Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 286, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 1, 1954 Page: 2 of 20
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Thursday, July T, 1954
THE DENTON,RECORD. CHRONICLE
7,
MARKETS
Stockholders
y
Stockholders of the newly form-
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season.”
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TODAY thru SAT.
Filman
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THURSDAY - FRIDAY
Features at 8:20 and 10:50
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WEDDING FLOWERS
given up as the French concen- and Haiphong.
*■ IRTmiATt TMUTIt
PLACE
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EARLY
Florist
8
Ph. C-2561 501 W. Hickory
321
Drive carefully, you might injure a customer of mine.
3
McCallister
214 W. Oak at Coder
Phone C-7425
I
PEGBT ANN GARNER* PRESTON FOSTER g2
PIECE GOODS
TODAY thru SATURDAY
— Also 2nd Feature at 9:35 —
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• Nuggett Prints
* Dotted Swiss
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1
BATTLE OF THE GORILLAS!
1
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AVA
CLARK
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r OPEN UNTIL 8:30 TONITI
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CO-ED
DRIVE-IN THEATRE
INDOOR AUDITORIUM
r ■ TVAK Pr d "I
ANATOLE
ROBIN-LITVAK
2± St
YOUR
ORDERS
n 1
trate all their defensive power in
the do-or-die sector betwene Hanoi
Our personality for today is Bill Hinkle, winner of
the boy's singles title in the Kiwanis Club's Annud
Tennis Tournament held this week.
the body of Howard Ellis
Mad a bookcase barrioade.
> of Fort Worth, Sue
Pampa, Joe Dabney of
Ar AN,
DAN V
Gingham Checks
• Bembergs
Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Bush will
leave Sunday by train for Spokane,
Washington, where they will visit
their son, Dr. Douglas M. Bush,
and family. “We expect to return
to Denton about the last of July,”
he said, “and I'm looking forward
to being out there during the fruit
3"--
THESE BEAUTIFUL MATERIALS WERE
em Look Sister... 1
r, You Gala Know 7
rp The Hood Who
4 Killed That Cop!"
+
FOR WHITER, BRIGHTER WASHES, GET BLU-WWITE
FLAKES CONTAINING A MIRACLE BLUING
There are quite a few Crepe
Myrtle shrubs in bloom here now
and they add to the beauty of the
town. Too, some of the Mimosa
trees are in bloom. There is hard-
ly a month in Denton that some
of the shrubs or plants don’t of-
fer their attractiveness.
J. W. McNiel, former Denton
County resident now of Carlsbad,
New Mexico, has been here the
past three weeks visiting with Mr.
and Mrs. J. R. McCreeless of near
Denton and Dave McNiel of Barton-
ville. McNiel left Denton for New
Mexico in 1914. “I am on the re-
tired list now, not because I want-
ed to quit work but on the doc-
tor’s advice,” he said.
i R _
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%
DRIVE-IN THEATRE
TONIGHT ONLY
22
5
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— Plus --
Sylvester Cartoon
Latest News
The Soap that AGREES
with Your Mln
21
PLAID AND STRIPID VOILE
H SOLID TISSUI CHAMBRAY
*893
LINWOOD
ROBERSON
old baby to a local hospital for a
checkup.
►
Lyle E. Montgomery Co.
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ner blad-
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Henry D. Robinson will leave
this week to spend sever el weeks
with his daughters in Amarillo,
Roswell and Ruidoso. In Amarillo
he will be with Mr. and Mrs. Reed
Schuler and in Roswell, he will
visit Mr. and Mrs. George Mer-
tton Sayre. In Ruidoso Sayre is a
member of the faculty of the New
Mexico Military Academy.
_ \
Signs of progress! Time and wear
had brought two or three small
holes in the sidewalk in front of
the McCrary building on the west
side of the square. While we never
heard of any one falling as a re-
sult of stepping in the holes, it
might have been the cause of a
fall. The holes have been filled
with concrete. There may be other
such places in walks in the busi-
ness section of the city and it
might be well to get them filled.
a I ch
Paceoh
k.1.ty
)
►
TODAY thru SAT.
"ARROW IN THE
DUST"
with
Sterling Hayden
Coleen Cray
Sport-Cartoon-News
ROUNABOUT
(Contnued from Pege i) >
Should we decide to do that we’ll
either build a new home or add
to the present house. Wichita may
not be quite as hot as Denton
during the days, but I believe the
nights are not as comfortable as
they are here. Denton seems to
get a night breeze that Wichita
doesn’t.”
Blaze Destroys
County Barn
Special t the Record-Chronicle
PONDER — Fire Departments
from Ponder, Justin and Krum ar-
rived too late Tuesday morning
to extinguish a barn fire on B. D.
Gammill's farm seven miles north-
west of here.
Gammill estimated damage at
$5,000 for the completely destroyed
barn, which housed feed and farm
equipment. The blaze started fsom
faulty electrical wiring, Gammill
said.
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STRIPE SEERSUCKER
SOLID BATISTE ....
Filmed in Ceylon 1
BuFNMT
HenWK
“fDozeckEOLOR
eo
at 3:15 p.m. was a 1949 Oldsmobile
sedan driven
________by Mra. Effie G.
Koiner of Krum and a 1950 Ford
EXCESS WASTE
' tztize2itzsm,iq
■■M. When NW everyda condftion, such
Jown Copied
a mental hospital fought a
k dual with SOO policemen in
k- 1
1^1
Phi Elliott of Fort Worth, trom-
bdnist with the Aces, la author of
• new tune, “Fees, the Fireman,”
which will be presented for the
First time. The opener for the show
wil be an original composition by
Eddie Does, saxophonist with the
Ageo,
• Others on the show will be Bill
st Side home yesterday and
id eight officers before he
lied.
gA5MiNga
KARNITE
50c Per Car
59
Yd.
dbury and a vocal group of
NT students.. ‘
IDNEYS
IIIST REMOVE
Elis' wife Janie, first target of
Ito rage, suffered minor wounds
to the left leg and left hand.
■ One pattolman, Paul White, M,
Was ta critical condition with
wounds in the chest, neck and
arm.
Two others were listed in aer-
GABLEGARDNE
tot . • -GRACE KELLY
15 adonuc-moerun
M-G-M's MIGHTY TECHNICOLOR ADVENTURE!
TODAY’S LIVESTOCK
FORr WORTH (AP)—Cattle 1,900:
steady. Good alauglfter yearungs and
heifers 17 00-49 00; fat cows B.00-
13 00; good end choice slaughter
calves 14.00-17 00; common end med-
ium 10.00-13.00; stocker calves and
yearlings 13.00-17.00.
Hoge 150; butcher hogs 25-50 high-
er; eowe scarce. Choice 190-240 1b :
butchers 24.50-25.00.
Sheep 1.300; spring lamhe. steady to
strong; aged wethers and ewes scarce;
feeder lambs full steady; good and
choice spring lambs 18.00-10.00; cull
and utility springers 8.00-16.00: good I
and choice slaughter yearlings with
No. 1 pelts 13.50; spring feeder lambs
13.00-15.00. ’ -- — J
IDWMDB.
ROBINSON
PAUMTTE
GODDARD
FAGETWO
E,
11 .Lu
us condition. They were Dora
Ward, 27, shot in the head, and
Marita Lon,, shot in the right
tale. U. Paul Pearcey, 60, was
I fair condition. Four others were
released after treatment for ieaa
serious wounds.
Five toster children who had
been placed in the lis home by.
the Welfare Department slipped
nit of the bouse before the shoot-
tg started and were not harmed.
Central stte hospital said Ellis
had been on leave for a year and
, a half nd had been checked by
monthly.reports: The hospital said
Us June report was the most favor-
ible since his release.
TWNSALARRANGED.
EWmshmaaee
P' b maad
FORMERLY PRICED 1.19 & 1.49 Yd. NOW
dmnvt . ’ - -......... ■ •
2
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9' ■
• •*E- etarring
EUZABETHTAYUOR,
DANXANDREUOS
Prosper Mill
Hit By Fire
Special to the Record-Chronicle
PROSPER — The recently con-
structed Kimbell Mill elevator
here receivec an estimated $5,000
damage in a fire of unknown
origin Wednesday night, according
to Roy Skelton, manager of the
elevator.
The blaze started at about 8:30
p,m„ Skelton said, and was ex-
tinguished about one and one-half
hours later by the Prosper Volun-
teer Fire Department.
As far as could be determined,
no wheat was lost in' the blaze,
Skelton said, adding that the ele-
vator contained 280,000 bushels of
new storage space and 180,000 bush-
els of old storage space.
No injuries were reported.
,2
12
t n 0a 32M,
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
2-PIECE SOPA, basainet and mattress,
punch bowl with 24 cups. 118 Gotos.
FVRJflU«D APA*TMENT for cou-
ple. 1002 M. mm. key, 331 W. Byca-
mof^c-aeea___________
UNIVERSAL Portable sewing machine,
umed ia months, bargain, 531 W.
Byonmor, 0-5962.’"—— _
WANT to BtJT, a-hadroom brUk with
dan. wnito P.O. Box 1004, quote
price and detaila. ’
WANT -TO-MUY approximately 100
aerea unimproved, near Denton.
Write details and price P.O. Box 1094.
BUSINESSHOUSE for rent. 60x70, no
mPareine meters. Mrs. Johnson. C-
dbVPLk MBntM 3 or 3 bidroom
unfurnished bouse, rent or lease
C-5751..__________________________________
DOUBLE BONUS COUPONS
GIVEN EVERY THURSDAY
MOGAMBO
IT MEANS "TE GREATESTI"
REDS
(Continued from Page 1)
lages peopled by around four mil-
lion Vietnamese were dropping into
the hands of the troops of Vietminh
Gen. Vo Nguyen Giap.
It also meant that while these
millions were being abandoned to
communism, the French soon
would be shakily controlling only
the lifeline between Hanoi and
Haiphong and a strip of territory
in the northeastern Indochina in-
cluding the town of Moncay on the
Chinese border.
That too, however, may soon be
YACTUALLTNe
l FILMED V
/ BYM-G-M)
•g ON SAFARI
2 IN AFRICA!
R. C. Patterson, former superin-
tendent of the Denton public
schools, was here on business Wed-
nesday. Patterson moved from
Denton to Whitesboro after he left
the school system in Denton and
is now a dealer in farm imple-
ments.
as---.
When the gunfire finally was
• MH
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toin workshop on religion and men-
tal health. The morning’s second
speaker was Clint Pace, former
Dallas News reporter who is now
regional director for the National
Citizen’s Commission for Public
Schools.
Approximately 50 guests were
present Tuesday evening when Mr.
and Mrs. W. W. Marshall of the
Stony Community entertained
members and families of the Den-
to: County Nurses Society with a
barbecue and fish fry.
The Justin Chamber of Com-
merce’s all-community picnic July
5 will begin at 6 p.m. at the How-
ard Gibbs picnic grounds. It is to
be an informal gathering with each
family bringing a basket supper.
The Texas Baptist Conference
for the Deaf ill open a three-day
meeting at Camp Copas Friday.
Some 200 members are slated to
attend. Dr. W. G. Maddox, Denton
physician, is to deliver the wel-
coming address Saturday morning.
PERSONALS
Mrs. Joe Reese of Fort Warth
and her granddaughter, Candy, vis-
ited Mrs. Effie Temple, 315 Pearl,
recently.
Mrs. C. L. Oliver, 311 Mounts,
has had as guests the past 10 days
her sons and daughters-in-aw, Mr.
and Mrs. C. A. Oliver of Houston,
and Lt. and Mrs. Clarence L. Oli-
ver, Carol and Charles III, of Nor-
man, Okla. Mrs. Oliver will leave
by plane this morning for an ex-
tended visit with her daughter
Miss Clydene Oliver of Boston,
Mass.
TRAIN
(Continued from Pge 1)
—It weighs about 250 pounds,”
McCoy said.
McCoy explained that the T&P
handles traffic jointly over tracks
from Fort Worth to Whitesboro
with MKT and that he received re-
ports on the wreck.
The Rev. Philip Walker of the
First Methodit Church spoke this
morning to the NTSC health educa-
LerfiTTTTTTKImIID"5 A
ww
KIRK DOUGLAS
ASr
(©30
TODAY'S PERSONALITY
i
g67ge
., Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Barnes, 810
W. Sycamore, have announced the
pickup driven by Mrs. Etheline
Stallings Boyd of 502 Ponder Street
in Denton.
The Koiner car turned over after
the collision but the driver was not
injured.,
The infant riding in the pickup
was taken to a local hospital but
was released after examination.
Officers who Investigated the ac-
cident said high weeds on a vacant
lot obstructed the view for both
drivers.
The Oldsmobile was going east
on Sunset and the pickup north on
Alice when the accident happened.
GNazkar, 3 ?; Y
,wguco
gnu-e - - . •
■
2 •
ed corporation for canning soft
involved in the two-car collision, drinks here under a Mission
• 5 t -
'06 ■
32
4
dled by 26 bullets. His dirt
bite frame house was splintered
y thousands of rounds of ammu-
ition.dims——---------——- I
BOY CHOIR
SOLOIST
WINS $500
Sammy Long, a Denton Civic
Boy Choir member from Grand
Prairie, was the recipient of a
$500 prize Wednesday night on
the "Strike It Rich” television
show from New York He ap-
peared on the show with Victor
Young, head of Decca Records
in New York.
Smmy was accompanied to
New York by George Bragg,
director of the choir, and Mrs.
Willingham and Mrs. Barry,
Grand Prairie music teachers
who sponsored Sammy for the
program.
----mi------------------
Special Guests
Set For Workshop
Dr. Faborn Etier of the Univer-
sity of Texas and Miss Mary E.
Connelly of Boston University will
be guest consultants at the NTSC
business education workshop Sat-
urday.
Dr. Etier will also speak Friday
night following a watermelon party
at the home of Dr. O. J. Curry,
dean of the School of Business Ad-
ministration. His subject will be
on the effect of general education
trends on business education. He
is chairman of secretarial studies
and business education at the Unit
versity.
Dr. Etir will speak again at 7
a.m. Saturday..
Miss Connelly, who is assistant
professor of business education
and secretarial studies at Boston
University, will speak at 10 a.m.
Saturday on methods of improv-
ing shorthand transcription. 4
birth of a grandson born to Mr.
and Mrs. Jacob Price, Fort Worth.
Teddy Burgoon of bilene is the
guest of his grandmother, Mrs.
Anna Burgoon, 322 Texts.
HOSPITAL NOTIS
Flow Memorial Hospital
Admissions—Miss Josephine Al-
len, Collinsville, surgery; Mrs. Dan
Lawson, 1305 McKinney, medical;
Mrs. J. N. Cartwright, 216 E. Syc-
amore, surgery; Mrs Henry T.
Davis, Justin, medical; D. P. Chris-
ty, McKinney, medical; Jimmy
Keen, Lewisville, surgery; Mrs.
Ollie James, 317 N. Elm, medical;
Thomas G. Wood, 1400 W. Hickory,
medical; Mrs. Jack Clark, Fort
Worth, surgery.
Discharges—Mrs. H. K. Arm-
strong, Sanger; Mrs. Jack Grant
and baby, Denton; Mrs. Mabel
Fleming, 714 W. Hickory; Mrs.
Wink Criswell, 110 Cedar; Mrs.
Jack Hood and baby, 913 N. Locust;
Janie Lynn Skaggs, Celina; Mrs.
Edna Fielder, 408 Fry; Thomas G.
Wood, 1400 W. Hickory.
BIRTHS
A girl, Cynthia Ann, to Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Nelson Cartwright, 216
E. Sycamore, at 8:05 a.m. Wednes-
day at Flow.
A boy, William Homer, to Mr.
and Mrs. William Homer Smith,
612 Framer at 8:45 a.m. Wednes-
day at Flow.
A girl, Ruby Mardella, to Mr.
and Mrs. Danny Ernest Lawson,
1305 E. McKinney, at 11:35 a.m.
Wednesday at Flow.
Denton Hospital and„Clinic
Dismissed—Jimmy Bland, ill
Blount.
Kim Street Hospital and Clinic
Dismissed—Joe Reding, 113 In-
dustrial.
de c- •
JULY CLEARANCE
E. —
' :e Embosed Organdy
• Pique • Voila
The Denton County National and
the First State Bank will be clos-
ed all day Monday in ebervance
of July Fourth, which this year
falls on Sunday. In fact, many of
the business institutions here will
be closed on Mondayr July 5.
Pg ।
3105 "
5g** PRiVATB 3-ROdM apartment, 1013
55 a^fjr^oo.wfc
Fill
3 INDIANAPOLIS —A 54-year-
old man on convalescent leave
Denton Girl To
Be On Stage Show
Carol Ann Singletary, Denton
senior high school student, will be
one of the featured entertainers on
"‘Fessor Floyd Graham’s Friday
. ' night atage show at NTSC. She will
be presented in a . rhythm tap
PatientBahy Shaken Vp
_ in Two-Car |nl _ ,
ips Coupon Here Slate Meeting
An accident at the intersection TT r I
of Alice Street and Sunset Drive Hera I ndlaur
Wednesday afternoon turned one AaUh • - VUA
car over and sent a three-months- • •
FLOODS
(Continued from Pass X)
Ortgon was one of those st the
Piedras Negras airport early to-
day. He owns a school at Rosita,
150 miles south of here and teaches
there with his daughter. His chin
trembling, he said in a pitiful
voice:
“I came here to look for my
three children. They were visiting
here. I looked all over and I want
to find them. Maybe they got away
to Eagle Pau, so III look there.”
He was crying when he boarded
the plane for the Texas side.
John Morales, a fat little grocer
from Galveston, had better luck.
His family lives in Piedras Negras.
“I found my family all right,”
Morales said. “Some of them
moved to a nearby little village,
Villa Fuente, and I found an uncle
and his fimily camping on the hill,
but they had lost everything they
had.”
w
94 - . . -A---
' 2 -
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Orange Company franchise were
scheduled to meet in Hubbard
Hall at noon today.
A board of directors and officers
for the corporation were to be
elected at the meeting.
A plant for the canning corpora-
tion is now being built beside the
Whitson Food Products Company
on the Fort Worth Highway. The
canning plant is the first of its
kind in Toms although the Golden
Ago beverage company is planning
on one in Houston.
Stockholders for the new com-
pany are W. P. Whitson Sr., W. P.
Whitson Jr., W. D. Whitson, J. M.
Whitson, Joe W. Nichols, Walter
Parker, Erwin Upton, 'Dr. Dick-
son Boyd, Dr. Albert Wyu, W. F.
Hamilton, Dr. Charles Saunders,
Herschel Kornblatt, W. R. Blair,
L. W. Killian, Dr. BUl Remley,
Dr. Joe Holland, all of Denton, and
Roy J. Lovelace Sr. and Roy J.
Lovelace Jr. of Fort Worth.
The building being erected on
the Whitson site will house only
the canning machinery while a
Whitson warehouse will be used for
storing the new plant’s products.
The canning machinery for the
plant was purchased at a cost of
$100,000. The amount paid in to
the corporation by the stockholders
11 $165,000.
The switch to cans by Mission
was dons in order to attract the
“carry home” trade of soft drinks.
The iz-ounce can is more easily
stored in refrigerators and offers
no inconvenience after its pur-
pose is served.
Cover girl Cathy Monahan says: “I
make my living as a model, so beauty
is my business. And SweetHeart is my A
beauty soap. Its more luxuriant lather, £
so rich and fragrant, keeps me fresh all,
day. Best of all, SweetHeart Care leaves™
my skin baby-soft and smooth.” - __
o Today-change to thorough Care- «d“N35
with pure, mild SweetHeart Soap. See Ah - "
-In just one week, your skin looks N *Gs
softer . . •smoothert 0T.n
IEE
“ TEXAS
<^ MNT0N3 ^ FOPULAR
2 ."ammasud-AAAam mmnza.
lAMT Ve
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UTTLE OF DU SExtS!
Box Office Opens 5:45 ’ Dial C-5459
For Show Time
Adults 50c Students 40c Children 20c
Denton Man Fined
On Liquor Charge
Willie A. Alexander, Denton Ne-
gro, entered a plea of guilty this
week to charges of illegal posses-
sion of liquor in a dry area and
paid a County Court fine of $100
and court costs. >
Alexander waa arrested this week'
by Constable Sam Gentry, Liquor
Control Board agent Malcolm
Branch, and deputy sheriff W. E.
Tipton.
In his home officers found 10
cans of beer. Across the street
from his Denton residence, they
found seven quarts of wine and
five half-pints of whiskey in < a
weed patch.
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 286, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 1, 1954, newspaper, July 1, 1954; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1449725/m1/2/: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.