Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 2, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 4, 1954 Page: 4 of 10
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Wednesday, August 4, 1954
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Hal Boyle Says:
Denton
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Of Interesting Faces
••••
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New Almanac
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ATEQ
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Poor Little Rich Boy
New Tax Bill
Working Parents Get Break'
the state is now 100 per cent sol-
By Fred Nehev
Television Schedules
(As annonced by television stations.
WEDNESDAY — AUGUST 4
9
What Other Papers Say
..
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WILLHUM.
LOOKING BACK
1
5:00
4
4 Into the Night
FIVE YEARS AGO
THERE OUGHTA BE A LAW!
444
10:25
Strfeet, underwent minor surgery 19:30
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10:40
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DENTON RECORD-CHRONISLE
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8 My Little Margie
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Strike It Rich
Wild Bill Hickok
Kratt TV Theatre
Yesteryears
In Denton
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great enclosure of willow poles
hung with grene pine boughs.
In the center of the enclosure
Crystal Ball
All In, One
5:15
5 30
Here’s another in a series of
stories on how new tax legis-
lation affects you.
JIM COX GRADUATED AT AN-
n a polis in 1948 and he has seen
a lot of service in the Navy They
like the Presbyterian church near
them in San Diego, and it looks
like they are getting a break at
last. Marilyn was a lonesome little
girl for quite a while.
Lt. W. R. Bass Jr., and Courte-
is at sea now, on the submarine
USS Rasher.
Thursday at the Elm Street Hos-
pital and Clinic.
Mrs. C. Clements has returned
to her home in Krum after spend-
ing six weeks with her son in
Lubbock.
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According to Land Commissioner Bascom Giles, the
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(Page Doings
New York newsdealers have a plan which could ... crip- "
pie seriously the distribution of horror, crime and sala-
cious books. The newsdealers ... have formed the News-
On the other hand, the man who votes for Allan
Shivers knows exactly what he is voting for. Mr. Shiv-
« ers’ bill of goods is atractively displayed by his sterling
record while in office as governor.
Governor Shivers does not deal only in futures as
Weathercast
Basebal Hall of Fama
Weather
Four Star Playhouse
The Lona Ranger
Melody Tour
What do You have tn
Common!
Dragnet
The Goldbergs
Big Town
Ford Theatre
The Name's the Same
lee coptes: So for weekdaya: lOe for Sunday.
Carrier: 30c per wook.
"Mom said you make dandy cookies ... an' to be sure to thank
you when you give me some!"
Mrs. Harry Owens, 2316 North
Locust Street, and daughters, Mary
Ann, Savanali, Dianne and Linda,
were visiting Mrs Owens’ mother
in Honea Path, outh Carolina, for
several weeks.
Mrs. F. M. Sullivan, 1004 Peak
<
D3
4
6
8
8
support to Dwight Eisenhower, 'Republican nominee
who also believed as did Mr. Shivers, and since has
• passed legislation that restored the off-shore oil lands
ft'
4
A
8
4
4
4
4
8
4
TROY, Pa., GAZETTE-REGISTER: “The enter-
prise system has given the individual freedom and oppor-
tunity to use his private property in the competitive
struggle for profit. The result has been a huge continu-
ing growth in the number of business firms, and in the
number of productive jobs. Our living standards have
risen over the years to the point where they are the envy
of the world . . . But . . . the trend in America toward
socialistic reliance on Big Government will destroy the
fundamentals of the individual enterprise system which
has given us so much in the past.”
PORT HURON, MICH., TIMES HERALD: “Twelve
demumnn
..............■ .
pupiuationao
O
.Jmy
turned to Texas — even though he had to swing his
—instead of talking about it.
On the other hand, a bulk of Governor Shivers'
backers were asleep, lulled into a sense of security that
was based on an easy primary victory. Governor Shivers
4
M every afternoon (except Saturday) and Sunday by: Danton Pub-
Co Ine 814 E Hickory St
l ar second class mail matter at the pontoffice at Danton. Texas,
‘ 12, 1931. accordina to Act of Congress, March 8. 1873. -
SURSCKIPTION RATES AND NNFORMATION
-------------------- 8 Julia Danall Show
- Sanger. Of Mr. E. W Melson in 10 4 ♦ auinKa,
was an issue in the 1952 presidential campaign. Governor
Shivers saw to it that the Tidelands were rightfully re-
al* not respoaible for M
tional error that occur ol
tht *• their atteniton, AU
candidate Yarborough has. Allan Shivers is a pay-as-
you-go governor and *
1
1886. But it was revived more than
20 years ago, and last week In-
dians came hundreds of miles to
the sprawling Pine Ridge reserva-
tion here for a renewal of the sym
bolic centuries-old festival.
In earlier times no formal date
for the ceremony was set. The
Indians simply drifted together "as
if pulled by a magnet by nature’s
out and worked—worked hard to get their man elected
i
raw MORE
“SAFE! /
Carbuncle
mares up
SPARE KEYs
FOR THE I
FMILY,
CLNHB
THE DOZEN
WE KNOW A NEW DENTON
citizen whom you ought to know.
She is Conniq. Sue Troll, 1425 North
Locust, and 7 years old June 9.
Her dad is W. N. Trull, warehouse
man at Morrison Mill; and her
mother’s name is Alberta. They
are originally from Great Bend,
Kansas.
The most interesting thing about
Connie Sue is that she is so much
like Eileen Pittard, 8. of 2320 Fow-
ler Dr. They are very flmart little
girls—you would just love them.
IN THE DAILY OKLAHOMAN,
Oklahoma City, is a folksy column
called, "The Smoking Room,” by
R.G.M.
Last week, under the picture of
a very relaxed fisherman sitting
on the dock, we read: “This part
of the column calls for a picture,
and here it is. It shows Dr. Ev-
erett S. Lain fishing from the boat
dock on Tenkiller (in the rain),
as soon as the downpour let up,
We do not recall that he ever
caught a fish big enough to put
on a stringer; but we can testify
that he tried and tried.”
-
B
8
7:30 4
. 5
8
8 00 4 Tell Talc Clue
8 30 4 Place The Face
< 8 Groucho Man
8 Captured
6:00 4 Double Duty American
8 Justice
8 Boston Blackie
9 30 4 Tour TV Theatre
8 Calvacade of America
8 Counterpoint
10 00 4 The World Today . -
6 The Texas News
8 Final Edition
10:18 4 Ute Talk about the
Weather
U/ace
KRLD-TV
4
0.*m
kefe-•
Subject to change.)
WFAA-TV
9
cently, the same Mr. Yarborough attacked the Governor
of Texas for “spurning” federal aid for water conserva-
1 tion and drought.
This just doesn’t make sense to us. Nor do many
. things Mr. Yarborough has shouted. If he is so quick
i to change his mind to score a point, he easily could get
Texas in just as confused a position as he is—should he
be elected.
THE DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLE
dependents. And of course you ■ irr'r ■ Ic rHAT
can’t deduct baby sitter expenses -5” -im5 "nA
while you are out frolicking.
The theory is to permit a deduc-
tion for expenses you must incur
to make a living—just as regular
business expenses ate deductible.
ery Piayhouse
tmTonight
Ittime Movie
Madison Square Garden
Waterfront
The World Today
The Texas News
Final Edition
Let s Talk About The
Weather
Weather Teletacts
Channel 8 Theatre
Howdy Doody
Variety Fair
Kiddle Karnival
Martha McDonald's
Kitchen
Ann Alden
Six Gun Theatre
Frontier Playhouse
Party Time
See Sew Zoo Club
Time For Magic
John Daly and the News
9:45
TWENTY YEARS AGO 10 °°
Marriage license was issued to .....
Herbert Jones and Helen Miller. 10:30
Mrs. Lulu White of Abilene was
By CHARLES F. BARRETT
WASHINGTON (—An entirely
new idea is being imbedded in
By HAL BOYLE sees, the three first took a sweat
--PINE RIDGE, S.D. w_ The o. bath in an "Ini", or sweat house,
Sioux, in the days when they ruled made of willow boughs covered
the great plains, had a festival that with buffalo skins. Steam was pro-
combines in theme several of the vided by pouring water over hot
white man’s holidays. rocks in a pit within the sweat.
It was called the sun dance, and house.
to the Indians Jt was Christmas The dancers were then painted-
Easter, Thanksgiving, and a family red for the sun hiue for the sky,
reunion all wrapped in one. yellow for the rocks, green for the
In those times the nwandering earth.
Sioux bessed-the land and chased Without food or water the three
the buffalo from Kansas to Canada, men then danced ‘around the cot-
from the Mississippi River to the tonwood tree to the music of beat-
Rocky Mountains, ing tom-toms and the eerie, high-
But once a year the roving tribes- pitched chants of singers. They
men came together and were knit danced in turn in the direction of
into a nation by the sun dance, a the four wids, pausing only when
ceremonial that symbolized their the tom-tom boaters had to rest,
unity and common faith in the I watched the dance for part of
Great Spirit. each day, but to me the dance,
The government. In an effort to monotonous in itself was less in-
destroy a tradition which it feared teresting than the faces of the old
always held the danger of stirring Indians and their squaws on th*
up the fierce Sioux in fresh out- sidelines.
breaks, banned the sun dance in
FOR INSTANCE, “WHEN REV.
George W. Campbell, new pastor
of the Christian Church at Perry,
delivered his first sermon in the
church, new airconditioning was
being Installed The blower had
beeri mounted backward and the
cool air was being blown outside
instead of being fanned on the
sweating congregation.”
Any circulation at all would help
if the sermon was 49 minutes long
and the temperature was 113.
5:55 5 Evening News
0:00 4 Flash.Gordon
Cowboy Thrills
Evening Edition
' 4 Gurry Moore Show
5 Ding Dong Schoo
8 Maggie and Her Friends
4 Arthur Godfrey
B A Time to Live
8 Summer School
8 Three Bteps to Heaven
5 Home
* 8 The Money Man
8 Morning Devotianals
4 Strike It Rich
8 The Money Man
8 Cony Corner.-
4 Valiant Lady
6 Movie Marquee
8 Bob Smith Show
4 Love of Life
4 Search for Tomorrow
vent. Allan Shivers also controls as much national re-
spect as any governor in the United States. He knows
the business of a better Texas and he is the man to
see this type of program continue—on a local, state
and national—if necessary—level.
An example of how well he does know what’s good
for Texas is exemplified in the Tideland’s question which
4 Douglas Edwards and the
New
8 The World of Mr. Sweeney
5 Kiddie Kit Parade
4 Summer Holiday
B News
8 Camel Newe Caravan
3
signals—the time when the buffalo
were fat, when the choke-berries LONDON (Old Moore’s Al-
ripened when new sage sprouts manack is on sale today with the
sprang foot-high, when moccasins news that during 1955 dictators will
made a crisp echo in the dry grass die, elder statesmen will continue
of summer, to live, royalty will have romance
This year Frank Fools Crow, and everything will be all right.
sent out the call. Thousands of Those and many, many other
Indians came by horse and wagon, predictions can be purchased from
on foot or in beaten up automo- itinerant salesmen outside London
biles. They pitched their modern saloons for “tuppence.” In U.S.
tents and faded tepees around a money that -is 2 1-3 cents.
-Old Moore’s, a favored handbook
for those who like astrology, has
4:00 8
4:15 4
B
4:30 6
8
5:00 4
6
5115 8
8:30 4
.8
5:35 5
5:45 4
6
8
5.55 5
6:00 4
Century
This week of Sports
Cisco Kid
Duffy's Tavern
Music Hall Varlettes
A.g. . ...
TIN YEARS AGO
Staff Sgt. Jach Schmitz was at
home on a short leave. He was
with the Air Force in Dalhart,
Jus
tutor
good
wife
Spike
Jr.,
Hel
type,
leade
U0U8
her ।
a lai
cooks
loves
and i
In
been published every year since
stood a slender young cottonwood 1697 and each issue is packed with
tree. The tree Stlected in ad- news of things to come. The Al-
vance by a medicine man, had manack boasts on some pages
been carried to the site and about precictions that have come
or physically incapable of caring is reduced by the amount of your erected by strong Braves who took to pass during.its 257 year history,
for himself. income above 34,500 care to see that none of its leaves Hitler’s seizure of Austria in 1938
That means an actaal tax cut of Thus, if your income is $4,800, touched the ground. To the Sioux was one of its hot tips.
$120 for those in the lowest, 20 per you can deduct only $300. Butif the leaves of this sacred tree stood Among choicest bits of forecast-
cent tax bracket a bigger saving your income is $5,100 or more, you for human hearts, and must not be ing in the latest issue is:
In higher brackets * & are not entitled to any deduction, bruised. “Father Time will beckon with
Thi. i. wi‘,, o1c„ . One very important point to re- Sheafs of sweet-smelling sage- his scythe and dictators will be
Thisishowyou cansualify member — if you claim this de- standing for purity-were placed in called to their account.” That one
tax laws: a special break for peo- de the cnud-care provision. duction, you must itemize your de- the crotch. From them dangled a is supposed to come off in Novem-
ple who have to pay for care of If you file your return as a single pendent-care expenses and all piece of buffalo robe and man- her 1955.
their children while they work. head of a household—a widow, your other deductions. You can’t shaped figure cut from a piece of For February the Almanack
This concept goes into effect for widower, divorced or separated benefit from this provision if you buffalo skin, symbolizing the Sioux notes tha the moon is in the royal
the first time in the huge, 1,000- person—you can claim the $600 de- take the standard, automatic de- dependence on the buffalo, sign of Leo and that “it is strongly
page tax revision bill just passed duction regardless of your income duction of 10 per cent of your in- The sun dance itself is designed suggestive of royal romance—en-
by Congress, if you meet the other conditions, come offered to most taxpayers. to demonstrate the four great Sioux gagement or marriage—of one who
Experts figure it will cut taxes And if you are a working wife. The provision applies to expenses virtues—bravery, generosity, forti- is very dear to the hearts of all
for about 2,100,000 persons by a you ean still qualify it your hus- in this calendar year, which started tude and integrity. . _ British people.”
total of 130 million dollars a year, band is incapacitated Jan. 1. You can deduct them in This year three-young Braves Do you suppose Old Moore’s
The new bill permits many tax- You also can benefit if you file your income tax return due next volunteered for the ordeal. Two means that Princess Margaret is
payers to deduct from their in- as a married couple, where both Apri 1,15. ... . . . . were veterans who had pledged going to get marired? She’s 23.
come, before figuring their tax, husband and wife work and file a 80 if.xou qualify, you might want themselves to perform a sun dance “The sudden illness of an elderly
actual expenses of up to $600 a joint return. If your combined in- to staYt now keeping a record of in gratitude for their safe return English statesman will cause tern-
year for care of children, but also come is $4,500 or below, you can your deductible expenses, from Korea. porary concern," Old Moore's pre-
for any dependent who is mentally deduct the full $600. Your deduction You can deduct child-care ex- To purify and prepare them- diets for May.
penses if they are paid to your own
Latin Comes Alive
HONG KONG (AP)— Catholic
missionaries reaching Hong Kong
after long periods in Chinese Com-
munist jails joke among them-
selves that if enough Catholics get
in enough Communist jails, Latin
may become a live language again.
The priests use Latin to communi-
cate with one another.
One group of priests in Shanghai
jails used Latin messages on the
top of toilet buckets.
A bucket did not always come
back to the same cell. It made the
rounds until it found someone who
could read Latin He would
scratch an answer and in time it
might get back to the original writ-
er. In the meantime it might
find its wy into half a dozen oth-
er Latin-writing cells and quite a
conversation would develop. Some-
times important messages were
conveyed but usually it was mere-
ly an effort to let one missionary
know that he had a fellow in a
nearby cell, and to pass on a word
of cheer.
8
8:45 4
4:00 8
4:16 4
19′6)
7:30 4 I've Got A Secret
6 Mystery Theatre
8:0 4 Blus Ribbon Bouts
6 Racket Squad
8 This Is Your Life
8:30 R Annie Oakley
8 1 Married Joan
8:48 4 Greatest Fights of ths
Tse 4 Morntng Show
* Local News
WHEN WE FIRST MET Ei-
leen, she was telling about her
dad having his shoe samples stolen
“My daddy was wot bed. He was
wobbed of 7 cases of shoes, all
. for the lef foot I bet they thowed
’em in the wivvahl” '
P—* 8-4-54
J-
ass?
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‘ • %»
I 1$ X9
, X (Ga
Kiddle Karnival
Martha McDonald s Kitchen
Ann Alden
Six Qun Theatre
Frontier Playhouse
Party Time ,
Bee Saw Zoo Club
John Daly and the News
Douglas Edwards and the
News
Ths World of Mr. Sweeney
Kiddie Hit Parade
TV’S Top Tunes
News
Camel News Caravan
Fvening News
Red Skelton Revue
Cowboy Thrills
Evening Edition
Weathercast
Baseball Hall of Fame
Weather
SOUTHERN OKLAHOMA IN
the area north from Vernon, Texas,
is going in for irrigation in a big
way. They did not get started as
early as we did around Lubbock
and Plainview; but they are going
great guns now.
One farmer near Hollis had 85
acres in alfalfa; he cut 5,142
bales, the first cutting “The alfalfa
crop, including the seed, is worth
a million dollars a season —in
the Hollis areal
6
8
8:10 8
6:15 8
9:38 6
. s . Mohon.
9).
By E. J. HEADLEE
- LT. JIM COX. USN, AND MARI-
lyn have moved into a three-bed-
room house in San Diego. Cali-
fornia, and are happily situated.
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ell P. Cox, 1213 Bolivar St. She is
the lovely Marilyn Brooks, daugh-
ter of Mrs. Imogene Brooks. They
have three children: Angela, 5,
Cecelia, 3, and James A. Cox,
Jr., 8 months old
Asked what Jim is doing, Eli
said, “He is in the Navy and he
does not talk much. One thing he
is doing, he is raising a family.”
5
8
10:00 4
6
8
10:15 4
Morning Show
Sunup
Today
Agricultural. Nawa
Morning Show
Local News
Morning Show
Breakfast Club
Local Weather
HERE PARE,
Ykdsc8afksy4i*rM2*50J
--e //
dealers Distributing Company Inc., the members of
which have airreed to refuse to have anything to do with
the ‘tie-in sales’ racket, under which the newsdealer has
. been compelled to buy large quantities of filthy ... books
in order to get the decent ...”
BALTIMORE, MD., DAILY RECORD: “‘If we have
‘stand-by controls’ there is one thing which we should
insist on, and that is a clear, concise definition f the
I word ‘emergency.’ We had < rather sad experience with
the varying interpretations some of our politicians put
on the word ‘emergency’ th recent years.”
4 Bports Tonight
6 News Pinal
4 Nightttime Movie
5 Sporta with Sherman
8 Movie Marquee
• • • ■ •
THIURSDAY — AUGUST 3
Leon Griffith and family of Den-
ton moved to the Cooper Creek
community.
*
-
'' ■■ wN “ n ’ Ainl ■
mre-e------
gemrrn ' - ‘ .
DR. LAIN (FAMOUS FOR CAN-
cer research) is a brother-in-law
of Mr. L. L. Miller, and once
lived in Sanger. He is too smart
to have bad habits, but he has
at least one good one. He sends
us clippings of Interesting things
he reads or hears—and we love
, people "who do that
Anything you may read in this
column about Oklahoma, you may
safely attribute to Dr. Lain’s
thoughtfulness.
esn-‛
. . .___________________, )• ' - ’ . t
was the leader in the four-man race, he just as easily
could have been the majority winner.
But then, that is over — and, to use a baseball
phrase, we have a new ball game. . —nay also lve in San Diego, Bin -
This time it’s a head-up race, winner take all. We
s believe that winner will be Allan Shivers.
permanent school fund of Texas has received $40,989,
936.80 to date from cash bonuses paid for leases on less
than one-fifth of the approximately 2,608,000 acres in
the Texas Tidelands. Mr. Giles also pointed out that
every tidelands lease provides for an annual delay rental
and one-eighth royalty and he estimates that revenue
from this source will exceed the cash bonuses paid dur-
ing the life of the average lease.
This is “tending to the business of a better Texas.”
Allan Shivers will continue to attend to all business
* which means a better Texas and that’s one big reason
why the Record-Chronicle believes the voters in the
state will return him to this important job.
By man in Denton and adjoining countten, only where Carrler service i no* where Colonel Duane Skiles of Den-
E’aizabie: 85.85 per mr .1. moKtha. 06.00: three months. 88.80; one month, ton was the Big Boss.
Born: To Mr. and Mrs. J. H.
•g”*” putaide Denton County: 020.60 per mr ata montns, vi.8o: three Hurst of Lewisville Friday, a boy,
monune •3,00; one month. 81 30 — -- —
Candidate Yarborough, like a “souped-up” race
horse, ran in the money the first time out this summer.
* But it was a race where the jockey had to flog his
* mount, keep the whip coming up and down all the way.
Even then, the race wasn’t won. And Candidate Yar-
; borough must be tired.
Not only is Mr. Yarborough tired — the voters of
• Texas must be weary from his campaign promises—his
apparent smear attempts, his confused, loud yelling that
amounts to little when an interpretive cap is placed on
it We don’t know for sure what Mr. Yarborough is
“selling?’ It is difficult to pin down. Typical of his con-
fused primary campaign was the question of federal
* aid. At an early point, Mr. Yarborough lambasted Gov-
ernor Shivers up one side and down the other for accept-
ing federal aid—“violating states rights.” Then, just re-
• ■ . 1 . . ■ t ■ . ",2—
n: i - ’ . .: ■ 8 ■■ a ■ ■■■ ■ ■ '
—y—p--------------
11:20 6 Good Morning Pastor
11:25 4 Newt
11:30 4 Welcome Travelers
6 Dione Luca* Show
12:00 4 Robert Q. Lewis
6 Farm and Home
8 Tho Money Man
12:15 5 Weather
12:20 5 New*
12:30 4 House Party
8 Bobby Peter*
12:45 8 Noon Edition
1:00 4 The Big Payoff
■' 5 One Man’* Family
8 Showtime Matinee
1:15 5 Golden Window*
1:30 4 Bob Crosby Show
5 First Love
8 Guest Book
1 45 5 Concerning Miss Marlowe
2:00 4 Brighter Day
5 What’s Cooking
8 Hawkins Falls
2:15 4 The Secret Storm
5 Bride and Groom
2:30 4 On Your Account
8 Betty White Show
3:00 4 Mary Carter’s Cook Book
6 Movie Marquee
8 Duchess Playhouse
3:30 4 Portia Faces Life
Bck HOME IA - --9$,
' BUREAU DRAWWER: A- ------Te_N4220S
dqtddda grpms: u- mmee tus: * ■
Voters To Make Decision
GGp“mog
K*. The voters of Texas will make a clear-cut decision
Aug. 28 on their governor for the next two years. May
it be a good choice.
Aa we see it there is only one way to go to insure a
continued growth of sound governmental progress. That
is to return Gov. Allan Shivers to office.
Ralph Yarborough ran a good primary race. He
had solid support from the ‘‘Liberal’’ faction in Texas.
In contrast to two years ago, the “Liberal” backers got
in the Denton Hospital and Clinic.
mv/.emeseeo,
, ■ .
. ■■■■- . ■ ■ _
bn on.
.. .MEMBER of TUB ABSOCIATED PREB6
aAreectatedYr—* “ entitied .paclusively to Ms im* for
o loni MM printed An tts newspaper, M wel as au
po
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 2, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 4, 1954, newspaper, August 4, 1954; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1430858/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1&rotate=90: accessed June 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.