Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 305, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 5, 1953 Page: 2 of 10
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FHE DENTONRECORD-CHRONICLE
Wednesday, August 1, 1953
N
Wedne
AGE TWO
T
Rites Held For
MARKETS
OWER REPORTS ;
14. Ri
*
I
/
More Senior Citizens Enrolled
/2
4
4
40
near Pilot Point 90 years ago.
*7
13 Draftees
R
Auto Victim’s
T
He was a member of the Meth-
I : e 4 F'k. ....h amca A . +L.
I
Dr,, Mrs. Jones
।
. nwui, 4UU4 WVUrai, A /l. QI I Ul-
Omitted From List
bury.
W. E. Ledbetter
going
Dies At 79
.Their
♦
Davis was born at Pitot Point on
I
Last Times TODAY
LAST NIGHT
Funeral rites for Mrs. Loretta
P
0
half
Screen Time 7:55
1
z
2 - Cartoons . 2
COMING THURSDAY
8)
'• Hardware
$
OF
SAY IT BEST
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CALL
ma
C-2561
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SAVE REGULARLY
We invite you to
A
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Member F
LAST TIMES TON
AONFEN2ES§
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FIRST DRIVE-IN SHOWING
COMING THURS. - FRI. ■ SAT.
ters. Miss Edna Baker of Tolar
and Mrs Horace Carswell of Fort
ehlldren, Charlie
ger, Harvey Ham-
TIX AVERY
CARTOON
ton Pythian Lod
the Gainesville
A list of new families in Denton,
compiled by the Retail Merchants
IF
AN
ther, Paul of Henderm; two ais-
tors. Mrs. Lillian Harris of Pitot
Point and Mrs. Henry Carson of
Santa Monica, Calif., and a grand-
2 Plead Guilty
in Liquor Cases;
Fined $100 Each
• O1
12 . Pi
13. Li
Look
who's j
haunting |
castlesl |
THEY’RE %
A ROTI
Free Vacations
Open For Girls •
At Kiicanis Camp
Vacancies still exist for girls
mood Seymour, who is
with the Air Force in
Polio Chapter
Gets $3,575
National Aid
m.
stats
Pythians Confer
Ritualistic Work
At Gainesville
Qveen of
society
tongles 4
with o l
rugged '
man-of-
thrills! .
Mr ss4 Mrs. Ashley G. Darts
have lived in Denton County for
FIRST DRIVE-IN
SHOWING
Henry G, Baker
Services Held
At Dallas Church
11 is
Gor
Information can be obtained from
the Kiwanis Club office. Central
4323.
its ago. was born in Sum-
I, La. His parents were
Hassell, 320 Bryan, medical.
Dismissed: Baby boy Goodner,
1106 Johnson; John D. Smith, 2218
Prairie.
1100 80-»1 00 lower; choloe
1b. 021.8-922.00
aughter, Mrs. WO
Henderson; a bro-
89
41
53
Irving; a
liam r. I
TWIN-VUE
IRWV-M
f Lwosru
Mrs. Talle
srx
of act
poses.
GHILDREN
FRII
in Flow Memorial Hospital. He had
lived In Denton - for about five
years
LATEST
NIWS
ADULTS
♦4c
iy of Pilot
a tog cabin
REA
A s L
r has two chil
3^ e< i Lewisville
Roberson, B E. Looney. Weldon
Underwood. Walter Shirley. Henry
Bradford, L. G Hardaway, Leon
Young, Wilford Pierce, Jack Gray.
Tom Knight, Henry Miller and
District Deputy Grand Chancellor
A. L. Chesney of Decatur.
Mrs. Elizabeth Wk
Point, who was born
■DREAMLAND1
mumIEGMHg
UDNDIGAN
MW
UKI
UTNt
MW
want
DuAVen
20
!
*
‘f
mm v
7» and TT years, real
home to now at MS
Dollar-Poor Iran Stands As
Weakest Link Against ‘Reds’
Foxworth-Galbroith
Lumber Co.
WARNER Bros. pocaw.
See Ue Fer
Cook's Paints
COOLED b> REFRIGERATION
TEXAS 1
'T
!
Tbe Eisenhower administration
sponsored several proposals last
February Under these proposals,
the United States would have put
up more than 100 million dollars
against future oil purchases and
would have joined with Britain in
arranging for marketing oil, pro-
vided Iran and Britain would agree
on a formula of compensation for
the nationalised companies.
‘ Mossadegh seemed cooperative
at one point but later backed
away. Such hope as there to rests
r J
%,DRIVE-IN
• THEATRE
FT. WORTH HIGHWAY
MORE I
(Oonunuaa from Page 1)
their northern prison camps not
knowing what awaited them.
One tearful ROK repatriate bit
a fingertip and raced in blood:
'The Communists never defeat
ed us."
for a full 400 million dollars ap
propnation for aid to embattled
Indochina apparently still fresh in
his mind, the President pictured
Southeast Asia as an area of vital
concern to the United States.
It to one of the world’s last
great population centers not dom
mated by the Communists, he said,
and if Indoehina fell to the Reds,
the free nations would lose their
chief supply of tin and tungsten.
Of Dan, lying on the western flank
of India and the eastern flank of
the strategic Middle East. Eisn-
hower said it la "in a weak-
Lost Times TODAY
Yvonne DeCarle
Edmund O'Brien
Berry pigereld
in
"SILVER CITY”
In Technicolor
Richard Hammons, Pilot Point,
has vedin Deaton County all of
his fe-M years.
* Wamm— was born on Feb. 25,
1869. He was married to Miss Des
Beavers, who died 35 years ago.
Biographles of Denton County
Senior citizens continue to be re-
ceived by the Record-Chronicle
and added to the Senior Citizen
Honor Roll.
Thecounty’s oldest resident--
and foremost Senior Citizen — to
Jown Joptcl
818 80; Sleeker steer yearlings 617.00
down, stocker cows 810.00-818 00
Rites Set For
Mrs, Bentley
This Afternoon
Survivors include his parents,
Mr .and Mrs. Tom MeKenzie of
Kingsville, and two sisters, Misa
Virginia MeKenzie. of Kingsville,
and Mrs. Joy Hughes of Sanger.
-wn; ।
105950
E5 of paying bills by check
COUNTY NATIONAL SANK
G Member Federal Reserve System
‘CCTVEi
R"«m•Tetwomoumamre
cum unrosai nan
annus-Maor hob
4 •-wXRMMOPM.s-wowEsMQus WARON
•--emmete-tudemwa awe-e
COMING SOON
HOWARD KIEL
TOUT BERGEN
MARJORIE MAIN
"TODAYTru SAFSRBMTL*-
DEAN JERRY
wMMARTINaoLELEWIS
wsfmscm .CARMEN MIRANDA
Two men, charged with viola-
tions of the liquor laws, pleaded
guilty in County Court yesterday
and were fined $100 and urt costs
each.
Robert Gonner was convicted of
1 Mi- today to ths Jack Schmitz
and Son Funeral House Chapel.
Burial was to be to Jackson Ceme-
tery near Krum.
bre. Bentley died at 2:20 a.m.
yesterday in the Paten Hospital
thiwilbethe bestMr in hintory.
------
Mn Ora Finney of Justin baa
lived to Denton County all of her
life-81 yuan
Mra. Fianey was born Feb. 13,
1872.
Mre. B. F. Wilson of Krum has
lived to Denton County all her life.
She was born on Aag. 31, 1873,
and has lived at Krum since IM.
Mr. and Mn. Lewis Rue. her
gar nets, came to Danton County to
1853 as bomesteaders and founded
the Rue Lunununlty.
2 Denton Cars
Are Damaged
About $500 damage was done to
a 1950 Buick driven by Mrs. Elsie
Dicus, 38. of Denton, in one of two
automobile accidents here yester-
day afteruvon.
The Buick was the second in a
line of three cars traveling on
Railroad Ave. near Hickory at 4:50
p.m. About $25 damage was done
to a 1946 Plymouth driven by Tom-
mie Reynolds Locke, 25, of Den-
ton.
The vehicle in the lead, a 1952
Chevrolet truck driven by John
Doyle Williams, 57, of 2430 Stella,
was not damaged, according to
investigating city police.
At 2:45 p m. a Itol Oldsmobile
dr vc- by John R. Horton, 28. of
1513 Maple, and a 1953 Plymouth
drievn by Richa. dN Allen, 17, of
710 Cordell, collided on W. Hickory
and Cedar.
About $30 ramage waa done to
the Plymouth. The Olhsmoblle re-
ceiven $10 damage.
mona of Aransas Paas, Mrs. Faye
Heater of Fort Worth. and Charlie,
Eul, Eivy, and Bil Hammons, and
Mn. Mary Vandever and Mra. Lot
tie Shelton, all of Pilot Point.
medium 010.00-010.00: good and
choice atooker steer eelvm 016.00-
t
l.Cl
4 M
I HOSPITALS
(Conttnuea from Page 1)
Miracle
OFOURLADY
iatini
AA WARNIENCOLOR
2"
oned condition ” He sdded that
Premier Mohammad Mossadegh's
recent attempts to dissolve the
Iranian Parliament were "support-
ed by the Communists.”
"Only last week Secretary of
State Dulles expressed concern
over the activities of the Red Tu-
deh party in Iran. Unless it is
curbed, he said, the United States
might not consider sending assist-
ance to Iran.
Iran’s official reply was that the
Tudeh party had been outlawed
and that, to cut off American aid,
would not help at all in combat-
ting the human misery on which
communism feeds.
American apprehension about the
possibility of an eventual Commu-
nist takeover in Iran rises and
falls according to Mossadegh's be-
havior. At the moment, there is a
strong fooling among U. S. author-
ities that the Iranian leader is
Lyle I. Montgomery Co.
Menec-742s
. I ........
28
32
3
PERSONALS
Mr. and Mrs. Alonso Davis and
R. E. Jackson are grandparents of
a baby girl, Linda Ruth, born to
Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Jackson, Jr.,
5304. Dana .Drive, Fort Worth.
Linda Ruth was born Tuesday at
2 p.m.
First Lt. Randall C. Wood, mem-
ber of the ROTC teaching staff is
attending a two-week workshop at
East Texas State College.
HOSPITAL NOTES
Denton Hspital And Clinic
Admitted: J. H. Blackwell, Rt.
2, Denton, m d..- David Paul
Haggard, Rout? 1, Denton, med-
ical; Clyde Wilkerson, 1105 Mono,
surgery; Elizabeth Ann Riggins,
Lewisville, medical, Mrs. H. B.
McNary, medical
Dismissed: Mrs. M. L. Swas-
ford, medical; Buster Swasford,
medical. .
Elm Street Hospital And Clinic
Admitted: Mrs. L. M. Meadows,
CIS Crowford, surgical. . 1
Dismissed: Mrs. 0. D, Gregg,
and baby, Carrollton; Mrs. Laura
Hoyle, $30 Rose; Mrs. C. C Ellis,
Sanger.
Flew Momarial Hospital
Admitted: Mrs. Nellie Cowser,
212 E. Oak, medical; Moxie Kin-
ney, 614 E Mill, medical; Mrs.
W. R. Yeary, 809 N. Locust, med-
ical; Misa Dickinson 1710 Maple,
medical; Mn. Alta Fuller, 907 W.
Chestnut, surgery; Mrs. Olen Mc-
Bride, 504 Frame, surgery; Bobby
Funeral services won held this
morning at the Daniel Funeral
Home in Sherman for Mn. S. E.
Peacock of Sherman, mother of
Mra. R. B. Newman of USD W.
Oak.
Mrs. Peacock, who died early
Tuesday after an illness of several
weeks, is also survived by a grand-
daughter, Mrs. Frank Martino of
2303 Fowler Dr.
Ige were guests of
। Lodge;
Those attending were Linwood
b Ont
theBtotyeedoteena
Mn. J. J. Johnson was born 70
years ago to the Nave Community
aad has lived nearly all the in-
tervening time in Denton County
Now ill with arthritis, she is a
shut-in and keeps up with world
events by reading the Record-
Chronicle and several magazines
regularly, reports her husband,
J. J. Johnson.
D4UVC4N THLATMA
LAST NIGHT
Beat between Raymondville aad
Kingsville He attended Sanger
High School and during World
War II be worked ia the Houston
shipyards and later served with the
Merchant Marine ard the Air
Force. At the tune of his death
he was employed by the Humble
Gal Co. at aymondville.
Thirteen Denton County draft
registrants left this morning by
bus for Dallas to answer the
Armys’ first post-Korean draft call
from local Selective Service Board
No. 33. One additional registrant
who has moved from Denton will
be included in the local quota.
The August Denton County in-
ductees are:
Melvin H. Chapman, Sanger;
Frank Hayden Bruce, €23 Carroll
St, Denton; William Dale Schle-
mat, 207 Ruddell St., Denton; Rob-
ert Lee Morris, Rt. 2, Aubrey,
Melvin Louis Petty. Rt. 2, Den-
ton; Robert Dennis Windle Jr.,
Sanger; Floyd Edward Jones, San-
ger. -
Frank Carroll Harrison, 120g
Johnson St. Denton (will be in-
ducted in South Dakota); Iouis
Norman Wolters, Dallas; Floyd
Maurice Johnson, Ml S. Wood St.,
Denton; Walter Matahall Durham.
Rt. 1. Lewisville;' Morris Nix
Young. 1020 E. Oak St . Denton
Jackie Gleen Carr, 601 Wainwright
St , Denton, and Bobby Leon Seals,
BL 2, Justin.
Selective Senko officials her*
have been notified that the quota
from Denton County for September
will be nine men
15 days.”
Private Dobbins was returned to
the UN command on a stretcher.
Mrs. Dobbins said the last letter
she got from Freddie he hsd writ-
ten that he was "low sick in a
hospital." Two days after the truce
was signed, she had a telegram
that Freddie had been ill with
pneumonia.
Sept M, 1874. His father was the
late Col. G. B. Davis, confederate
veteran. Davis has lived in the
county all his lite.
Mrs. Davis, the former Miss
Alice Reynolds, was bon in Hop-
kins County, Tennessee on Sept.
13, 1872. When she was four years
old her family came to Denton
County. She waa the daughter of
the late W. L. Reynolds.
lying with fire in apparently ai-
ring the Tudeh party freedom
fo rhis own political pur-
Funeral services for Henry
Grady Baker, aasiatant professor
of business administration at NTSC
were held this morning the chapel
of Highland Park Methodist Church
in Dallas. Burial was in Restland
Memorial Cemetery, near Dallas.
Services wer directed by Goen
Fuerel Home, Denton.
A heart attack waa fatal to Mr.
Baker Monday afternoon at the
Corinth community stock farm
where the Baker family resided.
He was working alone in a remote
spot on the farm when he was
stricken, and his body was found
a short time later by a daughter,
Miss Bobbie June Beker.
Mr. Beker had lived on the 67
acre farm since 1947, shortly after
he came to Denton from Dallas,
where he taught for many years at
Crosier Technical High School,
formerly Dallas Tech.
Petroleum products from differ-
ent fields very widely in the nature
have included Dr and Mrs J..A. and proportion of the compounds
Jones, 103 Panhandle, rather than they contain
Dr, and Mrs. J. H Moore, as new- i
Amor
might
try is i
foreign
Rega
I. P.
police,
".Mal
or stro
part t)
been a
siderin
ity pol
amazin
Gilm
ing Be
took s<
“ can pu
ful fel
Gilm
no cue
। so constructed that the bed capac-
ity could be increased -from 60 to
as much as 120 with the addition of
one wing.
Deuton's bospitals now have no
facilities for caring for polio pati-
ents. Denton County's polio pati-
onto—there have been nine this
year—are sent to City-County Hos-
pital in Fort Worth.
However, Neale said that four
of Flow’s nurses this year were
sent to Parkland Hospital la Dal-
las for special training in polio
nursing, so the hospital would be
prepared for an emergency.
Neale said that Flow's greatest
need now is for more private
rooms. Flow has two rooms which
are used for isolation cases.
An additional wing at Flow could
provide aa many as 30 more beds
for medical patients and 30 for
surgieal and obstetrics.
la addition to serving Denton,
Datone County and area patients.
Flow also eares for many NTSC
and TKW students who must have
surgery or become seriously ill
Funeral Today
Special to the Record-Chronicle
SANGER—Funeral services for.
Varnerd McKenzie, 26. of Ray- who wish to attend the Kiwanis
mondvile, formerly of Sanger, I Club Camp at lake Dallas next
were to be held at 3 p.m. today at Monday through Saturday, the
the Shepard Funeral Home in Den-1 camp committee announced today.
Ritualistic work in the second
rank was conferred on Pythian
candidates by the Denton second
rank team in Gainesville last
night, when members of the Den
M • check-
anzatth
CENSORS
(Continued from Page 1) *
tor tulles end U. S Army Secre-
tary Robert Setvens.
“Wo are off to a good start,"
said Taylor in a radio broadcast
from Freedom Village “The bap-
pine sa and eagerness in their fsces
speaks for them "
Stevens said. "It certainly
touches your heart strings when
you greet these boys."
Dulles called the occasion “one
of the great moments of my life.”
Cabs of the vehicles which
brought the liberated prisoners
hare were decorated with colorful
pictures of pinup girls. ,
One of the first items was a
good American meal
Mra. Margaret Talley was born
Nov. U, im. on a farm in the
Stewart Creek community east of
Lewiaville. She haa made her home
to Denton County for 79 years.
An to the daughter of the tato
Mr. and Mn. J .L. Sparks.
He was a member of the Meth- transporting liquor in a dry area
odist Church and a major in the W D. (Slim) Loftin, Denton, was
U.S. Army inactive reserves 1 fined for selling liquor.
. Pallbearers were S. J. Cole, R ■ Court will convene again Tues-
hi
Mr. MeKenzie died Sunday of ■ summer vacation There is no
injuries received in an auto acci- charge and the chib provides trans-
" - portation to and from the camp.
Bheep 1,608; Steady to 80 Aower;
cholce to prime blackface spring
lambs an 28; other good and choloe
830 00-881 00; utiuity to low good
516.09-910,00; utility and good we th-
ere 87 00-810 00; slaughter ewes 88.00
to 84 00. fat ewes to 88 80. medium
to good spring feeders 818.00-018.00.
WEDNESDAY’S POULTRY
AUBTIN (AP)— Brotlers and fry-
en: South Texas steady. 2%-8 iba.,
to. Cut Texas steady, M-N. Waoo-
Corel oana steady. Waco 38-38; Cor-
atcana FOB plant 29-30.
Polio Patients 1
To Be Released
I
Two Denton children, confined
in the polio word of Fort Worth
City-County Hospital since June,
wil ba releaaed this week, hospital
officials said today.
Joel Chambers, 10-year-old son
of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Chambers,
111 Peach, will te taken home Sun-
day.
Mary Ann Gerding, 9, daughter
of Mr. ant Mrs. J. L. Gerding,
1914 W Oak, will be releaaed
"later this week,’’ according to
officials.
Both children are free of par-
alysis.
Mrs. White’s
Funeral Today
Special to the Record-Chronicle
LEWISVILLE—Funeral services
for Mrs Mary Alice White, T9, of
Lewisville, will be held today at
3 p.m. at the Lewisville Baptist
Church.
Burial wi be in the Old Hall
Cemetery at Lewiaville. Mra White
died Monday in Lewisville. She
had been ill for several years .
Survivors include her husband,
C. T. White, three daughters, Mrs.
V. R. Walters, Miu Olive White
snd Mrs. A. L. Gune, all of Lewis-
ville, and four sons, Horace
George White of Brownwood, Bill
White and Carl White of Lewisville,
sod nine grandchildren.
Assoeiation and published in the
Sunday Record-Chronicle, should
R. H. Taliaferro, chairman of
the Denton County Chapter of the
National Foundation for Infantile
Paralysis, announced today that a
check for $3,575 haa been received
to help pay for the care of local
polio patients..
He disclosed that Denton is one
of many counties throughout the
nation which have exhausted their
March of Dimes funds during the
current polio season and have ask-
ed for and received national aid.
Taliaferro said Chapter funds
were committed for the payment
of overdue hospital bills Incurred
last year before a single case was
reported for this year.
March of Dimes funds are divid-
ed evenly between the county chap-
ter and headquarters of the Nat-
ions! Foundation, he said. Locally
retained funds are devoted to pati-
ent care. Funds allocated to nat-
ions! headquarters support scien-
tific research and professional edu-
cation programs and provide as
sistance to chapters whose funds
have been exhausted by id to
patients during high incidence of
the disease.
At present the Denton County
ehapter is providing funds for the
eare, in whole or in part, of five
patients stricken this year. In addi-
tion to three patients stricken in
previous years.
WEDNESDAY’S LIVESTOCK n i
Mrs. Keacock
and eholo* slaughter ateers and year-
linn 417.00-492.50: common to med-
turn $10 00-818 00; fat oow 60.00-
818 00; food and oholo slaughter
calve* .1S00-818.M; common and
PaUbearer* will be Robert Lee
Epperyon, Jodie Fries, W. T. Ri-
ley, Jr., Clyde Willett, Henry
Scroggins and Hulon Cheatham.
1» He
17. Ne
18. Fe
18. Ai
21 Be
22 Jo
24 M
28 Bi
28 Ol
30 Sr
31, E>
32 Be
34. Ne
NEW
for 11
chief o
yesterd
Russia
again,
Gilme
sian bo
two ch
ing for
m ission
Gilm
tions:
Sovie
"has al
sion of
in chai
While
change
of Stal
thath“MAdmitedlnff Tn Arm,
might still, be able to get together. VII I O Army
the late Mr. and Mrs. W. H. and
Catherin Ledbetter He was a
miember of the Baptist Church
in 1899 be married Miss Peart
White in Sherman. After her death
he married Mrs. Lillian Dunn of
Tioga.
Survivors include his wife; a
daughter. Mrs. Lillian Scallerud,
TEXAS JOY
(Continued from Pag* 11
Division. Jimmie was 22 when he
was killed. Sterling is 23.
Mrs. Abe Dobbins of Anson,
mother of Pvt. Freddie Dobbins.
21, was equally jubiant snd thank-
ful. “I’m so happy,” said Mrs.
Dobbins, a colored cook. “I want
him to come home quick. "I’ve
tan. Burial will be in Roselawn The camp is being held for chil
Cemetery. dren who would not otherwise have
FSD FLORIST
William Jywood Jackson, 70.
Worth, four brothers, A A. of Tol- Mr. Jacksop, who had been til for
a number of years, died Monday
4
D.
Johnson, H G. Bishop snd David! r, _ _ -a.
Pfeiffer, all of Dallas W . J. JaCKSOIl
Honorary pallbearers were Dr.
C. L Littlefield, Dr O. J Curry. H UUCral Planned
Martin Rooney, Garland Brook- -
shier.C. CDavisand Hazgard This Afternoon
heppard, al or Denton. *
Survivors include his wife, two , , ,
daughters. Miss Baker and Mrs. C. , Funeral, services were scheduled
Robert Young of Dallas, two sis- o be.held Pm today in the
— — - - - - — Goen Funeral Home Chapel for
WASHINGTON w--Olrich but
Belter poor Iran stood out today
gs the weakest link, from the
American viewpoint, in the chain of
ndtions standing against the Com-
munist threat of expansion into
southern Aaia.
Furthermore, U. S. officials give
no evidence it any tresh ideas for
dealing with the situation.
The spot in which American lead-
ers find Iran was dramatized by
President Eisenhower in his speech
to the Governors Conference at Se-
attle yesterdsy.
With the administration's fight
FINST SHOWING AT REGULAR PRIcES
IN DENTON
ADULTS 50c CHILDREN FREE
Special te the Record-Chrenicle
PILOT POINT-William Edgar
Ledbetter, 79-yearold retired far-
mer. died at 1$ p. m. yesterday in
his home in Henderson
Funeral services will be held at
9 a. aa. Wednesday ia the Tioga
First Baptist Church with Elder
H. G. Ball officiating. Burial will
be to Fairlawn Cemetery with
Beck Funeral Home, Pilot Point,
ta charge. .
Mr Ledbetter, who resided be-
tween Pilot Point and Tioga until
be moved to Henderson two and'a
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
tvLx jib HusquanaBgam
irune, shot 8 ume. Bert DSnoak.
602 Bernard.'
PURNISHED bedroom, for working
girl, % block Square. 11$ Cedar.
Phe aneC-4022or C-4M3 _________
PU1U(T8iiH> 8-room apanmanf prF
rate bath, bus line, bill* paid. 1431
N Locust ____
NICELY furntahed 3-room apartment
near town, 317 W Mulberry, C-881M
FOB BALK: By owner: 1-bedroom
bame. eteacbeC garage 811 CoSt
WANrtodowanhinga.'Bringt4s%
Danton ftoesonable rqtaa_________
CASH BY TELEPHONE
Quick—Xasy—Lower Car Payments.
Rninance Today.
MARK WALDATP AUTO rnANCE
_ Phone.0-4054
'XHT 11-mah DuMont Televlalon.1
won it. You save 880 J. P. Gheen.
t3» W. Hickory, C-7241
•-hooEtouse.4 iota Lake Dallas, i
M >00 #900 down. >30 monthly- ।
C -8567.
OY 1-bedrooms $7 600 81 806 down
MI monthly Rear STTkC, C-aan
Special
* Acre, a-bedrgoma, tree*. $13,000.
Aaalat in financing. C-AM"
ONE Smmona Roll-Away aingie bed
complete .with mattrena, 622 ne
■•piece. Pining Room Suite in par.
feet condition other articles too
numerous to mention. Phone C-5880.
KIBLER OFFICE SUPPLY
Royal Standard A Electric Typewriters
> Monree - Victor * Clary Adding M
Baa ef Office Supplios • Purniture.
Sales * Rental . Serviee
Air Cenditiened
TODAYS PERSONALITY
70 ! - * * ■ !
Dn Jesk Shilo — "Me. Denton Ceunty Vair” - is
herd et wik •n the 1953 ehew. Adminsion wil be free,
pngram li in the work', and Jack b optimiatic that
dlsScARED STIFF
MGEORQ DOUNZ. OOROTT MALON - wuuM CMM
ATI.
brisk 1
tinner
H P
take c
hotels
blew $
Map
A that th
" $140. 1
the wi
comers. Dr. Jones is a physician j
at the Medical Surgical Clinic. | T
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 305, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 5, 1953, newspaper, August 5, 1953; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1427267/m1/2/: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.