Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 234, Ed. 1 Sunday, May 2, 1954 Page: 2 of 47
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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-
mmermmarom • r
*
1
"Sundoy,mya,nu
--. ;
aseam
-
A. M. Housden
%
107-voice Mnior high school
,73
201
4
r] 1,
I
L E. Bennett
2
-WVHFMJ W-Ae4HE, • FPJ-WwV-8J
journal published in New York.
The study was made in two men’s
1, director
t th
R.
artehent of music
MARKETS
recital
in
of
May 4. The program, a
part of Musie Week activities, to
608 Withers: Mrs.
Smith,
Chinese MIGS
Reported Set
BIRTHS
Last Rites Held
force is making aerial reconnais.
Jet-
ordered to strike.
graving Co.
. (Continue* from Paos 1)
to merely an attractive prize to go
so.
the man who win her.
Miss
■aid the wicked fictional
.03
Darkness
muhicationa
al
era who
■
PERSONALITY OF THE WEEK
Berlin fell to the Rssians on
TOMAT
I
and W. A. Braley, 909 Avenue F,
Lyle E. Montgomery Co.
214 W. Oak at Coder
Rhone C-7425
*
I
y
I
{ ■
N
- -X
"Yum confidence...
om reward’’
Denton County Rural Directory
Scheduled For June Delivery
Jaycees Set
Installation
2 Cars Collide
Near Corinth
Dies At 70
Special to the Record-Chronicle
>1 Was dis-
e reported
court and
Former County
Woman Dies
ehunoaa
after an
and knocked-out cci-
made early estimate
drilled by Jeff Cross of Denton,
we understand, has been termed
a dilster and the test abandoned.
Drilling is continuing on the Knox
farm, southwest of Justin and south
Dismissed: Mrs. D. T. MeKin-
ney, Denton Rt. 1; Mrs. Homer
Jeeter, 1300 Neff; Tony Veanueva,
The number of MIG15 fighters
concentnrated on airdromes along
the China-Indochina border, includ-
ing two big fields with hard-sur-
faced runways, is more than 600.
say persons returning from the
Far East. In addition to the MiG’s
there are believed to be a number
of light, twin-engined jet bombers.
to the
I. They
pastor of
t Church.
An eye operation was perform-
ed on Dick Wood of Denton at
the McKinney Veterans Hospital
Thursday morning. It was under-
stood here that he stood the oper-
ation nicely and it is believed to
have been successful, however, it
will take several days befdre re-
sults will be definitely known
2 '
A ..
Sme
JOHN SHRADER JR.
. . . Jr. C of C president.
are today observing their birthday
anniversaries
a ■ »
F yddie
w I be I
we hear, covered 23,000 acres of.
Land.
home,
lay eve-
HOSPITAL NOTES
Plow Memorial Mespital
Admitted: Elmo Ferguson,
Hickory, medical; Leroy
Funeral services for Mrs. Cora
Elton Keith, 77. were held Friday
morning in the First Presbyterian
Church USA, with the Rev. Pren-
tisa Barnett. officiating.
Special to the Record-Chronicle
LAKE DALLAS, May 1—I. E.
Bennett, 72, a resident of the Lake
Dallas community 70 years, died
at his home Friday afternoon after
an illness of several months.
Mr. Bennett, a retired farmer,
was born in Georgia and came to
Texas at the age of 2 with his
parents.
Survivors include his wife; four
sons, Lynn Bennett of Victoria;
Dean Bennett of Big Spring, Her-
shel Bennett of Dallas, and Ken-
neth Bennett, with the Army in
Germany; two daughters and sev-
oral grandchildren.
A 1951 Chevrolet, driven by Joe j
Goes, and a I960 Pontiac, driven
heard the case reset for a later
date.
Traster is charged with negli-
gent homicide in the death of
former Denton County Sheriff Ones
Hodges.
Last Monday, April 26, the trial
was postponed because of illness
on the part of the defense lawyer.
Wednesday, April 28, the case
was put off again for County At-
torney Darwin Wilder to refile
his complaint against the defen-
dant.
Prior to the current term of
court the case had been postponed
once.
Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Estes of Okla
homa City, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Crockett of Altus, Okla., Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Copp of Fort Worth and
Miss Marlene Taylor of Denton.
band of 86 pieces. McKinney enter-
ed an 80 piece band.
Competition was concluded Sat-
urday night for approximately 3,-
top visitors to the college campus.
The league music festival was
conducted by Floyd Graham, local
chairman, for schools from 11
counties.
Some 40 schools in the region
were presented in competition, with
junior and senior high school bands
GENEVA
' (Continued from Fage 1)
St. Julien for an appointment with
French Foreign Minister Georges
Bidault at the latter’s villa.
He was expected to confer brief,
ly with Bidault and then have talks
with all Big Three Rperesentatives.
Dinh’s spokesman said the diffi-
culty over invitations to the con-
ference dates back to the final
ROUNDABOUT
(Continued from Pace 1)
Caruthers of Denton, has been
transferred from Indiana to the
baseball team of Denver, Colorado.
John was a star third baseman on
the Southern Methodist Universi-
ty team when he was signed by
the Philadelphia “Phillies'. He was
in the spring training camp of the
Phillies in South Carolina.
ory, will be honored with a birth-
day party to Glen Rose today. Den-
tonites attending will be Mrs. J.
H. Fultz, Miss Betty Fultz, Mrs.
Kilby Hodges and Mrs. Allyene
Crockett.
Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Tayler, 1405
woman to smarter than men, but
if she to attractive, foolish, or vir-
tuous, she appears below average
to intelligence.
Along the Texas-Mexican border,
the Texas Rangers so admired by
SCHMITZ
• SUVCE 187 ‘
109 W. McKinney C-2214
T. I. Standefer
J. B. Floyd
Licensed Embalmers
Funeral Divectov
TORNADOES
2 (Contnued from Page 1)
iter of Tul-
L
Bek
‘ —-in
wtetnumnukca’
Mra. Keith died at her
1007 W. Sycamore, Wedusd
Dr. M. K. Bonney, professor < *
psychology at North Texas State
are Dr. Elton R. Miles of Sui Rosa
State College, president, and Dr.
John Q. Anderson of Texas ARM
College, vice president.
112
120
nu.,
___________will be held at
. m. Sunday in the Trinity Meth-
5
1 ‘
•F
by Ike Taylor, collided Saturday
afternoon at an itersection near
Corinth, on Highway 377, accord-
ing to Buster Gibbs, deputy sher-
iff.
“Both ears looked like they were
totally demolished,” Gibbs said.
Occupants of the two cars were
released at Denton Hospital and
Clinie after receiving first aid
treatment.
L. C. Brown was riding in the
Chevrolet and Taylor’s daughter
was in the Pontine.
Shearler,
30, and MW. J. W. Rubottom,
'Biw andi Shearler’s
dormitories at
Dy. 3. WIN
of the TSCW4
and Margaret
or’Xan.
College, to the author of "A Stu-
dy of Some Factors Related to
Sociometric States in a Men’s Dor-
mitory" recently published in So-
Admitted: Miss Viola Lawson,
908 Greenlee, medical; Mrs. W. E.
Pallbearers were Clyde Carpen
ter. Coit Carpenter, Sam Fulton of
Denton; Herman Fowler of Big
Spring; Ross Arnold of San Mar
cos; and Newland Talkington of
Midland,
wenjured when
nek Tipton in south-
naeryintheday.
ered injuries, one
a storm battered
Nothergiwwere so-
a twister at Paw.
W
SNOW
(Continued from Pass 1,
gan a survey of business damaged
in Friday’s storms. The survey
is being made so a request might
be made to the Small Business
Administration for disaster loans.
Along the Rio Grande, another
big rise headed down the river
toward the reservoir behind Falcon
Dam,
A crest of 10 feet above normal
was expected at Laredo Sunday
morning. The water came from
heavy rains in the Devil’s River
First Meeting
New Building
Special b the Record-Chronicle
BUST,May,1-The Justin Vol-
rtment met last
huildingfor the
1 employee of a Celina furnl-
store,
tea. UM Allen, surgery; Master
Freddie Atkins. Rt. 1. medical;
Master Kent Smith. Mg Parkway,
surgery; Mrs. A. K. Blaizer, 1116
Ball, surgery; Mra. A. W. Good-
win, Rt 1, medical; Mrs. Max
-------------
J. G. Sublett and baby. HIT
Cleveland; Sammy Dean Bryan,
-02
d
cow and Peiping decide Red China The group will begin the program
should intervene more actively in, with a dinner at the Dallas Press
the Indochina fighting. | club given by the Dallas Times
The white vapor from high-flying. Herald at 7 p.m. Sunday
craft, seen almost as far down as - ■ -- -
Saigon near the southern end of
-.-9 PLANTS
Also a Full Line of Other
Band students from the high
school won first places in concert,
sight reading, and marchink. Den-
ton was the only band to receive
first division in sight reading The
choral unit won first in concert
and eight staging Only two bands
in the region won sweepstakes —
Denton, a 3A school, and Wichita
Falls, a 4A school.
The 72-piece ban: from Denton
high was directed by Carroll Me-
Math and the choir of 73 voices
was directed by Jerry Jackson.
The North Texas Junior High
School was awarded first place
for their choral group in concert
work. The unit was not entered in
any other event.
Vernon’s musicians, 208 strong,
were entered in al divisions of the
competition and both the junior
and senior high school groups rated
first places. The junior high chorus
was 107 voices and won first in
concert and eight singing. The
• etore, Peterman was a former
of Denton ounty where
had lived about 10 years
e to survived by his widow.
» wore incomplete
at Helms Funeral
* !
Bob Hollowwa, who has been un-
der treatment at Dr. Martin's Cli-
nic, Dallas, for the past ten days,
is expected to return home Mon-
1 day.
One of the largest acreage trans- Hor nAophina
fers fohr oil and gas leases was *
.. .
“I have lived at my present home
310 Stroud Street, a long time."
I said Frank Gilbert, “and during
that time I have seen quite a few
rains fall. The little branch of Pe-
can Creek that runs by my place
was higher this last rain than I
have ever seen it. In fact, the
branch got out of banks, doing
some damage to gardens along-
side."
y to
here.
elina Man
ies Suddenly
total to the Reovd-Chreniele ‘
ELINA, May 1-Sheara F.
Irman,:.92 ryarold candidate
cqnstabl of precinct 4, died
owing • heart attack while
wig hia laws about 5:15 p. m.
communique of the Berlin confer-
once. The term “interested states’’
was used by the Big Four in dis-
cussing the composition of the con-
-7 -7
Joiun Joptci
Anl .* - .Hi,
THE RENTON RECORD.ERRONICLE
V ' ————TTrra
Denton High Musicians Make
Clean Sweep Of Region Meet
singing. These were the largest
"sur&X'i-M-.
the Wlehita Falls High School
♦
Burgi*r "Let’s figure up and
see how much we made on this
haul." •
Assistant Burglar: 'I m too tir-
• P-Let’s writ and CM out in
the morning newspapers.Gulf
Breese
Mrs. Mary Ann Washington,
90, former long-time resident of
Roanoke, died Saturday afternoon
in Austin. Services are scheduled
for Monday at 10 a.m. In the First
Baptist Church in Justin, with the
Rev. Eddy Broome in charge.
College told of Mexican legends
about a miraculous image of Christ
la the Big Bend country of Texas.
Mody C. Boatright of the Univer-
\ •) speaker at a Friday
night banquet. NTSC's Dr. George
Hendricks, retiring president of
the society, reported an out-of-
town registration of about one hun-
W persons for the two-day
meetig:
New officers elected Saturday
mythof American women as char-
acterized by popular magazti
fiction. The min goal to tot
this mythteal woman, she said. is
id also to got married or protect her mar
rlage.’The woman to nearly always
described as attractive, foolish,
practical, virtuous, or wicked, or
During Monday and Tuesday the
_ - students will visit Station WFAA,
Indochina, suggest the Red air Rogers and Smith Advertising Ag-
force is making aerial reconnais- ency, Dallas Morning News sta-
sance of targets it would attack if tion KRLD-TV, and Blanks En-
Hermes Nye and Mrs. Miriam
Gallerstein of Dallas sang and
played guitar accompaniment in a
program of Civil War ballads -
Ineluding the mournful Northern
“All Quiet Along the Potomac"
American boys are looked upon as
“something like Hitler’s Gestapo"
In Mexican fols ballads, the group
was told. This came in a paper
A girl was born to Mr. and Mrs.
Geno Monaco, 1206 McCormick,
Friday at 12:43 p.m. in Denton
Hospital and Clinic.
Rites Set For
Mrs, Witherspoon
Special to the Record-Chronicle
CROSS ROADS, May 1 - Fu-
neral services for Mrs. Fannie
Witherspoon, 66, will be held Sun-
day at 3:30 p.m. at the Shiloh Bap-
tist Church. Burial will be in the
Old Shiloh Cemetery.
Mrs. Witherspoon died Friday of
a heart attack. She was stricken
at her home here and died on the
way to a Denton hospital.
Survivors include her husband,
Bert Witherspoon; three sons, Da-
vid Witherspoon of Dallas; Charles
Witherspoon of Aubrey, and Claude
Baggett of Dallas; a daughter,
Mrs. Blanche Connally of Dallas,
a sister, Mrs. Nannie Holley of
Lewisville; a brother, Lish Mc-
Combs of Walters, Okla.; eight
grandchildren, and two great-
grandchildren.
Sanger Rt. 2; Mn. D. D. Yancey
and baby, 2417 Bolivar; Mrs. Lec-
tor Relyea and baby, Haslett.
Elm Street Mospitel and CHnie
Admitted: Mn. J. M. Atkins,
700 W. Mulberry, medical; Sam-
my Doan Bryan, Ponder, surgery.
Dismissed: Mrs. Fat O Riley
and baby, IN Welch; Mrs. Niel
Jones and baby, Pilot Point; Mrs.
and the song of an urreconstructed
rebel of the carpetbagger era ‘
nazcsausnss#
kees and wishdwe’d kled three
ERROL FLYNN’S DAUGHTER—Arnella Roma Flynn, 1
4-month-old daughter of the Errol Flynns, poses in the 1
arm* of her mother aa cameras dick for her first por-
trait. She was born in Rome on Christmas Day. The
mother and girl are shown in Hollywood. The mother is
actress Patrice Wymore. (AP Wirephoto) -
Burial will be at the Justin Ceme- - . m.1
tery, under the direction of Goen HAc H mIMaur
Funeral Home. •ICS I IIUdy
She was the widow of George
Second Group
Of Jurors Set
* H2. ;
The second group of IN moa
summoned as jurors for the Coun
ty Court trial of Gregory Eugene
Traster will report for service
Our personolity of the week is Mies Barbara Bakar,
who this past week was named outetending’actvess
in "You Can’t Take It With You," this years Denton
High School Senior Floy. As personality of the wook,
she will receive a bouquet of roses, courtesy of Lyle
Montgomery Company-
Denton County. Part three will con-
tain a list of all incorporated towns,
cities, and villages and their resi-
dents in Denton County.
A classified buyers guide, made
up of display advertisements of
Denton County merchants, will
make up part four of the direc-
tory.
Each rural home will be given
a house number that can be locat-
ed on a map in the directory, mak-
tag it possible to locate any home
in Denton County, the spokesmen
said. House numbers will be de-
livered to the homes with the di-
rectory. Containing over 6,000
rural homes,.the directory is sup-
ported by local advertisers.
Groups compiling information
for the directory ar headed by
O. L Fowler, secretary of the
Chamber of Commerce; Al Petty,
County Agent, and Mn. Myrtle
Negy, county home demonstration
agent.
Copies of the directory will be
delivered free to people listed in
the book. Other copies will be sold
at $25 each.
ference on Indochina. of Drop.
If invitations are issued on this
baasis with explicitly stating the ___ ________ _
Vietminh status, it will be inter- May 2. 1945 and the Germans sur-
preted throughout Asia as recognj- rendered in Italy on the same day.
tion of the Vietminh regime as a ---• e
state, the spokesman said. si L. W Newton, 2020 Scripture St.,
Dulles, after meeting with Molo- —' ”’ * " — — *----"
tov to discuss again the atomic
pool, went to the lakeside villa of
his French colleague for •lunch
with Bidault and Lord Reading,
undersecretary of state In the Bri-
tish Foreign Office.
British Foreign Sedretary An-
thony Edon dropped in for a brief
talk with the other guests before
lunch.
Gray, 1204 Bernard, medical;
iie Martha Terrill, 326 E. MOI, medi-
will ‘cal;;Mr. D. W. O’Rear, 703 Ave.
‘ A, medical; Mrs. Edna Jeffcoat,
Aubrey, medical; Mrs. Charles
King, Denton Rt. 3, accident;
James B. Wilson, McKinney, ac-
cident; Albert Fisher, Pilot Point,
by Thomas S. Sutherland of Hous-
ton, which was read by Tom Hall
of NTSC. These ballads reveal the
hatred of the Mexican for the "yan-
qu" and demonstrate that our An-
glo-Saxon sense of justice has not
been applied to Latta American
relations, Sutherland wrote.
la other Friday talks, Americo
Paredes of the University of Tex-
as told the legend of a Browns-
ville bandit, Jose Mosqueda, and
Elton R. Miles of .Sul Ross State
Preceding Doble to the Satur-
day morning session wore John Q. to the 1
Anderson, Texas ARM; George D. Houston
Hendrick*. NTSC; Evereti Gillie,
Texas Toch, end Brownie McNeil,
University of Texas.
A Denton physician. Dr. W. G.
Maddox, opened the Friday ses.
sions with a discussion of old-time
folklore about healing, surgery,
and childbirth.
fw tea truck trying to
■ tog storm cellar
kwiater overtook thorn.
rs seller struck near
der, Grandfield, War-
Me, Pawnee, Sasakwa,
of Pooca City and at
N. Locust, today are celebrating
senlvarearda For Mrs. Keith
• -T
Washington, who died in 1947.
Survivors include six sons, Bar-
ney McClure snd M. T. McClure,
both of Bridgeport, M. F. Mc-
Clure of Austin, Zack McClure of
Roanoke, Bill Washington and
George Washington, both of Big
Spring; two daughters, Mrs. Irene
Simpson and Mn. Annie Mae
Craven, both of Austin, and 15
grandchildren.
1710 W. MIU. ( u
Mra. Bessie M. Brown, 311 Hich- Ponder.
surgery: Mrs. V. D. Mikel. Lew-
isville, medical.
Dismissed: Mrs. Alice Reed.
__ . — , - Sanger; R. B. Newman, 1819 Lau-
dometry Magazine, a psychology relwood.
J . , Denton Hospitel end Clinic
of Aubrey,
to a Fort 1
HMM iclude hia parenta
brgthera, Jerry, taro
iofAubrey; four sisters, Mn.
nle Freeman of Denton, and
a, Peggy, and Carolyn of Au
; three grandparents, Mr. and
W. O. Claytor of Denton and
r. Kelly of Blanchard, Okla.
ill oasoftea
Funeral sei
« ist Church, with the Rev. E. L.
CgmiL poster of the Aubrey Bap-
tist Church, officiating, assisted by
troversy* between psychoanalysts
and cultural anthropologists over sity was the
the development of folk culture.
Friday afternoon MinsMaude
Houston of Austin described the
Mra Jack Webb of Amarillo and
Mrs. Phil Campbell and two chil-
dren. Phi) Jr. and Cathey, of
Claude, who have been guests of
their sister and aunt, Mrs. E. S.
Edwards, on Lake Dallas have re-
turned to their homes.
of Watson, Roanoke, medical; Mra.
Minnie Harmonson, 1201 Austin,
The main business topic on last
tek's mooting was a rodeo to
ehjsponsored by the Justin Fire
Monday at 0 a.m.
Last week’s jury pan
missed after they twit
to Judge Jack Gray’a
"SM(vs"0f Let Brooks re-
counted the tale of an Indian maid
m en who. became queen of a nest
m the south- sity of Texas discussed the con-
THIS WEIK'S POULTAY
AUSTIN, May 1 (A)— Weekly
poultry:
South Texas steady after a steady
week. Bupplies were generally ade-
quate. and trading light with olosing
prices unchanged at 34 cents.
East Texas steady through mid-
week, grew about (toady and closed
weak, bupplles were fully adequate.
Trading was moderate to normal with
closing prices mostly one cent lower
at 33 cents to unchanged at 34.
Waco-Coraicane closed week after
a steady week. Supplies were plenti-
ful for a fair demand. Trading was
moderate Cloaing prices were one
cent lower. 33 centa at Waco and 34
at Corslcana.
THIS WEEK’S LIVESTOCK
FORT WORTH, May 1 (AP)—Week-
ly Hvoetock:
Cattle: cows and slaughter year-
lings and alaughter calves unevenly
lower to 50 to 1.50 per hundred.
Stocker claaes were steady to 60
cents lower. Butcher hogs and pack-
ing sows closed 75-1.00 lower. Slaugh-
ter spring lambs closed 30-1.00 lower,
and shorn slaughter lambs and
atocker and feeder lam ba were off
around 3.00 per hundred or more;
aged wethers were 1.00-2.00 lower, and
slaughter ewee sold 80 lower.
Slaughter steers and yearlinga 10.00
-33.71; alaughter cows 7.00-14.50;
bulla 10.00-18.50; slaughter calves 10-
00-21.00; atocker calves 30.00 down;
etocker yearlings 19.50 down; stoeker
cows 10.00-14.00. Cloeing hog top 27,-
00; bows 23 00 down; slaughter apring
lambs 10.0O-33.S0: ntoolker and feeder
lambs 16.00 down; slaughter yearlings
10.00,15.00; aged wethers 10.80 down:
daughter ewee 8.00-6.00: old bueks
4.00-5.00; breeding ewes 8.00-15.00.
( *
m-
Denton High School musicians 107-voice senior high school chorus
made a clean sweep of Regton also,won first in concert and aight
10 Interscholastic League entries * “ '
Saturday at North Texas State Col-
lege, taking • first place to ech
competition entered.
istomer of
The Junior Chamber of Com-
merce will have it* annual instal-
lation banquet Monday at 7 p. m.
in Hubbard Hall at TCW, accord-
ing to Grady McKuin, vice-presi-
dent.
R. E. (Prof) Jackson will be the
main speaker and Judge Jack
Gray will be master of ceremonies.
H. T. Norris and Benny Mibbaugh
will sing.
New officers to be installed at
the banquet are John Shrader, Jr.,
president; Grady McEuin, vice-
president; Dr. Gil Adami, second
vice-president; Bill Hudson, secre-
tary, and Cecil F. Martin, trea-
surer.
Outgoing officers are Jimmy
Neblett, president; Frank Martino,
vice-president; John Shrader, sec-
ond vice-president; W. H. Kamp,
secretary; Jack Messer, treas
urer, and George Hopkins, state
director.
New directors sre Robert Cald-
well, Charles Crain, Jack Gray,
Bill Hudson, H. W. Kamp, Guy
Laney, Jimmy Nblett, Dr. Gil
Adami, L. L. LaRue, Jack Messer,
Cecil Martin, Grady MeEuin, and
John Shrader.
Mrs. Graham
Dies Saturday
Mrs. S. C. Graham, 74, 1002 N.
Kim, died Saturday morning in a
local hospital, following an extend-
ed illness.
Mra. Graham, the former Miss
Virginia Freeman, had been a
Denton resident about 52 years.
She was the widow of S. C. Gra-
ham and mother of Floyd (‘Fes-
aor) Graham of the NTSC Music
faculty.
Services have been set for 2 p.m
today in Jack Schmitz and Son
Chapel, with the Rev Charles B.
Luck in charge. Burial will be in
IOOF Cemetery.
Survivors include two sons, W.
B. Graham of Oklahoma City and
Floyd F. Graham of Denton: five
sisters, Mrs. Chartea Cobb of
Temple, Mrs. George Cobb of Dal-
las, Mrs Clark Brown of Dallas,
Mrs. R. H. MeNew of New Orleans
and Mrs. Georgia Collins of Den-
ton. and several nieces snd neph-
ews.
Bedding Plants
KoWaon Florist
501 W. Hickary
Denton County's rural directory
will be distributed early to June,
a directory spokesman said Sat-
urday.
The directory will be divided
into four parts, it was announced,
with part one including county his-
tory city and county officials,
rural schools, articles on soil con-
servation, 4-H clubs, home demon-
stration clubs, programs to the
county, Southwest Conference foot-
ball schedule, Texas League base-
ball schedule, cty and rural foot-
ball acherules, officials of the Den-
ton Chamber of Commerce, and
the names of all churches in the
county.
Part two, titled “County Gen-
eral,” will include listings of all
people living to the rural area of
gin a three-day tour of Dallas ad-
vertising and publishing agencies
Sunday night.
Along with students from four
other colleges, they are taking part
in the Alfonso Johnson memori-
al student tour, an educational pro-
ject of the Dallas Advertising
League.
Five North Texas State College
business students and their inatruc-
tor, A. N. Harrison, will begin a
three-day tour of Dallas advertis-
ing snd publishing agencies Sun-
day night.
I here say a swarm The NTSC participants are Em-
-------------- jet fighters and! ily Bonham, Denton; David Clark
bombers are poised on airdromes Bellville; Jan Johnston, Mexia and
close to the Indochina border, from Jack Kimball and Phil Miner ‘Dal.
where they can stab swiftly if Mos- las.
PILOT POINT, Msy 1-Arthur
Monroe Housden, a resident of Au
brey for the past 61 years, died
this morning at 7:13 in the home
of his daughter, Mrs. O. C. Podd,
at Denton.
Funeral service will be held at
4 pm. Sunday at the Aubrey Bap-
ttet Church, with the Rev. Delmar
G. Morris, pastor of the New Hope
Baptist Church, officiating, assist-
ed by the Rev. Edward L. Carroll,
pastor of the Aubrey Baptist
Church.
Burial will be in Belew Ceme-
tery, under the direction of the
Smith Funeral Home. Pallbearers
will be L. F. DeMar, J. M. Lllard,
L. M. Galbreath, George BeU,
Marvin Stewart, and H. H. Hudson,
all of Aubrey.
Mr. Housden, 70, was born
March 25, 1884, at Salem, Mo., and
was married to Miss Lovie Hen-
drix at Fort Worth in 1902. He
was a retired employe of the Texas
and Pacific Railroad Company.
Survivors include his wife, Au-
brey; three daughters, Mrs. Podd,
Denton, Mrs. A. M. Alexander,
Grand Prairie, Mrs. J. G. Sitz, Au-
brey; one son, H. V. Housden. Irv-
ing; 11 grandchildren, and 18
great grandchildren.
Other hospitalized crash victims
w re repeated m to satisfactory
e ndition and Wilson was thought
ti be suffering from chest injuries
(King was treated for a broken
riht thumb before he and his
daughter were released.
anvestigating the fatal collision
ware patrolman Pat Berkley and
npombrs of the Denton County
gjil'Wi departmeot .
llness Fatal
To Aubrey Lad
ipacial to the Record.chronicle
Pnor POINT. May -Bobby
Gene Claytor, fiveyear-gld son of
Ifo. and Mro. Eldon.. Claytor
venteen members __ g
lyAtC Folklore Society Meets Here
r items. However, Eeonesm.ia .Wli »■ ■■ ..
to have it finished
signed here this past week. It was WASHINGTON, May 1 UT-Re
probably the largest single assign- ports reaching ‘
ment ever made in the county, of Chinese M l(
according to lease men. The lease.
Chasins and Milhaud.
Couples, that the. Rev. Philip
Walker, pastor of the First Meth-
odist Church, has united in mar-
riage will be honored today at
the church’s morning worship
service and in an all-day program.
At the evening service, the Texas
premiere of “John Wesley” will
be shown.
PERSONALS 4
Mr, end Mrs. J. W. Norton of
Oklahoma City are weekend guests
of his sister, Mra. T. S. Moore,
v 10 gave their address as east
c Denton occupied the other car.
Only Peggy Joyce King was hos-
B talied overnight from the Km*
«r. Hospital authorities said (he
* robabl will be kept several
X’ husband and touryeatola
daughter were released.
An. King, who expect another
chd within ate or right weeks,
4m ta daka A Ra in 4tmma» aAniinm
W} Mia to De in 900a coHGEO9
SotunMmerea a fractured right
a m. loss of several teeth, and
la erations.
■ J. 1. Martin,
Id Sontag, and present a
Aubrey. Burial Beaumont
ty Cemetery. 1 *
2200885,
• -
Hemom-- — sd t. —-m--
eegu 6 ' a qm--amem
ymem n ■ •: - .
S--------—
i , Z__\
Drive Carefully, you might injure
mina.
and choral groups represented.
Judges for the festival were Max
Mitchell, Stinlwater, Okla.; Weldon
Covington, Austin; George Bush-
ong, Dallas; Paul Cox, Athena;
Clarence Gates, Tulsa, Okla.; J.
J. McCoy, Seminole, Okla.; Dr.
Frederick Baumgartner, Nacogdo-
ches; Sherrod Townes, Natchito-
ches, La.; Dr. Archie Jones, Aus-
tin; L. N. Perkins. Stillwater,
Okla.; Justin Bradberry. Artesia,
N.M., and Roy Wallace, Palestine.
School groups were from Wil-
barger, Wichita, Baylor, Young,
Jack, Parker Tarrant, Denton, Col-
lin, Rockwall, Grayson, and Cooke
counties.
Students To Make
Advertising Tour
Five North Texas State College
business students and their in-
structor, A N. Harrison, will be-
The oil test on the Higgins farm, .6.. n..
northeast of Denton, which was1 arpa abo • Del Rio. . ,
Falcon Lake rose one foot last
week and stood at 80 feet depth,
compared to the low of 66 feet it
reached last April 8. It still is
about half as hill as it was last
November when it reached its
highest point to date.
~ r v siLiiii^ir
SEE US FOR
HEALTHY - VIGOROUS
nta; sponsored by the Heaumont
and Clubs. Selectiohe to-be pre
include compositions by CIs
Brahms, Intante; Rachmaninoff,
Man Killed
|n Car Crash
On Hwy. 24
ja,msseswaniss2rmzu"
Iegro, and sent three other per
amis to local hospitals. • .
Admitted to hospitals from the
c r Sanders occupied were the
4 iver, James Woodrow Wison of
McKinney, and Jim M. Wattley
c McKinney.
KNOW LAND
(Continue* from Page 1)
stating his own views about such
restrictions. But he said pressure
is so strong that the committee
will have to writs some sort of
safeguard clause into the foreign
aid bill, or else amendments will,
be adopted on the floor.
The House group is expected to
finish work on the meesure later
thin month. As now worded it pro-
vides for 3 billion dollars in
foreign aid for the 12 months be-
ginning July 1.
Just last week the House beat,
down, 214-37, an appropriations J
bill rider proposed by Rep. Coudert -
(R—NY) to bar the use of new!
military funds to support troops in
combat in any country the United
gtates to not required to defend,
except by prior congressional con-
sent. This would include Indochina.1
-------
-at
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 234, Ed. 1 Sunday, May 2, 1954, newspaper, May 2, 1954; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1441813/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.