The McKinney Examiner (McKinney, Tex.), Vol. 67, No. 12, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 25, 1952 Page: 3 of 16
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THE EXAMINER, McKINNEY, TEXAS, DECEMBER 25, 1952
THREE
Times -
robbery
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C. P. HORN
Television & Radio
224 E. Virginia St.
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Expert Television
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§ I Milk Robbery
Still Mystery
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Our idea of a well-equipped rain-
maker is one who can stop a rain as
well as start one.
CHOICE McCLURE
East Virginia Street
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Johnson Furniture Co.
WILBUR THOMPSON
McKINNEY
! Alice Attorney
Free on Bond in
Ambush Killing
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Repair Shop
Phone 1487
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The C. P. HORN TELEVISION AND
RADIO REPAIR SHOP offers you
the most Expert Workmanship
in the repair of all makes
of Television and Radio. The
very latest in modem repair
equipment is used.
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ALICE, Dec. 19.—Alice Attorney
Nago Alaniz was released on $15,000
bond Thursday afternoon to await
trial Feb. 2 in the ambush slaying
of the son of a prominent South
Texas political leader.
Haggard and underweight, but
nattily dressed in a gray suit and
red-striped tie, Alaniz hurried from
the courtroom and sped away in an
automobile with his wife and two
,small children. His brother, Luz
Alaniz of Beeville, followed close
behind in another auto.
“I don’t know. 1 don’t know,” Na-
go repeated again and again when
reporters asked if he planned to stay
in Alice, if he would resume his law
practice, if he would move to San
Antonio as had been reported.
He seemed nervous and anxious
to get away from the little South
Texas city swarming with Texas
Rangers and officers since Jake
(Buddy) Floyd, Jr., was shot down
Sept. 8.
Local officers indicated they
would make no effort to give Alaniz
special protection while he is out on
bond.
When reporters asked Alaniz
Thursday about rumors that he was
a marked man, the attorney refused
to answer.
Signing the $15,000 bond, ordered
by the state Court of Criminal Ap-
peals, were D. C. Chapa and Lorenza
Garcia, both of Duval County.
Alaniz had been in jail here since
his arrest Sept. 14.
-----o—————
Save at Bergvall & Son’s.
---------o---------
Save at Crary’s
George Carter in Dallas
Herald says:
The $15,000 Borden Co.
Wednesday gave indication of den-
veloping into as much of a mystery
as the famous $1,200,000 Brinks
holdup in Boston which it paral-
leled in precision and planning.
Detective Capt. Will Fritz refused
to discuss the case. He indicated
there were no developments.
Four men, three of them masked
and one with the bill of a cap low
over his eyes, walked into the third-
floor checking room and cashier’s
office of the dairy at 6:45 p.m. Mon-
day and carried off an estimated
$15,000.
Twenty or moie persons, most of
them routemen checking in the
day’s receipts, were in the office at
the time and were made to lie face
downward on the floor while their
money, and that from the cashier’s
till was stuffed into sacks.
“We’re going about it just like
we would in any other robbery,”
he replied when pressed for details.
He said, however, that victims of the
holdup had not yet been shown pic-
tures of local police characters who
might be considered as suspects.
Capt. Fritz said Tuesday the
showing of pictures probably would
be one of the first steps in the in-
vestigation.
Borden Co. officials still had not
announced the exact amount of the
loss, previously set at “probably
about $15,000.”
The robbery, at the $15,000 figure,
was one of the largest of the year.
Last January, a cafe holdup netted
four men $16,000. The bandits were
later arrested.
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Thompson, Clint & Thompson, Wofford. The McKinney Examiner (McKinney, Tex.), Vol. 67, No. 12, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 25, 1952, newspaper, December 25, 1952; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1328221/m1/3/: accessed July 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Collin County Genealogical Society.