Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 19, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 3, 1950 Page: 1 of 28
twenty eight pages : ill. ; page 23 x 18 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
VK ' r
lvan>l
j
)
. i
SUNDAY
WEATHER
IU5
PoaaiNa Starov
I
105b
TWENTY EIGHT PAGES
Sept
DENTON, TEXAS, SUNDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 3, 1930
VOL. XLVI1I
Antedated Press Leased Wire
!■
NO. 19
r
★
★
e Made
REDS UNLEASH NEW ATTACK
Mate
Tilts
I
the
I
iY«ao*m.
School Tax Election
be
Scheduled Tuesday
PUSAN
f
ENS
A school referendum vote here1
1
JlaWI MAH
EEDS, a fav-
M’Arthur Asks
For More Aid
midway
of Pohang. (AP Wirephoto Map)
AAF Mum On
midnight
Bomb ‘Nests’
how
estimate
to
I
Forecasters
j
«
and
fed
"Costa"
santlne
r
Buses Crush
of
T-Patchers Leave
ground forces were still outnurn- proximately 1.100 miles southeast
i____■ I nt Miami
of Miami.
bered
Dewey Is Sought
THERE'S A GREAT FAIR A-COMIN’
A
0
I
WEATHER
&
(
13
■»»
4
I
I
w
I
Nine Die, 50
Hurt In Crash
Danger Lurks
In New Storm
' 1
IS
key
Cave-Man Lover
IF oom, H eds Girl
time to plant.
• lot of seed
■ mall
Fann Burglary
Believed Solved
Price 10c
Per Copy
LATE NEWS
BULLETINS
hey come up
II.
t very
tICHOLSON'S
)
’alls. 5-3,
Austin
AS
r Act
which
place.
Dr.
the
Maneho
iNablene
SOUTH
KOREA
Noerw
xoefs
- - .»
A
■a
IM
It
14
ALBANY. N Y., Sept 1— UR —
Lt. Gov. Joe R Hanley tonl*ht
withdrew aa candidate for the Re-
publican gubernatorial Domination
and urged Governor Dewey to run
for a third term.
Mu*n
soai*
tow
much
i
i
»
Fla ,
tropical
1
!
s
• Fencing
ECO.
Tub Aluminum
>7
1
San«u •>
.... 78
... eo
J
Kun«*
. *
k w^i*rey*neVjRj
.. )
. 3t t ’•
i
■M
**.’ ’J
MP
Dream Of Late Homer Flow Will Be
Realized As Hospital Opens Today
NEW YORK CITY, hept. X
— i-P) —Eighty-eight persons
lost their Uvea in holiday acct*
dents before the Labor Day
weekend was well under way.
Seventy-three of the victims
died in highway accidents, one
by drowning and 13 in miscel-
laneous mishaps after 6 p.m.
local time Friday.
Enemy Forces
In Desperate
Final Drive
nade more than £
. In 1943. to be-
players ever to
. in their first \
C**o Hyonpueg Of ££te
**"*'v^’*7r
^■P-<HAMAN Ww
a head-on crash between two spe-
cial Interurban trains.
The collision, about nine miles
from dowptown Milwaukee, was be-
- "
LaborDay
Programs
Are Set
ut of a schedul-
vlth Texarkana r
urth now -with
in over Green-
lilt with Oalnes-
il out last night.
Sherman Deni-
un sixth inning
while
again.
KUMCHON
GAS GAUGE
4 am. ...
• am. ....
war.
—
The farm on which Shaddix liv- back across the Naktong.
ed was about one and one-half
miles from the Axtell home
MILWAUKEE. Sept. 3— tf) —
A national convention of model
railway fans opened tragically to- j
TOKYO. Sunday, Sept. 1 —
UP,—United States Marines
want back Into action in Korea
Vriay against CommunliU in
the bulge across the Naktong
River west of Yongsan.
MIAMI. Fla., Sept. 2—"P>—A
giant tropical hurricane, now
ranked with tire destructive mom
stera of 1929 and 192V thundered
through the Atlantic tonight with
160 mile an hour winds as another
twister developed In the western
Caribbean Bea.
Although the Atlantic storm was
by far the more dangerous of the
two. the effects of the rapidly-de-
The frost Is not yet on tte pumpkin but B’a geUing mighty does
to fair time. And the 1M0 Denton Oounty Fair and Rodeo pr relate
to be the beat yet as new attractions are being planned tor this year's
exposition. You'll find the details on Page 1. Section H. of your Sun-
day Record-Chronicle.
DENISON, Sept' 2 —<4h—
Perrin Air Force Hase reported
tonight an F-51 Mustang plane
made a belly landing three
nrilea south of Valley View,
near the Denton-4 ooke county
line. The pilot was unhurt.
• Utsong
k?
xarkana.
led first.
third place club.
r the first two
round
ALLIES BLUNT RED DRIVE
U. 8. troops in the Homan area (1) have won back
positions they lost in the initial phase of a massive
North Korean assault. The U. S. 2nd Division drove
back into Yongsan (2), blunting the deepest penetra-
tion of the enemy drive. However, the Reda were re-
ported to be massing tanks to exploit the dent of nearly
eight miles they still hold in that area. North of Taegu
(3) Yanka attacked hills near Waegwan and South Ko-
reans were pushing the Reds back in the L'ihang sector.
Allied forces (4) reported they wire pursuing Reda north
IX
•r
■ p
120-Mile War Perimeter
From Maaan To Pohang
Explodes Into Action
TOKYO, Sunday, Sept. 3—
(AP) — The North Korean
Communist Army unleashed
a massive general offensive
along the entire onrthern
front today and attacked in
an attempt to get their south-
ern drive rolling again.
All the 130-mtle battle perimeter
from Maaan on the southwest to
Pohang on the northeast exploded
into action.
The northern power drive gained
nearly two miles against the U.S.
First cavalry Division near Waeg-
wan. 12 miles northwest of the
American supply base of Taegu.
Anierlcan officers have listed the
Waegwan-Taegu corridor as the
Reds’ No. 1 route for a push on the
lifeline port of Pusan, 5* air miles
southeast of Taegu.
Familiar Ground
It is the sector where Pint Caval-
ry troops opened an attack Satur-
day seeking to seise three vital
heights. Intelligence officers ex-
plained at that time the move was
to forestall a major Red offensive
there.
The Reds' general attack in the
north extended from Waegwan
eastward 55 air miles to the east
coast above Pohang. A U.S. Eighth
Army communique this morning
said the United Nations line was
''generally holding firm." But it
listed the 3,500 yard loss near
Waegwan.
The communique also said the
Reds had seised high ground south
of Klgye, nine miles northwest of
Pohang. Tills high ground domi-
nates a highway from Pohang to
Taegu.
On the west and south, where
wha R®ds opened an offensive
1 m TWraoay midnight which was
MMM by Saturday. the Rads re-
___ grouped today and resumed their
attack at the south end.
Aimed At 25th
Thlf punch was aimed at ths
hard-flghtlng U. 8. 25th Division
defending Mason and Pusan.
On the right flank of the 35th,
American Marines reinforced a
counterattack being made by the
U.S. Second Infantry Division.
American forces are trying to
eliminate a deep Communist pene-
tration.
When the 50.000 Reds opened
their west and southern offensive,
they massed their greatest strength
near the confluence of the Nam and
Naktong rlvera. awung northeast
against the U B Second Infantry
Division, rolled the Americana back
eight and one-half miles and cap-
tured the town of Yongsan.
Saturday, the Second Diviaion re-
captured Yongsan. Today, bolster-
ed by the First Marina Brigade,
the Second Division launched an
attack along its entire 35-mile
front, aimed al driving the Reds
Denton Countlane can celebrate
Labor Dey right here at home this
year as programs are planned for
all day in different parte eg the
county.
At 2 p.m., at Hundley's Camp at
Lake Dellas, a regatta will draw
boating enthusiasts from all over
North Texas- Kib Hundley, owner
/j
Mid about M boats would be en-
tered in the regatta parade and
show that follows.
A water stow will give spectators
s sample of plain and fancy aqua-
planing and other water aporta.
Hundley invited holiday-era to
ftx a picnle lunch, bring It to the
lake and stay for the regatta. It
will bo open to the public free of
charge
The Denton County Rodeo will
take over the Labor Dey flreworke
Monday night with a special rough-
and-tumble show scheduled for
^15.
A special attraction al the ro-
deo will be Betty Ward, a mem-
ber of the Gaineeville Circus, who
will do a 90-foot sway pole act.
Unfortunately, Labor Day wtM
mean just that, a labor day for
many Denton people. Moot retail
merchants have signified that they
will remain open aa usual Mon-
day
Bankers and city employes vrtB
get a reel and the Rocord-Chront-
cle offices will close at door Moo-
NORTH FORT HOOD. Sept ?
bf* —Texas T-patchers of the
36th Infantry Division began roll-
ing homeward todsy after two
weeks of summer field training.
...‘.''J iLrurv
'n>. -
DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLE
WASHINGTON Sept 3 — (4A —
The Air Firce — which should
know the facts if anybody here
does — presented a poker face to-
day about a top general's reported
assertion that Russia has five atom
bomb "nests. ”
Doos the United States know that
or believe the statement? A re-
porter asked a spokesman for the
Air Force whose job Is to atomise
RumIs'a war potential If she at-
tacks the United States
"I have no Information aa to
whether that la correct or not.”
the spokesman replied.
Maj Gen. Orvll A. Anderson was
suspended yesterday as command-
ant of the Air War College at
Montgomery, Ala , after ho was
quoted as saying in an interview
that he could "break up Russia's
five A-bomb nests in a week” if
given the order, and that tt is
dangerous "to assume that the
Russians won't use their A-bombs
if we sit by and watch them build
them." _____
The Air lN>rce spokesman said,
in response to a reporter's ques-
tions. that Anderson waa not sus-
pended for disclosing secret in-
formation; that the question wheth-
er secret Information was involved
had not been raised.
Officials, smashing hard at "pre-
ventive war" talk, accompanied
and followed Anderson s suspension
with strong assertions that starting
wars la not American policy.
<R-NJ) Mid he favors getting all
the men needed, but does not be-
lieve a hot war is Inevitable.
McClellan's suggestion for firing
the first shot paralleled the pre-
ventive war proposal for which the
White House and State Department
rebuked Secretary of the Navy
Mathews.
It was akin to some statements
which contributed to the Air
Force's suspension of Maj Gen.
Orvll Anderson aS commandant of
the Air War College at Maxwell
Marines Peak Ahead
Associated Proas Correspondent
Don Huth said the Marines pushed
ahead mor* than a quarter of a
mile in the first hour of the drive.
Marine tanks were In support.
The Marines hit due west from
Yongsan while the Infantrymen
struck northwest. Thia threw the
Leathernecks across the same ter-
rain they traveled in helping ths
U S 34th Division eliminate a 13,-
000 man Red bridgehead two weeks
ago
Hundreds of land and carrier-
based planes attacked enemy tar-
gets In their consecutive day of
massed support today. They bomb-
ed. rocketed, and machinegunnod
Red troops which already have suf-
fered casualties well over 10,000.
This was the situation at what
may bo the climatic phase of the
entire campaign.
1. “ ~ ‘ ......
Weather Bureau
hurricane
ATED PRESS
ter Morris has
plans for the
but he's leav-
er me fourth
round.
Into Temple to-
ime series and
Class B League
results of this
veloplng hurricane only 190 miles
southwest of Havana, Cuba, al-
ready were being felt as far north
r.s Miami.
Southeast storm warnings for
winds up to 50 miles an hour were
ordered displayed at 7 pm. <C8T>
from Port Everglades, near Fort
Lauderdale, through the Florida
Keys.
Winds in gusts up to 46 miles per
hour with sustained winds of 35
miles an hour have buffeted Miami j
since 5 p m.
At Tavernier. Fla . a tiny fish-
ing community midway between
Miami and Key West on the Over-
Highway. windg up to 53 miles
— '-y f'1
■ -
for school purposes.
These school districts—many of
them dormant—had tax rates from
25 cents to fl on the t',00 pro-
perty valuation
In the city, for the past three I
j years, as part of the overall $2 18
tax residents hate been paying
MoCMellan called for all-out mobi-
lization.
He said American strength
should be built up as quickly as
possible so the United Blates could
demand through the United Nations
that Russia agree to join this
country In disarming and interna-
tional Inspection guaranteeing that
such agreement Is carried out.
"If Russia refuses to enter into
the spirit of International coopera-
tion for peace then, we would have
our final answer and could be
governed accordingly." McClellan
said
"Under such conditions. I would
favor our firing the first shot In a
that then would be Inevl-
ATHENS. Greece. Sept 2 -oTI—
A surprise marriage has climax-
ed the tempestuous romance of
Taasoula Pefracogeorgl and her
dashing abductor.
The sultry-eyed Cretan beauty,
wan but avowedly happy, arrived
here today as the bride nf Con-
snntinc "Costa" Kephaloyannlx. | dix lived,
who kidnapped her 12 days ago.
"I love Costa and married him
of my free will," she said.
They sought the blessing
Greek Orthodox Archbishop Spyrl-
don for the wedding yesterday in
s monastery of Crete's Mount Ida
Otherwise the bridegroom faced
the possibility of arrest o« a kid-
napping warrant Issued by n Cre-
tan prosecutor, reliable sources
said
The Reds attacked today all
along the north 55-mlle sector of
the battle perimeter, gaining at
Klgye and Waegwan.
2. Along a 35-mlle front west
of YongMn the U. 8. Second Di-
See REDS UNLEASH Page 3
[TEXAS: Partly cloudy 8un-
and Monday with a
showdra.
r year new PtymeaRi
lTTOK Aa ttMte aa M« • MR
4 '
I School of fids Is have pointed out
that some of the county residents
will naturally face tax raises, but
that their tax valuations will re-
main the same and there will be
no new boards of equalization.
For those residents outside the
city limits, the new school taxes
would be paid right along with
county and state taxes They would
be collected by the county tax as-
sessor-collector.
To those within the city limits
It would mean nothing new or
added
Students from the annexed dis-
tricts were or are now going to
within the city limits public schools
with the exception of those ’
al tend Center Point, MayhlU
Cooper Creek school.
r^hou; were clocked'ln frequent ,BllWBy 1B„„ w
rain squalls. | day when nine of them were kill-1
The entire Florida Key area was ed and an estimated 50 injured in
getting 40 to 50 mile an hour
squalls.
Grady Norton, chief forecaster at
the U. S. Weather Bureau here,
said the 160-mlle an hour storm
some 150 miles northeast of San
Juan, Puerto Rico, now contained
winds equal to the murtlerous
storms which caused dlMstegs 'in
1926 and 1928.
He said Nary hurricane hunter
aircraft found the 160 mile an
hour winds on the north side of
the storm, which probably means
................... winds on the south-east side are
and type of units j stronger.
----- --------- ... j He declined
10 ym.
I* noon
« p m.
4 p m.
• pm. 74
• prn........: ?1
10 pm. ....... TO
Solons Support Plan
For 3 Million Troops
WASHINGTON, Sept. 3 — (B —
Senator McClellan (D-Ark) called
tor for an ultimate "peace-or-
war" shov down with Russia as
lawmakers pledged support for
President Truman's plan to boost
the nation's fighting forces to 3,-
000,000 men or more.
McClellan, member of the Senate
Appropriations Committee, was one
of the first to speak out for the
sort of preventive war Truman told
the country Friday night that the
United States doe* not believe in.
A school referendum vote here J Tuesday * election *111 seek to
Tuesday will equalize the tax rate I equalize the $1 25 tax over the en-
over the 143 square mile Denton j tire district. Ths election in Den-
Irtdependent School District and ton la not an unusual one. M sim-
also place the assumption of the ' flar ones have carried over the
bonded Indebtedness upon th/* ’ state, as part of the far-reaching
whole district, if carried. | effect of Gllmer-Alkin school legls-
Votlng will be conducted in the i lation. _ j
city hall auditorium with M L. -------------'——7,- -7;
Uaujey as election Judge This |
..„Ty ...„■ qualified ! will naturally face tax raises. —
Angon«
Field, Ala. The White House and
State Department might dlMvow
McClellan’s views, but they
couldn't keep him from expressing
his sentiments
Rep. Mabon (D-Tex) UAd
House recently to expect aVeqvest
later for 510,000,000,000 more In
military funds.
Senator Lodge (R-MasCJ said
Congress may have to raise Its
draft sights to get 3,000,000 persons
In uniform. He Mid the present
law Is geared to bring In about
2.500,000. Z
nif.r rwiiv* 4_v v/a
. member nations." he |
united and deter- , lnuch stronger.
Forecasters explained that the
1 squalliBnow buffeting South Florida
j are being generated by the same
low pressure system which is de-
veloping tha Caribbean storm, but
are not winds from the storm. It's
still some 380 to 400 miles from
Miami.
The official
term for the Atlantic
was "great and severe "
Late yesterday the storm had
come to a virtual halt with highest
winds ranging from 110 to 130 miles
I an hour.
Now. revitalized, it again was on
the prowl.
Fore* asters placed the center of
Arthur” said that’ strategic with- j the Atlantic storm at Latitude 20.3
drawals were required because the | north, Longitude 65 0 west, or ap-
HOUSTON. Sept 3— Eight
persons were rushed to hospitals
when they were Injured this after-
noon in a collision between two
I city buses. None was thought to
' be seriously Injured, police report-
1 ed
auditorium with M
as election Judge
vot«T will be only for
property tax-paying voters in the
Denton Independent School District,
to simplify voting procedure. Ra-
mey has asked that voters bring
along a tax receipt, if possible
Tbit will not be a general ballot-
ing
Voters will mark two propositions
on the referendum tit Shall the
Denton Independent. School Dis-
trict have an equalized tax of
11 25. and (2> shall the bonded
Indebtedness of the enure district
be assumed by the district.
Need for an equalizing election
came about a year ago when 11
outlying school district* were am
nexed to the Denton Independent
i School District by the county board
tween two special two-car excur- j
slon trains of the Mllwsukee Ra-
pid Transit and Speedrail Co.i
Delegates to the annual conven- |
tlon of the National Model Rail-
road Association had leased them
for a sight-seeing trip.
The forward cars of the two
electrified trains were smashed to*
bits as one telescoped Into the oth- j
cr. splitting the sides back line 1
a banana peel The rear coaches of]
the both trains remsined on the
tracks.
One of the trains, operated by
Jay Maeder, president of the rail-
road. was returning from Its trip
to suburban Hales Coroners. The j
other was enroute there Both
trains were traveling on the same
track.
Maeder, who told sn Associated
Press reporter he "Jumped or was
shoved" from the control booth
of the Inbound train before the
crash, said "I have no idea of
how it happened."
A five-day old burglary was sol-
I ved Friday afternoon by the ar-
residents have been paying ' rest “ 28-year-old ex-convict on
$1 25 in school taxes. One dollar of; a farth near Hebron,
this had gone for maintenance and I
25 cents for bond retirement.
I.AKE SUCCESS. Sept. 3— W —
Gen. Douglas MacArthur pleaded
touay for a quick buildup of Unit-
ed Nations ground forces In Ko-
rea.
He said In a report to the Unit-
ed Nations that naval and air
power have grown In strength and
effectiv ness. but added; "My
gravest concern is for a prompt
buildup of the now outnumbered
ground f roes of this command."
MacArthur is the rommander of
all I . N. forces trying to push
North Korean invaders back to the
28th Parallel, across which they
Invaded South Korea. June 25
■"Hie information I have receiv-
ed on the size
offered bv.....
said, "shows a
mined spirit in tne nations of the
United Natlons-to repel the inva-
der of the Republic ol Korea that
♦ is gratifv ing
"I still feel it my duty to re-
port to you that contributions must
be forthcoming without delay if
this threat to international secur-
ity is lo be resolved promptly."
He added -"I am glad to report
that during the period of thia re-
port 'Aug I 15' the cohesion dis-
played by the United Nations
forces of this command has prov-
ed tire validity of the United Na-
tions concept of peace.”
Tire report Is his third
a general description of military
operations in the Pusan bridge-
head between Aug. I and 15. Mac-
I
"1
-7'7*
^3 ’
1
1
DALLAS, Sept. 2 —*>—
Five persons—all victims of
traffic accident*—died violent
deaths during the Labor-Day
holiday weekend in Texas
through t p.m. Saturday
9, «hrub- 1
This was to hava been Homer
E Flow's day
Flow Memorial Hospital was his
dream. But Homer E. Flow died in
1947—three years before that
dream came true.
If Flow were alive today ha
would be nearly 80 years old—but
you could be assured he would be
standing on the summit of that
hill in the northwest section of
the city A hill on which srtians
have built a gleaming, three-story
brick and Iron mercy ktfUrtiirr
Someone would have to tell Flow
what the hospital looked like. About
its broad lines and its immensity
—for Flow lost his sight when he
was 50 years old.
But in those hours of darknaM.
intimates My he often thought of
a place of great brightness where
the less fortunate sick and diseas-
ed could find refuse, solace and
treatment for their ills. -
At 3 p.m. Dr. Roger Hebard.
minister of the First Baptist
Church will offer a brief prayer of
dedication at the entrance of the
hospital From that hour on. now
. Memorial Hospital will be open—
its doors nevvr to be closed to the
sick of Denton County.
Visitors will course its broad
, halls and marvel at the wonders
of new, gleaming silver equip-
ment Thev will see luxuriously ap-
See HOSPITAL Page 2
DENTON AJ4D VICINITY: Partly
cloudr Bunday and Monday, with
possibility of a few eeattered
showers Not much change in
temperatu^;
EAST
day
scattered showers Not
change In temperature
(Experiment gtatlna weport Friday)
Nigh M
Rainfall SO
Saturday's T~
LONE 8TAL
Friday
13 1MJOU 7S
3 pm. 84
4 pm
• p.m.
8 p m.
10 pm
•atarday
18 a m. .....
1 am.
umhwa h? j
NeGan«
^*•7 TAEGU
war
table
McClellan Mid he doen't think the
President'* plan for an armed
gtrepgth of 3,000,000 men goes tar
enough.
"I think that we are dealing with
a desperate world situation In
which our only hope of winning the
peace Iles In showing Russia that
we are" prepared to and can des-
troy her unles* she Joins in an Inter-
national spirit of peace and good
will," he said.
Senator Russell <D-Ga> said 3,-
000,000 fighting men are Insufflc-
clent—"if we are faced with the '
inmlnent danger of an ail-out
Benatot* H Alexander Smith
Sheriff Ones Hodges said Satur-
j day that charges had been filed
_ I against James Shaddix in con-
I nection with the burglary of the
I farm home of J. W Axtell, near
Hebron, sometime Monday.
Sheddix allegedly entered the
Axtell home by going through a
window. Large quantities of house-
hold goods and clothing were re-
ported taken from Axtell's home.
All the goods were found when
Shaddix was arrested by Deputies
Olen Jones and Olen Key. Sher-
iff Hodges said. The stolen prop-
erty was hidden in grain sacks un-
der corn tn a barn on which 8had-
Twktone
OB the same page yrnl M stertM M tha Hg Ml Hg ohm
held hare Friday, the opening M Dawiam aebaate Awtmg tbw oaatw
week, and the Hows Utah's plans far tbatr aasmal earetraL
You’ll find your* Bunday Record-Chrociola Jammed-packaA wtth *
news of folks you know in Denton and Danton Cbunty. Thn enok at
the Danton man who thia week finished hia fin* batt eantaiy aa •
barter ia found op Page I ot ■aatton IL the Bditorinl BlbhlW X«e;
the many fields in which wotnen are making a maik ter thenaalvee
are outlined on Page « at Section H. tha firel of tbt WtaMS*a Pngaa:
and the artlviUM at Denton QroMy men wte tas tab enlM to
military eervice will be found en fhfb • et Beotian L
__
Today Denton roaihso aa toqpeitoSt ■Battona ndfe 1
opening of the aew adMan •eBar Vtov Mmartrt MM
find stertea and ptotareo at toe naw an fl eentor en VbMa 1 abl
2 at gootten I aad Pago t at ■uBea IL And to* tee ttnd babp
bora there, a galaxy ef prtaae w«S to awaeM kr Damtea aaar*
chaata. The detaUe at too "Baby ate toM on Bas* < «t
Tte autumn weather ttmt baa taMM Danton' Mi WMtoM to l
reminder that ItetbaH won't be to* btotot. VMtfB ttot -teK'ItoP Mt
North t*xm Btolee and to* Danton Wb Bnms tett naaanaSto ate
shaping up on the Sport* Pago. >Wa • eC BaaMte £
aH s|
It gives
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 19, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 3, 1950, newspaper, September 3, 1950; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1315916/m1/1/: accessed June 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.