Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 24, Ed. 1 Monday, September 8, 1952 Page: 2 of 8
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IMONDAY, SEPTEMBER I, TW
1T H E DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLE
MARKETS
In For Youth
and
08
I,'
7/
would resign as soon as normal
In news.
Tommie Yates’ Mother Wants
To Be Reunited With Child
G
881,000 ; 71;
369,
Oklahoma,
Louisiana,
Tennessee
Mesquite and Homer
I
I
O
MK
Mrs
CHICKEN FEED — DAIRY FEED
i1
^0
COMMENTS
niWHtn
★ LAST TIMES TODAY ★
q
HOPE-FtfMiNG
30c Lb.
- JOKE Ml
★ PLUS TWO CARTOONS *
50‘
Per Carload
,1
Every Night
teach him to talk.
>1
A
.A
TEXAS
I
I
Egypt Premier Due
To Speed Reforms
Special Announcement
to the
Hard of Hearing
Injured Youths
Go To Gainesville
Omar Anderson
Services Held
At Church Here
Bernard St. Fire
Causes Damage
kN INTERSTATE THIAHt
-AST TIMES TODAY
io 1
• i
iw
’ /‘JV
Jesse Schoppaul
Services Held
At Old Shiloh
Cogburn, iOOT last year
and Miss Joyce
, medical; Mra.
R W Goodwin 622 E College,
I J j
r’-"'- /j
PAPER
BULBS. •
tie Lake and heard the Rev. Nor
I man (’. Anderson,
in
one favoring Eisenhower.
The trip to Texas also will take!
i nett waa leaking oil. Another call
brought them to 1910 Norman St.
to battle a grasa blaze.
oiouxaR
DRIVE-IN THEATRE
Drive carefully, you might injure a cwitomer of mine.
Lyle E. Montgomery Co.
214 W. Oak at Cedar Phone C-742J
The finest money con buy at Snow's
Bring Ui Your Custom Grinding
SNOW'S FEED STORE
McKinney O Frame Phone Central 6431
MUVE4H
60*
FOOTBALL
BARBEQUE
Hat Blows Off,
Trouble Blows
^Jotun
^TEChimicolO,
A
1952 Cotton Crop
Estimate Is Reduced• W
PAGE TWO
Mid-Week eervlce* at the As-
bury'Methodist Church will be held
charges of >n home of Mr and Mra. W E.
a sister, Miss Allie Mae Downey;
and three brothers, Roland Down-
ey, Wayne Gammtll and Durwood
Gammdl, all of Denton.
^JoyncA
Tents of a daughter, Karen
•n at 1:35 a m. I
Memorial HoapitaL
Funeral srevices for Jesse
Schoppaul, 74, retired Bartonville
farmer, were held Sunday at the
Old Shiloh Church with the Rev.
STILL ROLLS HIS OWN—Though methods of smok-
ing in the past century have changed—also with news-
paper work, A. W. Neville, Paris, Texas., News editor
still likes to roll his,own. He celebrated his 50th year
with the paper recently and enjoys the title of “Dean of
Newspapermen.” (AP Photo).
__
• Last Day ♦
-THE SAN FRANCISCO
STORY”
Starts Tomorro w
•JF.MIMP
aiTOTirnni annul ii
The DOVE HITNTERB are
about a week into their hunting
season and reports that we've
had indicate that most shooters
are getting their limit each time.
Come down ot Harpoola and get
your SHOT BUN SHELLS We've
got Remingtin and Winchester
12, 16, 20 and 410 gauge shells.
head, 801 Cordell,
p 11! I
^e?nd TMm“a« ‘Beiman' med.eal - Dismissed-~C A Whltl^
NTSC and Texas A4M. Beeman
and his wife are living at 2310
Fowler. They have three daugh-
ters.
>>e miitmi
LAST TIMES TODAY ’
JAMIS ----- COSINN* -- 1
CAGNEY CALVET I
___-*** DAILEY —I
was born here March 4. 1947.
Survivors include her parents;
■ brother, Raymond L. Wheeler i
Jr , of Denton; and grandparents.
Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Hutcherson of
Clifton.
Interment will be In Roselawn
Memorial Park.
The Rev. Hoytt Boles was to
be minister in charge. Pallbearers
were to be Jack Eavenson, R. B
Neale Jr., W. F. Brooks Jr. and
R. T. Harpool Jr.
Funeral Held
For Mrs. Squires
Final rites for Mrs Zelda
Christine Squires, 27. were held
in the Faith Tabernacle Assembly
of God Church Sunday with the
From Harpool's
to grow grass on, this fall is a
good time to dig th* soils of
those areas to a depth of 8 or 10
inches, add some peat moss and
fertiliaer and work the soil to a
erumblizod form. It will than
he in shape ot grow tome nice
grass.
The FOOTBALL PREVUE
AND BARBEQUE at North
Faxas State’s naw stadium thia
Thursday night, Sept. 11 opens
the local football season. Plan
to take your whole family for it
will offer an Aeninf of swell
entertainment for all.
We have a new PARROT in
WWe have a new PARROT in
our PET SUPPLY DEPT Come
down to aee him and help ua
THEaTU
Per Ivory
Cor Night
LAST NIGHT
"CROSSWINDS"
er forthcoming elections are held,
TV Experiment
BASEL, Switzerland (fl— ExpfrL
1 television programs in
Basel have been suspended be-
cause of a “lack of public inter-
est,” the Swiss Broadcasting Corp,
announced.
7'fl
WHITE NARCISSI
1 ,S5c Pkg.
ONION SETS
B— ajo*
irtgon
Coming Tuoo.-Wod.
"IF THIS Bl $11?'
i some Southeastern areal to re-
duce production prospects.
In an accompanying report, the
! Census Bureau said 1,413,098 ru-
ining bales from this year s crop
had been ginned prior to Sept. 1.
14JS5.000 bJta a month*'ago* j Thu compare with 2,0U458 ginwd
compares with a government pro to the same date last year and 8SB,-
i _* <vw> u_i .< | 401 two years ago.
Cotton production was 15,144,000
14,600,000! bales last year and 11,775,000 for
Four Gainesville teen-agers, two
of whom were seriously injured
Saturday night in a car wreck near
Ponder, were transferred from
Flow Memorial Hospital to a
Io- ''O
together again ”
Prison officials said Mrs Simp-
son was a model inmate and was
making a valiant etfrrt to rehabili-
Christmas party for him was held 1 tate herself.
jjij ,U| H g •'
(Continued from Page 1)
| Comdr A M Savage, skipper of
' the Fraser, said the cook was on
the aft section of the Foundation
Star and three times turned down
proffered rescue bv fie Emu. Lat
er, Savage said, the Fraser tossed
him a line to vithin tvu feet of hia
i grasp but "he paid no attention
to it.”
Mrs, Swisher
Wins Newstip
Mra. Minnia Swisher of Lake
Dallas again won the Record
Chronicle $5 newstip prize for her
information on the drowning at the
lake last week.
Another Interesting tip came in
from Mrs L. E. Henderson of 2000
Edwards St.
The Record Chronicle invites
readers to send or bring
human interest stories, facta about
organizational plans, club meet-
ings and items for the Town Topics
column.
Essential to any tip is detailed
information of news events. Speed
and accuracy are considered when
Judging In the newstip contest is
made each week.
A special demonstration will bo held ot the* Dr. Bort
Davit' off loo, North lido of Square, Deaton, Tuesday,
September 9, from 9:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Thh demon-
stration will be held by Mr. M. W. Harwell featuring the
World famous Farevox Hearing Aids.
You will have on excellent opportunity to see and try
those wonderful instruments designed to fit the personel
heering needs of eny one who can bo helped by • hear-
ing eld.
Como In for o free hearing tost and demonstration end
relievo that doubt in your mind regarding your hearing.
You will not be obligated in the least.
If you hevo friends or loved ones who hove hearing
problems, please coll this demonstration to their atten-
tion.
There will bo frosh batteries an hand for all mokes of
hooting aids.
Get your liwn ready for fall
planting of - rye and bermuda
grass. Put on 5 lb« of VERTA-
GREEN or VIGARO per 100 Sq.
Ft. of lawn and water it well for
a couple of days. Then add rye
grass seed for a nice winter lawn
and bermuda grass seed to get
a good start on your spring
grsas If you have some spots in
your lawn that seem impossible ,
Hearing Aids Center
2112 Stonewall St.
Greenville, Texes .
Funeral s rvices for Omar
derson, 5^, ... »
p.m. today in the Central Baptist
0V... —. — U ...XaU *U— T>—.. I
officiating Burial was to be in i
Mrx F. S. Cowart
Funeral Is Held
ourv ivurs inimuc ms w muw ,
two sisters, Mrs. Ira M. Cox and
Mrs. Cumi Whoberry, both of
Denton; one brother, W. B. An-
: derson of Maybank and a number
' of nieces and nephews.
Joie McCrea Yvonne DeCarlo
Features: 1:30, 4;39, 7:48
Also
“WHEN IN ROME”
Van Johnson Paul Douglas
Features: 2:06, 6:17
I
WASHINGTON (fl—The and early Avgust damaged the crop
Agriculture Department today esti- ’n
mated this year’s cotton crop at
13,889,000 bales of 500 pounds gross
weight.
This is a deereaae ef 846,000 bales !’ln/ 1^‘les fnoo'1 *‘s-
from the department’a forecast of >d *>*n gln“<1.Pr?nr,. «.Sept 1
14,735,000 bales a month ago. U j Thu omaparw witt 2,01*458 gmwd
compares with a government pro- 10 same da^e year and 85*,-
ductiofi goal of 16,1100,000 bales and
with forecasts of total needs of be
tween 13,300,000 axd
bales.
Severe dry weather during July
Jury Indicts
Crime Chiefs
1 W A R H T N G T O N (fl - A
; federal grand jury today indicted
two of the nation s underworld
'chieftains — Joe Anonis and An-
thony J, Accardo—on t.
contempt of Congresi McDuffie, 1426 Bolivar. Miss Vir-
I The Senate voted last Jan. 23
to cite both of them for their re-
fusal to answer questions put to
i them by the old Senate Crime In-
jvestigating Committee on grounds
their answers 1_ „ .
them.
School Beaman, who attended
NTSC from the first grade, re-
CAIRO. 1
Premier, Mai. Gen. Mohammed< Cabinet,
Naguib, called the first meeting of Uadinu
4ds Cabinet today to speed the re
forms he has vowed will follow his
week end sweep to power.
The 51 year-old Army strong man
who ousted ex King Farouk six
weeks ago, moved swiftly and with-
out bloodshed yesterday to consoli-
date the Army’s grip on the coun-
try. As he brushed aside former
Premier Aly Maher, took over the
Estes Jr. officiating. Interment
was in Old Shiloh Cemetery under'
the direction of Jack Schmitz and
Son Funeral Home.
Born in Spartenaburg, S. C ,
Aug 1, 1873, Mr. Schoppaul had
Right-Wing
(Continued from Page 1)
filled
They fired the questiona and the
governor stuck to his ground: He
couldn’t vote for Adlai Stevenaon
because of the Democratic Presi-
dential candidate’s stand for fed-
nal ownership of the tidelands
What uord would he pass to his
followres to do?
“Well, in the first place, the
word 'followers’ is presumptuous.
But I believe every Texan ought
to have the legal and moral right
to vote as his conscience dictates.”
1 mitted:
Cold Wall, al
MrB. Waller Wil ___
FOR sale: Good 3-wheel Waller. IS
•pools barbwire. Art Seely. 1102
Oreer.wood
WANT child' care by day or week
O-eeee
Soon 3-badroom homa, near achooix bales compared with
tor kale 714 Alice -•
TWO PAIR8 boy a white band shoes,
sizes 7 and 8. (4 00 pair A’
Silver Conn Clarinet, 00. Moreari.
1SO7 Peat. C-7317.
Services Today
For Daughter Of
R. L. Wheelers
Funeral services for Barbara Jo
Wheeler. 5, daughter of Mr and ‘
Mrs Raymond Wheeler. 2215 Hous.- 1 attracted friendly crowds at every
ton Pl., were to be held today at : stop.
■2 pm. in the First Presbyterian*
1 r,K..e*«aV T TC A I
i inioa onuirj xjra i n uir, viaiiiv^vuir, I
Boyd Cox, Quadrangle 1, North
W
Salsman of Midland, and
I grandchildren.
forsy in an effort to encourage
traditionally Democratic Dixie to
vote Republican
His Southern tour Is due to start
about Oct. 1 or 2. The cities he
will visit, and the dates, have not
been announced
Eisenhower made his first bid
for Southern support last week in
' a flying trip to Georgia, Florida.
Alabama and Arkansas, a tour that
PERSONAL*
Almyra Lynch of Naw
York City is visiting in the home nio t w I4l t
°L“r. ?n<! .Mr*. P’ Berkel,>' medical. Dismissed: N. H Stall-
i ings. 1200 Wilson; Mrs Mat Har-
monson. 1903 BM1 Ave ; Mrs Roy
, W Everett. Richardson.
to teach at the North Texas Lab
HUNTSVILLE 'fl-The
mother of crippled Tommie Yates,
Mrs. Robert Dale Simpson, wants
to be reunited with her child when
she gets out of Goree Woman’s
prison near here.
Tcara came to her eyes yeater
day when she heard of the Christ-
inas party Vernon gave her injured
five year old son Saturday night.
“I hope Tommie received all the
Christmas gifts left under the tree
at our home the nicht of the ecci-
dent,” she said.
Mrs. Simpson is serving a 10-
year prison sentence after convic-
tion of beating little Tommie with
a long-handled kitchen fork last
CTirlstmas Eve. At her trial she
said Tommie kept climbing up on
the bed against her orders
ginia Brown will lead the discus-
sion.
Denton County Registered Nurses
Association will have their first
fall meeting Tuesday at 7 30 p m
might incriminate in the home of Miss Beulah Bowles,
1413 Highland.
and 680,006;
Texas 10; 16,114,006 , 59, 186. and
3.500,000;
New Mexico 1.3; 296,000. 94, 486,
and 900,000;
Arizona 0 8: 666,000; 12; 764, and
1,060,000;
California 0 5, 1,309 000 ; 93 . 652,
and 1,000,000.
The production ot
Elm Street Hospital and Clinic-
Admitted Mrs. W. R Jones. 224
Fry, medical; F. F Littleton,
V7.,nmAOAr,’,.,\\?r,e“UaM1u danger, medical; Mrs. Paul White-
ceived his masters there and is
now working toward a doctorate
Formerly a math teacher at
| the 1951-50 average.
The condition of the crop as of
Sept. 1 was reported at 69 per cent
of normal compared with 7* per
- cent a month earlier and 74 per
cent a year ago.
The average yield of eotton to
the acre was reported at 270
pounds compared with 277.4 indi-
I rated a month ago and 2719 for
, j the 1951 crop. ‘
were transferred from The department estimated that
Memorial Hospital to a j5 2 Per cenl the acreage in cul-
Gainesville hospital Sunday. tivation on July 1 will be aban-
The youths, all 17 years old, in- doJned- compared with 3.3 per cant
eluded Wally McIntosh, who suf-. mdicated a year ago.
fered a broken collar bone; Miss ' This would leave 24,693,000 acres
Shirley Gamble, slight head con-(for harvest compared with to,698,
evasion: Carroll Ray Cogburn, (KXi last year
head lacerations, and Miss Joyce No estimate of cottonseed pro-
Hughes, cuts and bruises |duction will be made until after
All were injured shortly before the final ginnings fur the year are
midnight as they drove toward determined. However, if the ratio
Fort Worth on Farm Road 156. of lint to cottonseed is the aame
A grass fire began a new work
week today for local firemen It
occurred at 1103 Bernard St.
Minor damage resulted
In weekend activity, firemen
rushed to the north side of the
r__ court house square where a 1951
lived in Denton County 65 years. Chevrolet belonging to^W. O. Ban-
He was married to Sallie Broome
era! succeeded in blocking a pro- ln Bartonville March 15, 1899 A
| years, production would be 5.650,-
nod tons. Last year it was 6,325,000
bfoatOOM. rumlshed or unfurnished, ; tons.
The per cent abandonment after
uie bath- uly ’’ acreage for harvest,
kitchen, tradition of the drop as of Sept. 1,
bunt-ins.’j respectively, by states included:
" Oklahoma 10 6 per cent abandon-
C -S3S4. . -------- . . - --------
n help.
Apply In person. Brooks Drug
SEVERAL nice study tables, cheap, 1a<‘re-
Egypt (fl—Egypt’s new premiership and swore in a new
Mai. Gen. Mohammed (Cabinet, the Army rounded up 47
leading politicians, princes
friends of the royal family.
Among those arrested were for-
mer Premiebs Ahmed Hilaly and
Ibrahim Abdel Hadi and Fuad Se-
rag Eddin, ex-minister of interior.
Eddin is boss of Egypt’s dominant
political party—the nationalistic
Wafdists.
Also taken in the Army dragnet
were Prince Abbas Halim and
Prince Said Halim, bofti third cous-
ins of Farouk and Ahdullah Sadek
and Mostafa Sadek, uncles of ex-
Queen Narrtman.
The new Premier—the seventh
since January — awore he would
tackle three main jobs—“a purge
of the political setup, enforcement
^n. 1 of a limitation orf land ownership
59, were to be held at 2 a"d a/,url>in«,of Uie «kyrocketing
p.m. vuday ... U.C Cr..u m L-puot I COat llV,n« u -u M .K
Church with the Rev. Loys Vess 1 - An Army spokesman said Naguib
officiating Burial was to be in | w0UJd f<‘s|8n as soon as normal
Oakwood Cemetery. |
^n(LerS?nh ’ rt,red/.r°Ty i not later than"FebruaVy. ”
clerk, died at his home Saturday __
night after a long illness. He was I „
born in the Corinth <
Aug. 14, 1893, and was married to
Annie R. Taylor Aug. 2, 1914.
Survivors include his widow;
MONDAY LIVF.8YOCK
FORT WOBTH (APi -OaUle 7.800:
clavaa -3,700; auudy to to c«ntt to
81 lower. Good slaughter steers and
yearllnga 835-128. common to medi-
um *15-424; cull yearlings 812-815;
good and choice slaughter calvea 8-20-
826, common and medium 815-818;
cull» 812-814; good and cbolce
■tocker oalvee 883-827; eommoa and
medium 817-898; stoeker yenrllngi
817-8M. etocker cows 814-4*0. young
co wb to $23.
Hogs 1,400; >3 to 80 ennto higher,
choice 180-360 pound huge 8w»-
50. medium to choice 150-170 pound
horn 817 80-81*7*; sows *18.80-
• ITM)
Sheep 11,000; steady utility and
rood spring slaughter lambs *9100-
50; utility and good slaughter year-
lings 816-41**0; culls and utility
•laughter ewee *4 00-76; utility and
<<mx1 grades *7; feeder lambs *17
•own.
“The newspapers left the impres- on the courthouse lawn in Vernon
sion that I was entirely at fault
for the beating of my son,” Mrs
Simpson said yesterday. ‘”nds is
not true I was only partially to
blame. My husband and I were
drinking heavily that night and I
don’t believe either of us realized
what we ware doing.
“However, in court I took full
responsibility for the beating as
I did not see any use for both of
us going to prison ”
Tommie spent months in a Dal-
las hospital He was released only
last week, and still wears a brace
on his right leg He is being cared
fnr at Sunshine Home in Vernon
as a ward of the state. A mass
HOSPITAL NOTH
Flow Memorial Hospital—Admit-
ted: Mrs. M E. Batson, 820 An-
derson, medical; W. H. Mitchell,
Rt. 2, Denton, surgical; Eddie ■
Haynes, Denton, medical; James
Gray, Denton, medical; Miss Shir-,
ley Gamble, Gainesville, medical;
James Enoch, 1628 Egan, medi-
cal; Mrs. B. A. Ragsdale, 12101
Ave, A, medical. Dismissed: Mrs. pan
L. J. Yarbrough, 100? W. Prairie; I bori
Nellie Cowser, Denton; Joe Cudd,' Mei
ing the Good I-ord will bring usthe general on a swing through bert of Denton, James of Dallas,
Ixiuisiana, Oklahoma, Tennessee Julius of Mesquite and Homer
and Kentucky—his second Southern Schoppaul of Carswell Air Force
Base: six daughters, Mrs Her-
man Parker of Argyle; Mra. C
M. Gaston of Lewisville; Mrs. C
E. Finley of Dallas, Mrs. J. M
Smith of Lake Dallas, Mrs W. D
Gaston of Denton and Mrs. Gene
Smith of Lake Dallas; one brother,
Louis Schoppaul of San Antonio.
Pallbearers were Frank Gaston,
Don Gaston, Herschel Parker,
Floyd Schoppaul, Johnny Widner
and Woodrow Pippin.
Democrats
(Continued from Page 1)
posts. Governor and I. S, Senator,
jn.uy have had a falling out.
I Daniel was the first to urge that
1 the state convention try to find a
way to make Dwight Eisenhower
the state party's presidential nom-
inee, rather than Stevenson. Shiv-
ers announced Saturday he had
concluded there was no legal way
to do this, and would recommend
that the convention certify Ste-
venson as the presidential nominee.
At a news conference late last
night. Shivers said tic has not final-
ly shut the door on the possibility
he might give his personal vote to
Eisenhower. He would not expand
om the atatement, except to aay
that it waa hia “present intention”
not to vote the Republican ticket,
and to acratch Stevenaon on the
(Democratic ticket.
Services To Begin
At Lake Dallas
Special to the "Record-Chronicle
LAKE DALLAS—Fred Bandy of i ;
... Dallas will conduct a series of mental
the First Lutheran Church at Bat- i gospel lessons at the Church of
■’ ’ ' ‘ " -J 2.; - Christ beginning tonight at 8 p m. j
pastor, declare ] Services will be held each night
his sermon that the “mess in , through Saturday. 1
Washington” is "something to be ' M
feared.”
Eisenhower has used the phrase [
"the mess in Washington’’ fre-
quently in his campaign attacks on
President Trumans Democratic
administration.
Stortj Tomorrow L
WAIT IK. Win
THE SUN SHINES, I
h Naui V -
IM . Ml I I
taw-tie* *ewa«i
' SNEAK i
PREVIEW
• IHrtCHHKOlOi .4
ment; 1,100,060 acres tor harvest 40
, |>er cent of normal; 100 pounda per
and production 230.000 balea;
Arkansas 0.8; 1,865,00; 66 , 296
WHITEST’ CASH lor 1939 to ’194» and 1,150,000;
Ford, Chevrolet and Plymouth. | f,ouisiana 0.7;
Denton Car Company, 816 8. Elm, „_j
call C-3O3J._____________ |
800 ACRE FARM tor sals.
4 miles west and 1 mile South
Bolivar, Denton County. leased for
oil. C. C Cunnlngtiiun. Era. Texas
Nttb 'WAITRESS and car hop at
’T” Cafe
FQft LEASE 70 acres pasture, *3.50 j
per head psr month Mrs. Jno. I
Shelton Box 148, Pilot Point
BIJghtly ttBtD -7*foot Frtgldaire I Th* production of American-
.UghUy us»d. ai3*. call Egyptian tvpe cotton was estimated
•L““F _8an«M t i at 82.000 bales compared with 47,-
200 last year and 28,400 for the ten-
yea r average
Production of American-Egyptian
i by statea includes Texaa 29,000
i 18,700 last
I year; New Mexico 12,000 and
AUo 500: Arizona 40.000 and 19,700.
4
M1YS0N ’
nunuin, nvwvi t u. uiiiuivj, a ,
Mrs. D. B. Boyd. 1223 Broadway.
BIRTHS
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Davis, 1307
Margie, are the parents of a
daughter, D'Ann. born at 1>57 p m.
Friday in Flow Memorial Hospital.
Mr and Mra. Maxey Earl Bat-
I son, 820 Anderson, are the parents
I of a son Maxey Earl, Jr , born at
8 37 p m. Saturday in Flow
Memorial HoapitaL
Mr. and Mra. Baxter Andrew
Ragsdale, 1218 Ave A, are the
ighter, Karen, ■’quires, a son, Bruce squires; a
today in Flow daughter, Agatha Frances Squires;
D C I C ♦ n r“ i t? A 11 • ** LIaa
Saturday night.
Mrs Simpson talked of her plans
for the future. She said her hus-1
band was working on a farm near
King City. Mo., and was trying;
to save enough money to move to,
Huntsville, obtain work here and i
aid her in getting a conditional
pardon.
“I am happy to hear that Tom
mie is in good hands.” she said.
"But 1 will be workm-’ and pray
WHO PASSES ON A HILL OR CURVE
BUT PROVES THE MIND IS FEEBLE,
AND SELF DEFENSE -
MAKES LITTLE SENSE,
TO FEEBLE MINDED PEOPLE.
When J04 Patterson’* hat blew
off here Saturday it Uew right
into a headoa collision with *u-
another car.
It also netted him a pair of traf-
fic tickets from Police Capt
Bryan Graham and Patrolman Le-
Roy McDaniel.
The accident occurred on Pond-
er Street. The 20 year old youth,
who lives at 405 Prairie St.,
turned his car around to pick up -
his hat The vehicle collided witli
a car driven by Dick Doyie Hart-
ing, 17, of 606 Hillcrest.
Patterson was charged with n«g
llgent collision and driving without
an operator’s licnese. There were
no injuries
A trio of tickets also went to
two other Denton residents here
Saturday.
Sam David Carter, 35. of Red
Bud Courts was charged with
driving with an illegal operator'*
license and passing In an inter
section. To Mrs Janie Mills, 40,
of 1105 Avenue B went a ticket for
driving without an operator's
license.
They were ctied by Patrolman
Andy Anderson after their cars
collided at North Elm and Pecan
Street*. No one was hurt
Two more local motorists es-
caped injury Sunday when their
autos came together on the south-
west corner of the court house
square. They were James W
Temple, 29. of 914 Avenue C and
Virgean E. Estes, 53, of 616 W
Oak St.
The accident was investigated
by Patrolman James Cothran.
703 Bolivar; E M Easley. Rt 1,
Denton; D. C. Argo. Rt. 1. Aubrey;
Miss Shirley Gamble. Gainesville;
Texas State College
Denton Hospital and Clinic— Ad-
Ceci! Ferguson, Aubrey,
surgical: Patsv Ann Bodkins, 2425
Charlotte, medical; Leon Bodkins,
2425 Charlotte, medical; Henry A.
Barton, 322 W. Oak, medical: Cecil
Ingram, Sowers, medical; Cecilia
Ingram, Sowers, medical; Jo Ann
McNary, 2118 Bolivar, medical;
Mrs 1 O Lawson, Rt 1, Denton,
iiixuivai. i'ioiuisu<u \ n reuancj,
, Atlanta; Robert L Embrey, Tioga; '
ui uiki i nuren sunaay witn me |
1 Rev. H A. Johnson and the Rev.
. Buster Hilliard officiating
Pallhearers were Johnnie Pat-
| terson, Marion Culver, Steve Nor-
man, Floyd Ray Patterson,
Leonard Starnes and J. C. Sim-
mons.
Born in Little Elm Sept. 20,
1924, Mrs. Squires is survived bv
her mother. Mrs. J. D. Gammill
and her step father, J. D. Gam-
mill; her husband, Frank D.
Squires; a son, Bruce Squires; a
Funeral services for Mra.
Frankie Skaggs Cowart, resident
of Denton 23 years, were held
Sunday in the Jack Schmitz and
Son Chapel. Burial was in Rose
lawn Memorial Park.
Pallbearers were W W Haynie,
N. E. Skaggs, C. M Chapman,
William Chapman, Bedford Vestal
and E. C. Wylie.
Mrs. Cowart, a native of White-
wright, attended ’school there and
was a member of the Baptist
Church of Denton. Survivors in-
clude a son, L F. Cowart of Fort
Worth; three daughters, Mrs. H.
i 1>. Lance of Fort Worth, Mrs. A.
Oliver of Denton, Mrs. T. L.
seven^ j Grayson and the Rev. Sam
of 2621 N. Ixxtust St.
William E Beeman, eon of Mr
and Mrs. W. A Beeman of Danton,
Rout* 2, has returned to Donton
kitchen privileges to ladv
2318 Houston PUos
Lovaly 3 bedrooms. large
with dressing table. Tile
plenty of cloa.'tx and
screened porch, utility porch
Bendlx connection, by owner '
WANTED experienced fouutal
SEVERAL nice study tables,
618 W Hickory.
I He relaxed on his current Mid
I west campaign tour yesterday
in Flow Memorial Hospital after ’^e Minneapolis Star and Trib-
une, at a game fam near Battle
j Lake, in the heart of Minnesota *
1 10,000 lakes.
The general attended services in
Eisenhower
(Continued from Pag* 1)
key states in his convention joust-
ing with the Ohioan.
Convention supporters of the gen-
“ol «i in Kirt/«Vir»rf rtm_
Taft Texas delegation and seating member of the Baptist Church, he
. had attended Double Oak Schools
Survivors include four sons, Al
Church. USA. I west campaign tour yesterday as
Barbara Jo died Saturday night the KUC<1 <>f John Cowles, publisher
I in riow iviFrnoriui iiospiiAi Brier
an illness of several weeks. She
Aubrey,
I <rf lint to cottonseed is the
— *as the average fer the past five
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 24, Ed. 1 Monday, September 8, 1952, newspaper, September 8, 1952; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1348757/m1/2/?rotate=270: accessed June 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.