Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 292, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 30, 1952 Page: 1 of 12
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a’
1.
1951
I
Denton Record-Chronicle
Continued Hat
1
7*!‘J **
DENTON, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON^ JULY 30, 1952
VOL. XL1X
TWELVE PAGE*
Associated Pres* 1-eased Wire
★
NO. 292
★
★
★
FRISCO GINNER HOPEFUL
»
other trip to the Rio Grande Vai-
Weird Plot
Discounted
the next
two weeks
took him
i
gl
O' 1
t
automatically
of in
taken care
• o
he said.
sas penitentiary where he had
this
ROUND
ABOUT
TOWN
J. (Bob) EDWARDS
By
■’ T*’ ft
f
sue-
38, and I
here
Little distent is expected from
like to sit in on the conventions
way into the water
A
tare.
y
I
re
t
♦
Dim]
it ■
S?
t
4
I
MM
a
UK.
li
E
it
4
County GOP,
Democrats
Little Elm Man
Arrested Here
should attempt temporary admin-
See LUNCHES, Page 2
I
Today’s News Today
Latest Denton, Denton County,
Texas, National And World
News And Pictures
And Power Plant Superintendent
W. T. Elliott reported 4,175,000
This has been an unusual sum-
mer, satisfactory in some ways,
not so in others, but the weather,
that is the temperature, has been
in our favor all the way It has
neither been too hot, nor too cpld,
as the nights have brought the
thermometer to down in the sixties
while the best the sun could do so
far was to force the reading up to
80. But, the water on the beach
and the rains have been something
BOGAN
Staff Writer
Electricity usage is going up,
too, lioth agree. This is because
be started when the county con-
vention endorses the slate Satur-
Up!j*court .
it fad —
lira*, from
menace to the United States.”
Ssmford is one of the Air Force *
two top experts on saucers. The
other is Maj. Gen Roger Ramey.
♦
the
mat
iy,
for
this
taaxl-
Rwtahr surpass
__
|ng a
o St.
irs a
4. L*
mutest
9 i
«
it
month that ti
muathMbata
ed
J
i.7
r .3
A
mates. Cost has been set it $536,-
000.
Other projects listed in the esti-
mate of current needs include the
resurfacing of roadway and widen-
ing M
State
Count]
in Dot
IT > I
from j
tri
' ■*•'-*«**■*
*■ 'I’M
13
Pj~*o**
WMN
Hi* '
Lae 1
Ji
primary would la variably fall
Sutetoy.
e United Nations forces will
ick to forte a *•*•...;<
>ld the Rods "still Lave the
I< the tempera
>otury mark tta
♦1
* -W
ii
Fire Threatens
Elm St. Store
. I
mercury shot up^l* 1«
I ^riV^LVXJUlv ^v SB w Illegal . „ X 34BIU 4*
Edgar asked the superintendents: no comment, 14.
Typical of comments by the ma-
jority was that of a superintend-
ent who wrote, "if this program is
; shut off, it will ruin our lunch pro- |
I
TRAVERSE CITY, Rt. 1. Mich j
—The children of Ephraim turned j
I
I
t the
first
broke
sr for
con-
lating
•oast- ,
neat
I the
mers,
in.
k 30
run
Stan
Lice's
gun
third
[ two
b un-
Dfoa may or
rity, but John
meed that he
__ in a runoff
it* rommittee win have to
tether to declare Dies th*
;,H*
EB
L '?&$' CL
WATER USE AT Snag Found
RECORD PEAK
I
In Cheek Cate
«J ■ 7 WMi
WUliaai A. Wdaea ef Aubrey
pleaded guilty to
SteTtUc
- ami drew a BMay
j wm aim ordered
ceeU. . .
* __—
ON FURLOUGH — Tuck Bishop,
now in Utah prison under a
death sentence, set off a call for
a grand jury investigation in
Arkanaas with his notarised
statement that he bought a to-
day furlough from Arkansas
12,000.
'1
spite the apparent harmony
both local organisations.
con-
new
state election cod« hrs placed the
state’s 254 county Democratic
chairmen in a dilemma.
is how io order > nV Is printed
One provision of the code re-
pKTmt
So*. ROADS, Pag* a
line,,* distance of U
the Un. at su estiuti
**Stoto Highway U4, from th*
Wise Coucty lia* to tts Tarrant
County line across th* southwest
! inr and resurfacing for a distance
of 13 miles, th* rommisaieo anti
Same Rad News:
More 100 Degree
Heat Due Here
Louie Crowder, 37, of Little Elm,
wanted in Collin County on a grand
jury indictment for forgery, was
arrested hero Tuesday by Deputy
Harold V. Tanner.
Collin County authorities
turned him there last night.
Crowder’s arrest came
V' .■<!
' '.1-3
- .....
■ •• '
noon
-' '] I
’ ■ ’ JJ ' j#
' ■.. ■< • ■ •
------—y -“'ki,---TBr • 18^
Chances For Truce Growing
- W T WS» ' ’ « 1
er,
FORT WORTH, i** - A
flict in provisions of the
t a '.-«we8Hi
K * j
ht.
i -
P<-
back in the day of battle.—Psalm ;
71:8
Thia happened 3,000 years ago.
We should not be like them. Face
the wont that fate ean bring to
yeas^-Cowardice, physical er moral,
is a sorry fault.
I Ibu 1 ?'
. ,T ■». r
able distributing agency
Seventeen school districts had
been acting as unofficial distribut j
ing agents in the absence of a cu>
tral state set-up. The USDA decid I
WEATHES
Federal money sent to Denton
County will be increased about
>7,500 a month starting in October
The increase will come in the
form of greater old age assistance
and aid to the blind.
About 1,500 Denton County resi
Van Fleet DS
I e J-
But ha added ttay hav* *
22S*<J?a hSTovaJT
strtnftn • Mt ovu « ]
nd maay weeks’’ to the petal
- Ag
By ALLKN
Reeerd-Chreniele
An estimate of the cost of cur-
rent highway needs for Denton
County has been aet at 111,534,700,
State Highway Commission Chair-
man E. H. Thornton Jr. advised
the Reeord-Chrocicle today.
This figure includes SU,874,TOO
for primary roads and 1*50,000 tor
farm road needs.
Biggest portion of this estimated
sum would be expended for the
constructioo of e four-lane facility
on Highway 77. from the Uooke
County line to the -DaHas County
),ne. a distance of 354 miles Cost
is esUantted at <7.U6,4to.
bscard meat expensive project
For Insuremo eee C. P, WMeenont' section oT'the county, needs widen
• A W Insurance Aeowey
Office with Bell Reefin* Ce.
City Scheel Sept. Chester O,
StricMend and tafilty teheel
Sept. Charles O. Mk bath are
in fever ef centlnulnf free feed
shipments te schools boro, they
informed Commissioner J. W.
KdpOr.
They believe prices will po
up in school cafeterias if the
feed shipments are • discon-
tinued.
! bridges along II miles of
Highway 34, from the Wise
r Bne to State Highway 10
etoe, and the rosv^aetag ef
Mae et State Righway M,
Denton north to the Coilta
, F line
. former job would coot |M,-
Oto, the latter WTS.BOO, the com-
mission estimates.
sk-dowu in the, spending of
■
_ am w hmm «
attacks. £
* director of operations, a native of
Denton, Tex., and a former stu-
dent of North Texas State College.
Both attended the new* confer-
j ence to answer whatever ques-
tions newsmen tossed their way.
Sam ford and Ramey announced
that since 1847 the Air Force
anal
Grow Convicted
For Letting Red
Spy Seise Diary
FT. MEADE Md. ifi-The Amer
lean general who was reported by
the Russians to have kept a diary
advocating a hit-’em-first war with
th* Soviet Union has been convic-
ted of letttog Ms diary fall tote
Comwmtet hands
Technically, Maj. Gen Robert
W. Grow was found guilty by a
court martial ymtorday < two of-
fense*: jotting down military ac-
creta ta Ma personal diary and
failing to safeguard classified data.
BM fMtuN promotMMi, and utfpeMlM
■gl- from eemmasd for six montes
ma Ma vimm penalty would bars beeu
bl- five years confinement, discharge.
and forfettgro of pay and allow-
ances.
held Aug 12 to nominate
date* for all state-wide offices
On the county level, however, the j
Republicans will canvass the re
turns of the precinct conventions I The Rev
and confirm the election of vari- el! “rv‘ce:
ous precinct chairmen, nominate regular pastor is appointed
candidates for county offices and
elect delegates to the state con-
vention* and to the district con-
vention and confirm the election
of th* county chairmen
The State Republican Conventlm
will meet in San Antonio Aug. M,
and will be firmly in th* grasp of
i the party's liberal element. The
I local Republicans will send five
delegates to this convention.
! The only business for the Demo-
I crats when they meet Saturday at
12:30 p m. in the district courtroom
will be to name delegates to their
state convention which meets in
Amarillo Sept. 8.
Democratic leaders
Asbury Church
, been sent for life for slaying
Gets rastor
V
The* Rev. Frank Barrow has
been appointed temporary pastor
district convention, which will be of the Asbury Methodist Church,
candi tteRev. 1
district superintendent, announced
today.
Saucers Not A ‘Menace,
Denton General Declares
about 2.000 reports ef
of strange objects ta th* .jr
An all-time record quantity of air conditioners and fans are run
4,200,000 gallons cf water was !
pumped here tor local consump
tion Monday, Mayor Mark Hannah
said today
Anri Pnw»r Plant SiiMrintenrient
- after
Sheriff Ones Hodges received a gallons were produced Tuesday,
pick up request from the Collin
l County sheriff.
Needed Denton Roads To Cost
Over 13 Million, State Says
listed is the reconstruction of 23.8
miles of State Highway 10, from
tiie Grayaon County line to Den-
ton. Estimated coat is (*
The construction of two
al lanes on U.S. High’
from the elty of Dentoi
Tarrant County line ww
approximately tt.SMJW. <
mgbway CommiMton «
Hila would cover 1T1 M
Reconstruction and W
of StateMghway 121. _^,.y
Creek bridge to the ColUn County
- “ i, i* to
coat *4
HE FINALLY
FOUND HIS
NUMBER - 700
LOS ANGELES (M — Julius
Madkin is tired of telephone
directories.
He leafed through a pile of
10,000 of them yesterday and
finally found what he was look
mg for.
Last Saturday he turned tn
his old directory and received
a new one from a delivery man
for the Pacific Telephone and
Telegraph Company.
Later he remembered that
he had stuffed two 350 bills in
the old directory for safekeep
ing
At the telephone company
office it took him several
hours of leafing but he finally
found his money.
In <_
water is foreseen in Denton.
"If this dry spell continues, how-
ever, and the water level drops
we will have trouble." the mlyor
said. "It's still looking good
though.”
Elliott disclosed water levels are
remaining stationary, but "we’re
using all we have ” The water
levels, he said, build back up dur-
ing the night when consumption is
low
er, prospects for a successful cut- Mexican laborer* ready to
ton crop in the southeastern sec- I to Frisco about Sept. 15.
ton of Denton County and in most j Farmers probably will pay
of Collin County appear much aboUt $2 50 100 pound* for the
harvesting," he explained "This
would be nearly $1 cheaper than
last year. Laborers generally got
$3.50 per 100 last season — and
the worker were scarce.”
Early last spring, Ritchey re- I
turned from a visit to the Valley
and predicted at that time that I
GIBBOM> refrigerated ek-cendi-
tieners tatt*R*d MNie day pur-
cMeed. taey Term*, totefry Mf
Iteles, N4 W. MeKtaney.
,,_________________•._________________________,
four men, he killed two fellow
miners at Ophir, Utah. (AP
Wirephoto)
? ■
J;
hi
OLD FRIENDS MEET—Cov. Adlai Steveenson, the Democratic presidential nominee,
enjoys a hearty laugh in Bloomington, Ill., as Alberta Duff, his family’s former
housekeeper, hangs a floral horseshoe around hia neck. "If there’s anything wrong
with me,” Stevenson said, “you can blame Miss Duff. She brought me up." (AP Wire-
photo)
Cotton Prospects In County
Are Still Brighter Than 1951 |
labor would be cheaper and more
plentiful this year. He reasoned
that the drouth in the Valley would
hit production there, causing more
unemployment and giving Texas
farmers a chance to hire the work-
ers.
The blacklands of southeast Den-
ton County and most of Collin
County generally produce some of
the finest cotton in North Texas.
Most of the corn crop around
Frisco went into silos. The drouth
See COTTON. Page 2 '
Saucers Seen
Walter H Vanderpool.,
In Sky Over
L Mr Rarrow will hold ■«>
all service* st the church until a ' |3^|)tOIl 1. OO
The
Schoolmen OK Federal
An awning fire that threatened
the entire MAW Food Stare at 510
N. Elm St was extidguiahed bare
Tuesday by Denton fiTOtoto
Cause of the blase was believed
by Fire Chief T<n* IteMtoto to
be a cigaret flipped tote to* awn-
ing. Damage was extensive. Fire-
men alee put out 1 gran fir* at
800 Wood St.
REDS DON'T FEAR ATTACK
their son. Don. was killed.
i Jackson said the notice was not
a suit for damages but merely
complied with a Dallas ordinance
that notice* of liability must be
I filed witbin 30 day* after the ac-
cident.
The accident occurred over Ixive
Field, which is owned by the city
of Dalia*.
By Ramey
By VIRN HAUGLAND
WASHINGTON M — The Au
Force say* it'* still checking into
flying saucer reports, but it’s cer-
tain of one thing: the saucers—
whatever they are—don’t seem to
be a mehace to the United States
Most of the sightings traced to date
have turned out to be natural
phenomena
A flurry of report* that score*
of unidentified objects had been
spotted by rodar in the Washington
4 I area during the past 10 days led
the Air Force to call a special
J1 news conference yesterday to tell
what it knew—or thought—of the
to saucer*.
■ The official Air Force conclusion,
announced yesterday:
About one-fifth of the sighting
reports are "from credible obser-
ver*, of relatively incredible things
—so w» keep on being concerned
1 sbout them."
Of the one-flfth for which there
is no explsnation, Maj. Gen. Jobn
A Ssmford, intelligence director,
said
"No pattern has ever been found
that reveals snything remotely like
• purpose or consistency that eaa
I in sny way. be associated with any
gram ”
A superintendent on the minority day.
Iside gave his opinon of the sur-1
1.1^ food program « three words: (th* liberal element in the county I
Democratic organization.
~1 Although only delegates to the
SEOUL, Karoa to-Gto. Jbbm*
A Van Fleet said today there is
less chsnce tot an armtstics tn
Korea than ever before. ■
The U. S. EUfrth Amy eommaw
fJS; Aubrey Mau Fined
proportion to the anotot m ■ zv
tary pressure Mt on &CMMM-
aist* and th»t tbe Com mantos be-
lieve the Untied Nattoto fore** will
not attack to fore* ■ tree*.
Ikp Iftlw WWW ■■■■"■ -
capability of striktaf at any *etat
with considerabte *urprise.”
itow"Autes~FiMneed, bank rate by
*ene, CtoM. Mark WeMrto-
* state that time
Summer * currentfl
the flying saucer* —'
e«i *€**.-■*
ning and dai .
dent for a count of seconds.
W V. Taliaferro, 1007 Oakland,
glimpsed the "wheel-shaped” ob-
jects while sitting in his yard but
before his wife had time to clear
the front door they had sailed out
of sight going west
"There were three of them and
from where 1 was they looked to
be about the size of 12-incb wheels.
They appeared to be pale amber
and were traveling at a fantastic
rate of speed.”
Taliaferro explained the trio of
. "tights" were in regular V-forma-
i tion.
"I knew it wasn't an airplane
when I saw it, for the speed was
too fast. Then 1 thought it might
possibly be falling stars. But when
they remained in flight I knew tt
was some of the saucers I had
just been hearing about over the
j radio "
A notice of liability for 3100,000
ha* been filed with the City of
. .. | Dslls* by Hal Jackson, attorney
to interested persons who would for Mr 1B<J Mr, E j Wa(|t
* ■■ u. .u . . ““ ,n °n h* con*en’,on* H140 Frame «t„ in connection with
l Asked if they thought the state ———------------I,..- .— — ---• ----• • -
iriEiection Code
_______________________ I
- - —
Weather
DENTON AND VICINITY: CM*r
. to partly cloudy ato iBrttaiiil |
bet today andlUmroday.
1A>T ~ -
r, CM*ge —P-r.
-----a---j
... IM • J
...» 1*
8
IJ
Aid In Lunch Prograi
AUSTIN, (jfi — Texas school ,ed the procedure was illegal. , "Yes," said 788. "No,
superintendents and their board* | T ‘_ ’
have voted overwhelmhiE approval "do you and your school board en-
—788 to 3J--of the use of iederat dorse the use of federal surplus
- surplus foods in their lunch pro- ■ commodities by Texas schools?
else. There has been entirely too|grams. I—------------—---—
much rain here, as well as winds with results from a questionnaire />//••!
and even hail in some sections of'stjll coming in, that ws* the vote 1 UetllOn Ul TIClttlS
this peninsula, doing considerable 1 reported yesterday bv State Edu- v n >
damage t; the cherry crop. Thc ]caUon Commissioner J W. Edgar. F OVOr rrOgrattl
waves on our beach have washed j ne polled 254 county -ind 886 in- - . .
out two feet of shore tine since we dependent school district superin-
have been here, thereby lessening tendents to get their reaction on
the sandy beach that we have en whether Texas should try to hang
joyed in years past. We still have to it8 share „f government *u I
a little sand on our beach, but if | Jus commothne,
the water continue* to rise we will Th, v s rtment of Agril(1i.;
be stepping off our beach stair- turf hM iaid Texas wtU loac ajr. !
way into the^water * | p|us valued at more than one
. * ,* * h , . million dollars this coming .school
The people of all the Great Lake unless it sets up »n accept-1
Regions are quite apprehensive*.,, distributing saenev
to the future course of the 1-akes,
“The Creeping Danger," they term
it, as it has Caused millions ol
dollars in damage. A friend in
Traverse City, gives the following
description of the conditions:
"What has happened to the lovely
skies over our region snd the wa-
ters beneath them? What happen-
ed to the beautiful summer days
of blue skies and air as clear as
crystal? What have we done to
so anger Mother Nature that ahe
throw* the book at us? Thus far
we'vs bad no atomic bombs thrown
at us, but nearly everything else
has happened.
It used to be that when you were
in the dog house you could take
the old dog and go down in the
basement and sit it out. Now, if
See ROUNDABOUT, Page 2 ‘
aide
I plus toon program in inree wares: i
HR len t worthwhile "
I While opposing federal aid, seme i
superintendents believed Texas county conventions are eligible to
. should get surplus food* a* long a* 1 -•-•i-i—
other states are getting them. The
vote on that question was 615
"yes.” 35 "no.” and 7 no opinion.
I ning full blast these days,
spite of this, no^shortage of quire* that absentee voting for the
second primary Aug. 23 start 20
day* prior to the election.
Another require* that the State
Democratic Executive Committee
meet Aug. 11 to canvass the first
primary votes and certify can-
didates for places on the runof
election ballot.
The county chairmen's problem
is how to order ballots printed
in time for absentee voting when
they will not know whose Mines to
put on the ballot until 10 days af-
ter the absentee baDtatef to sup-
posed to start.
The question to particularly dif-
ficult in the ease of the race for
Congressman-at-large.
la that race, I*
may oat hav* a
Lee SmRh 1M*
will mo ptrtteH
n*
d<cid<
BotafoM or to place tatth on th*
Ballot with Woe des^to his with-
drawal br to put the third man ta
the race, Phfl Hamburfor, an the
ballot with Dtee
Another quirk 1* the code is the
provision that absentee balloting
start B* days prior to o*ch pri-
mary which sr* required to be held
uu Rstardsy. Twenty days prior to
each * * “
uu a
efieckiag, have boo* reasoMbly
well identified aa the product of
frloadly aircraft, out and^ut
hoaxes, or electrical or meteoro-
logical phenomena.
But every effort is being made
to identify the mysterious one-fifth. 4
One new step being planned to use
of a newly-developed toleecopic
camera which can photograph a
15Gdegreo area of sky on om
plate.
Some of the unidentified objects
show up distinctly on radar seta.
Early Tuesday for example the
Civil Aeronautics Administration
at Washington National Airport re-
ported strange blips on its radar
screen—dots which normally would
represent airplanes moving through
the sky—for a pro-daybreak period
of almost five hours.
Other radar units in the area
failed to pick up the objects, how-
ever. No vieual sightings were r*- ‘ . R
ported. • “ 2
The two general* added that th*
hot weather of recent weeks well
might be related to thd <*HMk
outbreak of saucer reports.
They said that a temperature to*
version—a layer of war** air over
cool air — sometimes may b* suf- ■ 1
ficient to deflect radar wavoo aa<
cause a false response o* • rodar
set.
— ------ .
Weather
1,500 HERE GET
BENEFIT RAISE ’
I J s’
these benefit* i
WE**
dents now receive t
and will get a 85 a month raise
begining with their October check*
Joe H. Bowers, area supervisor
for the State Department of Public
Welfare, said today.
The program is administered by
the state but both Texas and the
federal government contribute the
funds
Congress recently raised the fed
eral contribution 45 beginning in
| October.
"This now makes a maximum
i grant of $55 instead of $50 avail
1 able for old age asaistance and
aid tn the blind." Bowers said.
Although not every beneficiary !
receives the maximum amount,
every one will receive $5 more !
than he or she has been receiving, I
Bowers added
"Since these increase* ar* to be
ig. —taken care u, m ,
,n I Austin, it will not be necessary to |
Now that both parties have nom ! We^,re ®e‘
inated their preaidential
dates, the county backera
■tart the ball rolling Saturday to
elect them m November.
The county convention will be
the last lap of the cenvention ays
tern to be witnessed on the local
level. It will form the bub around
which the party machinery will
build its campaign
From their county conventions
the Republican* will move into a
Parched Denton County ep-
peared in for another day of aix-
zling temperature* today, follow
ing the aixth straight day of over-
100 degree reading* Tuesday.
The temperature in downtown
Deaton at 1:3* >40. today MNf'
fietally vii roeerdod nt IBB 4^
gree* and tlte monetary wm etill
rising
'The ---- - —
Tuesday
start*
daily
have
No
5
■
Meet Saturday
By JUNITTA WATSON
Recerd-Chrenicle Staff Writer
Saturday’* county conventions in
both Republican and Democratic
parties will not lack interest de
, get in touch with the local or Aus-
candi- I periment,
will |
Rev. Mr. Vanderpool said,
congregation will continue to meet |
in Schmitz Chapel. 108 W. Mc-
Kinney, until their B*V Building on
North Elm is completed.
The Rev. Mr. Barrow will
ceed the Rev. Bennie F. Jordan
who ha* accepted the pastorate of
the Monette, Ark , Methodist
Church.
A graduate of Denton High
School, the Rev. Mr. Barrow at-
tended North Texas State College
and Louisiana State University. He
j received hi* local licenae in the
are Methodist Church Jan. 7, 1852 The
l completely favorable to the nom- I Rev. Mr. Barrow is the son of Mr.
. inee of the national convention, and Mr*. W. D. Barrow, 806 Boh
and a move to support the Steven- var.
son Sparkman ticket in Texas will
Liability Notice
Filed In Death
Of Denton Flier
participate, representatives of both
parties have extended invitation*
I the June 2B plane collision in which
fp«ci*l fe th* R*c*rd-Chronicl* other trip to the Rio Grande Val-
FRISCO—Despite the dry weath- | ley and reported that he haa 400 1
i come I
:vu» ivi n Ducuessiui cui* ;
* in the southeastern sec- 1
>enton County and in most
County appear much
brighter than a year ago. And
labor will be more plentiful and
cheaper than last year, it is re-
ported.
Rains in the next two weeks
would enable growers of this area
to make "lot* of cotton" said H. I
C. Ritchey, owner of the Ritchey
Gin here.
"It looks like we’ll make from
one-third to one-half a bale per
acre right now,” commented Ritch-
ey, "but if we get a general rain
of two inches or more by August
10, we’ll see an excellent crop this
year ”
The crop is just now beginning
to suffer from the drouth, he add-
ed. The high temperatures prob
ably are hurting the cotton more
than the dry weather, he pointed
out.
"The cotton always looks good
in the morning, after the "cool tem
peratures at night. But in the late
afternoon, after the terrific day-
time heat, it begins to shrink. A
week or so of cooler weather cer-
tainly would work wonders for the
crop.
TTie widely-known ginner, whose
farm home is several miles east
of here in Denton County, is op-
timistic over the labor situation for
harvesting the 1952 crop.
He recently returned from an-
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 292, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 30, 1952, newspaper, July 30, 1952; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1348723/m1/1/?rotate=90: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.