Des Moines Tribune from Des Moines, Iowa (2024)

Television DES MOINES 8 FRIDAY 5:45 D. Edwards 9:30 Person -Person 6:00 News, Sports 10:00 News, Sports 6:30 Rawhide 10:30 Mary J. Chinn 7:30 Border Patrol 11:00 Jack Paar 8:00 Desilu Pih. 12:00 News 9:00 Twilight Zone SATURDAY 7:30 Rural Am. 11:00 Sky King 8:00 Kangaroo 11:30 Comedy Time 9:00 Heckle, Jeckle 12:00 Bowling 9:30 Mighty Mouse 1:15 Baseball 10:00 I Love Lucy Highlights 10:30 Lone Ranger 2:15 Movie DES MOINES 13 WHO-TV FRIDAY 5:05 Movie 8:30 -Squad 6:05 News 9:00 Boxing 6:15 NBC News 9:45 Bowling 6:30 People, Funny 10:00 News, Sports 7:00 (C) 10:30 Movie and Sixpence" SATURDAY 8:00 Kit Carson 11:00 Jr.

Bowling 8:30 Popeye 11:30 Detective 9:00 (C) Howdy 12:00 Harris Hop Doody 1:00 Movie 9:30 (C) Ruff, 3:15 Vernon Co, Reddy 3:45 Golf 10:00 Fury 4:45 Scoreboard 10:30 Circus Boy AMES 5 WOL-TV FRIDAY 5:30 Rin Tin Tin 10:00 News 6:00 Roy Rogers 10:10 26 Men 6:30 Walt Disney 10:40 Hotel 7:30 Black Hawk De Paree 8:00 77 Sunset 11:10 News, Sports 9:00 Detectives 11:20 Movie 9:30 Black Saddle SATURDAY 11:30 Soupy Sales 2:00 I Spy 12:00 News, Nkts. 2:30 Movie 12:30 Farm Facts 3:30 Roller Derby 1:00 Roy Rogers 4:30 Seventeen Shouldn't Do This To Shaw! By Cynthia Lowry (A.P, TV-Radio Writer) NEW YORK, N. nicest thing one can say of Thursday night's live Playhouse 90 is tent cast didn't that a compe- Your Key have much to to work with. TV It was a revival of "Misalliance," by George Bernard Shaw, and they shouldn't have. Every playwright has his off moments and "Misalliance" was obviously written in some of Shaw's.

It was a 1909 comedy, faithfully reenacted and so full of plot that I still know what went on. Involved were a couple of elderly rips, two aggressive women and three spineless men. One lady was a tightrope walker SHAW and another the man-chasing daughter of an underwear manufacturer. There were a book-loving tradesman and a fascist-minded aristocrat. And Shaw obviously was against what everybody represented -culture, force, weak men, strong women, even rebellious clerks.

In spite of a double handful of shavian dare you teach a man to read until you've taught him everything it was really very sticky going for 90 minutes. Such stalwarts as Siobhan McKenna, Robert Morley and Claire Bloom all tried hard. But, honestly, resurrecting that old chestnut just wasn't fair to Shaw. Mrs. Forment Services Set Services for Mrs.

Mattie C. Forment, 83, of 1431 Twentyfifth who died of cancer Thursday at the Burton Nursing Home in Indianola, will be at 2 p. m. Saturday at the White-Bumgardner-Mack East Grand Funeral Home. Burial will be in Woodland Cemetery.

A native of Corning, Mrs. Forment lived 38 years in Knoxville before coming here in 1922. She was a member of the Christian Church at Knoxville and the Alpha Rebekah Lodge. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Eva Frost of Knoxville; a brother, H.

A. Sherman of Tracy; a grandson; a greatgrandson and a great greatgrandson. Capone Probe Figure Dead MINNEAPOLIS, MINN, (P) -G. Aaron Youngquist, 73, a former Minnesota attorney general who helped put racketeer Al Capone behind bars, died Thursday in a hospital, Youngquist was an assistant U. S.

attorney general when he led the investigation that resulted in Capone's prosecution for income tax fraud. Statton Tells His Aims for Safety Laws By John Bleakly Iowa Safety Commissioner Donald M. Statton said Friday that he plans to push in the next session of the legislature for a law requiring compulsory driver education in high schools. He said such a measure would help cut traffic fatalities and teach young people respect for the law. Drinking Driver Statton was one of four state officials who took part in a panel discussion at the annual convention of the Iowa Congress of Parents and Teachers at Hotel Fort Des Moines.

The safety commissioner also said new legislation is needed to cover the "HBD" (has been drinking) driver, a driver "who is intoxicated but sobers up before he is given tests." In a third proposal, Statton said Iowa needs "a comprehensive testing program to get bad drivers off the road." Such a program, he added, "must be done by legislation, not by decree--as much as I'd like to after reading some accident reports." Salary Lure Another panelist, J. C. Wright, state superintendent of public instruction, told the group that his department is having trouble finding and retaining competent personnel. "We need about 000 a year more in our budget," he said. "That's peanuts compared with what's being spent altogether by the state." Wright said his department has lost two division heads in recent months because they were offered salaries $4,000 a year above what they were receiving.

Teacher Health A third speaker, Dr. Madelene Donnelly, director of maternal and child health in the state health department, said Iowa needs a state law requiring health tests for teachers hired in public schools. The other panelists, Ross Wilbur, director child welfare in the department of public welfare, said Iowa "does not tave a well-co-ordinated system of juvenile courts." He called for a review of the state's child welfare laws, some of which were passed in the 1920's. Mrs. Charles W.

Reynolds of Grundy Center Friday was Channel 13 Late SHOW tonite 10:30 olivia, Robert A WARNERS TREATS! Princess GROURKE WHO- TV Channel I IOWA VS KANSAS STATE Broadcast Time 1:15 Presented as Publie Service by: HILAND POTATO CHIP CO. Des Moines NODAWAY VALLEY NAT'L BANK Villisca UNION PETROLEUM COMPANY Counell Bluffs KELLY-RYAN FARM EQUIP. CO. Bisir, Nebraska STAY TUNED FOR ALL SCORES! p.m. FINALE'- 6:45 p.m.

Presented by: BEVINGTON JOHNSON, your Jos. Schlitz Brewing Co. Dist. In Southwest Lows lows Hawkeyes Every: Saturday DIAL 960 Moines Tribune Page 13 elected president of the Iowa Congress of Parents Teachers. Other new offi- KRNT-Radio 1350 CBS.

Des Moines FRIDAY: 5:45 Lowell Thomas 6:00 Dale Buhl 6:15 Rhoades, 6:30 Album Time 7:00 Bob Ray 7:15 News Analysts SATURDAY 5:30 Walt Reno 6:00 News 6:10 Reno; News, 8:00 News 8:15 Walt Reno 9:00 News 9:10 Top Ten 10:05 Ted Hazard 12:00 News 7:25 FootballRoosevelt vs. East. 9:30 Amos 'n' Andy 10:00 News, Weath. 10:10 World Tonight 10:30 Nightwatch 11:00 News, Sports 11:10 L. McKeever 12:00 News, Weath.

12:15 Mkt. Basket 12:30 Riley Auction 1:05 Shoop Predicts 1:25 Footballlowa vs. Kansas St. 3:45 Scoreboard WHO-Radio 1040 NBC. FM-100 3 mg.

FRIDAY 5:45 Sports 10:00 News, Sports 6:00 Farm R'ndup 10:30 Country Style 6:15 News, Weath. 10:45 Reserved 6:30 News of World 11:00 News, Sports 7:00 Monitor 11:15 Marvin Gatch 9:00 Boxing 12:00 Ron Knight 9:30 Sports Hilites SATURDAY 5:30 News, Weath. 11:30 Duane Ellett 5:45 Duane Ellett 11:45 Red Foley 6:00 Heaven, Home 12:00 Farm Hour 6:15 Farm Facts 12:30 News 6:30 Farm News 12:45 Farmorama 6:45 Farm Hilites 1:00 Maurie Miller 7:00 Duane Ellett 1:15 FB Preview 7:30 News Report 1:25 Duane Ellett Iowa vs. 9:00 Monitor Kansas State 11:00 Here's to Vets 4:30 Monitor 11:15 Forward March KSBC-Radio 1390 ABC. Des Moines FRIDAY 5:30 Weather 7:05 Ameche Hour 5:40 Sports 7:55 News, Music 6:00 John Daly 8:55 People 6:10 R.

Odegaard 9:05 Music 6:30 Weather 12:00 Nightwatch SATURDAY 5:45 Jim Hoskins 10:00 Meal Plans 6:00 News 10:30 Music 6:30 Weather 12:00 R. Odegaard 7:00 News, Music 12:30 Weather 7:30 Weather 12:55 News, Music 8:30 Ameche Hour 4:00 Ameche Hour KS0-Radio 1460, Des Moines FRIDAY 7:00 Don Hinson 1:00 Ed Roberts 11:00 B. Mattson SATURDAY 6:00 Farm Show 1:30 Billboard 10:00 George Gregg 2:00 Barry Smith 6:15 Dick Vance 1:45 George Gregg KIOA--Radio 940. Des Moines FRIDAY 6:00 Bob King 12:00 D. MacKinnon 9:00 Mike Henry SATURDAY 6:00 F.

Mitchell 2:00 Steve Hefner 10:00 Lee Western' KWKY--Radio 1150, Des Moines FRIDAY 7:00 Skip Nelson SATURDAY 5:45 Pastor's Study 11:00 Don Bell 6:00 Doc Lemon 1:00 Chuck Olson 10:00 Chuck Olson 4:00 Peter Rabbit ON YOUR TONIGHT WALT DISNEY. The pro-British sentiment of General Marion's fiancee becomes an explosive issue with his troops in second of six "Swamp Fox" dramas. WOI at 6:30. "THE MOON AND SIXPENCE." Sir Laurence Olivier in Somerset Maugham story of man who leaves family and job to pursue a burning ambition to paint. WHO at 7.

77 SUNSET STRIP. Investigator Jeff Spencer encounters a ruthless plan to fix horse race and a murder attempt. WOI at 8. DESILU PLAYHOUSE. Desi Arnaz stars as CubanAmerican who undergoes severe emotional ordeal when his wayward sister comes to live with his family.

KRNT at 8. BOXING. Welterweights Florentino Fernandez and Gaspar Ortega scheduled in 10-round bout at Madison Square Garden. WHO at 9. PERSON TO.

PERSON. Producer-actor Jack Webb and Eugene List, concert pianist, are visited by Charles Collingwood. KRNT at 9:30. School Prayer Idea Is Dropped ST. LOUIS, MO.

(P) -Daniel L. Schlafly, St. Louis board of. education member who proposed opening school each day with a non-denominational prayer, Thursday dropped the idea. He said his proposal caused too much tension and controversy.

Several board had approved the idea of opening schools daily with this prayer: "Almighty God, we acknowledge our dependence on Thee, and we beg Thy blessings upon us, our parents, our teachers and our country." cers are Mrs. James A. Newsome of Des Moines, first vice-president; Glenn E. Holmes of Ames, second vice-president, and Mrs. Richard Jenkins of Cedar Rapids, secretary.

BROOKS GLANTON DES MOINES Will Pick And Clerk a Of Court By Robert H. McCall Des Moines voters in the general election Tuesday name two city council. members, four municipal judges, a municipal court clerk and a municipal court bailiff. All will be elected for fouryear terms beginning in January. The four council candidates (see sketches and color photos on picture page) and two court clerk candidates who survived the primary will run in the general election.

So will seven aspirants 1 to the judgeships, whose race did not require a primary, and Bailiff C. G. (Tod) Lyon, who is unopposed for re-election. Voting places in the city's 73 precincts will be open from 7 a. m.

to 8 p. m. Des Moines has an estimated 105,000 "registered voters. The general election's total vote is expected to be substantially larger than the primary's 20,895. Sketches of the municipal court candidates, who include the four incumbents, follow: Howard W.

Brooks, 50, of 2518 Thirty sixth will complete at the end of this year his third consecutive term as a municipal judge, having been on the city bench since 1948. Brooks, a graduate of North High School, attended Drake University and was admitted to the practice of law in 1934. He was an assistant county attorney in 1943-46. He is a former chairman of the Young Republican League of Polk County and was an organizer of the Polk Junior Bar Association. In World War II, he was in the army, and he is a former district American Legion commander.

Luther T. Glanton, 46, of 818 Fifteenth became a municipal judge last January by appointment to fill a vacancy. He seeks his first elective term. Glanton, who was an assistant county attorney in 1951-56, was an unsuccessful candidate for a municipal judgeship in 1955. Glanton, who was reared in Murfreesboro, was graduated from Tennessee State University at Nashville.

In 1952, he received his law degree from Drake University. He did advanced study at Northwestern University and the Sorbonne (University of Paris). He is a member of the governor's and the Des Moines commissions on human Harry B. Grund, 63, of 1140 Thirty is the senior member of the municipal bench in years of service. He has been a judge there more than 16 years.

Beginning in 1943, he twice was appointed to fill vacancies; then was elected to complete an unexpired term and, beginning in 1948, began serving regular four year elective terms. Grund, who attended East High School and Drake University, was admitted to the practice of law in 1925. He was an assistant county attorney in 1933-39. He served overseas in World War I. Ray Harrison, 57, of 334 Fifty-eighth first was elected as a municipal judge for two years beginning in January, 1958.

Now he is a candidate for a regular fouryear term. Harrison has been on the municipal bench, however, since March, 1956. By governors' appointments, he filled a vacancy from that time until the end of 1957. He was elected as a judge for the 1958-59 remainder of the unexpired term. Drake University's law college graduated Harrison in 1925.

Ila did grad ate study at Yale University. He was an assistant county attorney in 1928-33. Elizabeth Lynch, 61, of 2900 Rutland is an attorrey wh in the past has been TV SERVICE CALLS PHONE CH 3-8561 CASH Open 9. to 9 ALLIED ELECTRONICS GRUND 4 candidat for a judgeship. Mrs.

Lynch was the former West School and, in 1920, bachelor's degree Drake University. began the practice her husba receiving a doctor of from Drake. The mother of Mrs. Lynch is president of elen: junior high school Teacher Associations. past president of department of of Commerce in the American of Universi Theodore F.

Mantz, Locust is and a former solicitor here. reared on a farm near After being graduated Audubon High School, attended the State Iowa and then versity, where he degree in 1912. practice then about 12 years, advanced law students. Mantz was an solicitor in 1928 unsuccessful candidate mayor in 1932. Virgil Moore, 28, W.

Ninth attorney who is Polk parole officer and tendent of public is an associate of of Lynch Moore, a graduate High School, bachelor's degree from University in 1953 degree there in 1957. For two years 1955, he served in 82nd airborne division. As county parole Moore was appointed district court judges superintendent of stitutions, by the board of supervisors. 2 Candidates For Clerk Judges, municipal HARRISON MRS. LYNCH 2 Hiland- Continued from Page One he had never reported the money stolen.

"Shadowed" Dailey and Polk County Attorney Ray Hanrahan said police have known the identity of the three men who robbed the potato chip concern's safe since a few days after the burglary. Despite, "big spending" by the three men, sufficient proof to warrant their arrest was lacking. The "nothing taken" report from Hiland Potato Chip Co. left police with an extra problem: Where did the money the men were spending come from? However, several detectives were assigned to the investigation, including Paul Thomas, James McCarthy and Robert Weichman. Various detectives on the night shift "shadowed" the three, checking on their activities.

Police tipsters then were questioned. They told of the three men dividing a large sum of money, most of which was in $1,000 bills. The tipsters said it came from the Hiland firm safe. Officers later learned the three men had purchased autos with 000 bills. Dailey said Gossett, who was released Sept.

17 from the penitentiary at Fort Madison after serving a one-year sentence for carrying concealed weapons and assault with intent to inflict great bodily injury, purchased a 1959 Lincoln for "slightly uner $5,000." Dailey said Gossett was driving the car when he was arrested by Missouri officials. Gossett was returned here and arraigned in municipal court on a charge of breaking and entering. He has been held in the county jail since, in lieu of $10,000 bond. One witness had told officers the three men had opened the safe in his garage and then had disposed of it in a weed patch near S. E.

Tenth and Vine streets. Police already had found the safe and had established that it was the Hiland firm's. A billfold found near the scene of the burglary contained identification papers linking it to one of the suspects, Dailey said. Police said Gossett has a police record dating back to Aug. 8, 1946, when he was committed to the Missouri state training school for boys at Booneville, Mo.

He was arrested numerous times after that on minor charges in Missouri and Illinois. His first arrest in Des Moines was Dec. 15, 1956, when he was picked up on a traffic charge. On Sept. 9, 1958, arrested on the two charges for which he later served term at Fort Madison penitentiary.

Hobbs, when arrested Fri- CATTLEMEN! SEE THE DRAMATIC NEW STORY OF CATTLE GRUB CONTROL KRNT-TV Channel 8 Sat. 7:45 A.M. MANTE MOORE day, was free on bond awaiting sentence Monday on 1 a charge of possession of lar tools. He was found guilty by a district court jury Sept. 18.

Police said Clay also has a long police record. Two Injured In 4-Car Crash Two persons were injured, neither seriously, shortly after 7:30 a. m. Friday in a fourcar collision in the 900 block on S. E.

Fourteenth street, according to a police report. Mrs. Charlotte May, 20, of 3111 S. E. Fourteenth suffered cuts on the face and left leg and was taken to Iowa Lutheran Hospital.

Shirley Ann Haworth, 22, of Route 3, was treated for a possible neck injury by her own doctor. Patrolman Ray Steiner said a pickup truck driven by Ralph Wayne Liles, 41, of West Covina, a truck driven by Kenneth Raymond co*ckayne, 40, of 4216 S. E. Fifteenth and a car driven by Miss Haworth had stopped at a railroad crossing on S. E.

Fourteenth street. Steiner said a car driven by Mrs. May's husband, James 26, struck the rear of the Haworth car, shoved it into the co*ckayne truck and the truck into Liles' pickup. Steiner issued traffic summons to May charging him with having inadequate brakes and failure to have his car under control. 3-Month Term For Break-in James Newton Gillespie, who gave his address as 1215 Ure has pleaded guilty in Polk County district court to charge of breaking into the Johnson Grocery Store, 2231 Delaware June 12 to take $20 cash and about $40 worth of cigarettes.

Judge Wade P. Clarke sentenced Gillespie to three months in the Polk County jail an fined him $10. Chiesa Released On $500 Bond Aldo Joseph Chiesa, who pleaded innocent in Polk County district court to a charge of violating the Iowa liquor control act, has been released on $500 bond. Chiesa, who gave his address as 1510 Ninth was arrested July 15 at the Riverside Club, 1500 S. E.

First where police said they found whisky. Chiesa's wife holds the beer permit for the establishment. River Parkway Plans Discussed Development of parkways and other areas along the Mississippi River was discussed Friday at a meeting of the Mississippi River Parkway Planning Commission with Gov. Herschel C. Loveless.

The commission, created by the legislature, is composed of state officials and private citizens. CARERS HUSK play with Jack Payne WOW Saturday RADIO 1:45 DIAL 590 NEBRASKA VS. OKLAHOMA DIRECT FROM LINCOLN BYPrudential Insurance Company of America and The Dealers and Distributors of CHAMPLIN PETROLEUM PRODUCTS GAME REPLAY 10:20 P.M. Randy Bahl, Injured by Car graduated High received from 1940, of law after law de- chilformer and ParentShe is is acAssoci- Women. 72, of attorassistant Mantz was Audu- from Mantz University Unireceived a began also, instructed assistant was an for of 2454 is an County superininstitutions.

the law of Linreceived a Drake a law ending in officer, by the and, as public incounty Here sketches of the candidates for the municipal court clerkship: Charles W. Gilbride, 56, of 1025 Eighth is chief deputy clerk of Polk County district court. He became a deputy clerk in late 1948 and chief deputy at the beginning of 1952. He is on leave of absence. In a five-man race for the municipal court clerkship in the primary, Gilbride placed second with 5,580 votes.

Gilbride, a graduate of Dowling High School, studied pharmacy at old Des Moines University. He served in the coast guard in World War II. Russell L. Lundgren, 57, of 3300 Vandalia road, is a rodman, in surveying, for the city public works department. He is on leave of absence.

Lundgren led the court clerk candidates in the primary with 7,305 votes. After graduation from East High School, Lundgren took liberal arts and law courses at Drake University. He has had civil service status as a municipal employee since April, 1945. Lundgren is secretarytreasurer of the American Scandinavian Club. GILBRIDE LUNDGREN Easy, Dad ALBANY, N.

Y. (P)-Dr. Paul Formel, Albany Medical College professor, had this advice for fathers in a talk here Thursday: Don't play football with Sonny just to be a good dad. Violent exercise, he said, is for adolescents. TV SERVICE Call CH 4-7227.

HOUSE CALL General Electronics, Inc. 337 UNIVERSITY AVENUE Randy Bahl, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Bahl, 3701 S. Eighth was treated for bruises at Mercy Hospital Friday and released after he was brushed by auto in the 700 block on S.

E. Thornton street. Police said Randy became intrigued by a fire truck parked in the block and stepped out into the street to inspect it. A car driven by Mrs. Malcolm Bacon, 708 S.

E. Thornton brushed him with a fender. The fire truck was on a regular tour of inspection of homes. 7-Year Sentence In Reformatory Richard Lee Walker, convicted Oct. 16 by a district court jury on a charge of assaulting a 12-year-old girl with intent to commit rape, was sentenced Friday by Judge C.

Edwin Moore to seven years in the men's reformatory at Anamosa. Walker, who gave his address as 3115 Fifty-ninth was indicted by a Polk County grand jury on a charge of rape, but the jury convicted him on the lesser charge. DINOSAURS The bones and footprints of dinosaurs have been found in the Palisades cliff near New York City. TONIGHT, 7:25 FOOTBALL Roosevelt Car vs. East on KRNT RADIO, Dial Spot 1350 Play- by- Play by WIN DOUGLASS 171st Stop on the Home Federal Savings Loan Assn.

SPORTS CARAVAN KRNT RADIO 1350 TOTAL FOOTBALL Saturday on KRNT RADIO dial spot 1350 1:25 IOWA. KANSAS ST. CLAY HOBBS Enjoy all the colorful Hawkeye action Al Couppee's play-by-play, account Saturday's gamel At home or away the next best thing to seeing the game in person is a game-side seat at dial spot 1350, KRNT TOTAL RADIO! This is the 172nd Stop on the HOME FEDERAL Savings and Loan Assn. SPORTS CARAVAN! 1:05 SHOOP PREDICTS KRNT Radio-TV Sports Director RON SHOOP makes his observetions on the major games of the day Including the lowa, Jowa State and Drake games every Saturday afternoon preceding the lows U. game.

Sponsored by RICHARDS PHARMACY 3:45 FOOTBALL SCOREBOARD (Immediately following lows game) Your KRNT Scoreboard reporters, BILL RILEY and HERB HEIN, with scores of all the games from coast to coast as they roll in from the wire services! Stay tuned every Saturday after the lowa came for this comprehensive roundup. Sponsored by FRANKEL CLOTHING, Inc. 6:20 SPORTS Late afternoon news from the world of sports and complete football scores. Sponsored by MITCHAM TV Sales and Service KRNT. RADIO 1350 TOTAL.

Des Moines Tribune from Des Moines, Iowa (2024)

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Frankie Dare

Last Updated:

Views: 5956

Rating: 4.2 / 5 (53 voted)

Reviews: 84% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Frankie Dare

Birthday: 2000-01-27

Address: Suite 313 45115 Caridad Freeway, Port Barabaraville, MS 66713

Phone: +3769542039359

Job: Sales Manager

Hobby: Baton twirling, Stand-up comedy, Leather crafting, Rugby, tabletop games, Jigsaw puzzles, Air sports

Introduction: My name is Frankie Dare, I am a funny, beautiful, proud, fair, pleasant, cheerful, enthusiastic person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.