said,
have been isolated. They were giv-
en a change of prison clothes, a
bucket and a matress. I viwr aramayv,. wuuse imm "«
"Diseipline is firm and tight but properties in Bolivia were nation-
fair," the warden said. ;—2- — -
One of the two ringleaders killed in .Europe. 2
Business News
Classified .....
■ rawtof f
Editorials
Home News ..
Sports .....
Town Topies .
TV Log."...
In --.T.-HMMI
gg * wS“belvd"to iK ■ endtandnreformiwersuthetwa
Treasury Secretary
Calls Postponement
Of Payment Immoral
NEW YORK (AP)—Secre-
tary of the Treasury Robert
B. Anderson said today it
would be immoral to post-
pone paying off part of the
record national debt in pros-
perous times.
Furthermore, Anderson declared
a budget surplus that would per*
mit debt repayment is one of the
steps required to head off infla-
tion
“We must realise that long term
economic growth in real terms can
be achieved only without infla-
tion.'' Anderson said in a speech
Denton's Chamber of Commerce
will unreel its annual banquet to-
night at 6:30 in the northeast din-
ing room of TWU’s Hubbard Hall.
The banquet, this year a tribute
to retired manager Otto Fowler,
has several surprises in store for
those present.
CC officials won't say fort what
the surprises will be, but they think
It will be entertaining. Three of
the chamber’s past presidents—W.
D. Barrow, J. Holford Russell and
Tom Harpool will make short
speeches at the affair.
"Fessor Floyd Graham and the
Aces of Colleseland will be on
hand from NTSC. Graham will be
master of ceremonies. Their music
will reflect the periods in which
Fowler was secretary - manager
of the chamber.
Mrs. Frank Barrow has written1
the script for the evening She
says that vocalists and dancers,
in costume, will perform
Tickets are on sale for $2 to each
at both Denton banks, the chamber
office in City Hall, Brooks Drug
Store, Selby Flower Shop and from
T. W King Jr., C. A. Hogan or
Dr. Harold Farmer.
BACKING THEM UP
Mrs. J. K. Finch, mother of two Aldine School children,
is shown signing a petition asking the removal of the
Aldine School Board and the election of a new board.
• "mr- '
mm.
-a---- S,e ■
% N/“-4 ..•
"eA—ame- Ldla a
go away through delay.”
He called on members for
speedy action as the Legislature .
faced Its moat critical hour. It was
time for a showdown in the strug-
gto over taxing and spending. The
Legislature has just » days, in-
. eluding Saturdays, to finish Ito
- work.
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SERTING THE
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UNIVERSITY CENTER
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 223, Ed. 1 Monday, April 20, 1959, newspaper, April 20, 1959; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1453524/m1/1/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.