Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 87, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 23, 1952 Page: 4 of 31
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Tbeae receiver* «re ADAPTABLE to I'.HF. sad eetec.
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Santo Item: RCA Victor T.V. offers you at many as
23 tubes for as little as $199.95.
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Reliable and Accurate
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Denton's Only Self Service Drug
Santa Hem:
Unusual and entertaining toys from our
"Toyland" for Xmas!
N. Side of Square
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Santa Item: Givo • Do Soto for Christmas
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DI SOTO SALES * SERVICE
Phone C-2100 600 So Um St.
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gram is never negative or sti
Hunt said. It must be positive
dynamic, prodding the basis
all production, finance, purchai
sales, and personnel t "
BROOKS
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tU iotobed in walnut.
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Let Christmas Come Early!!
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them to figure the pumping pres-
sure, the amount of cement and
the countless other details that go
into the operation. 1116 well driller
has overall supervision—but since
he’s paying a fancy price for these
experts, usually lets them call the
tune.
One of the companies that spe-
cialize in oil well cementing is
Halliburton, with home offices at
Duncan, Okla.
"You just can’t go out and ce-
ment a well,” saya Lee Boortz,
veteran of 21 years with the firm
and assistant division manager of
RS
'dl
a Powarmastor 6
• Pawar Staaring
izcAViem
TELEVISION
Debonair George Ochoa Free leakYinAboat
CASABLANCA. French Mo-
. rocco, Nov. 22 O—After finish-
ing their work on a U. 8. Air
Base in Morocco, four Ameri-
can plumbers set sail for home
today in a IS-foot yacht
They were Joe K. Bolin, 28,
FOR 1953
• Now Beauty
O160H.P. Fira .
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- whine at neraonal friendahip. is An effective public relations pro-
- xr^uHoTir^oSSSr^ Tx «g.tiv. or
^^v^^ffiSTp “
through sundry acts of courtesy
and belpfulneas ”
UeSoto
ladies.’* '
But that wasn't the Gavo who
showed up on Christmas night in
IDO at the home of a Laredo brok-
er, J. J. Ballesteros. Ochoa look-
ed ‘’terrible"—red eyed and hag-
gard. He demanded money, got
none, anatched some cold tamales
from Ballestros* refrigerator and
fled back across the border.
All this time, the state, of Texas
and the U. S. State Department
were trying to get Mexico to ar-
rest Ochoa. Mexican officers fin-
ally did catch him—in a Mexicali
hotel room on July 11, 1950. He
temporary or transitory activity
Hunt warned. ‘‘We do not improve
our relations with others in a few
days, weeks or even months. Good
will, confidence and friendship re-
quire time to mature; respect and
influence cannot be acquired ov-
ernight « l
‘‘Good public relations, like the
El nW
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"Sopor S*" lUdel HTITT^
O Ideal televmion' Enjoy 1
BIG-acreen reception ...
the finest po~-i!4e u>
your TV area.
• Exquisite provincial
cabinet it fmi*he<i in
mahogany, walnut or maple.
• Ask na to show you thia
magnificent instrument. ;
. <»>
^1 "Sopor Set" Model 211176
• With RCA Victor’s 21ioeh Suffolk you can
sit way back and enjoy television m real comfort.
• Clearer, steadier, finer pictures are yours
on this tremendously impressive set . . .
it’s one of the "Super Set” series.
O Excellent sound reproduction, finest-type
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THI DINTON RECOR D-C H RO NIC LI
------------T;------
Companies Adopt Philosophy
Calling For Public Service
WACO, Texas, Nov. 22 (gi—A new
philosophy of management — one
which places the interest of the
public first in all matter a pertain-
ing to the conduct of a business
—is emerging from industry’s self-
analysis of Its own shortcomings.
So says Prof. Arcfa W. Hunt Jr.
of the Baylor University School of
Business, in a Baylor Business Stu-
dies Publication recently releaacd.
‘‘This new thinking conceives that
a company must be operated end
directed to serve the interests of
al* public groups,” Hunt reported.
rm*’**1*!"11
Professor Hunt charges that "not
only have many individual produc-
ers and distributors host face with
the public, but it may be assumed
that in far too many instances they
haye brought our entire business
system of capitalism and individu-
al initiative into disrepute.”
- It means, he said, "the future
of not only our industry * *
American tradition of
prise may dei
the lost friend
of the public.”
Wl
"Sopor Sot" Model 217177
• For malrhlsm performance
yen’ll warn the Dooky 2l-mch
"Super Set." Get the beat
picture* paalde in your
Odd Assortment Of Industries
Thrive On Oil Well Drillings
the Dallas office. "It’s a tough job
to learn.
"We have two men to each of
the trucks, one truck to a job. One
is the driver, and he’s reslly sn
apprentice cement operator. After
about two years, he usually be-
comes a full fledged operator.
"A specially built truck carries
everything you need except the
cement. That's brought out in bulk
and mixed at the well site.
•‘But the truck carries all the
equipment for pumping, measur-
ing and everything else.”
There’s no "average” amount of
cement used. Each well varies.
"In West Texas they use a tre-
mendous amount of cement,”
Boortx said. "In North and East
Texas not so much. Maybe you’ll
only need 400 or 500 sacks. It all
depends on the area—and the
well.”
if he’s a United States citizen.
Although both Ochoa and Villa-
lobos have Latin names and claim-
ed to bo Mexican citizens, they
never proved their claims. The evi-
dence was stronger in the other di-
rection.
That didn’t seem to matter.
Ochoa found himself in a pretty
good spot, after he finally landed
ui the federal Jan in Mexico City, ver,
He stayed out of jail for a long
time, though.
The bodies of Henry Whittenburg
Jr., 31, Laredo cotton ginner, and
Air Force Cpl. James Lindsay, 30,
of Oneida, Tenn., were found on
July 31, 1949. Whittenburg's body
lay in a fifth-floor Laredo Hotel
room, Lindsay’s in a tenth-floor
room. Both had been shot with the
mhmf .32 pi Ft /M
Witnesses told of seeing a scar-
faced man around the hotel in the
early morning. Polk* Chief David
0. Gallagher discovered that both
men knew Mrs. Ochoa, although „ ,
there was no evidence they knew had died his hair blond and regis-
each other.
"Jealousy,” said Gallagher, and
a day later he filed a murder
charge against Ochoa.
But Ochoa had disappeared, aft-
er putting in a debonair appear-
ance at his golf club.
This appearance was in charac-
ter. Ochoa was a wealthy import-
er. He inherited the business and
it didn’t demand too much of his
time.
His friends called him Gavo. He
wss a flashy dresser but "he took
off his shirt at the slightest op-
[I ■ffi’
ill Ph ?
but our
__e enter-
upon regaining
and confidence
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. and his brother, Edgar, 38,
both of South Lake, Tex.;
George A. Harvey, 36, Custer,
S. D.; and James R. Patterson,
22, Cincinnati.
The Americans bought their
Tangiers. The ship was nearly
a wreck but tn their spare time
from their jobs the Yanks put
the vessel In good shape.
They plan to cross the Atlan-
tic with stope in the Canady
Islands, at Barbadoes and at
Marginique before dropping an-
chor in Norfolk, Va.
As Mexico Bars Extradition
portunity,” a friend said drily. Ho
was a fine swimmer and diver, a
crack shot, an expert boxer and
a very food golfer. He was 38 then.
Another friend summed him up
this way: "Gavo was a polished
gentleman when sober and a pan-
ther on wheels when drunk. He
was a gay Caballero, blue-eyed and
smiling. Ho was well educated, cle-
a 11 wiin int*
MMon yacht, named Tridan, in •‘Man.feSnent te eomlM o roc-
■ibility to the public, and that It
must accept this obligation if its
public relations program la to be
effective,” he continued. "Public
relations will be effective in an or-
ganization only when social consci-
ousness permeates its entire heir-
archy.” ;
DALLAS. Nov. 22 OR—An amaz- 1
ing and strange assortment of in- ,
dus tries thrive because some-
where, at almost any given time,
an oil well is being drilled.
Special mud, surveying, logging '
—and cementing industries.
You probably wouldn’t think you (
need upwards of 1,000 sacks of -
cement to drill an oil well. Or that
you’d pump it down the same pipe
you intend to use as a brace to
keep the hole from collapsing.
But you do. You need more ce-
ment or less cement, depending on
the area where the well is drilled.
Why?
To keep oil out of water sands
and water out of the oil and to
jurround the pipe down which the
drill is dropped. This is an almost
sure cure for any possible cave in.
*It doesn’t sound too complicated,
pumping cement down the pipe as
the drill bites into the earth, out
the mouth of the pipe and back
up its length.
But most of the men who wear
the hard top hats and do this are
engineering graduates. It’s up to
ragb rotm ? > j
ACCUSED IN U. S. SLAYINGS
MEXICO CITY. Nov. 22 (JB-Scar-
faced Gaorga Ochoa, the gay Cab-
allero, the devil with the senoritas,
the panther on wheels, the hombre
accused of murdering two men in
Texas—George Ochoa will go free.
Like less debonair and colorful
border jumpers, Ochoa proved that
often a man can laugh at United
States isw-irom the Mexican aide
of the border.
Likp, for example. Joie Villalo-
bos. There's nothing colorful about
Villalobos. A Texas sheriff stopped
him on a lonely Big Bend road and
asked to see his citizenship papers.
Villalobos grabbed the sheriff's
gun and killed him with it. Jose
was arrested in Mexico. He con-
fessed. Then be was freed.
Ochoa never admitted he was
guilty. Hu waa charged in Laredo,
fkts ln IMS, with killing two men
in separate rooms of a hotel. Both
men knew Ochoa’s beautiful wife,
Rosa.
By the time officers got on
» Ochoa’s trail he waa over the Bio
Grande—or the Bio Bravo, as the
snakelike border river is known in
Mexico. Mexican officers finally
arrested him. There were more
than two years of atempts by the
United States to extradite him for
trial. Ochoa even claimed once he
wanted to stand trial in the Unit-
ed States.
But he best the extradition at-
tempts on Nov. 14. The supreme
Court said there wasn't enough ev-
idence against him.
It’s hard to extradite a man from
Mexico—almost Impossible if he’s
a Mexican citizen, a littler easier
tered as Gulllerme Vidal.
He was transferred to the peni-
tentiary at Mexico City. There he
lived in a private room. He liked
to sit up all night playing domi-
noes.
While Gavo played dominoes, his
lawyers kept wrapping red tape
around the case. The U. S. State
Department almost dropped its ex-
tradition proceednigs when Ochoa
said* he wanted to be tried in the
United States. The joker was that
Ochoa wouldn’t waive the injunc-
tion preventing arrest his lawyers
had filed for him.
In June of 1951, a Mexican fed-
eral judge said Ochoa would have
to go back to Laredo to be tried.
But on Nov. 14 of this year,
Ochoa, the smooth operator, turn-
ed out to be the winner when the
Supreme Court issued sn injunc-
tion against his extradition, decid-
ing there wasn't enough evidence
against Gavo.
The Villalobos case wasn't quite
so complicated and was in doubt
a much shorter time.
Sheriff O. W. (Blsckie) Morrow
of Presidio County was shot to
death on the lonely road between
Marfa and the Texas town of Pre-
sidio on March 12, 1950. Skilled;
trackers followed Villalobos’ trail i
to the border. They got Mexican of-,
ficers to help and on March 16
caught Villalobos in the mountains :
of northern Mexico.
After he confessed, he was clap- •
ped into jail while the United States
tried to extrodite him. But in May, 1
1950, Federal Judge Felipe Galindo
Hernandez of Chihuahua City or- I
dered Jose released.
The judge said no order author-
L’ing Villalobos arrest had ever i
been issued in Mexico.
Villalobos never went back to j
I jail—at least, not on V. S. charges.
I
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 87, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 23, 1952, newspaper, November 23, 1952; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1348822/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.