Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 176, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 25, 1960 Page: 3 of 16
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Thursday, February 23, 1960
THE DENTON RECORD.CHRONICLE
PAGE THREE
i
IN OVERSEAS TRADING
I
For First Time
Lunar Surface
A Relaxed Frondizi
The
United States has succeeded in
By BRIAN BELL
$14.95
Buenos Aires Is
Although pleased at the favor-
Mrs.
Frolicsome City
operator on the earth a quarter
in both branches of Congress.
ing sessions on routine matters
until 4, a.m.
call a popular president. Powerful
Miss Cormier has deinonstrat- j restaurants and scores of night
clubs, big and small.
Anaya a pAona at hand in a homa thaft Tafaphone-Planned!
MYSTERIOUS DOG POISONINGS
•)
f
SEIDLITZ PAINT
J
409 N. Locus
DU2-4194
tire sale!
uuaamuums uuuuuuuauum
VETO OVERRIDE
IT
4
Its FUN to ride the
tires
NEW CAR
DRASTICALLY
"e g
k % I
CHANGE-OVERS
REDUCED!
7
FREE INSTALLATIOII! LOW-LOW PRICE! |
2
ONE LOW PRICE
TI
FREE INSTALLATION
§)
2
ASK ABOUT OUR LOW BUDGET TERMSI
T
DUpont 2-9878
Santa Fe Station, Danton
. C. L TRAYLOR, Agent
Art Wiley, Mgr.
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26
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All-Woman
Election Due
and some foreign aid spending.
However, in order to close the
gap completely, the goal of ad-
dictator Juan Peron, are no longer
pressing the president. Labor, fre-
I Still continuing is the effort to
’ convince foreign nations to elim-
For the time being, the Treas-
ury Department apparently has
stopped pressing for a reduction
10 or more votes short of the two-
thirds needed to enact the multi-
million dollar measure into law
over the President’s objections. I
The bill would authorize federal'
grants of 90 million dollars a year
for 10 years to help municipalities I
Mis
Smith.
Brand new
GOODFEAR
results being transmitted to the
earth by television.
The first phase of an intensive
Nottk Sidt 9^ Sucre
FOXWORTH-GALBRAITH
Lumber Co. of Denton
only a few months ago.
A combination of factors, includ-
ing a quick spurt in American
inate entirely remaining restric-
tions on dollar sales in their coun-
tries.
I
V
9*
ig
Pay Only $1.25 A Week For Four
Whitewalls . . . blackwalls . . . any size at this one
low price. Don't wait. Soo us now & Sova.
VELVET
high-heel version
ed leadership, but without antagon-
izing male colleagues.
Neither Miss Cormier nor Mrs.
Smith are given to much speech-
making. But both have a way of
making their words count when
the time is right.
Miss Cormier operates a station-
ery and gift store here.
1
, / I -
ANY SIZE RETREAD
FEATURING GOODYEAR TREAD RUBBER AND REPAIR MATERIALS
Mrs. Smith, lone woman in the
Senate, hs no opposition in her
bid for renomination, and none i
HOUSE MULLS
Whopping
Reductions
on complete set* I
slightly used!
115 South Elm
wevmonnwrwsomomyoomewwmomoawow
lueSi
""""""""""""""""
GOODFEAR SERVICE STORE
RUMFORD, Maine (AP) — The
possibility of the nation’s first con-
test between two women for the
U.S. Senate looms today.
State Rep. Lucia M. Cormier
says she will seek the Democratic
nomination for the Senate scat of
Republican Margaret Chase Smith.
A race between the two will de-
pend on the outcome of the pri-
maries on June 20
7
Diol DU2-4136
RMaMUUMSMUMMHIMaMM
1(
WASHINGTON (AP) - With
| little hope of success, House Dem-
ocratic leaders scheduled a vote
ON ARGENTINE VISIT
Throughout all his troubles, tall,
gaunt Frondizi (nicknamed "El
Flaco" or "Skinny" by the Argen-
$995
Plus Tax 8 Re,
cappable Tira of
some passenger size
S »yp«
. — Moon Rover’ I EXPORTS CLOSE GAP
Eisenhower io bee May Explore
Most good restaurants don t. groups on all sides have little love
start serving until 8 pm. The big for him-the military, the Peron-
crowds don’t start coming until I ist as, the Communists. house-
Many nations have agreed to do
this but the added markets will
not be reflected in increased sales
for many months.
fore the moon can be surveyed
properly its surface must be stud-
ied close up with optical systems..
This may be done by satellites
orbiting near the moon or by
packages designed to crash-land
on the moon, Jastrow said, with 1
expected. But Miss Cormier will । • • • •
Of Portland, a mutual fund sales- NIGHT LIFE, MUSIC, FUN
man and former state representa- ....... ........ ■ 1 ■■ 1
tive.
grounds Both are former school
teachers, and both have made
something of an impact political-
ly.
Mrs .Smith was the first woman
elected to the Senate in her own
1 4
62, have similar back-
build sewage treatment plants.
Present law. not affected by the
“Come on over—
the whole crowds coming!"
Another fun time in the playroom - the center
of family relaxation. Why not have a phone
within easy reach of your fun? A color exten-
sion in your den or family room — in your choice
of ten delightful colors-costs so little.
(a) GENERAL TELEPHONE
America’s Largest independent Telephone Syslem
t, Chicago
Oklahoma City $4.97-Wichita $9.92-Kansas City $13.97
Pardner, The Texas Chief is a mighty good way to travel to Chicago.
Stretch-out sleeper seat chair cars, restful all-room Pullmans, Fred Harvey
meal* and a friendly train crew. We head for Chicago at 2:20 P.M., from
Denton. Come on along.
ministration financial leaders, au-
thorities wan! a cushion of at least
for billion dollars.
overseas military spending.
WASHINGTON (AP)
Tessas Chief
Galveston_Houston—Fort Worth—Dallas—Oklahoma City—Wichita—Kansas City—Chicago
9:30 or 10:30. wives, labor, big business. His
Movies run two shows nightly, I own Intransigent Radical Party
the last getting out round I a.m. I has lost much of its enthusiasm
j The night clubs are open until 4 for him since his election Feb.
Buenos Aires is South America's a.m. j 23, 1958
largest city, the eighth largest in: President Eisenhower won’t But Frondizi, Oct. 28. 1908,
the world and the biggest metrop- have a chance to observe much’ one of 13 children of Italian im-
olis south of the equator The of this night life during his brief tr“H‛ jned"t left Center study of the moon’s terrain al-
populationi of Gi eater Buenos Air es stay but he will be able to see Radical party as a teen-ager and ready has been completed, anoth-
18 estimated at more than five the city s . beauty. The road in has been active in the party since er speaker reported. Dr. Arnold
million. from ’he an port is a divided four- graduating fron law schoo’. He C Mason told of a joint project
it is a night city. Things don't j lane highway withtrees and grass was jailed briefly by Peron for, with the Army map service to
——--in the center. Modern low cost his outspoken opposition; i map the moon’s surface,
apartment houses and housing i
developments are along the road- ' F
He is not what anyone would [ division of NASA’s Goddard Space
"" - i :j„. " .< Flight Center here, said that be-
New estimates foreshadow a
“balance of payments’’ gap of
about 2%2 billion dollars in 1960,
compared to the nearly five billion
dollar figure which set off a vig-
orous campaign to correct the i
situation last year.
The cheeriest ingredient in the
new figure is the rise in American
exports. Tentative January esti-
mates are that such shipments ;
are running at a level of 1712
billion dollars as compared to 15
billion dollars in January 1959. I
The United States exported
more than it bought last year,
even when the over-all balance of
payments deficit wound up as
nearly four billion dollars. But the
export surplus over imports last
year was only 900 million dollars
as compared with a prospective
two billion dollars plus in I960.
This trade cushion will help
make up for the big sums spent
for foreign services such as trans- '
administration leaders
Denton police are investigating a series of dog poisonings that
have killed nine dogs in the past week.
Denton Police Chief Andy Anderson said the nine dogs have been
poisoned in an area bounded by Frame and Hettie Street's north
of East McKinney.
A Denton veterinarian is performing an autopsy on one of the
poisoned dogs, Anderson said, to determine the type of poison used.
Anyone found guilty of willfully poisoning a dog, Anderson said,
faces a possible penitentiary sentence.
“Poisoning a dog is bad enough,” Anderson said, “but if a child
gets hold of that poison it could be murder.”
Na., 8
n
only
$9728
A M (Plus
4m • On* Way
Chair Car
physical and chemical tests as it
proceeds, and controlled by an
Cormier, 48, and
portation, tourist expenditures, I
------- ■ ............ - -
E
today on whether to override
President Eisenhower’s veto on
visited the crises in his two years in office | has many grumbling.
antipollution bill. .
Indications were they would fall veto, sets the limit at 50 million
__________ .... ..... BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP)
right, and the first to have served _ Buenos Aires, .President Eisen-
hower's first stop in Argentina, is
Miss Cormier is the first woman a crowded city of music, night
minority leader of the Maine I life and fun.
House, where she has been a The city’s 3,700,000 people have'
member for 12 years. Like Mrs. , at their disposal two racetracks,
Smith she has a reputation for lie-: 155 scccer stadiums, an opera
ing firm, forthright and conscien- house, 20 theaters, a hundred mov-
tious. ie houses, 50 athletic clubs, 500
th m n l exports, also has halted what was
rover in its more advanced form feared to be a potentially danger-
s“nmhcitypheopt,counttess POLICE PROBE SERIES OF
......... . - - than they earn in overseas mar-
it will hibernate during the hi- i kets.
WASHINGTON (AP) — A re- cutting by nearly 50 per cent the
motely controlled "roving vehi-overseas financial gap that
cle" may be the first device to alarmed
explore the surface of the moon.
When Frondizi
BUENOS AIRES,
OheShamzock
I IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH!|i|lll l ll Illi lllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliH
I SHOES I
the eve of his departure for Wash- tion is still on rocky shoals fl-
--------- Argentina ington. There was talk in Argen-1 nancially. The budget is far in
(AP i—President Eisenhower will tina he would be overthrown any the red: frequent strikes still As described by Robert Jastrow
he seeing a much more relaxed day molest the people and the econ-' of the National Aeronautics and
President Arturo Frondizi of Ar- But now Frondizi is on smoother omy; the cost of living has in- Space Administration
gentina on his visit here than he i ground A man with a scorecard 1 creased 100 per cent in a year;
did a year ago in Washington, says Frondizi has survived 22 a government austerity program
plazas, many of them with im-
pressive statues of Argentine he-
roes dot the capital.
In the center of Buenos Aires ;
is a needle-shaped obelisk which
looks as if it came from the land ,
of the pyramids. A few dozen
blocks from the obelisk is the I
dome-topped capitol of Argentina, j
where Eisenhower will address a
joint session of Congress.
Buenos Aires is fashionable,
with its women appearing in the
latest styles only scant weeks
after the Paris showings.
start really moving until close totines, has maintained an icv cO
midnight The House of Deputies. H has sind thtrough Criss
after of a million miles away.
in, act. thin snothing.o matters crisis without panicking. i Jastrow, head of the theoretical
may be powered bv solar cells. I ous drain on the nation’s 19% bil- | I
„ . ■ 1 lion dollars in gold reserves m
United States in January 1959. But he hasn’t had a government But the economicsminister and ni uring each Lortnightilong Iu, i Financial authorities who re-
„ Frondizi had just survived one of relatively quiet. imt salX th^ "onomy has over the lunar surface, collecting
is ' his many government crises on I There still are troubles. The na- made progress The cost of living data samples and analyzing local
- * ‘ * rise has been’slowed. conditions as it proceeds." Jas-
J _. .... ... . trow told the Geological Society
The military, which several e . ... . . . ..
times threatened to topple Fron- of.Washinston Wednesday night,
dizi because it felt he was too ... ...
friendly with the followers of ex- nar night, ana come to me again
- - - 1 at each lunar dawn. .. . .. . .1.. ..
, . .... . able turn, they cautioned that the
Jastrow conceded that it would , final outcome depends on the sue- !
quently a thorn in Frondizi s side, be a formidable task to build a cess of the government's all-out
is still causing trouble but has reliable vehicle that would rove • campaign to boost export sales in '
calmed down somewhat. , in a vacuum under extreme tern- the months ahead.
perature variations, performing
a year
Eisenhower objected to the pro-
posed increased use of federal i
funds for the program, and said
the job of clearing poHution from I
the nation’s streams is primarily I
the responsibility of state and
local governments. He has urged
that the present program of fed-1
eral grants be curtailed and even- '
। tually ended.
It s the first veto of 1960 and
the 158th since President Eisen-1
. hower took office in 1953. Only I
j once, last year on a big public |
works appropriations bill, has
Congress overridden President ।
Eisenhower.
Most Republicans, and a sizable
group of Southern Democrats,
Vere expected to provide enough
votes to uphold the antipoHlution
bill veto. They figured that 140
votes to sustain would be suffi-:
cient, since it would require 2801
to override under those conditions. I
The present House membership is j
431, but seldom do more than 400 i
members show up to vote.
When the bill was passed last i
year, the vote was 253-142, eleven j
short of two-thirds Voting against !
it were 114 Republicans and 28 1
Democrats. For it were 226 Demo- '
crats and 27 Republicans.
ported this today said that per-
haps the turning point has been
reached in the battle to keep
Americans from spending more
for foreign products and services
Cub Scout Pack
Holds Banquet
Cup Pack 361 of Sam Houston
School celebrated the 50th anniver- ,
sary of Scouting this week with the I
annual Blue and Gold Banquet in
the school cafeteria.
Approximately 180 Cub Scouts, i
their parents and guests, attended.
All preparations, including fried
chicken dinner, were made by the I
cubs and their parents.
‘Fessor Floyd Graham, NTSC fa-
culty member, was master of cere-
monies. Entertainment was provid-
ed by Ronnie Rawls of Ft. Worth
with a juggling act, Linda Woods j
of NTSC who played the marimba
and an Indian dance group com-
posed of Pat Gardner, Bob Me-
Math and Wallis McMath. The lat-
ter group, members of the Order
of the Arrow Lodge of the Boy
Scouts, wore Indian costumes
which they had made
Following the entertainment, Dr.
David F. Speck, cubmaster, as-
sisted by Ellis Baker, presented
the Cub Scouts with awards earn-
ed in their progress through the
ranks of Cub Scouting. Den moth-
ers were awarded pins denoting
service to the Cub Scout program.
Een-e" “
Just a modest cut-out, just enough to add intrigue to
a beguilingly slender patent leather shoe that forms to
your foot ever so gently. For accent, a soft pleated
overlay.
--------------------------
Alexander Graham Bell, inventor
of the telephone in 1876, lived to be
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Kirkland, Tom. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 176, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 25, 1960, newspaper, February 25, 1960; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1468269/m1/3/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.