Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 178, Ed. 1 Sunday, February 28, 1960 Page: 1 of 64
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Denton Record - Chronicle
WEATHER
SHOWERS
A Newspaper Designe d With You In Mind
DENTON, TEXAS, SUNDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 28, IMO
84 Pages In 4 Sections
PRICE TEN CENTS
Russell Claims Rights
Backers Want Rioting
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WEDDING THIS SPRING?
u
1883
Mother Of 2 Tricks
Infant Starves
Gunman Into Arrest
of her infant sister. She told them
Russian Pact
One Dies In
See INFANT, Page 2
REMEMBER WHEN
WEATHER
NAME THE
ENTICING OF MASHERS OUT
MISSILE BASE
Police In Skirts
Suggested name for missile base:
Bemoan Old Rule
Reason:
unwittingly
civic crackdown
IKE IS AT ARGENTINE
RESORT FOR TOUR REST
Site should be dedicated to (can be same as name):
Reason:
INSIDE TODAY’S PAPER
of your welcome I am most grate-
Phone No.
Your Name
(please print)
City
Address
Page Sec.
Farm News
Persons, Places, Things 5
his Columbine 111 with Argen-
Women’s News
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Happy Meg,
Fiance Pose
Big New Store
May Locate In
Denton Center
Reported Due
BOGOR, Indonesia (AP) — So-
viet Premier Nikita Khrushchev
agreed to extend long term cred-
its, up to 250 million dollars, to
Manfred Lorenz, 30, father of
two, was shot and killed in un-
Lest 24 Heun
This Month
Feb. Average
This Year
tut Year
Migh Friday
Migh Saturday
low Saturday
Migh year • *•
low year age
A group of Pilot Point citi-
tens with a capital of $1,500
drilled a 1,491-foot-deep wild-
cat oil well four miles to the
northwest and struck a 300-
barrel a day well? They sold
it later for $30,000.
Sports......
Town Topics
TV Log
out of his gun, and tricked him
into his arrest.
tina's President Arturo Frondizi
after another tumultuous reception
from Argentines on the Atlantic
at Mar del Plata. The two Pres-
idents will have a chance to meet
privately here for Camp David
type conferences such as Eisen-
hower conducted with Soviet Pre-
mier Nikita Khrushchev last Sep-
tember.
About 10,000 persons welcomed
Eisenhower at the Bariloche Air-
port. on a sandy plateau 15 miles
out of town. Their reception was
enthusiastic, through numerically
a miniature of the greetings hun-
dreds of thousands had given him
in Rio de Janeiro, Sao Paulo.
Buenos Aires and Mar del Plata.
Eisenhower told them he ex-
pects to hold private talks here
with Frondizi. These may be held
Sunday.
There was a troop review, Gov.
Edgardo Castello of Rio Negro
Province delivered a brief wel-
coming speech, and Mayor Osiris
bility Saturday night because of
fog.
The Weather Bureau issued a
storm warning for the Texas Pan-
handle, eastern New Mexico and
western Oklahoma. Observers said
a low pressure center over east-
ern New Mexico would reach Am-
arillo by dawn Sunday, bringing
snow, sleet and rain.
Forecasts promised at least oc-
casional rain during the night or
Sunday everywhere else in the
state. The Weather Bureau said
a collision of the cold front with
warmer air was hikely to trigger
thunderstorms Sunday.
weather and teeming crowds that
have attended his South American
tour He flew to this picture post-
card resort in the Andes for a
weekend rest and said he was glad
to be here.
For the opportunity of rest and
Page
10
Son today it 6:9* p.m., rises Monday at
6:58 (.m
Amusements ...
Classified .......
Cook Book .....
Comics .........
Editorials ..t..
Family Weekly
in the same pursuit. He is in Sara-
toga Genera) hospital reported in
serious condition.
The trio's escape car couldn't
get out of heavy snow at a curb,
police said, and the three fled on
foot.
Mrs. Braden and her husband,
Schmitz-Floyd-Hamlett Ambulance
Phones DU2-2214 and DU2-4147.
(Adv )
The temperature was warm-
er but the air was wetter in
Denton Saturday.
The thermometer climbed to
a high Saturday of 43 while .06
inches of rain fell at the Den-
ton Experiment Station. Sat-
urday morning's low was 32
degrees and Friday’s high was
39 degrees.
The U.S. Weather Bureau
predicts more of the same for
the Denton area today with
cloudy skies and slowly rising
temperatures.
3•
43
32
67
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DENTON AND VICINITY: Mostly eloudy with
occasional rein. Possible snow HI north-
west Central Texas tonight.
NORTHWEST TEXAS: Cloudy and some fight
snow in upper Panhandle.
EAST TEXAS: Cloudy wtih slowly rising tem-
peratures today end Monday.
(TEMPERATURES
(Experiment Statien I spore
Police Seeking AFTEK holdup, killing
Parents Of 7;
06
1.16
1 06
4.92
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armed pursuit of the holdup man
and two alleged accomplices, both
OKLAHOMA CITY (API-Offi-
cers continued efforts Saturday to
locate the parents of seven chil-
dren, one of whom they said died '
of starvation.
Two policemen found a 13-year-
Gauge
.10
1,50
1 06
6.07
1,47
2
2
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weather. Four other children were
home.
Detective E. B. Meals said the
13 year-old told him she had saved
some food for the infant "but she
didn't wake up” The officer said
he was told that the older girl
had fed her brothers and sisters
pie crust for two days
Meals said the girl told him she
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
A soupy mixture of weather hit
Texas Saturday as snow grains fell
in the Texas Panhandle, there was
gleet or freezing drizzle in parts
of the South Plains and upper Red
River Valley, and dense fog cov-
ered downstate sections.
The weather mixture, accompa-
nied by comparatively mild tem-
peratures in many areas occurred
as the week's second storm brush-
ed northernmost areas of Texas.
Abilene and San Antonio were
among points reporting zero visi-
daily average
net paid circulation
IDS TMREE.MONTW SHIM
ENDINS DEC 61, 1*1*
10,207
sunner Will un
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-Aueciated Press
groes refused to leave the stores. They are shown
above searching one of the Negroes before placing
him in the police wagon.
SIT-INS BRING ARRESTS — Policemen broke up
“sit-ins” in downtown Nashville, Tenn., variety stores
Saturday by making more than 75 arrests when Ne-
...... «. »
SEVERAL OUTSTANDING speakers are scheduled for the final
convention of District 2, Texas Federation of Women's Clubs in
Denton. Program outline, Page 3. Section 2.
FOOD APPEALING to the men is featured in a Leap Year Cook-
book, Section 3. Denton's male cooks reveal their secrets
DOCTORS MAY near a groat breakthrough in possibly con-
trolling heart disease. Read about it in a revealing story on
heart disease on Page 5, Sec l.
ANOTHER WILDCAT oil well has been started in southern Den-
ton County as oil interest is spurred by successes in the east
part of the county. Page 7, Sec. 2.
8, 9
10, 11
... 1-20
.... 11
.... 4
... 120
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2-5
also captured. I Indonesia on condition it keeps
Another bar patron, John E.. out of any Western alliance, high
Grey. 27. was shot in the abdomen! level sources said Saturday.
- d
Drizzly, Cold W eather RaceFights
Hits All Texas Sections Over South
RAINFALL
(I* Inehes)
la* W* Gauge
Clip and mail to Denton Chamber of Commerce, Box 560
$350 IN PRIZES OFFERED—The winner of the mis-
sile base naming contest will receive a 20-volume set
of the American Peoples Encyclopedia, and the five
runners-up will be awarded a dictionary-encyclopedia
given by the Family Weekly, the Sunday magazine of
the Denton Record-Chronicle. Deadline for entries is
March 15. Any number of entries can be made. The
base can be named after a geographic region or after
a local Army veteran.
Sec.
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trapment. So said the lawyer.
The police were frankly caught
with their disguises down. A cha-
grined lieutenant, Harold Mclicby.
said in Camden County Court that
he knew of no such law when he
had the brain wave of costuming
policemen as women to catch
mashers.
What next? Signs points to
a huddle with the city's legal de
part inent and probably a hard re
assessment of the old ordinance.
east struggled to shake off a
thickening blanket of white.
The storm which earlier in the :
week gave the Ohio Valley its
worst lashing of the winter before
moving into New England lin-
gered in upstate New York. It
buried communities along Lake
Ontario in up to 15 inches of snow.
ful," Eisenhower told officials and
citizenry of Bariloche, a Swiss
model settlement in a lake stud-
ded mountain setting.
Full facilities for fishing. golf-
ing. sightseeing, talking and just
loafing were available at this half-
way point on Eisenhower’s four-
nation goodwill trip.
The temperature was a balmy
66
Eisenhower flew to Bariloche in
to the Princess, Dr. Geoffrey
Fisher, the archbishop of Canter-
bury, will officiate.
Many other matters of great
moment, when a bride is a prin-
cess, will have to be considered.
No problem of succession arises.
Margaret remains a princess,
now fourth in line for the throne.
But there was a question aa to
what she is to be called.
In some quarters it was thought
that the Queen might confer a title
on A rmstrong-Jones shortly before
the marriage, just as Lt. Philip
Mountbatten was made the Duke
of Edinburgh before the Queens
own wedding.
The couple planned a quiet Sun-
day after attending church serv-
ices this morning, he princess
worships regularly and her fiance
also is a communicant of the
Church of England.
Khrushchev and President Su-
karno will sign the credit agree-
ment. a cultural agreement and
a joint statement in Sukarno's
white-columned summer palace
Sunday.
The Soviets have shown con-
cern about Sukarno's increasingly
friendly relations with the United
States, a highly placed Indonesian
source said, noting "they seem to
have a very real fear we might
commit ourselves in some way to
the Western bloc.”
Sukarno has reiterated Indone-
sia's neutralist position repeated-
ly since Khrushchev arrived 10
days ago. Indonesians say there
is little chance he would abandon
it.
One informant said neither the
economic agreement nor the joint
statement will include any stipu-
lation that Indonesia maintain its
neutralism and stay out of SEATO
or any anti-Communist group
Soviet credits will apply to de
veloping steel mills, agricultural
projects and nonferrous metals,
chemical and textile industries.
An Indonesian source said the pos-
sibility of future Soviet military
aid was discussed unofficially but
nothing concrete was requested or
proposed.
Foreign Minister Subandrio told
newsmen the only official condi-
tion attached to the loan was: "It
has to be paid back.”
had bathed the dead infant. I
she was looking for a funeral
home. she calmed a fidgety self-pro-
An 8-year-old sister was with claimed holdup man, talked him
the older girl in the freezing
DETROIT (API— Mary Braden, | Eugene, 37, a Chrysler Corp. fac-
welder's wife and mother of two tory worker, were having coffee
children, was "never so nervous before retiring after he had come
old girl Friday carrying the body in my life.” । home from his late-shift job.
During six frightening hours as There was a sudden knock on
a prisoner in her home Saturday -------------------------——
County Wreck
A man tentatively identified as
R. I. Broyles of Idabel. Okla.,
was killed in an auto wreck on
State Highway 114 west of Roan-
oke Saturday night.
Two persons were hurt in the
crash two miles west of the North-
west school. Broyles, one of the
two, died enroute to Dallas’ St.
Paul’s Hospital.
The other person was not im-
mediately identified nor were any
details of the accident available
shortly before midnght Saturday.
The accident was reported about
8:30 p.m. Saturday.
By early evening there already
were 2 to 6 inches of new snow
across a broad band of northern
Oklahoma and southern Kansas
into southwestern Missouri.
In the Midwest, a new winter
storm flung heavy snow, sleet and
cold temperatures across the
Plains Saturday while the North-
to be bothered by men on the ■ ■ -
make, well, that amounts to en- relaxatien and for Ine warmth
The Money that slips through your
fingers will pay the loan that pays
your hills. Complete personal loan
service. Industrial Credit Com-
pany, over Russclls (Adv.)
months ago, was especially effec-
tive thanks to a masquerade. Cops
dolled up in women's clothes and
went strolling. To a man, they
were accosted, often nudely in-
deed. Then came the big surprise
when the accoster found out his
intended prey was no lady.
The deception was balked Fri-
day by the exhumation of a 54-
year-old city law which forbids
anyone to dress up and appear in
public as one of the opposite sex.
Why such a law?
“Search me,” replied a police
officer, thwarted and disconsolate.
Whatever its inspiration, the
musty old ordinance was success-
fully invoked by a defense lawyer,
who argued that any policeman
garbed as a woman is an agent
provocateur. And if the imperson-
ator makes himself so alluring as
She said he boasted that shortly
beforehand he had held up the
crowded Conn-Warr Tavern near-
by on Detroit’s East Side and left
one dead and one injured pursuer.
have been making passes at cops
dressed as lasses. The offenders'
mistakes have landed them in jail
for stiff terms.
Now it seems that what the po-
lice have been doing is illegal.
And they faced a ban on it with
dismay Saturday.
Until Friday they were going
great guns in a drive to rid the
city of mashers and all others giv-
en to pestering hnescorted wom-
en on the streets.
The Police Department's cam-
paign, conceived a couple of
»7TH year of daily service— NO. 17S
BARILOCHE, Argentina (AP—
President Eisenhower took a
break Saturday from the hot
Saddo handed Eisenhower the
keys to Bariloche.
Then Eisenhower flew 30 miles
in a U.S. Marine helicopter over
lake waters and three-covered
mountain slopes to the Lla-Llao
Hotel.
Somebody who evidently stiM
likes ex-dictator Juan D. Peron
painted big signs reading “Viva
Peron'’ early Saturday morning
on the paved road between Bari-
loche and the airport. Local au-
thorities quickly obliterated them
Streets of Bariloche and nearby
roads were decorated with bunt-
ing and newly bought American
flags, some so new they showed
50 stars.
Hundreds of thousands of Ar-
fentine vacationers, many in
bathing suits, turned out to cheer
Eisenhower on his visit Saturday
morning to Mar del Plata.
Eisenhower paid a 2%-hour vh-
it to Mar del Plata. 230 miles
southeast of Buenos Aires.
Denton is apparently going to
have a big new department store.
From all indications, a branch
of the R. E. Cox Co.—one of Fort
Worth's leading department stores
—is going to be built in the new
Denton Center on Highway 24.
R. E. Cox, president of the chain
of department stores, could not
be reached at his Fort Worth of-
fice for comment.
James Storrie, Denton building
and plumbing inspector, said he
has seen a plat of the shopping
center that shows a building re-
served for the department store.
Storrie said the plat was filed
in his office for approv-
al. but no permits have been is-
sued. The store would be in 30,000
feet of the west part of the build-
ing.
The building that would house
the store is to be located west of
the building now under construc-
tion at the shopping center.
Ako on the plat were two un-
named service stations and an un-
named jewelry store, Storrie said.
No construction date was listed
on the plat.
WASHINGTON (AP) —
Sen. Richard B. Russell (D-
Ga) said Saturday efforts are
being made to spark race
riots in the South in hopes
of winning support for pass-
age of civil rights legislation.
He also called one part of the
administration’s civil rights meas-
ure “a salute-to-Nixon section—an
effort to promote the vice presi-
dent of the United States.”
Russell ripped into the legisla-
tion after Sen. Jacob K. Javits
(R-NY! held the floor for more
than three hours in the first full-
dress move by civil rights advo-
cates to present their case since
the debate started two weeks ago.
The Saturday session brought
forth the liveliest debate yet.
Russell, quarterback for Dixie
senators opposed to the legisla-
tion, said direction for recent Ne-
gro demonstrations at hunch coun-
ters and other traditionally seg-
regated public services in the
South came from New York City.
Russell shouted that a group
known as the Congress of Racial
Equality advocated mass efforts
by young Negroes to get into seg-
regated places.
“They fostered, planned and in-
cited these incidents that could
lead to a great tragedy in some
cities,", Russell told the Senate.
"It demonstrates to me that
they were anxious to start a race
riot of terrible proportions.
"This is no time to be going
down there and trying to promote
a race riot. Gentlemen, you are
playing with powder and I hope
the match won’t catch fire to set
off a disaster."
The Senate recessed at 5 46 p.m.
until noon Monday, when round-
the-clock sessions are scheduled to
begin.
In race violence over the South
Saturday a young Negro woman
was hit with a miniature baseball
bat and more than 100 persons ar-
rested in places where Negroes are
pressing their campaign for equal
service at lunch counters.
In Washington, Sen. Richard B.
Russell (D-Ga) charged efforts
are being made to spark Southern
race riots in hopes of winning sup-
port for passage of pending civil
rights legislation.
Student demonstrations and
picketing occurred in several
Southern cities and at Madison,
Wis.
Montgomery, Ah., was the
See CIVIL RIGHTS, Page 2
hand, burst into Mrs.' Braden": With Sukarno
home shortly before 2 a.m.
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2
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VICTORY will be ours when yea
brine er mail in your pledge card
Sunday. First Baptist Church •(
Denton, (adv.)
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By ALVIN STEINKOPF
LONDON (AP)—Amid specula-
tion in royal circles of a wedding
this spring, Princess Margaret
posed for engagement pictures
Saturday with her society photog-
rapher sweetheart.
The Princess and gay, easy
going Antony Armstrong - Jones
giggled as photographers demand-
ed pose after pose at the Royal
Lodge at nearby Windsor.
Margaret was careful to hold
her hands so that her new en-
gagement ring showed to good ad-
vantage. It is a large ruby, set
in gold and surrounded by dia-
monds arrained in the shape of a
flower.
QUEEN MOTHER
Supervising things happily, and
getting into some of the pictures
herself, was Queen Mother Eliza-
beth, whose announcement of the
engagement Friday night startled
and delighted Britain.
The secret had been well kept.
Almost no one suspected that the
young man who had won recogni-
tion as one of Britain's best soci-
ety photgraphers also had won
Margaret's heart.
Margaret and Armstrong-Jones
are staying with the Queen Moth-
er over the weekend at the Royal
Lodge, a cozy house of stone and
stucco about 30 miles west of Lon-
don where the royal family can
hide away.
The only intrusion, by appoint-
ment, was by the photographers.
For the encounter, which the
Princess managed with practiced
ease, she wore a belted, two-
piece frock of blue.
LOUNGE SUIT
Armstrong-Jones wore a dark
gray, delicately striped lounge
suit. The Queen Mother was in
powder blue.
First there were pictures inside.
Then the Princess and Arm-
strong-Jones were photographed
many times strolling arm-in-arm
and holding hands. They walked
up the garden path, stood, beside
the shrubbery and frolicked with
frisky dogs. Then they retired to
the seclusion of the Royal Lodge.
The Queen Mother gave no hint
of a wedding date in announcing
the engagement.
If royal tradition is observed,
the ceremony will take place in
Westminister Abbey. It is almost
certain that a churchman who is
an old friend and spiritual advisier
Mobile Unit Report* News And
Where It Is KDNT, 1440. (Adv )
the door and Smith, gun in hand,
entered.
The Bradens engaged Smith in
casual conversation as he lolled
on a couch, his gun in his belt.
They got his confidence. Mrs.
Braden prepared him bacon and
eggs. He began to doze.
At last she told him “I don’t
like that gun around. I’ve got two
boys sleeping in that room over
there.”
He handed over the gun to her.
She pretended to put it in a
dresser but tucked it under her
girdle.
Finally. Mrs. Braden played her
trump. She told Smith she had
to go to the store to get milk for
the boys' breakfast. It was then
about 7 a m.
Smith agreed.
Mrs. Braden hurried a block
and a half to an outside telephone
booth, called police. Twelve scout
cars surrounded the home. Police
rushed in and Smith gave up
meekly.
Shortly after the tavern holdup
and shootings, police flushed John
E. Bauman, 19. and Arthur L.
Burgess, 20, from beneath a
house porch where they had been
hiding. With Smith, they were held
for investigation of armed rob-
hery and murder.
CAMDEN, N.J. (AP) — For
some time mashers — targels of a
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Kirkland, Tom. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 178, Ed. 1 Sunday, February 28, 1960, newspaper, February 28, 1960; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1468279/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.