Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 59, No. 45, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 1, 1961 Page: 2 of 48
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THE DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLE
PAGE TWO
Stor
Cash
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eess 8
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surance settlements totaling only gating Committee.
*32.000.
The committee met to hear re-
-
•
KISSES BACKFIRE
Okay Given
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8
mne
omgn
cases.
Reps. Criss Cole and Don Garri-
No Word On
TOWN TOPICS
- Ford Pact
Union Halts
DENTON AREA DEATHS
cation of documents linking Cuban Peru, the United States, Salvador, with the Ivel Construction Co. of
sence, Reuther smilingly told
government of Argentina was pulled all embassy personnel out
re-
HOSPITAL NOTES
seen
11th hemisphere nation into a Uruguay and Venezuela,
have
Elm Street Hospital & Clinic
will be in Belew Cemtery,
Saturday in a maritime strike
Chamber of Com-in the Aubrey Christian Church
A resident of Denton for the
terms which they
contract-No work," said signs car-
day following a heart attack. Prior: ried by members of the union.
to moving to Denton she had liv-
private firms here for the lowest
V)
17 ships—nine in San Francis- Memorial Hospital.
up
four at Portland, two at Se-
co.
and those of East and Gulf
MRS. WILL A. BOUNDS
uLe‘
THE
1
TODAY'S CITIZEN
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382-9621
117 South Elm
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H
4.,
Exuberance Puts On Exhibit
Smuggler In Fix Of Russia
Army’s Pay
Chief Says,
‘We Goofed’
UT Regents
Fail To Act
On Petition
Powell, Billy Powell.
Powell and Joe Belew.
past five years, Mrs. Lasater died
at her home at 3:20 a m. Satur-
Two Denton High School Eng-' Walter P. Reuther, UAW pres-
lish teachers. Mrs. Lois Hineman ident, has set a strike deadline
A boy was born Friday morning where he will embark for Eng- close they were to a new contract
to Mr. and Mrs. Curtis (Dub) Land land for a two-year tour of duty, settlement.
Solon Says
HOUSTON (AP)-A state legis- tained by the 1,500 persons includ-
ed in the Galveston area survey.
Stewart placed a report on the
survey before an informal meet-
ing of the House General Investi-
lator said Saturday about 1,300
Galveston County residents whose
property was damaged by Hurri-
cane Carla have been offered in-
DEAD-EYE MONKEY MAKES
IT ROUGH ON POOR HUMANS
ment's request, but the deadlock
of remained.
SAN ANTONIO (AP) + Govern-
ment employes should be required
to learn the language, customs
and culture of the nations where
they art assigned. Rep. Jim
Wright, D-Tex., said Friday night
U.S. difficulties overseas stem
! The Denton Rebekah Lodge No.
18 will have an initiation Monday
night at 7:30.
Vern Adams, store manager of
Harpool Seed House, left today
for Chicago where he will attend
Wright spoke at a college for-
eign affairs forum.
His address followed a tour of
As pharmacists, we are proud to stand
alongside your physician
on the community health team — to serve him
and serve you in the fullest interests
of better health for everyone.
Our function on the team
is to compound and dispense medicine
for which we are eminently qualified.
Your physician will diagnose your case and
prescribe the medicine you require.
Bring your prescription to us for compounding.
r
,2
5.
ed at Odell. 1 if necessary,” said Capt. Robert
Mrs. Lasater was born in Hod.
LMdd
-Associatea Pvess
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adj
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COMMUNITY
HEALTH TEAM
UN C. IVEY . . .
. . . Chosen as chairman of the Denton State
School Volunteer Council
porters "we are prepared to move
if they are ”
Ford's vice president for labor
relations. Malcolm L. Denise, also
was in a pleasant mood as he
carried his brief case into the
conference room at a downtown
Detroit hotel. He said it contained
problems.
That would be a majority of the normally a strong sign of disap-
,21-nation Organization of Ameri-proval.
In part from the fact that people
| in other lands “have seen in us
the symbol of self-assumed supe-
, riority," he said.
BARROW INSURANCE AGENCY
"YOUR HARTFORD AGENT
Offers 3%,
2 hese adde
POLICE AND PORKER
Policemen and volunteer firemen in Racine, Wis., use highway flares and sticks
to round up one of 134 pigs which escaped Saturday when two trucks collided
and overturned. Three pigs were killed: all others caught.
Sanger — Funeral Thursday, bur- No further negotiating sessions I
ial in Swisher Cemetery, the were set.
Revs. Thomas Adams, E. L. Vin- i
son and Harvey Lowe. Pallbear- The first power-operated laun-
ers Coit Carpenter, Horace Sha- dry was started in 1851 in Oak-
han. Wilburn Shahan. Dorris Sha- land, Calif., by a man named Da-
han. Jack Bounds and Donald vis. He used a 10-horsepower don-
Ray Brown. • key engine.
AMXaNKM
STOP SHOPPING
... AND MARK A BEELINE TO
JOHNNIE'S
HAMBURGERS
. FOR RIC LUSCIOUS
. 25c EA.—5 FOR SI.15
503 N. LOCUST
OPEN 11 A.M..7JO F.M. — CLOSID SUN.
Castro government of bringing a
foreign ideology into the Ameri-
cas.
■ amm---
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At?
BARROW INSURANCE SALUTES I
• 3 « *
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r . Mt
KENNEDY VACATIONS
President Kennedy, in the center wearing dark glasses, relaxes Saturday aboard
the presicential yacht “Honey Fitz” near Newpori, R.I. Others aboard are
Caroline (left); guests Charles Bartlett and Bill Walton (center); Mrs. Ken-
nedy: her nephew Ivan Steer; and the ship’s skipper
- .-----— — — - । Rev. Charles Van Beb- SAN FRANcISCO CAp).Deck
exhibit in the Soviet Union were Lasater, 66, of 419 N. Wood, ber, pastor, will officiate. Burial r; . rikt’wes Coast shins
„oina t. mt." -uu E will be held at 230 nm tdav win C in dicers picketed West Coast ships
Always Welcome
And Appropriate
9 BUB
Diplomats Need
1 Full Education,
Solon Claims
Latin-American diplomats here
Mid it appeared certain Argen-
tina would break relations and if
it does not, that one of the six
other hemisphere nations still
maintaining normal diplomatic
missions in Cuba would do so.
The documents were stolen
from the Cuban Embassy in
Buenos Aires by a Cuban diplo-
mat who said he could not stand
any longer what he termed in-
creasing communization of his
homeland. Officials here My the
documents are authentic. They
were leaked to some newspapers
last Monday, and shown to a
news conference in Miami by
Cuban exile leaders Friday.
Publication of the documents
was regarded by Latin Americans
here as a severe blow to the
Castro regime. They Mid it es-
tablished. despite all protests to
the contrary by Castro, that Cuba
is indeed plotting against other
hemisphere nations.
Of the 21 American republics,
eight have broken relations with
Havana outright—the Dominican
'Another Setback
(Seen For Castro
t .n1dt I I :
urday on a 6,000-plus name peti- with the insurance companies."
tion calling for racial integration Eckhardt Mid. . y
of athletics. Woodrow Herring, an insurance
vAtncRoy Union wound up a week of
and fmily or 22 Avenue eX intensive bargaining Saturday and
the National Garden Center Show- the past 30 days left Friday for moved into weekend negotiations
ing. He will return Thursday. ' McGuire Air Force Base, N.J., without any official word on how
-
vim
• CUT FLOWERS
• CORSAGES
• POTS
Linwood Roberson Florists
Ph. 382-2561 SOO W Hickory
For one thing, the Russians
agreed to let the State Depart- ‘
WASHINGTON (AP) — Publi- Republic, Guatemala, Nicaragua, ment review the Soviet contract
Lackland and Medina Air Force
’ Bases here and an endorsement
of State Sen. Henry B. Gonzalez
in a Nov. 4 special election to
nare a mw congressman from
San Antonio.
DALLAS (AP»—A hungry monkey with a fine throwing arm
has cowed a section of Dallas with his icebox raids.
"It's a big. husky Capuchin," Mid Poundmaster R. G. Alex-
ander Friday. "When hi can't get enough food out of garbage
cans, he scouts for an open window, removes the screen, enters
the house and makes for the refrigerator.
The monkey first tosses all the eggs on the floor and eats the
fruit. If discovered, he bares his teeth, throws the fruit at the
human and makes his escape.
“He's rough and has a mouthful of ivory and people don't want
to mix with him," Alexander said.
The police department and pound men have tried unsuccess-
fully to capture the animal Officers said they don't know
where he came from.
parsihlaepatshanathouab thg depeouxo cAP Bn-l^dS^
review the contract before sign-Saturday the Chinese Communists:1 ' Jne"as * mem be 01 the
ing. This presumably would give seek to uphold world peace and a 5 1 an ue ' The strike against the Pacific, Sanger at Elm Street Hospital
the department some measure of wish “to live together with the1 Survivors include her husband; Maritime Association and its 13 & Clinic. In error, it was reported
control over costs charged to the people of all othew countries in- one son. Kenneth O'Dell Lasater shipping company members tied that the baby was born at Flow
American exhibit in the Soviet eluding the United States." I of Farmers Branch: two sisters. . . _ _ Memerinl Uoenitel
Union, through possible threat of But Chou contended that “the Mrs. A. C. Crouch of Denton and w auu. a. ____ ... -. __
retaliation. U.S. government has up to now, Mrs. Rov Gailbreath of Aubrey; attle and one in Los Angeles. UNITED FINANCE COMPANY
The Soviet Union balked, but refused to give up its policy of one brother, C. H. Close of Ver- * ” "n""5n
Prime Minister Fidel Castro's re-Honduras and Costa Rica. Two Brooklyn, N.Y., for handling the Q1 • Q *1*
gime with a plot to overthrow the others. Paraguay and Haiti, have Soviet exhibit. , Mrs. Wiley Lasater under the direction of the Sch- 3h1p B3all1ng
State Department officials ex- mitz • Floyd - Hamlett Funeral 1 O
likely Saturday to swing an of Cuba. Three others, Colombia, plained that sponsors of the U.S.1 Funeral services for Mrs. Wiley|Home.
' ‘ 1 “ a-t- " have "xhiit in tw, Fhin" .... Lasater. 66 of 419 N Wond
was among those attending the
meeting. Others included Reps.
Charles Ballman, the committee
chairman from Borger. W. H.
Pieratt, Giddings, and Menton J.
Murray, Harlingen.
Rep. Robert Eckhardt of Hous-
ton told the group insurance com-
panies ought to have the burden
of providing what caused dam-
ages, whether by water, winds,
L-
■■ seTMrT
,-07
*
Pr. --
Rep. Maco Stewart of Galveston i ports and complaints on insurance
said the offers amount to only claims resulting from the hurri-
about three per cent of an esti-cane.
mated *1,000,060 in damages bus- House Speaker James Turman
I
A I
Other PMA vessels will be tied IS STILL LOCATED % Mock
up as they reach ports, and 135 north of the Post Office at 312 N.
ships eventuallv could be affect-1 LbcmL
ed. Tankers, foreign flag ships r
Ecuador, Mexico and Panama.
* IN FLOETER CASE
Exchange Program
Between U.S.,Reds
Believed Saved .
WASHINGTON (AP) - The So- 10 read K" Heath said. torneys, charged that adjusters j F
viet Union has agreed to two U.S. , Names on the petition — called are using such unethical tactics
conditions and will go ahead with by′ students the largest in as offering quick settlements in
a medical exhibit in Chicago and University of Texas history—were return for agreements not to bring -
Minneapolis, the State Depart- obtained mostly during registra- attorneys into the
ment announced Saturday. A dis-: ion early in septenche r P E Cl
pute had prevented its showing at At a -uly meeting the board son of Houston said they have re-
the Oklahoma Stale Fair in Ok- issued 1 statement that “no sub- ceived complaints mortgage com
lahoma City. stantial changes" in university panies have been coercing home
.. . . ’ . . policy on integration would be owners into buying policies from
Similarly. AlUStransportation made in the immediate future. « specified companis but without
exh n "ilhe.shown as sched added: "we shall continue to move permitting the homeowners to see
uledsin Kharkov and Stalingrad, forward with due and deliberate the policies.
V:S.s.R, but not in Moscow, speed as we think advisable under Rep. Donald Shipley of Houston
where,it was l° have opened । all the circumstances which exist recommended it be made a felony
SePt 23. from time to time „ offense for an insurance salesman
The dispute had threatened a The regents reviewed the uni to misrepresent a policy.
major ruptre of the U.S.-Soviet versity’s’building prgram.t Rep. J.C.Whittieldof Houston
cultural exchange program under said 1965-66 would be the earliest recommended that homeowners
which the exhibits were arranged possible target date for starting collectgtheirownevidencegofdam-
on a reciprocal basis. classes in the proposed medica ** „„and 8° to court
ButFrancisW Tully, State De-school in San Antonio., SBallman said the committee
Partment press officer: said the The regents reported , bill of probably will in the
dispute has been settled and, “the $150,000 at M. D. Andersen His- Palacios area.
department is pleased to an- pital and *35,000 at the university's "We heard enough in Houston
nounce that the exchange of ex- Marine Science Institute at Port to warrant looking into the situa-
hibits has been resumed.” Aransas. tion further," he said.
Durkin. Masters, Mates and Pilots A boy. to Mr. and Mrs. W. D. i
Union West Coast president "We Hamer, Lewisville. Sept *9 at Elm
have no other choice—something. Street Hospital 4 Clinic
must be done to solve our unem- A girl was born Friday morning
ployment problem.” ,10 Mr and Mrs. Cash Bentley of j
The strike against the Pacific Sanger at F
.. .. A____2: a e•> Ar
They received the petition with- claims adjuster, criticized the 1
out comment Friday. committee for holding the hearing 8
W. W. Heath of Austin, vice without having read the insurance |
chairman of the board. Mid the policies.. .. . . .
petition contains the names of "All the policies are standard .
nearly one-third of th» student and were written and approved by
body: the state board,” he said. “If there
The university chancellor, Dr. is any fine print, the board ap,
I Harry Ranson, presented it to thePin’a prepared statement, R , |
। egents; , . . Shearn Smith, president of the,
W e haven t even had a chance Texas Association of Plaintiffs At- j
to read it,” Heath said. 11
; break in relations with Havana, withdrawn their ambassadors - required to contract with the So- will be held at 2:30 p.m. today
That wnuld he a mainritv of the nnrmallv a xtrnns sin of disan- viet All Union - " - - ha A.hee- fh-t-:__FL___u
, , merce dee
, can States, which already has ac- Seven have normal relations: said included assignment of ex-ig fT
.cused the Communist-aligned Argentina. Bolivia. Brazil, Chile, cess Soviet personnel. This added uhOu Urges
। thousands of dollars to U.S. costs. O
The Soviet Union, on the other WVIA,. p..
hand, was free to negotiate with W 01 IQ 1
-e, 4:’
and Miss Eulah McElroy, attended for 10 a m Tuesday
tion in Dallas Saturday. ennr. n.k.” ema..l.. ..1 ..
c.n
now has agreed to the review. hostility to ‘Communist) China,” non; three grandchilden and one
Tully said the Soviet exhibit will the New China News Agency great grand child.
open in Chicago Oct. 13 for a 21- reported. ~ . I
day showing and then move on Chou also “condemned the U.S. bervices Held
to Minneapolis. government for once again engi- Coast companies will continue
Similarly, the U.S. exhibit in neering plots" aimed at blocking MRS. DELLA B. POWELL of operating
the Soviet Union will open in Red China's admission to the 909 Panhandle — Funeral Satur- The strike began Thursday but
Kharkov Oct. 22 and move on to, United Nations at the current day, burial in Denton's IOOF pickets were not placed immedi-
Stalingrad. General Assembly session. Dr. L L Armstrong and Rev J. ately so cargo could be unloaded
Frank Weedon. Pallbearers T. C. and other crewmen could set off
Powell, J. M. Powell, Joe Bob the ships. . .
Howaral An hour s emergency meeting
was held Friday at the govern-
Jr. at Albuquerque, N.M Pa-
ternal grandparents are Nir. and DETROrT (
Mrs. C. A. Land of 919 Bolivar, l „ . . . . .
tor Co. and the United Auto Work-
TOBIN DRUG
NORTH SIDI SQUARE
DETROIT (AP) - Pvt. Jon
Floeter, 25. serving in the
Army in Korea, is back on
Uncle Sam's payroll. And his
wife, 24, who lives in East
Detroit, can keep a 991.30 al-
lotment and will get $182.60
shortly due as back allot-
ments.
Col. Clovis B. Norris, chief
of the Army Finance Center’s
Collection Division in Indiana-
polis. put it this way: “We
goofed."
Norris explained, "We have
30,000 cases here and these
things happen."
Norris, answering a query
from the Detroit News, said
that after Floeter joined the
Army some question came up
about whether his enlistment
was valid. Pending an inves-
tigation, his pay and *91.30
monthly allotment checks
were held up. Floeter was at
Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo., at the
time.
Then the Army put him back
on full pay and sent him to
Korea. The only trouble. Mid
Norris, was that nobody in
the Army notified the finance
center, which does the pay-
tag.
So the center wrote Mrs.
Floeter and demanded return
of $91.30 it said she had been
overpaid, claiming her hus-
band was discharged last
June.
"What’s more, Floeter was-
n’t getting vaid in Korea, eith-
er," said Norris. "But that's
• cleared up now, too."
■ * %
hedd-,, .
55" '
Mmkd
- Asseciated Presa
"_l+ge jo emm,a-
erg.- . )
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP)—Rifle No. 1 for tourists enter-
ing Yugoslavia: Don’t kiss the customs man.
A businessman, identified by the Belgrade newspaper Politika
only as Basil, tried to and it cost him about *5,000. This is the
story Politika told:
Basil was traveling by train from Germany and arrived at
customs control in Jesenice on the Austrian border.
An officer checked his baggage and found it conformed to cus-
toms regulations. He saluted the businessman and turned around
to leave.
Basil, evidently satisfied with the outcome, jumped to his feet,
embraced the customs man and gave him two long, resounding
kisses straight on the face.
This ends the gay part of the story.
The customs man, apparently unused to such friendliness by
passengers, decided to take another look.
He took a screwdriver, opened several planks in the walls of
Basil’s sleeping compartment and felt around inside.
The end of the story has Basil sitting with a long face and
the customs man beaming over a big pile in the middle of the
compartment—60,000 gold buckles for necklaces, three pounds of
gold bars, a quantity of lighters and other commodities.
ji Politika figured out the two kisses cost Basil a total of roughly
1 4.6-million dinars, tax included.
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AUSTIN (AP» — University of or by tornado.
Texas regents took no action Sat- "The advantage should not be
which might be of long duration. 1. Admitted: Mrs. W D Hamer
“Masters, Mates and Pilots. No Lewisville.,
Dismissed: H. R. Parker, Ar-
gyle; J. B. Cantrell, Fort Worth.
“We're ready for a long strike, BIRTHS
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 59, No. 45, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 1, 1961, newspaper, October 1, 1961; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1491767/m1/2/?rotate=270: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.