Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 246, Ed. 1 Friday, May 28, 1948 Page: 2 of 10
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Denton Record-Chronicle and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Denton Public Library.
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MARKETS
rd
but
! .
I ;
fP ’ .
-------- — — pwnj WVWM, UIVMIUM1 «1IU M 1VW
services o[ spewal- good shorn lambs and yearlings 1» do-
ping service, merit- , 22 50. some good grades raid about
1
NEW TREADS
in
Applied in 8 Hours
r
Save up to 75% by having new treads
. • J
Sam Laney
Phone 61
•jy Inter*fere Theatres >
Ck.A theit LOW bus fares
t
• NOW THRU SAT. •
$13.70
DENVER
COLO. SPRINGS .... $12.40
. .. $11.35
PUEBLO .. .
I
SALT LAKE CITY . . $21.70
GRAND JCT.......$18.65
REA Granta Ixtan
w
(plus tax)
Round Trips
I
DIXIE*
*
the
IB
See the Great Neu/
5l-*
EEE
own bugrnoM?
'fl
182 Dewendanta!
"MARGIE"
Cleaners
IBf
ice’s beet-selli!
Notice To The Public
if!
Call 2100
*
j
For prompt ond dependable service
See Your Stinson Dealart
Now Have a Fleet of
Denton Aviation Co.
'Be
I
Phene 211
Municipal Airport
Denton. Teses
*■
I
r ->V
x. t
I *
♦
E*
TEXAS
TRAILWAYS
PALACE
MEAM1MJ
I II
K *4
'Ifoot'U tuioA a mG
One mile north on 77
Ends To-Nite
Saturday Nite Only
2 Shows Starting at Dusk
Coming Saturday
Tex Ritter In
"Sing Cowboy Sing" ond
Chap. 8 "Tiger Women"
• Children's Matinee •
-tat. Morning at 10:00—
MANNE CRAIN in
WHEEL OF TOY TRAIN
SWALLOWED BY BOY
KlllfR BRAND
ON (VlKt MAN
Corpus
" j tor
Ulman’s par-
FAMILY HAS FIRST
GIRL IN 22 YEARS
secretary organisation on the Ki-
wanis Youth Clinic of Denton.
the
the
WAS
Elm
PLAZA«
LAST TIMES TODAY
X-...
New Cars?
Tire Co
700 N. Locust
fllNI AUTRY
'ai—iii ■! In —. I..
HOOVER
Mm
Sunday —
iBraaMya*
_____________________________________________ ,
applied in our shop.
rrid
that was my first day
to make my home in Denton.”
. _ J “tulip” is derived
from the Turkish word • turban".
Have year winter elothes rleaned
and demothed. Send la Royal
Cleaners. Phene SIM. 114 Congress.
' Rain Moves Into
Other Sections
EB '
IE?.'.
[ found that home environment often
hope and comfort to
• - " He ex-
*1
1
|b_
BUS TERMINAL
210 So. Elm St. Phone 90
• The Hsovtr Triple-Action dh X" /\QC
Cleaner, Model 28—it boots ; ; ;
oe it surer ps ; i ; at It cleans* I I }
.. .with Hoover's exclusive ‘'Positive , uJ>
Agitation.” Cleaner alone .. .„.....— Tliroo
£ WlfT...-
■LL. L-..
tf
WATERFRONT FIRE—A Tacoma, Wash., city fireboat and four tugs shower tons of
.water on the Wilcox Wood Flour Company plant in Tacoma before bringing it under
control after more than three hours. The plant and equipment were destroyed with
a loss estimated at $100,000. (AP Wirephoto).
i I recall It. as
w. ..... to mas« my
reported pound- — —r
.lenxslsm while I . Th8 . W0*
HOSPITAL NOTES
Mrs. Walter C. Pitts, Decatur,
was admitted Wednesday as a med-
ical patient to Elm Street Hospital
and Clinic.
R. L. Matthews. 1818 Highland,
underwent major surgery at Elm
Street Hospital and Clinic Wed-
nesday.
James Shockey. Decatur,
dismissed Thursday from
Street Hospital and Clinic.
Miss Marketta Langley, Argyle,
was dismissed Wednesday from
Denton Hospital and Clinic.
Miss Virginia Lee, >12 West Mul-
berry. who was admitted to Den-
ton Hospital and Clinic for medi-
cal treatment Wednesday, was
dismissed Thursday.
Mias Ida Garrison, 306 Avenue
E. was admitted Wednesday t o
Denton Hospital and Clinic for med-
ical treatment.
Bill Proctor. 301 Normal, was
dismissed Wednesday from Den-
ton Hospital end Clinic.
Mrs. Mary Beck. 2101 West Oak.
was diamisoed from Denton Hospi-
tal and Clinic Wednesday.
BIRTHS
A daughter was bom to Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Howard, 302 Ponder.
Thursday at Denton Hospital and
Clinic.
Savings on
] Cancer Victims
Treated at Home
ZANl <7RFY'5
C 11 M 5 I •
- -■ Bunday school and
Fellowship groups of the
are to meet as usual.
PERSONALS
Mrs. J. L. Eller and daughter.
Jeanne, who lived here at U15
EAST RAINELLE W Va . May
28 — i/Pi — Daniel Rupert Pitsen-
barger left 182 direct descendants
when he died at his home near here
Wednesday.
The 80-year-old retired farm-
er and pioneer Greenbrier county
resident is survived by five sons,
five daughters. 64 grandchildren,
and 108 great - grandchildren
fz
t
ARAB LEGION COMMANDER IN JERUSALEM—
Brig. Gen. John Glubb Pasha, left, Briton who com-
mands the Arab Legion, chats with a member of his
legion in Jerusalem. Arab shells were i
ing Jewish positions in old and new Jerusalem while
King Abdullah of Trans-Jordan prayed at Moslem and
Christian shrine in the Holy City. (AP Wirephoto).
CAROLINA MOON"
— ©CYRA!---
«^-,**•*
MacArthur
(Continued from Page 1)
bo questioned about If he comes
home is the foreign aid program
being carried out under the Eco-
nomic Cooperation Administration
— better known as ECA.
Potitica Barred
Senator Reed <R • East, who
cast the other “no" vote, comment-
ed;
■‘I think General MacArthur is a
great man, has done a great job
and deserves a great reception
when he gets home. But I don t
want to get it mixed up with poli-
tics.”
There are some indications that
backers of Gov. Thomas E. Dewey
of New York, Harald E. Stassen of
Minnesota and of Senator Arthur
Vandenberg of Michigan would be
just as well satisfied if the general
stayed in Tokyo until the Republi-
cans decide who will top their tick-
associated press
partly cloudy skies thi >
In Texas had replaced
clouds of the past let/
JAMHDUNN
Bcripturo, left Wednesday for Hub-
bard to join their husband and
father, who is employed there with
the Boll Conservation Service. HiL
er left for Hubbard several weeks
•«O.
Mrs. C. D. Mounts and children,
Carl Dean, Jr., and Mrs Frances,
of Lubbock are here visiting her
parents. Mr and Mrs J 8 Nelma.
412 Fkilton Bt Over the week end
another guest of Mr. and Mrs
Nelms was their son. Billy Nelms
of Kansas City, Mo. Mjss Mary
Nelma, who teaches in McCamey,
has returned here for the summer.
Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Sample. 812
W. Oak. returned Wednesday aft-
er vacationing for 10 days in
Monterrey.
Mrs. Irt Crowder, 411 Mounts,
who underwnet surgery at Scott
and White Hospital. Temple, last
Friday is improving satisfactorily
at the hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Mullen and
<0
ORANGE. Tex . May 28 — —
A six - day - old. blue • eyed, au-'
burn haired
By THE
Fair to
morning
the rain
days.
Morning fogs shrouded portion
of West and Southeast Texas, but
no rain was forecast today
During yesterday afternoon sno
last night Beaumont recorded a
.72 inch rain Lufkin 57. Dallas 22
and Tyler 30 Traces of rail fell
kana.
Temperatures ranged from a
high of 100 ai Presidio yesterdsv
to a low of 52 at Guadalupe Pas
early today.
Widely scattered thunderahou
era were forecast for West Texas
and the northwest portion of Eas'
Texas tomorrow.
*New is the lime to hats yum
winter clothes cleaned and de
mothed. Send them to Royal Clean
era. Phone 2158. 114 Com rest
Xbera to to be m regular men-
tht Mrvtoe at the rtut Presby-
tertaa-Church. 120 S. Elm. Bunday,
because of the illness of Leoile
JTancea Shannon, daughter of the
Rev. and Mrs. Frank L. Shannon.
Westminster
church
became a field marshal in
after overcoming powerful
sition to-take the leadership al hu
country through the World War II
<In London, the conservative
Graphic commented that the action
of the Standerton voters "Will
stand in history as one of the
classic examples of the fickleness
and ingratitude of Democracy” >
Frank Quarry. «4>
fance manufacturer, ,
Loa Angeles
r Itflth thia 4-ploce fly-any-
where plane, the jobs 500
miles away are more profit-
able than jobs 100 miles
away u«ed to be," says Frank
k, Querry, who learned to fly at
44. “Soon after buying our
firat Stinson, we decided we
needed two of them!"
"""""
WASHINGTON. May 28 — <JP> —
The Rural Electrification Admin-
istration has granted loans totaling
85,790.000 to 11 borrowers to pro-
vide electrical service in farming
areas. The loans included: Whar-
ton County Electric Cooperative.
El Campo. Tex . 8360,000
LABOR DISPUTES ON
DEI REASE IN TEXAS
AUSTIN. Tex . May 28 — -
Tire number of Texas workers idle
because of labor disputes wax cut
in half last month.
The Texas Employment Com-
mission reported that 3.124 strlk-
idleri workers were of their jobs
ai the snd of April, compared to
4.957 on the first of the month.
The bulk of the returning work-
^1.^ .—.J Mrs. Chitwood has been ers were in Houston, where settle-
asked to- make an address to the ment of four disputes put 2,635 back
to work. TEC said.
E'
I
I '
I
La „';j -
Bjs!:
L;
time,
pay us a rtaady profit I can fly direct t» . *y
l.t.on job. with a three-man craw
Js ffiis • profit-mskmn 'dea tor your
Lot us chtck th* taets w/ffi you.
Smut Resigns
Continued from Page 1
I ral regions the trend swiftly re
versed
The prime minister's own defeat
in Standerton, the constituency he
—aWMC.
fltn: Colar Cartoon "Craiy
with tha Hoot" and
MY PAL
A Spacial 20 Mlnuta Subject
’ FRII-Vua Sot. Nita 11:10
Buy a tickot to our latt
regular show > remain to
thi* Picture FREE
..ICTVll- . 8GU16 glKKI JJiaUW flill »UVUl
and i 24 00; cull to good shorn slaughter
more swes 7 50-11 00
out of Uiree stone houses the last
desperate defenders - of the Jewish
quarter. Hurva Synagogue, where
Irgun fighters held out for 11
days, was in Arab hands.
At Lake Success, the British
called for a four weeks' armistice
In the Holy Land during which
no arms or fighting men would be
permitted entry. Id that period a
last try would be made to restore
peace to Palestine.
Jews Rap Proposal
The Jews assailed the proposal
as an alliance between the British
and the Arabs Thus it appeared
headed for failure An Arab
spokesman commented that the
plan had ' an ethical approach "
Just before the British proposal
was made the Russians resub-
mitted an American plan under
which the Jews and Arabs would
be given 36 hours to stop fighting
or face strong U N measures for
ending the warfare The Jew*
favored the Russian plan but the
Arabs did not.
The British proposal calls for
forceful U N measures in event
of its rejection.
An Israeli communique claimed
the recapture of Ramat Rehel, the
much fought over settlement be-
tween Bethlehem and Jerusalem
and said the Arabs had been driven
out of Mar Ellas Monastery on
Bethlehem road.
The Egyptian government
charged In a note to the United
Nations that two Zionists admitted
Infecting wells east of Gasa with
typhoid and dysentery germs. Au-
brey 8 Eban. representative of
Israel, said the charges were a
most depraved bit of medieval an-
tl-Semltlam ”
Dewey end Stassen sre top con-
tenders. along with Senator Rob-
ert A. Taft of Ohio. Vandenberg is
doing so well not being e candidate
that hla friends say they are high-
ly encouraged about his chances
of becoming a compromise choice
Taft’s backers generally think
the generate return may react to
the Ohioan's benefit. They have
hinted broadly that the generel
might be found in their corner, if
he finds he can’t walk off with the
prise hUDMlT
Let ns clean your winter suite
and put them tn moth proof bags
for the summer. Royal Cleaners.
114 Congrem. Fh. 2158.
8EMINOLE. Tex.. May 28— UB—
The small son ot Jack F Jones of
Seminole swallowed a wheel from
his toy train and it lodged in his
throat.
Dr. Andrew 8. Tomb bundled the
boy into )ils private plane to fly
him to a throat specialist at Big
Spring
Dr. Tomb banked the plane
sharply for the landing at Bic
Spring. The boy gulped, dislodging
the wheel. He completed swallow-
ing the gadget and an operation
became unnecessary.
RookF
Donlevy
Blytiu
OHOWTHSUMT. •
B’ uSBuSSSSl
EXTRA!-----i
Wit Cuckea"
at the hands of C.
una daughter. Barbara Ann.
Beaumont will arrive today
visit hler mother, Mrs. Willie C.
Smith, and grandmother, Mrs. B
E. Caskey. 1316 W. Oak. Mr. Smith
is teacher ot science in Lamar
College.
Mr. and Mrs W. P. Pittman and
daughter, Patricia, ot
Christi, are arriving Saturday
a visit with Mrs. Pittman's V-
ents. Mr and Mrs. W. W. Wright.
463 Mounts Avenue.
Mrs. T. C. Dobbins. 916 West
Oak. underwent major surgery
Friday at Baylor Hospital in Dal-
las.
Herschel B. Miller arrived
here Thursday by plane from At-
lanta, Ga.. to visit his parents. Mr.
and Mrs. W H. Miller. 902 West
Sycamore thia week end. Hla wife
and daughter, who have been vis-
iting here the past throe weeks,
will accompany him home Mon-
day.
A man was heard to remark
''If my wife uses my raxor again
for sharpening pencils, well I'll
see how her powder puff will work
in shining my shoes ”
Deputy Sheriff 8am Gentry may
know something about bringing hgd repre,rnlc<i for 24 veers, came
in unlawful beer, but he demon- gt the handt ol c Du pieces,
strated the fact that he knows little who once waj secrelary to Smuts'
about opening a bottle The office; longt(m€ toe thP lale j B M
had some confi.yated home-brew Hertiog. with whom Smuts vied
in fk* oaiih mnnthe enn .
for years of political domlnace In I
South Africa
Bitter Blow
It was a bitter blow for Smuts. ‘
thp nnwd»rfiil nf the!
Round About
(Continued from Fagc 1)
tarles have an organization with
! the Kiwanis Club and I expect to
meet with that organisation as well |
as with the Kiwanis Convention,”
she said
C . IF '
one of the powerful flaures of the.
British Empire for decades. He
became a field marshal in 1941.
j after overcoming powerful oppo-
*'I remember Wednesday four
years ago.” said Sam Randals.
and it was raining on that day. too.
' T It a* ■ watr fleet H ■ \r
“Stallion
Road”
FORT WOHTH 1.14 MT<>< K
FORT WORTH Tex May 28 (API
— Cattle 600. calves 200. cattle and
calf trade very alow; most blds and
sales on cattle and calves week to,
uneveny lower; few cbotoe lightweight
yearlings up to 1100, common to
medium yearlings and he Jara 18 00-
24 ; common to medium eowa 1100-
21.M; bulls 14 00-22 00; choice heavy
slaughter calves 80 00-21.00; common
to mediums 17.60-24 00. stackers end
calves very scarce.
Hogs 400; active and steady on all
welghte top 24 00 for good and choice I and JD „ J,” Texar
leoieo lb good around 400 lb Waco. Houston and lexer
butchers down around 21 50. good
and choice 160-175 lb. 2250-23.76;
sows 17 50-18 00; stags 15 00 down,
good 76-140 lb. Stocker pigs 1100-
22 00.
Sheep 4.500 alow, good and choice
spring lambs absent, few common and
medium springers 20 00 down; shorn
lambs and yearlings weak to LOG low-
er; aged sheep 60-1.00 lower; feeders
poorly tasted, medium snd a few
New ’ Wlrty Fiona!
Now Stinson for '48 cameo four neonle
r.4. «<7mCZ .
a
demonatration flight. P *,ve •
FRR FLIGHT TRAINING
you >n»«ruction—up to the point whore
w.
■if V A A. C 7%. ..Aj- ; . J. OJKfSaite,k
. .
^7 ^7 .
Joiun Uoptci
2 OKHTON (Tea-) RECORD-CHRONICLE— Friday. May 28. 1948
■■ --- w-— —.• — -
' " daughters, J sue and Joon, students
st Denton Senior High School, will
leave Friday tor Indianapolis, Ind.,
where they will reside temporari-
ly. Mullen is employed with tee
National Carbon Company, with
headquarters in Chicago.
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Barnhart, 2110
North Locust, returned Wednesday
from Corpus Christi, where they
attended the Republican Conven-
tion, in which Barnhart served on
the credentials committee with
Henry Zwelfel, Fort Worth Attorn-
ey. He also was elected presi-
dential elector of the 13th congres-
sional district. While at the Con-
vention Mr. and Mrs. Barnhart
attended several social events, in-
cluding a fish try given by Marrs
McClean of Houston.
Mr. and Mrs. W. Russell Smith
of
to
NEW YORK — (A7 — Hope for
the hopeless and a measure ot
happiness for the final months of
life has been provided by a new
hospital home care program lor ■
cancer patients. Success of the
! prop i am. which has been tried out
1 in New York by Monteftore Hos-
pital for a year, to described by
I Dr Martin Cherkasky. super
* visor, who prediets It will provide
I a model for other communities all
over the country
After patients have derived all
possible benefit from hospital care,
says Dr Cherkasky. It has been
' iounu -----
I gives new
; both patient and family.
' plains-
| The service provides all
services of the hospital, in
1 home This includes medical and
I nursing care, i
I ists housekeeping service.
i cation, hospital equipment
I physical therapy. Often it is
! important to keep the spirit alive
1 than It is to provide routine treat-
. ment in the hospital. Our experl-,
ment has proved the truth of the :
song — 'Be it ever so humble
there's no place like home ’’ " |
been in the vault for months, and
this week it was decided to pour
it out 8am opened a bottle, and it
fuaaed and apurtad all over him
before he could get away He suf-
fered a ahower of home • brew
"Well, we finally got that stuff
poured out.” he said
The Hoover i», by for, the most popular of oil Electric
Cleaners becau»e of iti real merit ... a better
cleaner, more durable, numerous handy attachment*,
eate of operation and popular price. Sold on eeasy terms;
no intereet; no carrying charge. Give her a Heaver
and you give her the best. j
*7 ; m
Evers Hardware Co.
. " ' • k 1 ■ A1 " ’
Magie Chef Ranges Dishes — Club Aluminum
flM
Showdawn
Continued from Page 1
IUJ Jordan Arab legion tried to dig
baby to the first
female child born Intn the Muaatna
family of Texas tn 122 years, her
father said.
The baby is Beverlv Ann. >
daughter of Mr and Mrs Warren
E. Muasina of Orange
The father aaid that the child’s
great great grandfather. Jacob
Mussina, and hla brother Simon
founded the cities of Port Isabel
and Brownavtlle and once had
large land holdlnga in South Texas
He Mid that descendants of Ja-
cob and 81mon are spattered
throughout Texas but until the
birth of Beverly Ann las’ Friday,
the descendants were to his know-
ledge all male
cons<
pager
matic
and c
ever ■,
Th<
of wc
Cann
f
i
r 4
4
4
4)
ways
book-
Hi
T<
I
T
It
J :
MAE
— i/P)
once t
Texas
for th<
loday
to bril
fruit fi
Taki
halt -
sislam
Hallori
Halli
yesten
Meel
at the
eonvlll
elation
•'1 g
tour h;
'Tex
the C
t tonal
the wc
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seener
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r
is
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 246, Ed. 1 Friday, May 28, 1948, newspaper, May 28, 1948; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1370698/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.