Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 94, Ed. 1 Friday, November 19, 1954 Page: 4 of 11
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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■
ROUND
ABOUT
TOWN
By BOB EDWARDS
Q
; E
(
roup
(iiG
Yesteryear
THE COW WITH THE CRUMPLED HORN’
Senators Get Censure Vote
four to nothing.
Advice By Varied Mediums
TEN YEARS AGO
went to a hospital yesterday with
his secretary.
usually heavy volume of mail. but j vice chairman of the special cen-
LIFE’S LIKE THAT
By Fred Neber
A
N
• - V
3
• W*
Ants Are Socialistic
TELEVISION SCHEDULES
(As announced by television stations.
O
matter. It would onl
.9°
4:00
4:11
+3,
1
\
THERE OUGHT A BE A LAW!
I
Denton Record-Chronicle
Life of
Day.
IF
Pighta
Story
A Newa Final
‘49
A
8
MEMBER or TAE ASSOMATED PRESS
=m-
SM 8 Bmilin' Ed's Oang
■
2
ai
►
V
sl.co
K
bell Till Week
« Of the /Week
The entrances to Bastogne are
still guarded by American tanks
that saw combat here Some 400
last spring.
memn*e
10:18
10:30
Protestant, Catholic. Jewish.
In a series of high tablets the
entire story of the Battle of the
Ruling Expected
Monday in Trial
mealtimes
Here the 10th Armored and 101st a
killed, wounded or missing in the
entire Btle of the Ardennes.
The memorial lists the names
ol all the units of the men who
fought in this vast wintry action.
around 1,400,000—to be eligible for
representation in the City Assem-
bly.
Monday in the government’s con-
spiracy trial of former Houston
city detective Sidney Smith.
ST.
Cen
ern
on c
5 PI
Ornithologists believe there are
not likely tc be more than 100 un-
discovered species of birds in the
world.
others said they have been getting
far less than they expected.
In the absence of McCarthy, who
FRIDAY — NOV 18
4 Martha McDonald’s
Kitchen
8 Pinky Lee Show
S Ann Alden
4 Barker BUl Cartoons
i
"spring fever" Saturday, as the -______ _____
mercury went up to a sizzling 92 I Bulge is told in letters of gold.
2cu
12:30
13:40
12:45
1:00
3:08
Of Reapproval
WASHINGTON W—The Foreign
ce >e his bachelor s life this com- j
ing week and will soon be one of >
us married folks.
8 Weather
8 Sporta
8 Weather
8
8:00 4
8
• The Vise
8 Dear Phoebe
9:00 4 The Lineup
8 Death Valley
10:00 4
5
r ■ .;; Ji
a dish of nuts on their table at endured.
"We were together.’ is the way
I Utah), chairman of the special
bipartisan committee that recom-
mended McCarthy be censured,
said Watkins has been receiving
as many as 750 to 1,000 letters
and telegrams a day.
In the first week of debate, he
said, this mail was about’ 8-1 for
McCarthy, but that at the start of
this week the pro-McCarthy rtio
had dropped to 4-1 or 5-1.
Sen. Edwin C. Johnson (D-Colo),
For thou has been a strength to
the poor, a strength to the needy
in his distress, a refuge from the
storm, a shadow from the heat,
when the blast of the terrible ones
is as a storm against the wall. —
Is:lah 25:4.
Not a sorrow, not a burden, not
a temptation, not a bereavement,
not a disappointment, not a care,
not a groan or tear, but has its
antidote in God’s rich and inex-
haustible resources.—George Lori-
mer.
7:80 4 Toppar
8 Ray Bol
Joe House, public school fac-
ulty member, evidently keeps his
money in both Denton banks, and
he must be getting ready to write
• lot of checks on both. He was
found on the east side Thursday
morning with a whole bunch of
blank checks on The Denton Coun-
ty National and the First State
Bank. We wanted him to autograph
one on each of the banks for us.
but he didn’t seem to take to the
idea.
i
R. O. (Mose) Woodson and John-
ny Powell are in Louisiana, where
they were invited by a friend to
do some duck and goose hunting
as well as fishing. Mose said, "Our
friend advises us that there are
lots of duck and geese in that coun-
try now and as always plenty of
fish, it will be the first vacation
that I’ve had and I hope to bring
some of the game back with me. ’
.. .0
An air lift that carried 138,700 passengers and 170,-
343.000 pounds of freight was used to build the railroad
which taps the newly developed Labrador-Quebec iron
deposit
Bur TOWELS COME AND TOWGLS Go AND
FLACCID IS STILL DOING BUSINESS AT THE
SAME OLD TOWEL STAND!
10:38 8
10:30 4
p if I
tal e
r
5.
Campaigning under the banner
of the Socialist Unity party (SED)
the Reds have only a slim chance
of making any sort of a showing
They will have to poll 5 per cent)
of the total vote -expected to run
ousds
buu .
... »
Playhouse of Stars
Dollar A Second
of visiting U.S newsmen
Theupubiahera are not reeponMbls for copy omindons, typographical
nex“asug“nhtei Lou T
l errors that occur other than to correct. in
*• brought to their attention. All advertising orders
an aceepted on this baste only.
M‘L
70)
3
I
WOC
quisi
brow
Iger Show
Riley
lege ot the Air
Thestre
8 Gillette
8:30 4 Favorite
I - III
Set
The Boy Scouts of Denton will
start work Saturday 'tomorrow)
morning on the distribution of the
new telephone books and the col-
lection of the old ones. The Scouts
for several times have done this
work for the telephone company,
as it gives quick distribution and
also helps the Scout fund. if you
wish, you might leave your old
telephone book in the front door
tonight and a new one will be left
in its place. The Scouts get extra
pay for the collection of the old
directories, so if you leave that
one for them, you will be helping
the Scout Fund, and, too, it might
be more convenient for the tele-
phone users just to place the old
directory in the front door tonight.
It might save you from going to
answer the front door bell when it
might not be so convenient. The
new directory will be left at your
house, whether or not you put out
the old one, but it will help the
Scouts if you put the old one at the
front door.
KRLD-TV
4
F
8. ‘
townsman expressed it to a
8 Barn Dance
0148 8 The Big Playback
>10:00 4 Ellery Quean
8 Texn News
' 8 Final ditfon
by next June 30 as Congress has
ruled it should.
Officials of the foreign aid agen-
cy, headed by Harold E. Stassen,
disclosed last night they are work-
ing on budget plans for the fiscal
year starting next July 1.
Such advance programming is
required by law, they said, and
besides the new 84th Congress
could repeal the 83rd Congress*
rare (for Washington) death ver-
dict on a federal agency. It will
be up to President Eisenhower to
decide whether to ask for an FOA
life extension.
In any event, the foreign aid
pipeline is not expected to be
snapped shut. Programs would be
split up among other agencies if
FOA is disbanded.
Subject to change.)
WFAA-TV
TUR
toda
of sr
num
5 PI
ROSI
exqu
polis
desse
Ueema:zwz,""A .
EDITORIALS
Hiss May Face More
Trouble After Release
If human beings were like ants, living would be
simple. The life of the ant consists of all work and no
play, with complete social equality. It is the ultimate
In regimentation.
When it comes to human beings, “If activity were all
that was sought, economics would be a very simple
only be necessary to see that there
food, clothes, houses or consumer
Communists Aim
For Vote Gain
In West Berlin
WBAP-TV
i
. morial services are held for the
different faiths of these men —
63,
K- }
, /;*
//.)
•• / /4
"We do not plan to operate the
Thrifty Pharmacy, which we re-
cently purchased," said W. F.
Brooks Sr. “We have consolidated
the merchandise with our other
stores, and we have such prescrip-
tions as have been filled at the
Thrifty Pharmacy in our other
stores for the convenience of those
who wish to have them refilled."
was not enough----- --------
' goods to supply the people. Then everybody could
work busily from morn to night, and as long as they
never caught up with the needs the activity would stay
feverish."
• *" I
Friday,
Trinity
fi lends
will me
noon for
fore the
Trinity
will be
< huri h,
Streets
Dr. J.
nus. ha;
Geese Population Up
EAST LANSING, Mich. (APL
smmmgz
fan State College said Canada
geese nested in at least 15 counties
— ---——
"Let me know if anything exciting happens, dear!”
""When I moved to Denton in 1918
I started to read Roundabout,
which then was written by W. C.
Edwards," said Mrs. Meta Bur-
ger, 2201 North Locust Street. "I
have been reading it since 1927
when you took over the column,
too.”
TWENTY YEARS AGO
An all-day rain here brought 1.60
inches, which put the best season
in the ground in weeks.
Miss Willie Faye Wallis, daugh-
ter of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Wallis,
left Saturday for San Antonio,
where she will begin training as
I a nurse in the Bonaire Sanitorium.
। Miss Sarah Hayden of Pilot
Point underwent an eye operation
Monday afternoon.
visit with his brother, Ashley
Davis, and sister, Mrs. Nick Akin.
Capt. Joe Caldwell, Mrs. Cald-
well and son. Bob, were guests of
Ms brother, Bob Caldwell, and
family. Capt. Caldwell has been
in the Pacific area for the past
27 months.
M. Sgt. Marvin Ramey, son of
Mr. and Mrs. M L. Ramey of
Denton, is recuperating from a
major operation at Camp Maxey.
; yards rom the point where the
I Germans thurst closest to the town
Dick Swafford of the Ponder
cormunity was in Denton Thurs-
day. He is a son of Mr. and Mrs.
, Ray Swafford of that section of
. ' the county. Dick is planning to
2%
2Xo
ponderantly pro-McCarthy.
Sen. Holland (D-Fla): about 60-
40 for McCarthy now.
Sen. Byrd (D-Va): about even,
maybe a little on the McCarthy
side.
Sen. Schoeppel (R-Kan): "over-
whelmingly in favor of McCarthy.”
Sen. McClellan fD-Ark); about
even.
Sen. Thye (R-Minn): "very de-
cidedly pro-McCarthy."
Sen. Saltonstall < R Mass):
"great bulk" for McCarthy.
Sen. Pastore (D-RD: preponder-
antly pro-McCarthy. -
Sen. Welker <R Idaho): "heavily
pro-McCarthy."
8 The Big story
8:30 4 Our Miss Brooks
One of the prettiest trees that
we’ve seen is a Black Jack at the
corner of Sherman and Palmer
Drives. It is a bright red, unusual-
ly pretty for an oak, and it is sur-
rounded by green leaves from an-
other tree, which adds even more
beauty that were it by itself. The
wind of Thursday started the
leaves to falling quite rapidly, so
it won’t be many more days that
the trees will offer their wonder-
ful colors.
A few years ago my son, who
was 13. proudly announced one
day: "I was the only one in our
class that got 100 in the Social Liv-
ing test.”
That's fine," I said. "Were the
questions hard?"
"Well, the only one I didn't
know the answer to was, ’What is
the salary of the Chief Justice of
the United States?' But I figured
it out. I knew that Ted Williams
got 1100,000 a year from the Red
Sox, and I decided that a Chief
Justice would probably get about
a fourth as much. So I put down
$25,00 and it was right.” - Read-
sr s Digest.
G. G. Bishop, who operates his
barber shop down on East McKin-
ney Street, was found uptown
doing some marketing. He said,
“Yeah, I make my money down on
East McKinney but I come up
here to spend it.”
Captain Midnight
Bobby Peters Jamboree
The average worker in the
United States loses about 7% work
days a year because of temporary
illness, says the Twentieth Century
Fund.
perjury, not spying.
But there is no time limit on when a man can be
tried for espionage committed in wartime. Chambers’
' part in the spy ring ended before the war. Hiss con-
tinued in the State Department through the war. He
did not leave until 1947.
The
Of (
i;
w hil
for t
With the help of the new immunity law Congress or
grand juries could reopen investigations of peacetime
and wartime spying. If they do, they may want to
question Hiss or grant immunity to others to learn
more about him. The penalty for wartime spying is .
death.
If through the immunity law the government got
evidence which Hiss denied under oath, although war-
time spying was not involved, he might find himself
confronted with a brand new perjury charge.
By JOHN CHADWICK I went to a hospital yesterday with
_ . an injured elbow, 1™ -----
WASHINGTON ( — By letter, said she was not authorized to
telegram and postcard, senators report on his mail.
are being advised how to vote on An aide of Sen. Watkins <R-
the bitterly contested issue of
whether to censure Sen. McCar-
thy (R-Wis).
A check with a number of sen-
ators on both sides of the contro-
versy, as well as with others who
sure committee, said his mail is
running “heavily” in favor of Mc-
Carthy “but I don’t attach signifi-
cance to that.”
"The people who are critical of
McCarthy feel that they have al-
ready won their fight, that he has
been censured by the committee,”
Johnson said.
Sen. Ervin (D-NO, another com-
8 Space Patrol
10:30 4 Abbott and Costello
8 Dallas County Talent
Show
11:00 4 Mr. Michael
A Movie Marques
11:15 4 Barker Bill Cartoons
11:80 4 Winky Dink and You
11:48 A Farm Editor
8 Touchdown
13:00 4 The Lone Ranger
A Football Forecast
13:18 A NCA Football
But human beings are not like ants, they are in-
dividualistic in nature and must have freedom to do
their best. That is why socialism and ant-like regimen-
tation are not the answer to man’s problems. To pro-
gress and gain contentment and profit from his work
and at the same time preserve his individualism, is
all important to him. He can’t do this under ant-like'
socialism. • .
i \
degrees ---——---------------
Dr. Lena Skiles suffered a badly A A
dislocated right shoulder when she] FUA I repares
fell at her home, 1721 Bolivar] I I 1 M
Street Budget 111 Case
Grand Prairie stopped the Den- “
ton Broncos by a score of thirty-
Looking Back Through 1 — ,
r» 1°c, . > vi I Beneath it is a chapel where me-
Record-Chronicle riles
1-/9-54
2228
2s2-,2ax
have not announced a stand
brought reports that their mail
has been running heavily against
censure. There were some excep-
tions, however.
Some senators reported an un-
for me.” He said it came from] the City Parliament elections Dec
Massachusetts to California and *
8 NCAA Football
4 Football Forecast
4 Naira
4 The Bible Saya
4 Western Theatre
4 Learning To Lire
4 Cartoon Time
TELPHONE C-2551
NOTIC R TO PUBLIC:
Any erroneous refleetion upon the character. reputation or standing of
any firm, individual or corporation will be gtadly corrected upon being
nailed to the publlshers’ attention.
BERLIN (Fl—The Communists
will try to win a political foot-
hold in Ail ed West Beilin through
KLAcCID THOUGHT HE HAD SOLVED THE
•TOWEL PROBLEM ONCE AND FOREVER BY
LOADING THE BATHROOM WITH TOWEL BARS.
HAL HOYLE SAYS
U ---t, ea e" - ’ 3 ommgeeemegonzmeemsnyyrmapme
Bastogne One Place Where
• , 1 1
Americans Always Welcomed
BASTOGNE. Belgium UP) — If the real purpose of his drive de-
there is any place abroad where I tested, massed his troops and
an American can be sure of a, again assaulted Bastogne, a prize
warmly sentimental welcome. It is he hoped would restore morale on
here in this small Belgian town, the German home tront.
made famous by a word—"nuts!" Shelled by ground fire, bom-
•Nuts ” is the reply an Ameri- barded nightly by Nazi planes, the
can genera1 is supposed to have civilians of Bastogne suffered Side
made to surrender demands of by side with theeir American de
Germans besieging Bastogne dur- ] fenders __
ing the Batile of Bulge Casualties were heavy Of some
Whether that is the word the. 10,500 homes in the Bastogne area,
general really used—or. as some nearly 9 000 were destroyed or
claim, it was the Army’s censors! heavily damaged, and this takes
translation of an even more forth no account of the public buildings
right barnyard term — it summed] reduced to rubble.
up the determination of the men Bastogne has made a great
who fought here it helped im comeback Today between 80 and
mortalize Bastogne 1 85 per cent of the buildings have
Today tills is still known as been reconstructed and one has
“The Nuts Citv ” There is a | to look to discover signs of the
Nuts Museum" that preserveswar.
wartime mementoes Visitors find The wartime camaraderie has
FIVE YEARS AGO
Dentonians were gripped with
g eyeu
Alger Hiss, the ex-diplomat whose name has been
used as a synonym for treason, must have thought
many times as the years slid past his prison cell:
"What’s in store for me? Will I be questioned again?
Will I be in the headlines again? And perhaps, for
something else I say or deny, will I wind up in jail
b
.......
9100 4 SMU Coll
A Sia Gun '
HOUSTON (P—Federal Judge Al- ... , ,
len B. Hannay is expected to rule! mittee. member, said he had been
'receiving unusually heavy mail
. w,e , , n. Operations Administration may—
Leslie Davis, formerly of Pilot not—go out of business
Point and Denton, now of Pas- • -
saic. New Jersey, was here fr a
ONE TOWEL RACK ROR < i
TOU-ONE TOR ME-AND)
ONE ROR EACH OF --
THE KIDS? NOW
MAYBE WE CAN
KEEP OUR TOWELS
SEPARATE:
GE FOUR 1'rrtEDITORIALS AND FEATURES : THE DENTON RECORDXHRONICLE • : : FRIDAY NOl’EMRER 19, 1954
The deer hunters have begun
the return home and some of them
have had good luck. In fact, such
luck that they can’t make a re-
turn hunt. They bagged the limit
on the first trip. D. B. Boyd and
Grover Stuart got two nice ol’
bucks, while Sheldon Ryan and
Billy Lanford managed to get one
each.
The Communists have not gam-i V
bled at the polls out of their own
domain since October 1946 Then
in voting in all of Berlin, they
received 15 per cent of the total. |
Since the city split int» the Allied 17
West and Communist Fast in 1948, 4
there have been two West Berlin ] •) I
elections and the Reds did not ven-! (e‛
ture into either. k2
Their entry this year, at the
risk of a disastrous public rebuke,
puzzles Western politicians. Some
suggest they hope to make propa-
ganda capital of the campaign by
loudly calling for peace and Ger-
man unity and promts ng an end
to unemploymen* in six months.
Again?" -C .j .
He may not have to wait long for the answer. Wednes-
day two congressional groups—the House Un-Ameri-
can Activities Committee and the Senate Internal Se-
curity subcommittee—said they’re thinking of calling
him after he gets out of jail Nov. 27.
Hiss’ career crashed to a halt when Whittaker
Chambers, confessed onetime courier for a Soviet spy
ring, told of secret papers he said Hiss gave him.
For denying Chambers’ charges. Hiss was convicted
of perjury in 1950 and started serving his five-year
sentence March 22, 1951. The verdict in effect branded
him a liar and traitor. He is getting out after serving
31/2 years. The law provides time off for good be-
havior. ., ,
Hiss a lawyer, will probably never be permitted to
practice again. He’s been disbarred in New York and
before the Supreme Court. He has lost his citizenship
rights. He can’t get a passport to leave the country.
His lawyer, Chester Lane, of New York, says Hiss
will try to vindicate himself.
The most Hiss could have hoped for was that he
might not again have to face congressional commit-
tees or federal grand juries unless he could vindicate
himself convincingly. ,,
But there has been a fundamental change in the law
__which the government may now want to use for
further investigation of Hiss—since he went to jail.
This year Congress passed the immunity law as a
weapon against subversion.
It lets the government—Congress and federal and
grand juries—grant immunity to a witness to force
testimony against others.
At the time Hiss was jailed juries or committees
investigating spying before, during or after the war
could be blocked right and left by witnesses who re-
fused to testify and escaped punishment by saying:
“I refuse to testify under the Fifth Amendment,
which says a man can’t be compelled to give testimony
which might incriminate him.’
Now if committees, or grand juries working with
the Justice Department, want to investigate spying,
they can single out one individual, perhaps a minor
suspect in a spy ring, and tell him: • ......
“We want you to tell us about this spy ring. We 11
grant you immunity to punishment for anything you
aid. We want to use your testimony against the big
shots." ___,
A witness who refused to talk after being offered
immunity could be cited for contempt and, if convicted,
jailed. Before the immunity law, if he refused to an-
swer questions under the Fifth Amendment, he could
not be failed for contempt. '
Hiss neither refused to answer questions not plead-
ed the Fifth Amendment, he eouldn’t be jailed for
contempt. .
He denied he gave secret papers to Chambers and
was convicted of lying. But the government was never ’
able to prosecute him for spying.
Chambers said Hiss gave him the papers before the
war, which was peacetime. Unless a man is tried for
peacetime spying within a limited time after the of- .
fense, he can’t be tried for it at all. Hiss wasn’t brought
to trial until five years after the war. The charge was
* ' 8
- '
.5' ,. '
.. N
. .. . . that most of the mail he received
Smith is charged with conspiring was against McCarthy.
with two police characters, one a Sen. Monroney (D-Okla), a Me-
federal prisoner, the other an ex-! Carthy critic, said he is receiving
convict, to obtain illegally a quan-! only about a dozen letters a day
tity of narcotics. [ on the censure issue, and that they
Final arguments in the 10-day I are running about 3-1 in support
trial were heard by Hannay yea-1 of McCarthy.
terday. Smith waived a trial by Other reports on mail:
jury. , I Sen. Knowland (R-Calif): pre-
1 »
N
A .
4:30 A Six Gun Theatre
8 Howdy Doody
4:48 4 Vartety Fair
5:00 A See Saw Zoo Club
8 Kiddie Karnval
5:15 4 Portia Faces LUa
5:30 4 Party Tima
A Sports With Sherman
8 Prontier Playhouse
8:40 A World News
5:50 A Evening Newa
5155 A Weatherman
8:00 4 Talk About the Weather
6 Cowboy Thrill*
8 Evening Eaiton
8:10 4 Bporta Today
8 Weathercast
8:18 4 The World Today
8 John Daly & the Nawa
8:80 4 Douglas Edwards Nawa
A Rin Tin Tin
8 Coka Tme
6:48 4 Perry Como Show
8 Camel Nawa Caravan
7:00 4 Mama
5 Ozzie and Harriet
8 The Jack Carson Show
Airborne divisions held the key
Bastogne area for vital days at
the start of the offensive, a stand
that caught the admiration of the
world. Less well known, but even
more bloody, was the fight that
followed soon after when Hitler,1 stands- a great star-shaped me-
। morial raised by the Belgians in
________ . . — tribute to the 76,890 Americans
‘2%
454688
- Tho, Prena *• enUtted exchustvely to ths um for publicatton of
all the locni news printed in this newspaper, as wel m all AF news ats-
T1U'
f
t
i .)
5 PI
8 Mystery Playhouse
10:45 4 Nighttime Movie
11100 8 Toniqht
8 Tonight
ig
e e e e
SATURDAY — NOV. 86
3:48 4 Ability Counts
3:00 4 Adventure Theatre
6 Post Gains Scoreboard
8 Saturday Playhouse
3:30 4 Questions that Count
A Teen Times
4:00 4 Cowboy Weaver Show
4:30 4 TV Bible School
A Sixgun Theatre
8 Cowboy Classics
4:48 4 Cartoon Time
A:00 4 Big D Jamboree
A Movie Marquee
5115 8 Cowboy Classics
5:30 4 Featurette
5145 4 Scoreboara
8:00 4 News
8 Kit Carson
8 sporta Figures
6115 4 Sports Spotlight
6130 4 Best the Clock
3 Hopalong Cassidy
8 Nlhsi and Albert
7:00 4 Jackie Gleanon Show
8 Mickey Rooney Show
*8 They Stand Accused
7:30 8 Place the Face-
8100 4 Two for the Money
5 Spectacular
S stop the Musle
8:0 4 My Favorite Husband
8 Break The Bank
0:00 4 That’s My Boy
8 The Stork Club
8:80 4 Forsign Intrlgus
8 four Hit Parade
8 Duffy's Tavern
10:00 4 Wresng
A $potuight on Tekas .
8 Rocky Ring. Detective
10:18 A Weather Teiefacta
10125 i News Final J
10:30 8 Spores with Sherman
8 Mystery Playhouse
10 40 3 Movie Maruee
11:00 4 Movietime
8 Channel 8 Theatre
Publiched every afternoon (except Saturday) and gunday by: Denton
Publishing Co., Me., 814 B Hickory St
Entered es second class maU matter at tha poetoffice at Denton. Texas
January 13. 1021. according to Act of Congress, March 8. 1872.
sunsRIPTION RATES AND INFORMATION
Singles copies Ac for weekdays: 10c for Sunday.
City Canter- 300 per week.
By man In Denton and adjoining counties, only where carrier service
is not available: 60.s0 per year; six months. MOO; three months. MAO;
one month, 9130.
._
ART BENSON«
2151 MONTROSE AVI.. ।
CHICAGO 18, ILL. *
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 94, Ed. 1 Friday, November 19, 1954, newspaper, November 19, 1954; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1430950/m1/4/?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.