Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 311, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 1, 1954 Page: 2 of 53
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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.. P-
/
t
Sunday, Aug
/
T
z3
3 .y
Beair
Explorer Scouts Set
i
ter Trip Planned Prior
de
S
land.
July 31 — A booster
BIRTHS
the
m
of Sanger
iton.
Hospital.
of a series-of
the fair, ached
ey Hits
Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Louis-
PERSONALS
Elast
The seven persons attending the !
Or. Scott Haggard and family.
‘s Action
Sil
tton here Saturday named them-
ly moved to their new home in
selves and two others as delegates
3 FO
Mei
sent
curb -high through
water
Une
Swlai
S
Boyd was arrested almost two
4 FO
BA
ivers Hurls
Munday.
went to conservatives.
CE
King made arrangements for the
ly after Guatemala's then pro-Com-
WA
again to his parents or sent back
Ch
the third time. On his last appear-
Fast
negligence.
Wide.
Ph. C-2504
t. Sids Sq.
5 YD!
3
THANKS
cl
a
PERSONALITY OF THE WEEK
anyone but his at
JULY 24th
C
'J
l
The Debt of
Gratitude I *
F
Miss Hapes returned to Ohio from
Corrigan filed a writ
Lyle E. Montgomery Co.
C-2561 501 W.Hickar - 214 w Osh of Cedar
Phan C-7425
A
Complete Prescription Service
• tomememaz
Negro Youth
Sentenced To
Reform School
Kiwanians To
Hear Dr. Escue
Adds Beauty
te any room
Our personality of the woek is Dan Cockrell, manager
of the Kiwonis Baseball Club, 1954 pennant winners
of the Denton Little League. As personality of the
week, he will receive e bouquet of roses, courtesy
the Lyle I. Montgomery Company. • 1
Drive carefully, you might injure a customer of mine.
School of Business faculty mem-
ber, has been appointed director
Irving; Mrs. Jack Vanderhoff and
twin babies, 920 Congress; Mrs.
F. E. Tennison and baby, Lewis-
ville; Leroy Reedy, 820 Myrtle;
The husband testified to Coroner
Samue Ferbert his relations with
Miss Hayes were “casual." Later
program, and Dr. Silvey will be
chairman for the day. The com-
mittee on agriculture is in charge. I
Kiwanis Assistant Secretary Mrs.
secretary.
Dr. J. K.
Yarborough was praised in most
loyalist-controlled conventions.
Smith County (Tyler), Anderson
(Palestine) and Gray (Pampa)
nd on August
visit in Pilot
Gs,M
REEVES
DRUG STORE
/
/
205
DEVIL'S
IVY “
| HAMED FOR YOUR
GOOD HEALTH
demn him editorially while "build-
ing up his opponent."
Wiley further charged that news-
papers often fail to indicate paid
Iron Curtain. Then Costa Rica, ap-|
parently concerned at Nicaragua's
verbal attacks, asked and got arms 1
from Washington also
Spc
I
Public Address System —- Andy
Wilson, Harold Wheeler and Blue
Democratic Primary
Election
was the best rain rince May ini
Llano county, one of the counties!
on the drought-disaste. list. (Up
to 2% inches fell in Kerr County:)
well, Ronny Seely, Harold Neale,
Frank Whitfield, Johnny Beck, and
Jim Edwards.
Ten days of the trip will be spent
at Philmont Scout Ranch, where
the group will take .pack hike
over f r mountain peaks.
Philmont is the world's largest
eamp with 200 square miles of
western Rocky Mountain country,
AM phases of the fair program
were studied and plans were made
for the entertainment section at a
meeting of fair offictals last week.
WEATHER
___ (Continued rrom ageu,
northern half of the county.
M2ca
-
______was quoted as
admitting intimacies and that she
k ‘35
wo" ■ g,
2/“
stendy to firm. cloaing steady. Priees
at the oloee were unchanged to one
cent higher.
THIS WEEK’ LIVESTOCK
of habeas
contending
I
_ _______ itensive ques-
ng nt Dr. Samuel Sheppard.
I Republicans ! of Area 10 of the National Office
Name Delegates.m
EVELAND, July 31 I-- Detec-
oday started ini
vertising" and hurled charges at
Hall, according to Lee Johnson, Texas newspapers for printing a
। news story when a political candi-
G. Silvey and T. W. date announces his intentions of
------—Con he i seeking an office and then con-
y0
2009 Denison; Billy G. Mayo,
Tioga; O. L. Shiflett, Krum; Mrs.
t
/by representatives
Chamber of Cem-
sad the father all practice. Mias
Hayes worked there at one time.
Taken to the village's Council
Hall, Dr. Sheppard was arraigned
before acting Mayor Gershom Bar-
STATE
(Continued from Page 1)
tions included Tom Green and Col-
‘ingsworth
Shivers was scored tartly in re-
solutions by several conventions
"4#
(4,
Behi
*
■
"3
gates committees were in session
in another part of City Hall.
Only other resolution to come
before the convention was one ap-
proving the seating of delegates.
All were seated without trouble,
their-credentials having been ap-
proved by the committee headed
by T. B. Davis. Other committee
heads appointed by Boyd were
Mrs. Sam Barton, delegates,' and
Dr. Jack Johnson, resolutions.
Last Rites Held
For Frisco Woman
- ♦
official reports included these in
the Dallas are: Muenster 1.74,
Valley View 1.50, Pilot Point 1.31,
Gainesville 1.07, and Sanger .74.
Little White Oak Creek forced
ik
A
_..s
started their ques-
ly after noon only to
m the doctor, at least
Alex Dickie Jr. of Krum, J. R.
Forbes of Lewisville, Joe B. Her-
per of Parvin and E) M. Acker of
Sanger.
Others, all from Denton, were
munist government received a ----- - -- ------
shipment of arms from behind the Monday, Johnson said.
DWl Charge -
D. R. (Red) Boyd' of Denton
was fined $100 and court costs
here Friday on a pleu of guilty to
charges of driving while intoxicat-
ed.
, Ponder,
Ere Md
fenced to the State Reform School;
for Boys in a County Court hear-
ing here Friday on charges of'
theft brought against two local
juveniles.
The other boy involved, who has
already been in reform school, was
referred to the State Youth Devel-
opment Council.
There he will either be paroled
aft Th
anger Com
iade over a
FOR THE FINE.
VOTE YOU GAVE
ME IN THE
Dr. Sam to an osteopath and
routd.Mo"bomblh.m Eet a fair
had accepted gifts from him. in-
eluding e ruede jacket, a signet
1 a Watch. The watch was
a replacement torone she lost
26 days after comely Mrs. Marilyn
Sheppard's body was found on a
blood - soaked bed in their lake-
front home in suburban Bay Vil-
lage. •
Since <lhen the investigation
--Clevcland’s moat sensational in
decades — has involved Susan
Hayes a 24-year-old hospital tech-
i ician quoted by Prosecutor Frank
Cullitan as admitting she was in-
mate with the doctor.
Dr. Sheppurd was arrested at
! trolled by loyalists.
Loyalists walked out of the regu -
lar Howard County (Big Spring)!
MANPOWER
(Continued from Page 1
serve law seta forth an eight-year
period of military service but pro-
vides no method to force young
men to join the organised and ac-
tive reserves.
Betty Chitwood will return to the; political messages printed in ad-
j Kiwanis office from het vacation I vertising columns. "I intend to
. , 4
4s '
; I .‘g
0 , .meIY
oup of Denton Explorer Boy
i will leave Tuesday with the
r, Ed Ball, District Scout
tive, tor a two week trip
h Texas and New Mexico.
Ing the trip Will be James
, Bob Gearhart, John Me-
tt, Sterling Smith, Warren
i, Richard Gorsuch, David
2 Don Gemmon, Jim Bos
COUNTY
(Continued from Page 1)
both us and the state convention."
So, on the second vote, Dyche’s
resolution was stricken. This action
brought a few dissenting votes.
Actually, it appeared that the
delegates were confused on just
what Dyche proposed. His motion
came after James. R. Wiley, Den-
ton attorney, read from an edi-
torial printed in a Dallas news-
paper. The editorial was in sup-
port of. Gov. Allan Shivers in the
Aug. 28 runoff.
swept farm, on one of the highest
spots in the Pilot Point area. Six
towns can be seen from the front
yard of the Sutter home, includ-
ing Celina, Prosper, Frisco, Au-
brey, Pilot Point and Gunter.
Their daughter is Mrs. Leonard
Blackwelder, who lives with her
husband on a nearby farm. The
eldest son Walter, lives in San
Antonio, and the younger son, Ray-
mond, is a Army master sergeant,
stationed at Wharton.
There is one thing certain about
Sutter. He will leave a fertile farm
for the succeeding generation. All
of his fields are terraces and his
plowing is done on the contour.
The fertile land, classed as Soil
unit 2, wen’t wash or blow away
under Sutter’s supervision.
Farmer Denton .
Man Elected To
Wise County Post
Jack G Morgan, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Standlee’ Roberts, 127 Sher-
man, and son-in-law of Mr and
Mrs. H. G.(Pete) Shands, 1023 W.
Sycamore, wag elected County At-
torney of Wise County in last Sat-
urday’s Democratic primary.
Morgan, who is associsted in a
Decatur law firm with Grady
Woodruff, received his master's
degree in 1949 from the University
Present were McCain, who pre-
sided; Harold Easley, Grbver Se-
bastian. Gene Hughes, Troy Miller,
Ray Holder, Lloyd Bucklaw, E. M.
Acker, Henry Cooper, Aaron
Yeatts, Jack Burkholder, Bobby
Ready, Lawrence Hoerat, Bill Car-
Farmers Union. He and Mrs. Sut-
904 ter live alone on their breeze-
from Dallas, are being displayed
in the Young America exhibit of
the American Craftsman Guild in Miss Maurino Malone, Lewisville;
Detectives Question Doctor
Accused Of Murdering Wife
Dr. R. B. Escue Ir., of the
NTSC science department, will
Oak Forest addition early Satur-
day. Welcome Wilson, assistant
civil defense director, estimated
damage in the Oak Forest area
alone at 3250,000 to 3300,000.
convention and held a rump meet-
ing
A 12-yearold Negro boy was sen- ___________
committee.
He said that a more active rep-
resentative to the executive com-
mittee was needed to support a
two-party system in the state.
Delegates elected to the Will
Rogers Colseum convention in
September were Mrs. W. A. Se-
walt, Denton; Frank H. Moore,
Krum: J. K. Hundley, Lake Dal-
las; N. Ci Settle; Lake Dallas;
and Mrs. Christine Unger, Den-
ton.
Alternates were Sewalt, Denton;
Mrs. B. E. Brown, Lake Dallas;
Mrs. Stella Basket, Denton; and
Wayne Evans, Denton.
A motion to send the delegates
without instruction was passed.
27 and 28.
been made to deco-
gaily as time ap-
the fair. Each mor-
A girl, Phyllis Jan, was born to
Mr. and Mrs. Philip H. Fultner,
222 Normal, Friday at 11:08 a.m. FORT WORTH ’July SC5-(AP) —
in Flow Hospital. ' Weekly livestook: Blaughter cowe and
A boy, Jimmie Lee, was born I calves advanced so cets to 91.00 or
to Mr. and Mrs. H. K. Graham, ! more. Beruaundredaerurin
Denton, Friday at 12:12 in Flow I Wer ' steady 'to Wenk: bulls ClOMd
Hospital. around 50 cents lower; stocker and
ter, Houston Higgs and Tom Muir.
Committees for the entertain-
ment were set up asfottows:-----
Bingo stand-H. B. Toon, chair-
man; R. C. Wilson, Buck Crouse,
J. W. Bucklew, Alvin Brown, Joe
Wiggins, Dennis Windle and Jack
Armstrong. .
Cat Rack—L. T. Kirby, chair-
man; Mon Gentle. Earl Chapman,
Tommy McDaniel.
Money Board—C. R. Chapman,
chairman; Fred John, U. A. Burk
holder end Lee Amyx.
Hoop Board—Virgil Ward, ehair-
man; Bill Enlow, C. R. Landers,
John Nicholson.
Dipping vat — Jack Burkholder,
chairman; Bob Ready, Ray Hold-
er, J Clifford Baker, Buck Collins,
Carl Kincaid, James Ready and
Buck Schertm
Cigarette Board — Lloyd Buck-
lew, chairman; Dick Chatfield, H.
B. King and Gene Hughes.
Hamburger Stand—E. M. Acker,
chairman; Harold Easley, Law-
rence Hoerst, John Hughes, Dave
Fellers, J. D. Gary, Bill Gentle,
Henry Cooper and Willard Bounds.
Bottle Stand—Roy Spratt, chair-
man; Jack McReynolds, Bill Lew-
is and Clyde LeGear.
. Milk Can Stand—Bill Carter,
chlman; Ed Hoerst, Alonso Jam-
ison, Cecil Jdnea and P. E. Parker.
Dart Board—Jack Perry, chair-
man; Lockett Cherry, Ross Ferris
and Johnnie Lee Richardson.
Sarah Barnard, Justin.
Flew Memorial Hospital
Admitted: G. F. Vaughn,
Ticket Issued
Driver In Crash
City Police issued one ticket for
driving without a license to a Fort
Worth man Saturday after a 1954
Pontiac and 1953 Ford collided at
the corner of North Elm and Mc-
Kinney Streets.
The Ford, driven by Margaret
Williams Miller, 1400 N. Elm, was
traveling south on Elm and the
Pontiac, driven by Earl Ritcher-
son of Fort Worth, was treveling
west on McKinney when the acci-
dent occurred.
The automobiles received only
minor damage and no injuries
were reported,
City Policemen Luther Allen and
Pete Enlow investigated.
Mrs. E. G. Lum, Justin; Mrs.
James Hammonds, Pilot Point;
James Harper, Aubrey; Mrs. J.
R. Green, 907 Bell; J. E. Fitzger-
ald, 1105 Vine; W. T. Evans, Ar-
gyle; Elzie Koffman, Lewisville:
Miss Betty Blakeley, Sanger; Mrs.
W. C. Blanton and baby, 620 Wood-
streets, but the Weather Bureau at
Love Field recorded only .31 of an
inch. Winds reached 45 miles an
hour in gusts during the brief
storm. Suburban Lisbon recorded
1.63 inches.
Other rain reported by the
Weather Bureau for 24 hours end-
ing at 6:30 p.m. Saturday included
Mineral Wells 3.25 inches, Lufkin
1.08, San Antonio 74, College stat-
ion .34, Laredo 19, Austin .18,Tex-
arkana .16, Fort Worth .11, Abilene
.08, Galveston-.05, San Angelo .04,
Junction .02 • and Ty ler .01. Un-
was praised in most that went to
the conservatives. -
Coke Bottle stand—Troy Miller,! months ago and has been free on
chairman; Jack Gheen, R.L. Odom | bond.
idsome 30year-old osteopath
rged with beating his pregnant
I to dealh, - -
r Sheppard, wearing blue den-
prison pants and a white T-
, wasjadvised in. his jail cell
To Opening Of Sanger Fair
$soe lol to the Racora.cbronien.
Bolivar, surgery; Mrs. Clyde Page,
Dallas, surgery; Mri. C. B. Cole,
man, 625 E. College, medical;
wide area of Dent
dunties by a car a
businessmen and e t
29. The caravan ,2il
Stint, Aubrey, ; pi
-
HThe tour Mjm ।
the first-degree murder charge.' - - ■ -
/)
aam
Sunday, AgvstT,T954___1
- = 4
MARKETS
setvation, crime prevention, Ju ven- was appearng before the court for
delinquency and the need for a C.. ..... C.. -rr—-
among middle-of-the road alate gov- ance nis mother was fined $i0o for
chant has been urged to decorate
hia* store or place of business, and
r flags and other decorations will be
I placed on the downtown streets,
4 ,2 Jack McCain, president of the Fair
, Cooke Association, announced.
’ M nF CN-NA-
Special to the* Record-Chronicle
FRISCO, July 31—Funeral serv-
ices were held Thursday for Mrs.
Rosa Etta Cunningham, 60, who
died suddenly at her home here
Wednesday
Services were held in the First
Baptist Church of Frisco under the
direction f the Rev. B. C. House-
wrigh' Ho was assisted by the
Rev. Bill Betts.
Burial was in the Little Elm
cemetery under the direction of
the Staley Funeral home.
Mrs. Cunningham is survived by
her husband, R. L. Cunningham;
a daughter, Mrs. Ann Fipps of
Celina; three sons, Earl and Wel-
don of Frisco and R. L. of Fort
Worth; three brothers, Ellis James
and Henry James of Frisco and
Paul James of McKinney.
Fourteen grandchildren also sur-
vive.
Hope to Pay Md
IN THI SERvICE YOU DESERVE
‘ . Sincerely,
A. J. BARNETT
' (Political Adv,)
car Houk, a neighbor and friend
of the doctor who is expected to
be a witness.
Houk is the man Dr. Sheppard
called arly the morning of July
4 to report Mrs. Sheppard was
dead.
No weapon has been found. Po-
lice noted the Sheppard’s 6-year-
old son, Chip, had slept through
the killing add that the family dog
Koko did not bark, at leayt not
.. i about 250 families to evacuate their
new homes in northwest Houston's
Car Overturns
On Highway 24
A 1947 Tudor Ford, driven by F.
E. Wilson, 519 Welch, received
damage Saturday when its driver
lost control on Highway 24 near
the Santa Fe overpass. Wilson was
not injured.
The car left the highway, rolled
over once, and landed upside
down in a ditch.
Investigating officers were Dep-
uty Sheriffs Earl Chaplan and W.
E. Tipton.
Liquor Raid Nets
Six Suspects
Officials from the Denton Coun-
ty Sheriff’s Department and the
State Liquor Control Board arrest-
ed six men in a Negro "tavern”
south of Lewisville Saturday morn-
ing about 1 a.m. in a surprise
liquor raid.
Two of the men arrested were
charged in County Court here with
possession of intoxicating liquor
in a dry area.
Two others were put in the Den-
ton County jail for being drunk
and two were arrested on charges
of vagrancy.
Price Allen and Ernest Jones,
both Denton County Negroes, were
fined $100 and court costa each
on the possesiosn charges.
; Making the Saturday raid were
Sheriff Rud Gentle and deputy
Buster Gibbs along with Liquor
Control Board agent Malcolm
Branch.
controlled by the loyalists. He
Marvin Stephens, Irving, accident;
Mrs. H. K. Graham, Denton, med-
ical; Mrs. D. K. Donaldson, 507
Austin, medical; Mrs. P. H. Fult-
ner, 222 Norman, medical.
Dismissed: Marvin Stephens,
PLANES
(Continued from Page 1)
to Nicaragua and Honduras reCent- I
Workshop To
Open 3rd Week
Use of radio and televiaion by
county home demonstration agents
and home economics teachers will
be stressed in the third Week of
the TSCW Home Economics-Jour-
nalism Workshop starting Monday.
Among those who will take part
are Mrs. Gayle Roberta Wilson,
WBAP-TV home and farm editor;
Miss Kate Adelle Hill, Texaa AAM
College Extension Service studies
and training leader who has work-
ed with radio for a number of
years; and E. Robert Black, TSCW
speech professor whe is co-direc-
tor of the eollege programs over
KRLD and KRLD-TV.
The students Wednesday evening
toured the Jack Cole home, south-
west of Denton, and the W. W.
Marshall home, near Stony, where
yard and home demonstration
projects were explained.
Special speakers last week in-
cluded Mrs. Katharine Randall,
women’s editor of the Farmer-
Stockman; Frank Burchard, local
photographer, and Miss Hill.
The three-week course is being
directed by Fred W. Westcourt
and Frank C. Bigler.
FARMER .
(Continued from Pass 1)
for an average of about 500 pounds
per acre. At approximately 15
cents per pound, that ain’t hay.
Sutter gave the Hubam a 200
pound shot of 16-20-0 The nitrogen
apparently gave the Hubam the
added "kick" necessary to pro-
duce a bumper crop of seed, often
teferred lo as "yellow gold."
The former Krum farmer’s
wheat averaged 24 bushels this
year an 1 32 last year. Oats follow-
ing vetch produced 53 bushels per
acre.
Sutter's success with vetch belies
the claim that the legume won’t
grow on black land. He likes vetch
and the results from crops that
follow.it.
DARKER
(Continued from Page 1)
the job at the house, a group of
businesses donated food and drinks
for the crew. But when the collec-
tion was delivered there was no
one to receive it.
However, Mrs. C. P. Hardwick,
spokesman for the group, said the
donations would be made again
this week — when there will be
workers on the job.
Those participating in the con-
tribution included Brooks Dairy,
two gallons of ice cream; Bordens,
24 hotties of chocolate milk; Char-
lie Mercer, two cakes, and Purity
Bakery, one cake.
E. T. Sanders, who must have
missyd the food party somewhere
along the way, did work Saturday
afternoon grading dirt around the
foundation. .
The Barker Home is for Charles
Barker, 29-year-old Denton father
of two, who has been paralyzed by
polio since last October. It is a
community project.
Fund officials said Saturday that
all .Solicitation had been completed
but that contributions would be
accepted by mail or by person.
Three points will accept the cash
donations. They are Tobin’s Drug,
First State Bank and the Record-
Chronicle.
speak on the relation of Atomic
bentoncgunty(Denion)... con- «frec,unpaiapoiicafaa.
I Denton Kiwanis Club in Hubbard,
-TH ED B N 7 OM a X CAMbrC* It O N ( C L S -
MeaaetoB^iaaBJ
New York. Dr ora Stafford, di-
rector of the art department, re-
ported also that jewelry made by
an NTSC graduate, Charles Whit-
lock, is being shown.
Ralph Snow, his family, and his
wife's mother, all of Gates, N. C.,
are visiting Snow’s mother, Mrs:
W. T. Snow, 534 S. Elm.
The regular monthly dance for
members of the Denton Country
Club was held Saturday evening.
Chairman for. this month's enter-
tainment have been Mr. and Mrs.
Stanley Munson, Mr. and Mrs. D.
C. Allen, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Robi-
son and Dr. and Mrs, C. H, Han-
cock. A seashore theme was used
in decorating the club,'and music
was furnished by Grady King's
band from Sulphur Springs.
L. Millard Collins of Dallas,
graduate of NTSC and former
ask the Legislature to pass new
laws that would make it manda-
tory for grand juries to investigate
newspapers and their political af-
fairs every time the jury is called.”
Wiley’s speech was not part of
the convention business and it waa
not given in behalf of Dyche’s mo-
tion but prior to the motion. Wiley’s
speech came when W. C. Boyd Jr.,
chairman of the Denton County
Democratic Executive Committee
who was elected permanent chair-
man of the convention, asked if
anyone cared to address the group
while the resolutions and dele-
Tom Laney, W. T. Hagen, Tom
Bingham, W. C. Boyd JK, Alex
Dickie Sr.. Kamp, W. L. Lowry,
Ross Compton, Mrs. G. G. Dorn,
D. M. Wells, G. G. Dorn, George
Hopkins Sr., Mrs. E. P. Crittenden,
J. W. Riddlesperger, T. B. Davis,
Mrs. Barton, Alonzo Jamison Jr.,
------------ James R. Wiley, Mrs. L. M. Atche-
Named and approved as the 30 son, C. A. Hogan, Mrs. Roy Min
delegates to the state convention ton, J. B. Birdsong, Albert Ford
at Mineral Wells on Sept. 14 were and E. C. Garrison.
—............................ ....------1----... . ___ L ■
Ann Shands of Denton, received
her bachelor of music degree from
NTSC in 1948. Mr. apd Mrs. Mor-
gan resided in Alice for four years
before moving to Decatur in 1953.
Mr. and Mrs. Morgan have a
seven-month-old son, Robert
Shands Morgan.
drenched downtown shoppersand !XlmIu*n,th hid1 “hetn meoging
through from the state executive
Tax Charge
jPORT WORTH July 31 U—Gov.
Savers predicted in an interview
today if Ralph Yarborough ia
elpcted governor, his promised pro-
cum will be suppotied by a state
s4lestax.
shjvers, here to address the state
American Legion convention, said
M.aaw no way for Yarborough to
fifance his program except a sales
tost and that if voters support the
Abistin attorney thev will be put-
ttog themselves on record as sup-
porting a sales tax.
Shtvers again declared Yar-
bOr ugh is a captive of the CIO,
“7298826848886867 n"na
fl Hdda u • Huaa.,
32700 6-
la . ---s
COME ABOARD, PARDNER — Sammy Barrett, 13,
helps his dog, Tip, into a bathtyp in which he is playing
in flood water in north secti8 of Houston. A 14-inch
rainfall in the area overnight caused some concern for
residents in low lying areas. Emergency vehicles from
Harris County and civil defense were ready to evacuate
victims and their belongings, but the water hast, started
to recede. (AP Wirephoto)
r . -------
corpu. this morning, contending exuqing a
Barber who Issued the arrest war- ring and
rant did not have jurisdicion. The
writ wile heard Monday.
•Mmsa pg------ -----.....
Week Trip tin New Mexico
I
Management—Association.---Fhe
area includes Texas, New Mexico,
loud enough to arouse neighbors.
hrs father's home nearBayView Detectives speculate the wresvon
iospital where he, two brothers may.havebeenaNo.94ronmiss-
- - - - - ing rrom Mrs. Sheppard s golf bag.
She was hit 27 cutting blows on
the head.
‘ne of the great governmental
neds of Texas ia a water conser
vttion program of action now," the
cfndldate said. "Five yean of de-
lar in the midst of the wont
dFought in Texas history ought to
be enough to convince everyone
that jetion—not words—is needed."
NAACP and qther groups he said
hre seeking to stir up strife and
increase takes.
Phe Governor said he will start
hw formal campaign for re-election . .. p,..
i a .week or 10 days. His ap. । to reform school
Pirance here was the first public! The Negro pair was accused of
of 1,4 has made since last week's' several cases of shoplifting here,
pmary, \ ! County Judge Jack Gray said Sat-
IHe aid he will tour the state, > urday
dQcuasing water and soil con The youth sent to reform school
Central and West -Texas counties i n i... ... . . -
already are eligible for the fed-and alternatesto the state, conven-
eral-state hay feed program. tionslatedforSept. 4 in Ft. Worth.
Both Eastland a.id Dallas had WtA Sewalt, of Denton was
typical hit-and-run thunderstorms f ... ty (or vention. chair-
Saturday. An inch and a half of man.for this section of the 10-coun-
rain fell in 45 minutes at Eastland.
The sudden downpour at Dallas
FPHNSON CITY, July 31 (P--
Haph Yarborough renewed his
campaign for governor tonight
yh accusation that Gov. Al-
lai Shivers has crippled soil and
inter conservation by spurning
aid.
•T think it tragic that soil and
inter conservalton hs been crip-
p)d by the constant backbiting of
the United States government by
Ipponent," Yarborough said.
Kto remarks were made in a
speech prepared for the Blanco
ddunty Fair. ' - '
At was Yarborough’s first public
speech since he gained the election
rnoff with Shivers
“'Action now" is needed to safe-
gard state water and. soil re
aOurces, not "five more years of
cppling delay," said Yarborough,
rterring to Shivers’ tenure as gov-
the world’s largest remuda of sad-
die horses, and the world's largest
string of pack burros.
Along the 81 mile main trail are
nine large base camps ranging
from the old frontier stockade to
the re-established home of Kit Car-
son. The camp will be a daily
host to 2,500 Explorer Scouts, with
1,117 tents located in 87 camp-
sites.
The trip will include stops st
Palo Duro State Park st Amarillo,
Taos, Pueblo, and Los Alamos,
N.M. The scouts will also visit
Santa Fe, N.M., Jaurez, Mexico,
and Carlsbad Caverns.
The Scouts will take a "Kit Car-
s<.n trek," carrying all of their
camp belongings on their backs
and hiking about 60 miles over
five mountain peaks in the same
manner as Kit Carson.
The Kit Carson trekers register
the-first day and move on up to
the stockade at Philmont. The
next day there ia training In camp-
craft and mountain climbing with
a short test hike.
. The next day the group will be
off, with a guide, to Black Moun-
tain Trail Camp. The fourth day
will take them to Comanche Pass
on Black Mountain, and then the
next day into Cypher’s Gold Mine.
At noon on the sixth day, the
grup will reach the top of Clear
Creek Mountain and camp that
ai|M M the Comanche TraU Camp.
On the way back they will stop st
Rsysdo Base Camp, Crater Base
Camp and Trail Peak.
Ball noted that there are still
four acancies in the trip for sny
Boy Scouts over 14 years old who
are now orhave-been registered !
in s Danton troop.
a___'
THIS WEEK’S POULTRY
AUSTIN, July 31 (AP) — Texas poul-
try marketa in the East, south one
Waco-Corsicana areas held ateady
Ulla week with clostng prices un-
changed from a week ago at moat
pointe.
In South Texas supplies ware eboit
of a fair demand in early traamig.i
At the oloee supplies were adequate
on light weighta for the light demand,
but ahort on heavy welghta for a . ,
fair demand Tradig was moderate
and undertone steady.
In East Texas, the undertone was
slightly’ weaker. Supplies were about
ndtequate on light weighta, short on
heavy welghta. Demand was fair to
good, except at the oloee when de-
mand was only fair. Trading was
moderate.
In the Waco-Corsicana area, cud-
piles ware adequate on light weights,
barely adequate to short on heavv
sizes. Demand waa light to fair and
trading was moderate. Undertone wae
about steady.
Cloeing price at 28 cents waa um
changed in the South and East and
at Waco The Corsicana closing price
at 29 cento was one-half to two cento
higher.
Arkansas markets in ths Northwest
and Batesvile-Ploral areas were
, ' -..... 2
k.shnucdat . ' ■
askedtaturdantc DodddedountinsDenton County Republlcan conven formexly at iloiston, have reeent-
drought relleflist. Twenty-threelton here Saturdav named them- lv meved *e *hei" ne" heme isa
ty 22nd District.
Sewalt told the six members
Wiley called the editorial "noth-
and W. K. Pate.
Guess What stand—D. C. Gheen,
chairman; Roy Odom, Walter War-
schun, Mr. Soloman and Dean Sul-
livan.
. Electricity Committee — Wendell
Keith, Calvin Harberson, Dick
Ready, and Ross Anderson.
Custodian of Property — Art
Seely, Jess Smith, Jess Seal, J. M.
Simms Jr. and Tom Muir.
feeder cattie end calves steady to
strong; hogs climbed 71 cents per
hundred: pecking sows 60 cents up:
slaughter and feeder lambs 60 cents
to mostly at.00 higher; ewee were 80
cente to 01.00 up; other eheep were
steady to strong.
Slaughter steers and yearlings 8.00-
33.00: slaughter calves 8.00-18.80:
stocker calves 19.00 down; Stocker
yearlings 17.78 down; butcher hogs
22.7 down; sows 13.00-10.00; atnugf-
ter lam be 6.00-30.00 and feeder lambs
15.00 down; alaughter yearlings 7.00-
13.00; aged wethers 6.00-9 00; old
ewes 3.80-4.60; old bucke 2.50-3.50.
T iton Pc
dent W. T. E
day that cit
of the Milli
were alariin
help the fan
loss of two
The Beair
1c of the!
intersection
Crawfcrd i
anonths ago
The secon
almost the s
bers of the
work in thei
before they
Florist
i
"e , ..... --
Denton at 819 Greenwood. Dr.
ie advite came f cpm William
tigan, defense lawyer who re-
ad a police proposal Dr. Shep-
I bo given a physical examina-
before the questioning.
migansaid the examining phy-
IM would be "medical ones
Haggard will have offices on the
north side of the court house of "Texas
SMr.c. L. Oliver, 311 Mounta, Mrs. Morgan, the former Mia.
has returned after a month’s va- i
cation to Boston, Mass., New York
City, Chicago and Lake Michigan,
where she visited her daughter,
Miss Clydene Oliver, and friends,
Mr. and Mra. John Kassablan
A Misses Gwendolyn and Pauleta
Hamilton, daughters of Mr. and
Mra. Paul Hamilton, 614 Auatin,
are visiting their uncle and aunt,
Mr. and Mra. Hubert Johnson at
the Methodist Home in Waco.
Mr. and Mra. A. J. Reed, Helen
and Adren, of 2024 Bolivar; Mr
and Mra. Pete Cole at Krum, and
Spencer Gary of Sanger, are leav-
ing today for a two-week vacation
in Colorado, Salt Lake City and
Yellowstone National Park. They
will also visit Mrs. Reed’s brother
and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
John Lynch on the Allemand Ranch
near Casper, Wyo.
HOSPITAL NOTES
Elm Street Hospital and Clinic
Admitted: O. L. Shiflett, Krum,
medical; James Franklin, 344 Rob-
inson, medical.
Dismissed: Mrs. R. L. Horton,
avsute
. Dr. T. M. Cunningham, paster,
announces there will be no serv-
ices Sunday at the First Presby.
terlan Church in Sanger. Dr. Cun-
ningham will return from vaca-
tion for Aug. 8 service*.
Two enamel capper dishs by
Victor Brown, NTSC art major
Sutter is a member of the
4
-----
mN >■ i:
fe.....___
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 311, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 1, 1954, newspaper, August 1, 1954; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1430855/m1/2/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.