Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 167, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 23, 1950 Page: 1 of 16
sixteen pages : ill. ; page 23 x 18 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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CLEMENT ATTLEE
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Approval Of
Omnibus Tax
Vith one week remaining in the
sclai session to financt state
spltals and special schools, the
-puse split «2 to «1 yesterday on
'* amendment which would cost
e state an immediate outlay of
» .000
fhe Senate was expected to vote
ay on a resolution to withdraw
4 i controversial amendment
; rhe amendment, attached to the '
.■use-passed bill by the Senate
f <.! submitted to the House tor ap- ;
■oval or rejection, would author-
' creation of a state agency to
ndle surplus commodities made ;
a liable by the Feder al Govern- [
qent.
j, fhe 82-51 vote killed a motion
j^»i would have sent the bill to a
*>nate-House conference committee ,
»th instructions to delete the dls-
■ ted amendment
|this was a minor 4ficlory tor
■ae .seeking immediate endorse- !
• nt of the measure, but they
See TAX, Page 2
Bill Delayed
AUSTIN, Feb 23 —a lone
* late amendment today blocked I
al House approval which would
, id the bill boosting omnibus tax
1 rates to Gov. Allan Shivers for
j nature.
• Vith one week remaining in the
3
Final Vote Due
4|
On FEPC Bill
d
-’■-ri
Weather Will
re-
*
WAanjwror. fm. a — —
f
with partly
lit
Ark.,
WEATHER
£
Six Saw Way
Out Of Jail
'■
n—<b-
Practices
AMATEURS AND PROS
Rad GvarriBaa Active
BMOUL, Fob. fl-Utt-Oommu-
nirttod guerrillas today kitted eev-
an persona and bunted M houses
at Bojl village, tern than M mile*
from the South Ooaat port of Pu-
san
,f 4sSiJ5 m
pntidart of the DeutoaOaurty
ORDER THOSE
BABY
SECTIONS NOW
Warn Up Here “
grwn end mad to the foroeiii be* 4
®enton ami victatty tontaht ae the ?
totarteeta eaei met, tat with the
r—w—AMtatofo the
TRXARRANA. Feb fl-(B—Six
prisoners sawed their way out of
the Bowie County Jail at Boston,
Tea., tost night and escaped after
aerkaaty wounding a Negro true-
tee.
Booion la M mite* went of here.
Officers said the trustee appar-
ently waa beaten about the head
during their escape.
Bam Raney, jailer, did not hoar
any automobile and believed the
man left on foot.
Five of the fugitives were await-
ing trial Monday. They were Chris
Cooney. 38. charged with burglary;
Rmmett Ttempeon, about M, from
Cam County, charged with tv*,
count* of auto theft; W. R. Fel-
tner, d* Miller County.
charged wtta check swtadlhw; Fred
Tsngtaftt, about M. Nash. Tea.,
charged with eeeond offense of
driving while intoxicated, and Don-
ald Bead, fl, charged with tar-
•tagy.
The sixth Prisoner, Tommy Ran-
dolph. about 30. had beta convict-
ed of robbery and esntenoed to IS
yean to prtoon. Be woe awaiting
transportation to the atata prison.
The suit of Id South Tones farm-
ers against the government's Uta >
program of admtatotaring ths cot-
ton quota tow was dismissed this
week ta U. B. District Court,
Judge Matthew F. McGuire, who
heard the case, said be dteminsed
it on two grounds:
1. That the secretary of agricul-
ture attoeated to all states, includ-
ing Texas, their proper share of
acreage on tor the MSB cottan crop
control act as amended.
X. That the distribution of acre-
ape quotas among counties in Tox-
as was car r isd on to ths same man-
ner and therefore eras in accor-
dance with the law.
Ths suit was nied by Gorpus
Christi lawyer* on behalf of the
grower*, who operate farms to 11
Ouif coastal counties.
The Texas Cotton growers had
asked an injunction agatagt Secre-
tary of Agriculture Charita Bran-
nan to Veep the IMO attotmeuts
from going into effect. They charg-
ed the methods of distributing the
UM acreage would cause groat
cotton tennnrs
and fail to give credit lor tends
planted in grain sorghums and flax
as war crops during the bam yean.
They did not attack the state-wide
total allotment.
The judge's ruling left congres-
sional action She recourse of cot-
ton farmers who feel they wore not
given proper credit' for war crops
ta Mw allotments.
and not no cool tonight; F»
attSfow
or west and north geritooe
afternoon and tonight, Ft
partly dtaudy. warmer in
and south portage. Mode
fMda.
Wanner weather, with partly
cloudy skies, is the ps edirtton for
Friday, which may indicate the,
weather man ta cooktag up some-
thin special for ths weekend.
Just a hint of a new cold wave
is found it ths weather forecast
for West Tsana. where cooler
further Kiwanto youth work ta Den-
ton County.
Bob Neale, director, baa built
this year’s show around a mid-
century “Out of This World" theme,
and has come up with a ••stream-
lined’’ minstrel. The favored Mack-
face acts will be there, however,
in the personages of Fred Minor,
W K. Baldridge and Fred Dendy.
Chorus of this year’s affair win
be aU male, utilising the singtag
membership of the club and a pick-
ed group from the Denton Civic
Boy Choir. Jerry Haughton, choir
member, will be presented ta a
sole, asSritt the choir.
Top-notch professional acts win
be mixed ta with acta from the
colleges and Denton lies. Topping
the net is Candy Candido, the Wtal
ic who gained feme with his Tm
feelin’ mighty low.” He’ll come to
the minstrel after a night club en-
gigssninf in New Orleans. hie
home-town.
There’ll be quartets, a Mno of
beautiful darning igkta. juggling
acta, slack-wire stunts, and plenty
of comedy.
Advance ticket sate* wore re-
ported picking up today, but tickets
may still bo purchased at the
North Texas State College main au-
ditorium prior go the performance.
Curtain time each night Is 1:1*.
There will be Bo reserved meta
WASHINGTON, Feb. 28—*
(AP) — Today brought John
L. Lewis just about his last
chance to head off the danger
of a multi-million dollar fine
against his striking coal min-
ers.
The chance—a quick agreement
during the day or night on a strike-
ending contract—looked slim to
government observers.
Meanwhile, the growing scar-
city of coal clamped an ever tight-
ening grip on industries and homes.
There continued to be tall: that
Congress might vote power for
the President to seise the mines
and tell the miners to work as gov-
ernment employes. The White
House said nothing
This is Lewis’ last chance be-
cause tomorrow at I a.m. the Unit-
ed Mine Workers are under orders
from Judge Richmond B Keech to
“show cause” why the union
shouldn’t be found in contempt of
court. If the union explanations
don’t satisfy the judge, there will
be a formal hearing Monday on a
contempt order.
Orders Ignored
It was Judge Keech who issued
a back-to-work order on Feb. 11
that has been flatly Ignored by
the miners. They have stayed away
from the pits, crying “no contract,
no work.” Although Lewis instruct-
ed them to go back, he. too. may
come ta for Judge Keech's atten-
Hons.
Lewis and the operators were
deadlocked over new contract
terms.
Whether Lewis and the opera-
tors were close to agreement on
a new pact after more than 10
months of negotiations remained
to be seen. Neither side would say
there had been any progress.
The mounting effect of toe coal
shortage wa.s another incentive
toward agreement.
A s.ite of emergency waa de-
clared in Erie. Pa . a city of 14#.-
000. Undd it. all industries WU1
cloee down on Sunday and Mon-
day, and maybe still another day
next wee*.
% SF JE
to down to<a
Banta* was only
to, temperahtora.
tower 30a early *
this morntag to
many secttaM of
the county Frost
temperatures dtafoed fart through*
out Ttaaa today after the tag end
of a cold wave knocked road tags ■■
down to freesing aa tar emitb as
Bn Antnto durtta the MgM.
Yesterday's high taanporahirb
waa 82 at Brownsville at Ttaaa*
southern tip. The low this mornttR.
to at Dalhart, waa exactly M da-
gMM under yesterday's high at
Brownsville.
Both Austin and Bbn keiaute re-
ported a troeatag » eariy tadayK
— . ... ■ I I.. -Se-iea. ~ ft-wiesi-
Kiwanis Minstrel
Opens 2-Night Run
It’s “Minstrel Time” tonight
and Friday as Denton Kiwanians
romp through their antics in pre-
senting the 24th annual charity
show, proceeds from which go to
ager c^the Draton-WteeFUrmLiNm
Association, baa boon —•—"* *’
fill the unexptfod Mtob
Milter aa chapter treasurer of the
American Rad Ctoaa, Bea TVQFr.
chapter ch
-EX.’
-__— _ ■■ ,
National Bank, and ta leaving Data
IS
;-8
sytvaate. Three aaea won beat-
en near Clearfield. State potice ea-
timeted that M.0N item ape ted
tote done to two rataes to the
Ligonier area.
Iron Ape, an industrial trade four-
art, ectimutod steel mltto-genera-
ally will have to cut Mart farnaoe
operatiene by aa much ea IB per
cent ottit week.
WASHINGTON. Feb.
A Fbir Employment
(FEPCi bill with few friends and
no entorr emen| provisions faced I
tinal vote today by weary House
members who toiled IS streigbt
hours to produce it.
The measure was in unnuiM-nt
danger of being sent back to the
labor committee for pigeonbdte-
tag.
The bill waa tentatively approv-
ed after southern civil rights op-
ponents had filibustered relent-
lessly against an anti-fob discrimi-
nation measure with enforcement
teeth, backed by President Tru-
man's forces.
The House was ready for the fi-
nal vote at 2:30 a.m. when a tech-
nicality forced it to quit, putting
off the showdown until sometime
after noon.
Supporters of the Administration
bill found little to their liking ta
th® sutMtitute nMNMurw bcBrta®
the name of Rep. McConnell iR-
Pa).
Southern Democrats who don't
want any kin* of FKPC measure
ecXi^the^tcConnrtl^yfi^
■■nHinBon dumb n nuan porV—wl mayto mm m
' 'Democratic support.
1 —»■...■«I— IW ail, I
Court Dinuhun
Cotton Suit Of
Texas Farmers
WINSTON CHURCHILU
iJ
s
‘B.
■ •' w
- - .
■r w
F
lb
r
Lewis Put On Spot
As Deadline Nears
Britain Goes
ARMAMENT RACE
To Polls Today
lotnis.
P?
tagged
IT.
as
ward in
TOWN
(BOB) EDWABDg
was Mr*. Winston Chrcb-
Oth<
Wouldn’t
I
t
Ground Search For
4 irmen A bandoned
ROUND
ABOUT
Welborn Honored
At C-C Banquet
HE MUST HAVE
SMELLED RAT
SOMEWHERE
parts of
all over
are < _ _____ _____
Square and Picadilly Circus to-
night to watch election results.
Churchill himself arrived to vote
tight
the
Civic Boy Choir as trucks r "
workers fan out at S p.m. Friday
to cover Denton in a gigantic paper
pickup drive.
If it’s )»per and bundled so ft
ware counted, he received
votes. Next mon
rested for voting
n» glad the
vise niy op-
me for the
v
tr
n
•r products will be taken in the
drive. Paper should be bundled and
stacked on the curb before the
drive begins tomorrow afternoon.
In case of rainy weather the drive
will have to be postponed.
Paper Drive For
Civic Boy Choir
Scheduled Friday
“Operation: Paper Drive ”
That, tn Army parlance, is the
in
the
sp-
in London and many parte of
eastern England the voters had dry
weather, but in western England
and in Scotland many of them bad
to trudge through cold winter dris-
sles an<J nasty mists to cart their
ballots.
The air Ministry’s special elec-
tion morning forecast waa for oc-
e main
axas
ternoon.
Thomas, a six-time loser
esldentlal races, urged that
-evident make a “dramatic
since July,
on domestic
casional rain everywhere ta Britain
al some time during the day.
The pro-Socialist weekly New
Statesman and Nation had predict-
e dthat rata would hurt the Labor-
ites end help the Conservative.
Roundabout misinterpreted what
i insurance man said about the
emium rale for Denton, ai this
rticute man said that there
James Petillo, 1014 Peak, had
just settled himself in his fav-
orite easy chair after a hard
day’s work and started to read
the newspaper
All of a sudden he heard a
•squeak, squeak.” That could
mean one of two things, either
the chair needed oil. or a cat.
Finally, with parte of the
chair scattered all over the
room. Petillo’s search was suc-
cessful. tn the head rest of the
rhalr, he found what looked
like a maternity
rodent hospital.
Eleven baby mice, their eye*
not yet open, had only one
thing to say to the intrusion.
''Squeak.”
totaa art*
Mr* J. B.
I Mr*, jr.
itebta. bad
urtebad. N.
TEXAS LAUGHS
By BOYCE HOUSE
m 'a rural cemetery is this in-
scription:
“Here lies the body of Bopbrow
la Proctor,
Who had a cold
doetor.
She couldn't stay; ata bad ta go;
Praise God from Whom all bless-
ings flow.”
A newcomer to South Carolina
ran for sheriff of ons of the targ-
ert counties as a Republfoan. He
mads many apesetas sad be cam-
paigned hard, and wben the ballots
—two
I, he woe ar-
i
at St. Stephan s a couple of hours
later. He waa cheered as he wav-
ed his familar “V” sign and stopped
to pat the cheek of a little girl
who handed him some flowers.
The voting was expected to be
close. Victory or defeat for the
Laborites—in power
1Mb—hangs chiefly
issues.
For these people of Lnxland.
Sootiend. Wak . and northern Ire-1
land neither perty promised any
relaxation of the bleak au. erity
under which Britons have lived
stace wartime. And no party has
suggssted dropping the
social aervloea eslablli
the Laborites came to
1MB.
So the choice for Mr. and Mr*.
John Bull 1* baaed on which kind
of government they think will keep
LightnmK Blasts Tank
CORPUS CHRISTI, Fteb. »-tll
-Lightning set off a brief oti fire
here yteterday which caused ebout
SB,000 damage. The bolt ripped the
top off a MO-barrel tank owned
by the KUmble OU Oo. and tossed
it ebout 2M tost into the sir.
last night
Adamton
W Crockett, ell of I
been contacted near
M. '•
The Mrtg teM Naw Manteo
ANN Wat they Just deckled „
•tay away a tew extra dayl and
Mgtected to notify retatfroe hero.
nart WAY ■esortOroatale
snvsjs « xrc
Ml ptem MB*. ------\..........
COUPLES REPORTED AS
MISSING ARE FOUND
SEMINOLE. Iteb. fl—(M-Two
couptea reported missing on a ftah-
tag trip to Mexico are safe and
sound.
Sheriff Bob Mo
that Mr.
and Mr.
This Clottifrad Ad
Really Fold OH
A full deacrlption always
help* gel big result* and this la
a good example of bow to get
result*, says Willie the want ad.
BOR-BALB:*"• 'taob~ttitag tabla
see sad *et of Dados, and table
rototaita, 1/4 R. F. tootor. BBO.
IflO Bsrnard. Fboro Ml-L
“when you place ytanr olaaai-
fled sd be sure and give s full
leecription end yeu’U get ta-
sulte every time. If you have
•emethtag to ceil, try a Recor*.
Mtelt, classified ed wtth a
MMriptifNi
FHONI 2090
i far tfie ClaaaHM Daak
Threat Of Phone
Strike In Halted
WASHINGTON. Fbb. 23 — (JI —
The threat of a nationwide break-
down in telephone service, sched-
uled for tomorrow, has been lift-
ed by union aceptance of a presi-
dential appeal for a today bar-
gaining truce.
”We will bargain every day. M
hours a day during that period in
•eeklng a peaceful settlement,"
•aid President Joseph A Belrne
of the CIO Communications Work-
ers of America.
President Truman a»kert that
service remain uninterrupted white
work goes on under present wage,
hour and other conditions.
course.
Despite the tension throughout
the world. I believe there is an
universal Interest in avoiding a
third world war,” he added.
To avoid war Thomas said na-
tion* should stop peace-time con-
scription. disarm island bases;
control mas* destruction weapons;
reduce armies to the *t*N>gth need-
ed only for internal police power.
“Our very existence depends on
escaping from the destruction of
the H-Bomb." Thomas told the
group. "An atomic war la a war
' not even the victors could afford ”
Thomas made little reference to
the Socialist Party in his speech
but predicted a close victory for
the Labor Government in Thurs-
day British elections in answer to
questions following the speech.
His appearance here was spon-
sored by the International Rela-
tions Club of North Texas, and was
part of a nation-wide tour under
the auspices of the j
Friends committee. Thoma*
more than an hour late after bad
weather had delayed hi* plane at
St. Loui*.
VANCOUVER. B. C-. Feb. fl—(fl
—Ground search was abandoned
today for firs airmen who para-
chuted laat week from a biasing
B-M Air Force bomber.
The Royal Canadian Air Throe,
announcing end of the search on
heavily timbered Princess Royal
Island, said a higb-epeech launch,
an airplane and three helicopter*
would continue to patrol the sea
and shoreline*.
The U. 8. airmen were part of
a crew of 1? which parachuted
from the ice-coated burning B-M
shortly before midnight Fhb. IS.
Twelve were rescued.
? THOMAS SCORES
^4. M tAlton) Zimmerman and
and Mrs John Zimmerman
| re Denton visitors this week and
»on was looking up some of his
7 g-tlme friends, a* he left Denton
1913. He now makes his home
“Frankston. Texas, but. at that.
Ki* seldom there as he It in the
end paper contracting busi-
■ s which call* htm in many parts
a the state, especially tn East
■ tas When Alton Zimmerman
E • here he worked for the late
g, T. (Tom) Morris tn the paint
kjd paper business He stended the
Jnton public school when he was
they. His brother. John Zimmer-
( tn. is an ex-student of North
Lxas State, but that was back In
■e day* when the college was
Town as The Teachers College.
>hn now lives in Dallas, where
• Bee ROUND ABOUT. Page 3
M. C. Welborn, former district
engineer at the State Highway De-
partment. who has accepted a spe-
cial position with the highway de-
____partment. was honored with an
American j appreciation dinner given by the
-*1 *»s highway committee of the cham-
ber >f < ommerce. Wednesday night
at 7:30 at the Southern Hotel.
Emcee of the dinner was Walk-
er Jagoe. highway committee chair-
man. He introduced Welborn's suc-
cessor. Frank W Cawthorn, as
well as T. E. Huffman, former
epunty engineet who was instru-
mental in Denton County'* first
toad building program started in
1910.
There were 21 guests present, in-
cluding members of the commis-
sioners court.
your property of possible fire has- ed:
*r«te. “I feel fine and D
Newspapers, magaalnes and pap- weather’s fine. Other*
—» win k. <_ .v- ponfht would blame
weather.”
No incidents had been reported
But London’s famous "bobbies"
were primed foe huge crowds which
expected to jam Trafalgar
The United Blates should take the peal” to the world for disarma-
iUative in an all-out effort to end I ment
e world armament race, Norman The elderly Socialist lashed out ,
American Socialist lead- at what he called the U 8 “war
. told more than 800 persons in I economy.”
auditorium at North I They’ve tagged the label of
State College Wednesday • 'welfare state* on the government a
1 program but actually our economy |
is five per cent welfare and 95 per |
cent warfare," Thorns* charged.
“It’s a waste of a nation s re-
sources and energies to conduct an
armament race,” "No nation has
ever gained enough superiority in 1
arms to prevent war by fear,"
Thomas chanced.
He said the United States should
direct its effort* toward two goals;
1— End to the armaments race
with proper supervision.
2— Cooperative aid in a
against hunger throughout
world.
Thomas mid that the B. 8.
foreign policy was wholly lacking
Ttie righteous cry, and the Lord in imagination The trouble with
•areth. end dellvereth them out' our foreign policy ta not what tt
all their trouble*—Psalm 34 17 doe* but what it leaves undone,
I thank thee for the gracious gift. Thomas added.
teara —Alderich | u;d didn t
' was any danger of immediate con-
flict but predicted the average col-
lege student of today would be
Involved in another war if the
aalSe this "past vear’ttat s^uid »orld vonttaued on it* present
t affect this year’s rate on fire ;***«’“
<urance In fact, effective this'
irch. the Denton credit of 15
r cent will be dropped to a credit
only 10 per cent, due to the
avy fire loaaes of the pa*t year
jnton has enjoyed a 15 per cent
kdlt, due to the light fire losse*.
|e maximum credit that may be
(talned by extremely light fire
^ses i* 25 per cent and the maxi-
.im debit, made necessary by ex-
,<mely heavy fire toase*. I* also
i, per cent. Let's all be as careful
nut ftre-hasard* a* possible and
ft if we can’t get that 25 per cent
xllt one of these days. That
Auld mean quite a lot of spending
^ney for other purposes.
LONDON, Feb. 23—LT—Briton*
formed the most Important queue I
of the past five year* as they ,
lined up today to mark their “S's" |
for or against re-electing their so-
cialist government.
A record vote in the national
elections was expected as lines
formed early and steady streams
began moving through polling sta-
tions all over thia Island kingdom.
The choice before mor* than
34,000,000 voters
Re-election uf Prime Minister
Oloment Atttee'a Laterites, pledg-
ed to put atill more taduaOrtes uA-
dor state control; or a return to
Ito coorontattro rate of wartime
ftfemtar, Winston CtarchUl. who
promised to halt nationalisation but
keep mart of Britain’s welfare state
eecurity measures.
■ F*w women, long accustomed to
queuing in shops, turned out for the ~
oariy voting. One of them, how-
ever, waa Mr*. Winston Chrcb- **
_ _ htn aries and cut their living costs,
objective of the Optimist Club* r£ ---- — ' - - - - ■ -
‘ arii^d'^.’^tt^ _____
Attlee and his wife already had
voted by mall.
The prime mlntater and
can be loaded easily, th. boys want ,
It. It’ll be sold to help defray the ■ U*y »rr^
expense of outfitting the choir for j
their concert tour which will take
them to New York this summer. ! ___ __
As the drive Wikers have point- Attlee shook hands with work- i
ed out, it’s also a good way to rid j men repairing the street and fok-
hill.
Mr*. ctnirehlU wm wnlling as
1 station
The prime minister and Mr-
j Attlee were cheered by a large ,
; 1 at Labor i
Party headquarters in Wai.ham- I
stow west, the working clqat sec-
tion of London where Attlee is a
. candidate.
AHtaa m
•J
next wat®
» qxtra <x
Jn*‘. cell
ring now eat-
222
tf a^w
w eertral Ok
ta two vton
WBAT A K
SFAXl
klaafll' Raskbtbi
IE£25;.. _
tew city with * large
i MBte#
extra •
*
one eoay « the Mg IBM Dentoa
Itocard Vdbranioto Baby Barttett
wen’t be enough for the whole
•mb®.
The amtamal grandaareafo w®
wata «Ma ttn gatarnai grandpar-
onto w® want one. the aunte aad
uncle* WIBIIB |B>kiiig for their
eeptaa, and one w® to needed for
the acrapbooko ' ‘ ; .
DOCTOR’S ‘CONSCIENCE IS~CLEAR’
woe
the
wtttoh
State Reports Sander Killed
Patient On Plea Of Husband
etatged gpeoifi-
--- Bor
■BUWKii
of oancer M
a nrameto ef weekaem to Btjert
ed the ate”
rote^ w
•wo tw
Tte
that Bander, ate
jueslion froig Dr.
■ Me
Bor-
«; ~ o?' r1*" ’*** **“*• "~1
^BSXe'ofMr. Borrotete Bload-
tage *nd tooawe Mr. “
a good Mend of hte.
•rreral teifrtnit MMM al Ufo
moating everwtoiminglv ntett ^
ed a proirel reachrttan directed to
-------------------—**—'—r—
to to Ito Datoteo aa* fto
•nratto al •trottea Moteia. fto MB.
.. •
VETERANS PROTEST
CLOSING OF HOSPITAL
KL FARO, fek M--Re|
•entalivro of veteraite organ
item last alght heard sport
tomato Inutottaf! action ta
•taro veterato toto f ‘—
MANumnrnm, w. r — -
-on—Tto atata said today that Dr?
Hermann N. Bander admitted kill-
tag a SB-year-old cancer patient
with air injections and ctatamd he
did it *t the pleading of tor bua-
toto to relieve ter euffering.
Attorney General William L.
Fhlnney made the aeeertton ae to
outlined the atata’! case against
the 4i-ye*r-oM doctor ta a IS-man
jury trying him tot murder.
Breaking aottiy and slowly. Phin-
ney quoted Dr. HMtir aa aaytag
that he NBmr to “ttdgM have brok-
Dr- totoer te gt2“
natty with h®a< Mr*, i
roto to riving h«r air
aa she lay
u ’"I
Arty. BtoMli1 tai
a.’ Borroto) tod died1
•m 2121
‘AtKINfl
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DENTON, TEXAS, THURSDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 28,1»M
VOL. XLVII
NO. 167
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^0R CHILD AID .
Enjoy The Kiwanis
Benefit Minrtrel
Tonight, Friday
.
VKA
Fair Aad Mild
Si
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iEWn.»u""‘ ’ f — ‘
Denton, Texas
■
DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLE
Aaaodatod Preaa Leased Wirt SIXTEEN PAGES
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 167, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 23, 1950, newspaper, February 23, 1950; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1314390/m1/1/: accessed July 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.