Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 74, Ed. 1 Friday, October 28, 1960 Page: 3 of 15
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Friday, October 28, 1960
THE DENTON RECORD-CH RON I CL E
PAGE THREE
its GRIM, MAN
OIL MAKE
9
POTENT TEXAS BLEND
Even Rule Out Jokes
The Dentor Record-Chronicle Presents
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Patrolman
Reinstated
History Markers
Urged In Denton
Woman Turns
Tables On Sam
Tree Itery
Detectives alary
Coptein Gallant
Saturday Prom
Felix, the Cat
Life of Riley
My little Margie
Mopalong cassidy
Marrigan R tea
Flintstenes
Californians
Reuw 8
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Ames 8 Andy
AUSTIN (AP)—The Department
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EDUCATIONAL TELEVISION
Amos and Andy
Sheriff ef Cochin.
rgyle Carnival Set
Saturday At School
The Argyle P-TA is sponsoring a
Halloween Carnival Saturday night
at the Cafetorium on the Argyle
School grounds.
Dalles After Burk
Merle - Musical
Mevie: 'In Early
Arizona:" (19 M)
VISITOR FROM MEMPHIS
SANGER (Special) -Mrs. Glenn
Miller of Memphis, Tenn., is vis-
iting her sister, Mrs. Nora Ward.
Mevie: ‘Joan ef
Paris:" (1*45)
Paul HenrIeS
Mevie: "High Ber-
baree:” (1947)
Adventure
Theater
This Mm Dawun
Movie: "Cond
Newt:' (1947)
June Allyon
Mevie: ‘Dragon
Seedi* (1*44)
Kathrine Mepburn
Hodges said “The cries of so-
"cialism are just propaganda for
the other side. As a businessman
of 30 years I think we have got
to have a growing economy and
we have to take care of the peo-
ple as a whole.”
Sen. Ralph Yarborough, D-Tex..
and Texas GOP Chairman Thad
Hutcheson met in a TV debate
at Houston where they discussed
Movie: ‘Young Tom
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Mickey Rooney
Fury
Lone Ranger
WFAA-TV
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Westerner
Basketball
Movie: Falcon’s
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Turn Conway
Bowling Stars
Football Kickoff
Football: Missis-
sippi w. tw
Carteons
lifht Time
Cartoons
WFAA-TV
ABC
Channe 8
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blackwan
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630 Aetion At law (Net).
7:00 Driver Educatien.
7130 Before There Was A U.S.A. (Net).
of the eight highway patrolmen it
fired last April.
A DPS spokesman said Thurs-
day Weldon Parson, 35, Paris, was
reinstated Oct. 13 and assigned to
the Houston area. Parson is now
on a six-months probationary tour
of duty that all new patrolmen
must pass.
Parson and seven other patrol-
the differences in their parties.
Sen. Lyndon Johnson, Democrat-
ic candidate for vice president,
announced a helicopter tour of
Texas for the final week of the
campaign. It includes Amarillo.
Wichita Falls and Fort Worth Nov.
3; Arlington, Grand Prairie, Dal-
las, Nov. 4; Beaumont, Port Ar-
thur, Houston, Baytown, Nov. 5;
the Lower Rio Grande Valley Nov.
6, and San Antonio Nov. 7.
Football Seores
TV Readers Digest
Channel 8
Pro Basketball:
Knicki vs. Pistens
Supper will start serving at 6:30
to be followed by crowning of the
King and Queen. Booths will open
following the crowning.
Late News: Channet i. Midnigh.
Channe! S: Mr District Atterney. 11:08.
Late Movie: Suspense. Midnight.
Channel B: Almanac Newureel. 11:80.
Bm Reasen,
Leave It T» Beaver
Movie: Devble
Featun
x’y
-X
8:00 Great Plains Triloyy (Nen),
8:30 Conge Crisis (Nut).
9:00 Sign-o#,
WBAP-TV
NBC
Channel 8
Today M the Farm
mhreugh the Pert-
belt
Moppalong Cassidy
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Movie: Western
Route M
Martin Milner,
George Maharis
Mr. Garlana
Channel 4
Firm S Garden
Dallas Spotlight
News
Mevie: ‘Red Stal-
lion:’ (1*47) Jane
Darwell
Wave in. Will
Travel
Gumsmoke
The president’s speech caa
be seen and heard in the Den-
ton area over Channel 1 at 9
p.m.
NO MONEY DOWN
WITHAVOUR OLD TIRES
As Low As $500 Monthly For 4
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Weather, Spert
Cartoons
Campaiqn and the
Candidates
Channel 8
Bowling
tyewitness t Mis-
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KRLD-T
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Channel 4
Benanze:
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Bexing: NTC
Thompsen vs. Or-
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Police Report
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VISITING PARENTS
FRISCO (Special) - SP4 Har-
old Duncan of Ft. Ord, Calif., is
in Frisco visiting his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. W. H. Duncan.
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MEMPHIS, Tenn (AP) — When
Unde Sam slapped a suit again**
her, an angry Gloria Mosby sued
right back and emerged the win-
ner by $2,290.
Miss Mosby visited a friend
being treated at a veterans’ hos-
pital last February. They got into
an argument and he shot her, for
which he subsequently was sent
to jail for 15 years.
The three bullet wounds put her
in the same hospital for 10 days
and the government handed her
a $210 medical bill.
When ‘iss Mosby wouldn’t pay,
the government sued. She sued
back—for $10,000, charging the
government was negligent in let-
ting her auailant sneak a gun
into the hospital.
A federal judge Thursday grant-
ed her $2,500 damages, minus the
$210 hospital bill.
1
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Beth Bartee, Mrs. Ruby Baker
and Mrs. Faye Orr will be den
No reason to run the risk of dangerously smooth
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No Wonder People in
DENTON COUNTY
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bm' on WFAA-820
• With John Allen spimning good morning musict
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A great many girdles have a
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who have put on excess weight,
why not do something about it?
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If the very first bottle of Bar-
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Daisy Juarez, 2917 Bowser
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men were dismissed from the
force April 21 while Parson was
serving in the Denton area. Par-
son was the only one of the eight
who applied for reinstatement, the
spokesman said.
Col. Homer Garrison, the DPS
chief, said Parson’s reinstatement
did not mean he was exonerated
of the misconduct charges that
brought about his dismissal from
the patrol.
ar Televisies Preyram Subjeet
(e indicates mi— telecan
892
§895
By IRWIN FRANK
Associated Press Staff Writer
Oil and politics mixed in Texas
Thursday as politicians continued
their quest for votes in the Nov. 8
general election.
Speaking at Tyler, U.S. Sen.
Vance Hartke, D-Ind., told a din-
ner meeting that Democrats are
the oil industry's best friends.
But former Gov. Allan Shivers
said at a dinner meeting in Waco
that Democratic presidential can-
didate Sen. John Kennedy “votes
against the interests of Texas on
the oil and gas depletion allow-
ance." Shivers is boosting the Re-
publican ticket of Vice President
Richard Nixon and Henry Cabot
Lodge.
VOTING RECORD
Hartke reviewed his voting rec-
ord in support of oil measures and
Change Witheut Preview netle•
$045 *
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at your In'll
said “My voice has not been a
voice in the wilderness. Most
members of Congress, in particu-
lar Democrats, feel as I do.”
Shivers was to be in San An-
tonio Friday and Hartke goes to
Fort Worth, Abilene and San An-
gelo.
Shivers and Gov. Luther Hodges
of North Carolina, a Democrat,
disagreed in Dallas over the rela-
tive merits of Nixon and Kennedy.
The former Texas governor, who
heads Texas Democrats for Nixon-
Lodge, told women at Love Field
they should vote Republican to up-
hold fiscal responsibility.
Hodge said his “old friend has
fallen victim to Republican propa-
ganda."
ELECTION TODAY
If the election were held today,
Shivers said, Nixon would carry
Texas with about 53 per cent of
the vote.
trying to prepare for it, permeates
the Nixon camp.
An air of improvisation, as if
someone forgot the script but it
doesn't matter -much anyway,
seems, at least at times, to con
trol Kennedy and his employes.
But these differences can be
stressed too much.
Anyone who travels with both
candidates is more impressed at
how frequently the techniques
jibe than at how much they differ.
Both firmly believe in the
hustle-bustle theory of politics.
This holds that elections are won
by keeping the candidate as near
to perpetual motion as is humanly
News
Weather, News
Movie: ‘Another
Fart of the For-
reste (1*48)
Fredrie March
______________ . Ike To Make POLITICS
Serious Campaigners ‘Clear Air’
I • Talk Tonight
same token," he said, “commit-
tees should make special efforts
to concentrate their efforts on pre-
serving the heritage of Texas.
Hill recalled the time prior to
the Texas Centennial in 1936 when
Texans spent a great deal of mon-
ey and time in erecting markers
throughout the state. Since that
time, he said, interest has lagged
because of the cost and lack of
personnel to spearhead programs
and this resulted in the loss of
many markers. The transition
from a rural society to an urban
culture is responsible, too, he said,
as industry rode roughshod over
established markers.
Hill said that the Austin asso-
ciation is concentrating its efforts
on a two-year program to empha-
size the importance of city and
county historical markers and mu-
seums. The historical value de-
rives not so much from how old a
place is as the event that took
place there or the personality who
made the history, he said.
Funds for county and city mark-
ers would have to come from lo-
cal sources, he said, although the
Texas State Highway Department
would make partial payment on
tourist markers.
The Texas State Historical Sur-
vey Committee was established by
the 55th State Legislature as a
permanent state agency. County
committees have been formed to
implement the state program and
provide coordination and leader-
ship in historical heritage matters
in each county. Denton's commit-
tee of 20 members were organiz-
i ed last year. Mrs. W. B. Cham-
bers is chairman of the Denton
group.
Denton has a new Cub Scout
Pack.
Pack 69 has been organized at
Woodrow Wilson School. Attend-
ing the organizational meeting
were 20 boys and about 35 par-
ents.
The meeting was conducted by
Joe Funk of the Chisholm Trail
District organization and exten-
sion committee and Johnny At-
kins, district scout executive.
Jack Browder will be the cub-
master of the new pack and Mrs.
By ARTHUR EDSON
WASHINGTON CAP) — An hour
before Sen. John F. Kennedy war
to arrive in Chicago recently, re-
porters were handed a minute-by-
minute schedule of his four-hour
stay there.
Across the top of this detailed,
two-page timetable were these
words: "We are behind schedule
—all movements must be ex-
pedited."
This illustrates as well as any-
thing a major difference in the
way Kennedy and Vice President
Richard M. Nixon run their cam-
paigns.
Nixon tries to be meticulously
on time and usually is.
Kennedy tries to be approx-
imately on time, but he nearly
always is off to a late start, and
so he’s rarely on schedule—so
rarely he can be written off as
running late even before he hits
town.
This attitude affects their cam-
paigns.
An air of careful premeditation,
of anticipating each crisis and
Channet ii
Jim Bowis
Mews, Weather,
Sports
Vagabond
Kingdom •< the Bm
e
Dentonite Makes
Air Defense Tour
Marvin Ramey, Denton insurance
agent, is scheduled to return to-
day from a tour of Army Air De-
fense installations.
Ramey and other businessmen
from Dallas and Fort Worth made
the tour as guests of the U. S.
Army Air Defense Command. The
group visited installations at Ft.
Bliss, the White Sands Missile
Range in New Mexico and the
headquarters of the Army Air Com-
mand at Colorado Springs, Colo.
by so many.
Other newspaper men are rid-
ing the second plane, and pho-
tographers, left-over staff person-
nel and baggage are toted in the
third one.
New Denton
I
Cub Scout
Speits Sports
Mevie: ‘Lone WeW" Mevier ‘Prmenine:"
News
Weather, Mows
Jack Paar Shew
V
mothers.
J. Leon Osborne, Lindon H Wil-
son and George Madore will be
committeemen for the new pack.
Members of Den l, headed by
Mrs. Bartee, are Dan Bartee
Jack Browder Jr., Gary Lee Holt,
Dennis Knepper, James Osborne,
Richard Stewart Jr. and Lindon
Wilson Jr.
Members of Den 2, headed by
Mrs. Baker, are Fred Baker,
Richard Cole, Robert Harvey,
Marc Madore, Mike Pierce and
David Wardlaw.
Members of Den 3, headed by
Mrs. Orr are Sammy Allen,
Keith Appleton. Bobby Carpen-
ter, Mike Clayton, John Farmer,
Timmy Jones, Randall Minnis
and Robin Orr.
I _
Museums, markers and other
symbols of Texans’ heritage are
cold things until the history sur-
rounding them is nurtured, George
W. Hill, director of the Texas
State Historical Survey Commit-
tee in Austin, told members of
the Denton County Historical Sur-
vey Committee Thursday after-
noon.
Establishing granite markers as
indicators of important events in
Texas history is necessary. Hill
claimed, to give Texans roots.
“If we do not give ourselves
roots, then we will tend to be
blown about like Texas tumble-
weeds," Hill stated. “If we don't
make a special effort to preserve
our heritage, then we will lose
it.”
Because of this, counties should
organize special committees to
point out their particular points of
historical interest, he said.
“We have special groups who
have established special pro-
grams for other things. By the
possible.
Each has tried to flush out
votes by train and by motorcade
but the favorite transportation
has been the three-airplane cara-
van.
The candidate rides in one
plane, with the rear end parti-
tioned off so that he can have
privacy. With him are his top ad-
visers plus three newsmen, one
from each of the two press asso-
ciations and one a pool man
representing the others.
Don’t think the newsmen get on
the inside track by being physical-
ly closer to the great man. Nixon
and Kennedy have about as much
time for chit-chat as a surgeon
would have as he nears the end
of the delicate operation.
It would be hard to prove, but
considering the unflagging indus-
try of both men and the way the
airplane enables them to reach
several major cities in a day, it’s
probable that no other two can-
didates have been seen and heard
Gh. > < - • ♦
visit the Virginia birthplaces of
his mother and of President Wood-
row Wilson.
At Staunton, Wilson's birthplace
city, Eisenhower said:
“We dare not fail” on a second
chance to win Wilson’s great goal
of "the reign of law based upon
consent of the governed, and sus-
tained by the organized opinion
of mankind."
A crowd of more than 5,000
heard Eisenhower speak from the
porch of Mary Baldwin College.
His speech was billed as strictly
nonpolitical.
"Societies must choose between
the conflicting teachings of politic-
al expediency on the one hand and
the pursuit of noble long term
goals on the other” Eisenhower
said, "This is the kind of decision
that free peoples are often called
upon to make—and we can only
pray that Wilson’s counsel will
always be their guide.”
He said Wilson "was not a man
who believed in bruising the ears
of his fellow men with shrill cries
of alarm.”
egoyugn
WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi-
dent Eisenhower jumps Into the
home stretch politicking tonight
with a Philadelphia speech in
which he says he will “try to
clear the air” in the presidential
campaign.
He addresses a dinner sponsored
by the Nixon-tor-President Com-
mittee of Pennsylvania.
The President's trip to Philadel-
phia comes on the heels of his
sentimental journey Thursday to
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Kirkland, Tom. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 74, Ed. 1 Friday, October 28, 1960, newspaper, October 28, 1960; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1468407/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.