Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 68, Ed. 1 Monday, October 19, 1953 Page: 2 of 8
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Monday, October 19, 1953
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Manday,
MARKETS
Search
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Mrs. Thomas To
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Return Here
Peace Bond
t
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this
1 1
Rites Planned
219 W. Oak
Denton
Extra
• DRIVE-N .THEATM
I
LAST NIGHT
for men. Reasonable,
>
Greece 6,200 and Holland
errol Flynn
down and unanimously approved
News - - Cartoon
<
was the culmination nf a long lint_____
Coming Friday-Saturday
of border attacks by
A
THUNDER
Big Four
14
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allies
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RATING
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TODAY'S PERSONALITY
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Lyle E. Montgomery Co.
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214 W. Oak at Cedar
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COOLED by REFRIGERATION
TEXAS
mupiiLiifixln
DREAMLAND"
DONI MISS
7dwxov
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ri CHNICOLOR
Ex-Mayor Dies
At Pilot Point
Hearing Set
County Judge Jack Gray
Takes Walk
From Talk Site
Rites For Former
Denton Woman Set
Four County
Persons Hurt
in Collision
"h
1
EAGLE CLUB
SETS MEETING
Denton
menus foi
«N tNTERSF*FE HAFR
Lost Times TODAY
Jordan’s
an uneasy
'TOMAHAWK'
in Technicolor with
Ollie
Mrs.
Mrs.
AN SUMS) ICMW Md
i : ■ ’IV 's o'l
Now Through Oct. 25
Kites Except Oct. 28
hat.-Run. Mat..
9,000,
4,400.
That
TOM & JERRY
CARTOON
Van Heflin
Yvonne DeCarlo
IAN A TURNER
Lttin
The moths which produce most
of the world's silk no longer exist
in the wild state.
UM ns uo am ns oasihi .
mesouririam wui mi sav
wan um Laves _
BEN SO N
.Continued from Page li
Extra Added
CARTOON-NEWS
"hsdt
Extra
Jordan claims 66
killed.
Mrs. Floyd Graham took over duties as clerk for
the United Fund campaign this morning in newly
opened offices in Hie Palace Theatre building. She
will shoulder the responsibility of handling much of
Hie paperwork in the campaign for Denton's civic
fund drive.
LATEST
NEWS EVENTS
c-2702.
NiaEB
LAST NIGHT
Two Big Encore Hits
Brought Back By
Your Request.
Drive Carefu:ly, you might injure a customer of
mine.
I NOHMIM tNO
| .UHM
DEDICATION
(Continued from Page 1)
shipped in a Presbyterian church
at Mission, Tex., and relaxed at
the home o Texas Gov. Allan Shiv-
ers.
After church, he stopped by for
a visit with a polio victim, Tommy
Robertson, 15.
A girl, Charleta Ann, was born
to Mr. and Mrs. Charles James
Thompson, 523 N. Elm, Saturday
at 9:45 a.m. in Flow Hospital.
A boy was born to Mr. and Mrs
Charles A. Sprabary, 322 E. Oak.
Sunday at 11:42 p.m. in Folw Hos-
pital.
I' ’
e
sam
4
I •
The 11-nation body took up the
issue today, with an advance claim
by Israel that the latest bloodshed
__
a
CT Enrollment Cp
AUSTIN t— Enrollment at the
University of Texas is 14,003, al-
most 9 per cent more than a year
ago, university officials said Sat-
urday. The peak was 17,486 in 1947.
A drive was on in Waco to get
car owners to register thefr vehi-
cles in the county where they live.
A state inspector said 10 days
ago he would start filing suits
Monday. By Friday, deputy tax
collector Leslie Strange of McLen-
TU English word "coney" is
derived from the Dutch "konijn,"
rabbit.
314 Wa l n wright Street._________
Ft) AN 18 HKD, 3-room apartment, pri-
vale bath, M> W. Eim, C-anM.
LOSf sTxliM blue gown at How Woe-
pital bunaing or grounds, Saturday,
October 17, phonr C-8604 _
WANT 1 or a children to keep to my
home. <MSW.
State Urges
Car Inspection
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Texas wants car owners to get
their autos inspected and register
them in the county where they live.
Some cities have started drives
to collect overdue personal taxes
on the care.
Colouial
DRIVE -IN THEATRE)
MONDAY - TUESDAY
DALLAS ICE ARENA
During Great State
Fair of Texas
EARI V MAIL ORnERs
ASSURE BEST SEATS
RUSH MAIL ORDERS
TO:
Boi 7712, Dallas
(Ene. Stamped, Selr-
Addressed Env.)
Prices: 83.30. $2.50; 82.00,
$1.50 (tax inci.)
All Beats reservea
Between 1931 and 1951 the num-
ber of Scots able to talk Gaelic
dronped from 12 4 per cent to 6.7
per cent.
SArr.-22
BETTER 67"
CALL 2541 E0
.INWOOD * °RN
RDBERSON FLORIST
m . m w. Mickory
Furniture For:
BABY?
ANDERSON FURNITURE
BIG 3
(Continued from Page 1)
eli troops Oct. 14 on the Jordan
►4
"0
2
/
FREE
OFFER!
Buy your Dearborn Heater
new, and wa will deliver W
anywhere in Danton Coun-
ty, install it, furnishing all
necessary connactions, and
adjust it to year butane or
natural goo proMuro.
The Department of Public Safety
told car owners last week to hurry
and get their safety certificates
The deadline is April 15, but more
than 2 million cars still remain to
(Winferize..
|: Economize 1
ocr rout
OlenrlMMnZ
N NOWI/
ar
a
4 M•
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CYCLES
m OF 1954
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Final d
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problem
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proposed
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the budge
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will add
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for the ye
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includes s
accounts i
LEN
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Monday
berry sat
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Tuesda
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rot strip!
late pudd
Wednes
salad, ap
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Thursda
turnip gr
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Friday
pickles, p
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Monday
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Wednes
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Print by TECMNICOLORSA
a
A’ +
Phone C-74M
mp
hm2020/30011/m/04k
Santerre, Rt. 1, Denton;
Franks, 109 E. McKinney;
Jessie McNair, 904 Gregg;
V. R. McLarry, Lewisville.
BIRTHS
The National Geographic So-
ciety says the first storm windows
in America ate believed to be
those at Monticello, Thomas Jef
ferson’s home.
was the program laid
c7 C7
J own ^JopicS
The first discovery of gold west
of the Mississippi in the United]
States is believed to have been the
Sierra de Oro lode in New Mexico.1
1
Special to the Record-Chronicle
WACO— Mrs. John Thomas, the
former Mary Louise Ivey, was
scheduled to be moved from Hill-
crest Hospital in Waco to Denton
by ambulance today.
Mrs. Thomas was injured ser-
iously Saturday afternoon in a two-
car collision on Highway 84 about
14 miles west of Waco.
Hillcrest Hospital authorities re-
ported this morning that Mrs.
Thomas was somewhat improved.
She received a back injury, frac-
tured pelvis, and cuts and bruises
on the head in the accident.
Mrs. Thomas, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Ben Ivey of 819 W. Oak,
was reported on her way to Austin
at the time of the accident.
Driver of the other car, Arthur
Penton of Waco, who was en route
to Waco, was also injured.
by the Intergovernmental Com-
persons were । mittee for European Migration,
meeting here to shape up its
1954 program for spreading out the
world’s population.
Geonge Alexander has returned
from a trip to Missouri, where he
visited bis brother, Jim Alexander,
■oar Sedalia. Both the Alexander
men grew up in Denton County,
but Jim has been living in Missouri
forA number of years. George
Mid, "While Jim is a few years
older than I am, 83, he is a lot
better man physically than I.”
Faye Tipton and Chick Crain are
this day observing birthday anni-
versaries.
brushed aside an earlier Soviet
proposal for a Big Five confer-
ence—including Red China—to dis-
cuss world tensions. They com-
mented the Chinese Communists
would have their say at the pro-
jected Korean peace conference,
whose object "precisely is to re-
move one of the major sources of
tension in the Far East.”
The three Western notes to Mos-
cow said if the proposed talks at
Lugano succeed, the way may be
cleared "for discussion of other!
major questions and for restoring
necessary conditions for peaceful
and friendly relations among na-
tions."
Observers in Moscow felt the
Russians would take their time an-
swering the latest invitation to talk
on these European issues. The So-
viet press already has indicated
her feelings on the subject, and
the Kremlin has suggested that the
questions of Germany and Austria
be discussed separately. The West
maintain’s the two must be set-
tled together if European peace is
to be assured.
nan County had to order 1,500
more lieense plates. By Frtday,
478 ' car owners had registered
their cars.
Some registered their cars in oth
er counUes to avoid city taxes,
not collected in all places.
More than 400 suits to collect
auto taxes hsve been filed in Tyler
since August.
Lubbock started filing suits on
4,000 or so car owners delinquent
on auto taxes.
-•w
231880
wch.
For
$495
Features 6:45 flr 10:10
"DON'T BOTF.ER
TO KNOCK"
Starring
• Marilyn Monroe
• Richard Widenork
• Jeanne Cagney
Cartoon
Roscoe Smith
Dies Sunday
Special to the Record-Chronicle
PILOT POINT — A. Roscoe
Smith, 53, Dallas business leader
and president of the Graham-Brown
Shoe Co., died in Houston Sunday
night, apparently following a heart
attack. Mr. Smith was well known
to Pilot Point, having been rear-
ed in this city and formerly serv-
ed as cashier of the old Farmers
and Merchants Bank here.
Mr. Smith moved to Dallas In
1920 and became a bookkeeper with
the Graham-Brown firm. He was
named president in 1948.
Funeral services were imcom-
plete at noon today. Mr. Smith
was a member of the Highland
Park Presbyterian Church and a
Rotarian. Survivors include his
wife; two daughters, Stephanie and
" Susan, and a brother, Ed Smith,
all of Dallas.
th/ West with a hearing at Chey-
enne. Wyo.
After traveling through North-
western, Southern and Western
and central corn belt states, the
17 participating members agreed,
in an informal poll, that the House
group would vote almost solidly for
continuation of present 90 per cent
of parity price supports for com,
wheat, etton, tobacco, peanuts
and rice.
Parity is a standard for measur-
ing farm prices, declared by law
to be fair to farmes in relation to
prices they pay.
The 90 per cent support law will
expire at the end of the 1954 mar-
keting year unless extended by
Congress.
In its 1,200-mile trip through the
Midwest, the committee found top-
heavy demands that the present
law be retained, at hearings in
Minnesota, South Dakota and Ne-
braska. In Iowa the demands were
not quite so strong.
In Illinois, farmers divided about
evenly between 90 per cent sup-
ports and a flexible plan under
which floors would be high in
times of shortages to encourage
production and low in times of
surpluses to discourage production.
DRIVE-IN
(OC. THEATRE
R“4ef FL WORTH HIGHWAY
(Special to the Record-Chronicle)
PILOT POINT—D' Troy Peters,
former mayor of Pilot Point and
present justice of the peace, died
at 2:30 a.m. today at his home
here. Death was attributed to a
heart attack.
Mr. Peters was an agriculture
industry broker, at one time be-
ing one of the most active peanut
buyers in this area. He had been
closely connected with farming
and ranching for many years. He
was serving his 12th year as local
justice of the peace.
Born in Henrietta, Texas, Mr.
Peters came to Pilot Point in 1909.
He was educated to the Pilot Point
public schools and served in the
Marine Corps during World War I.
He was a member of the Presby-
terian Church and the Masonic
Lodge. He was a long-time mem-
ber of the Vaughn-Walling Ameri-
can Legion Post.
Services tentatively were sched-
uled for Tuesday afternoon, with
arrangements being made by the
Smith Funeral Home of Pilot
Point. The Rev. John Clark, pastor
of the Presbyterian Church of Pilot
Point, will conduct the services.
Burial will be in the Pilot Point
Masonic Cemetery.
forces since 1950 after
UN-sponsored truce
Palestine war in 1949.
In proposing the
conference, the Western
r-_
"i
" • A PERLBERG-SEATON •ODUcTion
•LITTLE BOY
LOST
■ g
■ iv A
B 4
,* 486,
Dismissed—Mrs. M. A. Beaird,
1025 E. McKinney.
Elm Street Hospital and Clinle
Admitted—D. F. Card, surgery,
Valley View; Billy Don Cantrell,
Rt. 2, medical.
Dismissed—Jane Alice Spraber-
ry, 1013 Coit; James Arthur Spra-
berry, 1013 Cook; Billy Don Can-
trell, Rt. 2.
Flow Memorial Hospital
Admitted—Charles Santerre, Rt.
1, Denton, surgery; Ollie Franks,
109 E. McKinney, medical; James
David Ray, 223 Bryan, medical;
James Lee Brock, Lewisville, med-
ical; G. A. Baker, Rt. 1, Denton,
surgery; Jim Pepper, 1004 Car-
roll, surgery; Mrs. Charles Spra-
bary, 322 E. Oak, medical.
Dismissed—Robert Black, 811
Woodland; Mrs. C. F. Martin and
baby, 611 Highland; Mrs. Zetta
McNamara, 112 Ave. B; Charles
Last Times TODAY
Warner Bros.
PRESENT
tear Louts STEWENSOIS
THEMASTEROF
BALLANTRAE
A ar
TECMNICOLOR
1962 BENDIX Washer, preotically
new, used by couple for light wesh-
Inf Reaoonobly priced. 2280 W. Oak.
30 registeredMliking Short-
horn Cattie on % increase basts.
Three year contract. References re-
qured. Phone Norwood 5-1463, Fat
Bouchelle.GrandPrairle,,—
FOk rent: Modem roaiaeboe, Tii
W. Bycamore. Phone C-7472, C. W.
Beall.
VITOR SIED, 16 pound, Clifford
Otockard, Lake Dalles.
526 300 < 4/
TAEDENTON.RECORDCIEONICLB
MONDAY'S LIVESTOCK
FORT WORTH (AP)—Cattle 9.200:
steady to strong: good and choice
Slaughter steers and yearlings 8 1.
628.50; commos and medium •0 00-
015.50; fat cows 8880-81100: .g00d
and choice slaughter calves 81200-
815 00: common and medium •0 00-
813 00; good and choice Stocker steer
calves 012,50-415.50; Stockem and
feeder steers and yearlings 82.00-
815.00; choice steer yearlings S16 00;
feeder heifers 810 50
Hogs 300; 50-75 higher; choice 190-
250 1b. 822.00-818.00.
Sheep 5,400: steady to weak: good
and choice slaughter lamb* 816.00-
•17.00: utility and gbo slaughter
yearlings •10.00; alaughter ewes 84 50
to 85.75; feeder lambs 811 00-412.50.
MONDAY'S POULTRY
AUSTIN (AP)—Poultry: South Tex-
as steady. 2% to 3 lbs. 30. East Tex-
as. Waco and Corsicana steady, 38.
A Denton man and three Lewis-
ville residents were injured in a
two car collision on highway 77, >
five miles south of Gainesville Sun-
"AGE TWO
---- 3-
olice Probe Set
-9"". sy E
{AMPU5
RcrmTTTTETIIR"A
day morning.
David Ray, 225 Bryan, was in
Flow Memorial Hospital this morn-
ing with a fractured jaw and frac-
tured right hand and Mrs. Patsy
Ruth Washington, Mrs. Ollie Mae
Phillips and James Pippin of Lew-
isville were reported in serious
condition in the Gainesville Sani-
tarium. Mrs. Washington was be-
ing transferred to Flow Memorial
Hospital this morning.
The 1953 Oldsmobile driven by
Mrs. Washington and owned by
Ray was going north when it and
a Chevrolet driven by Finis Taylor
of Nocona collided. Both cars
were extensively damaged.
Other passengers in the Chevro-
let were Mrs. Taylor and their two
sons, Douglas Ray, 11 and Charles
Kenneth, 7. Mr. and Mrs. Taylor
and Douglas were reported in seri-
ous condition at the Gainesville
Sanitarium this morning. Charles
was "somewhat improved” in a
Dallas hospital.
The Taylors were en route to the
State Fair in Dallas when the ac-
cident occurred.
Patrolman Lester Robertson of
Gainesville investigated and am
bulahces from the Keel and Carol
Funeral Homes transferred the in
jured passengers to the Gainesville
hospital.
h ■ -
border village of Kibya in hich
The Eagle Club meets Tues-
day morning in Marquis Hall
and will hear a scout report
on Texas Western and see films
of Saturday night’s 39-7 vic-
tory over Midwestern.
The breakfast begins at 7
a.m.
NTSC’s Eagles took the Gulf
Coast Conference lead with the
victory over Midwestern.
117,000 Europeans
To Migrate In 754
VENICE, Italy (— Crowded Eu-
rope plans to send 117,000 of its
sons and daughters to the new
world next year in quest of a
broader future. Thirty, thousand of
them plan to head for the United
States.
They will be aided on their way
by their "old country” govern-
ments and by international funds.
The greatest number— 45,000—
are to go from tight-packed Italy.
Germany is to send 38,700, Austria
By MILO FARNETI 4
PANMUNOM w — Beaten in
their demand that Indian troops
force defiant Korean War prison-
ers to listen to Red persuasion
teams, the two Communist dele-
gations reportedly stormed out of
a Korean repatriation commission
meeting today. .
The Polish and Czech walkout-
reported by reliable sources—
threatened a collapse in the ten-
sion-ridden Interviewing of 23,400
anti-Communist prisoners who re-
fuse to return to their homelands.
The sources, who declined to be
named, said the Swedish, Swiss
and Indian members of the flve-
nation commission sided togethee.
The walkout stalled all activity
of the commission, at least tempo-
rarily. ,
A commission spokesman said
there would be no explanations
Tuesday. The Reds had refused to
Interview Chinese instead of the
North Koreans they had asked far.
A 1M-hour repatriation commis-
sion debate on the matter was
ended by the walkout at Czechs
and Poles, an informed source
said.
The North Koreans have stub-
bornly refused to move out of their
compounds to meet with Red ex-
planation teams.
Only 19 of 921 Chinese inter-
viewed asked for repatriation.
Six North Koreans who re-
quested repatriation were turned
over to the Reds, raising to 131
the number of POWs who have
returned to Red rule without first
meeting with the Red explainers
In all, some 22,400 anti-Red
POWs are in custody of the repa
triation commission.
Communist correspondent Wil-
fred Burchett, who often echoes
official Red policy, said one of the
main disputes between the Reds
and the repatriation commission
was over who has the right to de-
termine explanation plans.
Burchett said the Communists
believe they have the right to de-
termine whether they will explain
to Chinese or North Korean cap-
tives and they also want to say
when they will talk to the POWs.
x
I
Funeral Rites
For Sanger Youth
Held Sunday
Special to the Recard-Chrenlcle
PILOT POINT—Funeral services
for Waiter Lois West, 13, Route 1,
Sanger, were held Sunday after-
noon in Gainesville, with burial in
the Fairview Cemetery at Gaines-
ville. The young Sanger student
died Saturday morning in a Gaines-
ville hospital after an illness of
several months.
Survivors include his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Smith of Rt
l, Sanger; two sisters, Mary and
Kitty and a brother, Bennie. Pall-
bearers were Buck Bailey, Hugk
Tate, James M. Sims, Clyde Le-
Gear, Earl Coleman and Jess
Smith.
The Geo. J. Carroll Funeral
Home of Gainesville had charge of
arrangements.
I N . HOWARI HUGHES
DEVILS CANYON
For L. Hensley
Special to the Record-Chronicle
PILOT POINT—Funeral services 1
for Lewis N. Hensley, 83 year-old I
retired farmer who died Sunday I
morning in his home in Mansfield,
were scheduled for 2 p.m. today in
the Smith Funeral Chapel here.
The Rev. R. M. Merrill, Calvary
Baptist Church pastor, will offi-
ciate. Burial will be in Masonic
Cemetery here.
Mr. Hensley, born in Kentucky, j
married Miss Lillie Reynolds, Oct. 1
25, 1899, in Denton.
He lived in Pilot Point until about
1933. Mr. Hensley moved from I
Gainesville two weeks ago.
Survivors include his wife; two j
sons, George L. of Ringgold and I
W. A. of Mansfield; a daughter,]
Mrs. Ruby Ruffin, Turlock, Calif.; I
a sister, Mrs. Albert Watson, Gain-1
esville; nine grandchildren, and]
five great grandchildren.
Features 8:20 & 11.30
"SNOWS OF
KILIMANJARO"
Starring
• Gregory Pack
• Susan Hayward
• Ava Gardner
• Cartoon
ROUNDABOUT
(Continuea trom Page 1)
before have I gathered as much as
a bale to the acre,” said Stubby
lairman, southwest of Denton. "I
planted 20 acres and will get at
least 22 bales from the plot. A
man asked me how I managed to
make more cotton than some of
my neighbors and I told him that
I stayed at home and worked the
crop."
hotel on the tip of a taxi driver.
1 A. Long, board president, said
Police Chief Jeremiah O’Connell
was asked to “intensify and broad-
en the police investigation of the
case" following a special meeting
of the commissioners. ,
O'Connell said the probe would
include police questioning of Shoul-
ders and Doland although the com-
missionera said, “We have no
reason to believe any police offi-
cers connected with the case have
not given us all the information
they have."
The Post-Dispatch has reported
it learned FBI agents had found
a number of discrepancies in the
police account of Hall's art as t
and recovery of about (293,000 in
ransom money from him.
The newspaper said police rec-
ords showed Hall was brought to
a district police station following
his arrest with two suitcases filled
with money but that the FBI had
determined no suitcases were
brought with Hall to the station.
The newspaper said "make than
an hour elapsed” after Hall was
booked before the suitcases were
brought in.
However, Shoulders said, “The
bags with the money were deliv-
ered to the station at the same
time as the prisoners."
Shoulders said that after Hall
was booked ha (Shoulders) took
the two suitcases to a small room
at the station and locked the door.
"I can prove," he said, "that
the money I found in Hall’s apart-
ment was the same money I
turned over to the FBI. Where
that money is will come out at the
right time and when it does, I
know Lou Shoulders will be in the
clear. I’m dot worried."
The Globe-Democrat said last
night Dolan told FBI agents he did
not know the suitcases found in
Hall’s apartment contained the
ransom money until about two
hours after the arrest.
The Globe also reported Dolan
told the FBI Shoulders left the po-
lice station in his pricate car short-
ly after Hall was brought to the
station.
Shoulders, declining to affirm or
deny the report he left the station,
Mid:
"I can account for every move
I made and the handling of that
money whenever I’m called upon
to do so and it will be only to the
proper authorities — the police
board or the chief—and it will not
be the newspapers or the FBI.”
Hall has said he cannot remem-
ber what happened to the missing
ransom money—half of the record
3600,000 paid by Robert Green-
lease Sr. .
Red Committee StgtcNepgersn
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
HOME AND REVENUE
Two story, five big rooms and bath
upataire. Owner's living quarters of 3-
bedrooms, large kitchen, living and
aiding room, hath, downstairs. Up-
staira renta 180 per month. unfur-
nished. Very close to NTBC. owner
moving from Denton. Exclusive.
LETA HOWARD, PH. C-8507
NEED CASH?
Refinance your car by telephone.
Lower your car paymenta.
MARK WALORTP‘8 AGfo FINANCE
_________C-4064____ ,
3-ROOM. furnlahed apartment, large
clpseta, private bath, entrance. 1081
W Mvcamore.____
2 anas room furnished apartmenta,
2317 N. Etas.
K.dB. furnished cottages for rent by
week or month, bills paid. Reason*
abt rates. 2317 N. Eim.
3 - rooms, private bath, gano*- A1*"
bedroom, 818 North Locust, phone
ji VIRGINIA MAYO DAIL ROBERTSON
te SIEPHEN M NALLY ARTHUR HUNNICUII
FURNISHED apartment, near NTSC,
two boys or married couple. Avall-
-222200 s nearso-ena|be-inpauteu-cnns
- an."
COME EARLY AND SEF BOTH FEATURES
t —w*~**
,*
eNe
G-2Berrors-TBNuu
In Ransor
ST. LOUIS An investigation
of alleged discrepancies in police
reportson the arrest of the Bobby
Greeniease kidnapers and reccv-
ry of half ths ransom money was
stoners.
. The boaH ordered all reports
checked and "all persons connect
ed with the arrest" questioned
again following published reports
that the FBI had found a number
of discrepancies to the police M
count of the case,
FBI agents, still seeking (300,000
fa missing ransom money, refused
to comment on this report and on
reports they have questioned the
two police officers who arrested
Carl Austin Hall, confessed kidnap-
slayer, and Mrs. Ronnie Brown
Headv here Oct. 6. - '
Hall wss arrested by LL Louis
Shoulders and Patrolman Elmer
Dolan at a midtown apartment
By NT Fraternity
FORT WORTH—A NTSC under-
graduate chapter of Sigma Delta
Chi, national journalistic fratern-
ity, moved nearer realization to-
day, following action taken at the
Texas SDX convention here Satur-
day and Sunday.
Delegates to the convention
unanimously recommended ap-
proval of a NTSC charter- The
recommendation will be offered at
the national SDX convention in St.
Louis during November.
Those attending the state con-
vention from Denton included C. E.
Shuford and Delbert McGuire,
journalism teachers at NTSC, and
Allen Bogan of the Denton Record-
Chronicle. Fifteen journalists from
foreign countries were guests of
Texas 8DX at the convention.
Mrs. Philip Walker has returned
from El Pato where she visited
her daughter and son-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Richard C. White, and
children, Rodrick, 9, and Richard
Whitman, who was born Oct. 7.
Paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. James C. White of El Paso.
Firemen extinguished a miner
grass fire on Old McKinney Road
at 1:45 p.m. Sunday No damage
was reported.
PERSONALS
Mr. end Mrs. Harry Lynn of
Dallas were weekend guests of
their uncle, Sam Rosenbery, 227
W. Mulberry, who is seriously ill.
• HOSPITAL NOTES
Denton Hospital And Clinic
Admitted—Ollie Bailey, 409 Wain-
wright, medical; Mrs. Arnold
Kenas, Rt. 2, Denton, medical;
Mrs. Jack Smith, 331 E. Oak, med-
ical.
morning tentatively set a hearing
for this afternoon coneerning the
peace bond placed on A. E. Sexton
of Denton Thursday.
Attorney Hal Jackson this morn-
ing filed a writ of habeas corpus
charging that there was not suffi-
cient cause for the $2,000 peace
bond and that the amount was ex-1
cessive.
Sexton is in county jail. The $2,-
000 peace bond was set Thursday
morning by Justice of the Peace
Z. D. Lewis after Sextion was
charged in justice court with
threatening to commit an offense.
City Policeman C. C. Castleber-
ry testified at the Thursday peace
bond hearing that Sexton threaten-
ed him Wednesday morning after
he and Policeman Leroy Kena
approached Sexton concerning a
traffic violation.
Funeral services for Mrs. Vera
Bell Francia, former Denton resi-
dent, were to be held today at 4
p.m. in Welland-Merritt Chapel,
Dallas, with the Rev. Frank Dent,
officiating. Interment was to be
in Grove Hill.
Survivors include her husband,
William Bebb Francis; one son,
William Bebb Francis Jr.; grand
son, William Bebb Francis III;
granddaughter, Ann Francis;
brother, J. C. Bell, and one sis-
ter, Mrs. Carroll Y. Garrison.
! „0012
*
•____________________
•' I
Mon. thru Sat.: 7:30-10 p.m.
Saturday Afternoon 2-4 p.m.
Private Parties
By Appointment
DENTON ROLLER RINK
210 MeKirney C-6425
F --
1 —
1 .
oan-
Monday
ed potatoe
ed grahar
Tuesda j
enna sat
sticks, c
cream, n
Wednes:
blackeye
bread, b
down cak
Thursdi
whole ke
butter, m
Friday
corn chip
halves m
v
4 IS
TODAY & TUESDAY
BING
CROSBY
CLAUDE DAUPHIN
- CHRISTIAN FOURCADE
- n. IM« •-y
. hearbeal
Oalyoneheout
away frot ’
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 68, Ed. 1 Monday, October 19, 1953, newspaper, October 19, 1953; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1424615/m1/2/: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.