Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 286, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 1, 1954 Page: 4 of 20
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Thursday, July 1. 1954
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Denton
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Fourth Dimension
a big man with a big heart and
how he’s going about it.
porters in trying to improve his would dry up food crops by "over- pression don’t get out of hand.
state’s assets in every legitimate
You
guy
a
Television Schedules
like Dan Thornton.
By Fred Neher
(As annouinced by television stations.
A
cXA
4:15
4:80 6 Bobby Peters
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LOOKING BACK
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In Denton
THERE OUGHTA BE A LAW!
Five YEARS AGO
8
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DENTON RRCORD-CHRONISLE
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PROPOSITION
get the Academy. When he told
Secretary Talbot goodbye after a
visit to the Academy lite he
By FRANK CAREY
AP Science Reporter
11:15
11:20
11:25
11:30
1
i
1, a boy, in the Denton
and Clinic.
*
♦
Coke Time with Eddie
Fisher
Kiddle Hit Parade
6
8
4
5
d ‘lL’
4 News
4 Carry Moore Show
the new Air Force Academy. Stark
ing was using a crutch; he ex-
F
1 at the man and the reasons for his being
a security risk.
N
N
8
10 15 4
Hal Boyle Says:
Analyzing Wallets ..
I
1
----------- , MY LAWVER AND MY
COR MONTHSJ BRQKER ARE ShLL
I
I GOT A
FRIEND WHO'S
GOT A COUSIN
who cleans
THE STABLE/
BET 2
W»J
SIXTH! M
Mothwallet won’t invest in a PAIR OF
Shoe laces WITHOUT an F b i REPORT--
a big ranch, took an active part
in every effort that was made to
blma
PLEASE, MR. MOTHWALLET!
— YOU’VE BEEN
7-5-54
I I ALWAYS invest-
igate thoroughly
BEFORE rwRT/
E. H. STERLING, NEPHEW- OF
former governor, Ross Sterling, is
running for state treasurer in Colo-
rado. He was in Green Mountain
Falla for a day.
He moved from Beaumont to
Castle Rock, south of Denver, in
1933. He has a large ranch at
Castle Rock north of the site for
&
-
75
5
be trusted with his country’s secrets.
An ordinary man, brushed aside like this, might
disappear into obscurity. The 50-year-old Oppenheimer
never can. He is a genius. He is among the top five or
six theoretical physicists of the world.
. He directed the making of a wartime A-bomb. He
is head of the Institute for Advanced Study at Prince-
ton, NJ. He is known to scientists everywhere. Work-
ing with them and exchanging ideas with them has
been his life. He can hardly begin another.
Yesteryears
Gt
■
u.
■ MT
WATS
‘EE
ANSWER?
By E. J. HEADLEE
i e ,
3 e
l m batting five hundred ... I‛ve met four new boys in’ two
have called for dates.'*
M "
N :
THE RESTAURANT OWNER IS
Jerry Miller. His mother, who
lives in Waco, comes up each
summer to serve as cashier. The
first thing they asked about was
the L. L. Millers (not related),
who lived next door to them in
/7
174
7%--
But beoy! DOES HE COVE TO A ajc
DECISION ON A PROPOSTON LIKE THIS--
ANO
,2
WBAP-TV
5
11:00 4
_______Commission this week voted by a
44 majority that Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer is a security
risk and cannot be trusted with this country’s secrets.
Below, James Merlow of the Associated Press gives the
THE DENTON RECORD.CHRON IC L E
--------------------------■■■ 1 ■■■----
Final Edition
Let’s Talk About The
Weather
Weather Telefacts
OSCOA UKANOiH.
~er 2721W.MANST,,
M~-_F r- wy,
IW.
PEOPLE.” This sign is made
of evergreen pine needles. It is
of course, done by the women
of the community.
The soloist was a beautiful young-
lady from Oklahoma City, vaca-
tioning there. She sang the 23rd
Psalm, “the greatest song ever
written.”
DR. MILL’S SERMON WAS SIM-
pie '(and so is the New Testa-
ment). It was about feeding God’a
sheep.
I
2430
§:7
8
KRLD-TV
4
THURSDAY — JULY 1
4 Martha McDonaid's ,
Kitchen
8 Kiddle Karnivai
6 Ann Alden
News
8 Dinah Shore
ararursr
MM*
m
E
2
-
-'2
tn ’ Te
2
MR. BLEVINS SAID, "IF YOU
want to see any particular person
in the Southwest, just sit on that
bench at the front of the drug-
store, and he will come by in an
hour or so."
5
■
... 28
mU
Subject to change.)
WFAA-TV
a
Fashion In Fares
Musical Memo
Julie Benell Show
Catholic Report
Good Morning Pastor
GREEN MOUNTAIN FALLS,
Colo. We attended that little 1
church in this mountain town
again. Though the tourist season .
has hardly gotten started, the sanc-
tuary wes well filled.
They do not have a regular
pastor. During June, the preach-
ing is done by Rev. John Stuart
Mill, a retired minister (denom-
ination unimportant), who lives in
Colorado Springs. During July and
August the pulpit is filled by out-
standing ministers on vacation in
Green Mountain Falls. This is all
arranged by a local interdenomina-
tional committee of fine Christian
people.
THE MOST PEACEFUL AND
devout atmosphere is always there.
There is a large sign back of ,
the pulpit across the length of
the wall, "THE MOUNTAINS r
SHALL BRING PEACE TO THE 1
UA,
egeeca
*
Austin when Mrs Miller’s late 5:40 a Kiddle Hit Purade
busband (a prominent Waco at- 64 * Nummer Hliday
torney) waa attending University a Camel News caravan
of Texas Law School, and Mr. 5:05 » Evening News
L. 1 Miller was teaching in the 6:00 ’
Austin High School. 8 Evening Edition
can’t stop
ges*M
Automobile production has become so synchronized
X in all its operations and has achieved such efficiency in
mass production methods that a completed car leaves
* the assembly line two weeks after the raw material is
X purchased.
'7-
3*-"*.
Freer exchange than at present between the dollar,
the pound sterling and the currencies of leading Euro-
pean nations is particularly important because they fi-
nance the vast bulk of the world’s trade, says a new
Twentieth Century Fund study.
. i4a3 p8za ,2. ... • .
.kesa‛ s. : • t
Traffic “solutions” — street widening, one-way
streets, expressways, tunnels—while making escape from
the city easier, have usually resulted in heavier con-
gestion in the city’s core by providing greater access
to the already overburdened central area.
c sfr •
such as "catastrophic droughts,
storms, floods and other pheno-
mena. ...” “
And finally, Congress wants the
committee to recommend to what
extent the government should ex-
periment with or engage in wea-
ther control activities.
Some federal work already is un-
der way. Army, Navy, Air Force
and Weather Bureau have re-
search projects.
The Weather Bureau has been
conducting extensive cloud-seeding
tests in the Seattle area. Meteor-
ologist Ferguson Hall, the man in
charge, says results still are being
evaluated. He adds, however, that
as of now he does not think weath-
er control on any kind of worth-
while scale will be worked out.
This opinion is echoed by one
of the top scientists in the bureau,
Dr. Harry Wexler, who maintains
that if rainfall increases claimed
by commercial rain making firms
were real "they would stand out
like a sore thumb — and such has
not been revealed, at least in the
cases we have studied.”
Orville sums up the work of his
investigators this way:
"If the advisory committee finds
that weather modification projects
cannot produce Important results,
FRIDAY — JULY 2
6:00 4 Morning Show
5 Runup
8 Today
6:35 4 Agricultural Nawa
6:30 4 Morning Show
6:55 4 Local News
7:00 4 Morning Show
5 Breakfait Club -
7:35 4 Local Weather
7:80 4 Morning Show
7:55 4 Local News
6:00 4 Jack Paar Show
5 Ding Dong School
6 Maggie and Her Friends
8:30 5 One Man’s Family
8 Cowboy Classics
8:45 5 Three Steps to Heaven
8:00 4 rll Buy That
5 Home
8 The Money Man
8:38 8 Morning bevotionals
0:30 4 Strike ft Rich
10:00 4 Valiant Lady
5 Theatre of Romance
6 Bride and Groom
10:16 4 Love of Life
5 Movie Marquee
8 Hawkina Falla
10110 4 Search For Tomorrow
8 Betty White Show
10 46 4 Otuiding Light
e5e
~ag"
.69
Out of evry 10 persons in the world, 6 live on
farms and depend on agriculture for a livelihood, esti-
mates a Twentieth Century Fund report. This ratio
* varies considerably from continent to continent: in
North America only 2 persons out of 10 depend on agri-
X culture in contrast to 7 out of 10 in Asia and Africa.
It was almost 12 months ago—July 7, 1953—that
Lewis L. Strauss, who only three days before had be-
come chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission
; (AEC), ordered a re-examination to determine whether
X the government should continue to trust Oppenheimer
- with some of its most vital secrets.
X . Most of the witnesses said he was trustworthy. A
- few said he wasn’t.-The board decided he was loyal
5:45 4 Perry Como
5 News
8 Camel Newt Caravan
8:58 5 Evening News
6:00 4 Mama
6 Cowboy Thrill
8 Evening Edition
6:10 8 Weathercast
6:15 8 Baseball Hall of Fame
6:85 5 Weather
6 30 4 Topper
6 Stu Erwin
8 Life of Rlley
7:00 4 Playhouse of Stars
5 Pride of the Family
8 The Big Story
7:80 4 Our Miss Brooks
5 Who’s Ths Boss
. 8 Soundstage
8:00 4 My Friend Irma
5 Ozzle & Harriet
8 Gillette Fights
8 30 4 Favorite Story
5 Pepsi Cola Playhousa
8:45 8 The Big Playback
8 00 4 Meet Mr. McNutley
5 Little Theater
8 Dave Oarroway Show
8:30 4 Telephone Time
5 Barn Dance
8 Royal Playhouse
9:45 4 Music Hall Varletlee
10:00 4 he World Today
6 The Texas. News
6:10 8 Weathercast
6:18 8 Baseball Hall of Fame
6:36 6 Weather
6:30 4 Four Star Playhouse
8 The Lone Ranger
8 Where's Raymond?
7:00 4 What Do You Hava in
Common?
B Dragnet
8 The Goldbergs
730 4 Big Town
5 Ford Theatre
8 The Name's the Sams
8:00 4 Pubile Defender
5 Martin Kane
8 Dollar A Second
8 30 4 Place The Face
8 Groucho Marx
8 Boston Blackie
6:00 4 To Be Announced
5 Justice
8 Captured
8:30 4 Tour TV Theatre
5 Death Valley Daya
8 Cinerama
H Mystery Playhouse
10 08 4 Sports Tonight
- 5 News Final
10:30 4 Nighttime Movie
5 Sports With Sherman
10:36 6 Movie Marquee
10:46 8 Channel 8 Theatre
Messrs and Mines. Jack Craven, 10:00 4 The World Today
Sr. and Junior, have returned from 5 The., .News
Barrington, Rhode Island, where 10:15 • Lrs Faik about the
they went to visit their daughter weather
and sister, Mrs. Ann Greenup, and 5 Weather Telefacts
e.—n- ■ 8 Mystery Playhouse
amux:, . . .. m 10:38 4 Sports Tonight
A girl was born to Mr. and Mrs. 5 News rinAi
Lee Castell, 612 Pierce street, 10:30 4 Nighttime Movie
Thursday in the Denton Hospital 10:95 » sowtimth sherman
and Cuinic. i0 g Channel 8 Theatre
( LOOKING INTOW
\ WATTGR! GOOP
—PAY!
HP
"22 (i
— 9
EEzam-p--
z SVBSCHIPTION BATBO AND DrORMATION her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. E.
Arh- -. E. .. _.an... ... mnan. Shahan, MI North Elm Street.
Mer“soosurwoek"Miptsunde* Mrs. G. R. HUger of Ponder
„___ I ..... .. . . . ____ underwent a tonsilectomy here Sat-
I in Denton and adjoining counties, only where Carrier serviee to not arda, morning
b: SOM pet year: th moth, 66.00: three months, MW one month, urday morning: . „ _ .
Born. To Mr, and Mrs. R. La.
1 cuenta. nant ..... m.. a ar.. Hancock of Lewisville Saturday
. 6330;05‛ntonr8°015: 91600 Pe year: “3 momth* "7 30 three morning, . . _
mmw‛"N" __ ’ Hoaplta}
TELEPHONE 0-3661
K d ..' B sorics ro PUBLIC: TWENTYYEARS AGO
• 2 ’ - ------- .. . ... __• . ____....__ . .. . Allotment of $695,000 funds for
3 S43sesnenaen2sa " 5 -52 * “XIA
• anyzh* 12Me1 attenton —____
22". wMaznov’rue -a-22l
Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer will bear until he dies
‘ —as if he wore it as a mark on his forehead—the gov-
‘ ernment verdict that he is a security risk who cannot
2:45 4 Cash Quiz
3.00 4 Mary ’ Carter's Cook Book
5 Movie Marquee
8 Pinky Lee Show
3:30 4 Variety Pair
8 Howdy Doody
4:00 4 Martha McDonald’s
Kitchen
8 Riddle Karnivai
4:15 8 Ann Aldn
4:30 5 Bobby Peters
8 Frontier Playhouse
4:45 4 Party Time
6:00 6 See Saw Zoo Club
6:15 8 John Daiz and The Newa
6:30 4 Douglas Edwards and The
News
- w^mlni^^^ Pulte
•Montian. AU adverttaing orders ate accepted on Andy Crawford and his daugh-
_ i ter. Miss Cora and Mrs. Ruth
MEMBEa or TUB ASBOcIATED PRESB Minor returned from an automobile
M. U .MN , tomhoumtor pubMenttop . tript the-RloGrandesValey.
"T printed in thia newapaper, aa woU aa aS A* news du- Corpus Christi, Brownsville, Me-
Allan and San Benito,
5 Museum Adventures
13:00 4 Double or Nothing
5 Farm And Home
8 The Money Man
5 Weather
13 20 5 News
13:30 4 House Party
6 Little Theatre
13:45 8 Noon Edition
1:00 4 The Big Payoff
5 Mrs. USA
8 Showtime Matinee
1.30 4 Bob Crosby Show
5 Ask Washington
8 Guest Book
1:55 8 Charm School
• 2:00 4 Brighter Day
0-wKat‛s Cooking
8 Welcome Travelers
3:15 4 The Secret Storm
3:30 4 Portia Faces Lite
8 On Your Account
MR. AND MRS. R. H. BLEVINS
Falls’ largest grocery store, are
friends of Cliff and Lola Hastings.
They are all from Duncanville in
Dallas County. The parents of both
families went to school together 4:00
in Duncanville quite a while ago.
, , yrE ing habits of American men and
By HAL BOYLE sys they are "probably as good
NEW YORK w _ Did you know a test for individual psychological
that the way you carry your wallet factors" as sny.
reflects your personality almost as Cooper found that many men to-
much as the way you wear your day periodically shift their wallet
face? from the back pocket of their
Howard Cooper, a psychiatrist, trousers to their inside cost pock-
has analyzed the pocketbook-pack- et
"That is a sign they fel inse-
. cure about people as well as wor-
Senate Sends 3-.^ safety o their
"On the other hand, a man who
Al _ ~ .to* Q:lre- - carries his money in a metal clip
MOne DIIIS separate from his wallet is less
* concerned over material wealth.
_ / — •4. But he is the type who hates to
I O VresidenT have the routine of his life upset.
" % He jg less afraid of losing his cash
than he is of losing his driver's
WASHINGTON (P-Hurrying to license."
beata midnight deadline. Congress Cooper said the man who carries
Wednesday passed end sent to th walet at all is either completely
White House the. final threeannup free and easy or so insecure that
appropriationsihills forte "he fights it by over compensating
fiscal year starting today, _ by pretending he is careless
The Senate completed action on about money.
the measures within an hour after A fourth type, the fellow who
the House had passe . his wallet from pocket to
The three measures, provide Socket haphazardly, is probably in
funds for the State, ustice d motionai flux about what mon-
Commerce Departments, the La- things in his life-
bor and Welfare Departments, and eycandother.thins
the judicial and legislative branch- really mean to him. He s unset
es of gosernment. tled. ..... ...
The bills were compromises of The psychiatrist said that the
different measures passed pre- guv who keep a cluttered Wallet,
viously by the House and the full of .cards he never throws
Senate. away, is related in type to the
They make these appropriations: stamp collector.
Legislative Department, $70,695,- "He may be stingy, rigid of mind
754; Federal Judiciary, $27,501,740, and stubborn. He is likely to be
Labor Department and related generous only in spurts. But a man
agencies, $311,784,500; Welfare De- with too neat a wallet may have
partment, $1,163,413,761; State De even more of a withholding per-
partment, $114,110,000; Justice De- sonality than one with a messy.,
partment, $176,864,500; Commerce wallet."
__ __ Department, $837,022 000; U.S. In- How about the guy who marries
plained that, “I had a run-in witi a A / -1 r • . i, formation Agency, $77, 4, and still keeps the picture of a
a bull and came off second best.” Weather Device ' The total of $3,278,506,255 in the former girl friend in his wallet?
------ bills cleared toilay is approximate- IThat probably shows’an im-
IT IS NOT SURPRISING THAT • ....................ly $100,000,000 less than President pulse toward self. destruction,”
Academy. The Colorado Lzosa U.S. Could Halt Rain in USSR
ture voted a million dollars with **** --B ..... **“3 Chairman Bridges of the Senate
which, to buy the land; and Colo- Editor's Note—In one of man’s seeding” those same clouds. It is Orville's personal view that APoratpns thTbill^by both
rado Springs, through it's cham- earliest attempts at forcing rain And fortunately for the United if. the United States would devote houses'of ^Congress today -would adtety (jfUTK it
benpf.commerce, raised.,, from the skies he angrily fired can- States, Russia could do little to re- the same effort and money to wea- mark the second time in 25 years Toll
which was used in promoting the non balls at likely looking clouds. Kaliate becaus• most wea- J ... n regilar Noprorriations I rWlU IS t Utt
plan to bring the Academy to a But since a brilliant discovery in tier moves from west to east. ther experiments that ittdoes to .... , , gunrress p rme 30.I
site, 10 miles north of Colorado 1946, his attempt has been more 'The possibility such a spectacu- atomic, eyelrp""increase pre'eipi- Usually Congress has to pass Of 430 PcrSOTlS
Springs. scientific and to ip progress on an lar device as this might be used tation over any area almost at will, emergency legislation to keep the
rnvvnwn nAN HORNTON impressive scale. Here is the last in some future total war should using favorable situations ” government running pending action CHICAGO (P—The National Safe-
GOVERNOR DAN THORNTON, of three articles, 1s the story of be discounted.!’ according to sn8 aoae uuamons, the regular money bills. ty Council predicted today the com-
theeman who heads a group set .However, he empqastszes. ing weekend will produce the worst
up by Congress to advise it on the the. ad Visorycommitteedoesnno July 4 traffic jam in history and
chances for success of plans to take it for granted weather control said 430 persons may not escape
controtthe weather. ------- will or will not work. .. ----H will so report----and thus deter it alive.
Cant Howard Orville USN Ret In the law setting up the ad- farmers and ranchers from spend- . . na.0 w..t.na
---- _ — . WASHINGTON "W aI may who charted the weather for Doolit- visory group, Congress said appli- ing their money unwisely ... . hethre day,holid mom than
said, "You know I am praying someday be possible to cause tor- "e‛s raid on Tokyo and helped pre- cation of scientific advances to the "if the committe? finds out it. mE^clr attrac. "hirhwthan
for Colorado.” The Secretary was rents of rain over Russia by seed- pare the forecasts for the North problem of weather "appears to be can confirm the results claimed by u • - ’
quoted as replying, "You know, ing clouds moving toward the So- African and Normandy invasions practical." reputable and scientifically com- "More travel does not have to
sometimes prayers are answered.” viet Union. ’ is chairman of an 11-member ad- Primarily, Congress wants the petent operators—claims of rain-mean more accidents 1 f„every
Dan Thornton realizes that there Or it may be possible — visory committee charged by Con- committee to determine whether fall increases of from 7 to 50 per (nver.uses. ore cau ion,Ne,
are a lot of things Colorado needs opposite effect is desired — to gress with seeing that current ef- experiments, public and private, cent and more — then, the dollar Harearporh, council presment,
and he leads his aggressive sup- cause destructive droughts which forts at rain making and rain sup- strengthen possibilities of large- benefits to agriculture, industry sad.
. .------- -in ----" "------- j-----* ------- ------- . - scale weather control. and government will be so great "Let’s make this holiday a
But the committee has a coroL as to be incalculable.” wreckless one, not a reckless one."
lary job: to determine whether fed-
eial legislation is necessary to be LIFE'S LIKE THAT
sure that attempts at weather mod- -
ification- don’t result in disaster, T"
( PEADLEG$? I'LL PUT A
—COUPLE OF HUNDRED ON
— —7 the nose ! K
/ % thanks TOR )
--( AM ths TP? J
F4-/ V
IM ,9 =
■W’: ' -
gmm
8 Frontier Playhoume
4:46 4 PLty Tims
6:00 6 See Saw Zoo Club
8 Time For Magic
8:18 8 John Daly and the News
6:30 4 Dougias Edwards and the 12:15
X - grand jury. —
The majority of the commission decided Oppen-
# heimer waa a security risk because of “defects in his
£ : character”—they pointed to his lying—and to his as-
sociation with Communists, not before he was entrusted
■ with secrets, but afterwards. _____ _
If the long opinion of the majority could be summed
* z up in a few sentences, this would be it:
kas . When a man is entrusted with high secrets, which
7 may affect the nation’s welfare, he is given high re-
sponsibility. He is considered capable of living up to
X that responsibility or he wouldn’t be given the secrets.
There are clear rules laid down by which his re-
- sponsibility, or sense of responsibiity, can be judged. As-
X sociation with Communists makes his sense of respon-
sibility suspect. The AEC held Oppenheimer violated
5 . the rules and defaulted on his responsibility.
umsmmneiji.uuxidmij.2m..ahlnougmumu
—------—-------:-----
g0,*.
( ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
A t n I)
CiiitorialPa9e Doings
....
I ' -A
_pppenheimer Case
2,
ne Atomic 1
X but not a man to be trusted with secrets and reviewed
- his story:
X He had been a fellow traveler. He had Communist
* friends. He attended meetings with them. He was en*
- gaged to one woman who was a Communist and mr-
X ried another who had been. His brother and sister-in-law
were Communists for a time.
X All that was before he went to work on the atomic
- ' bomb. After that one of his old friends, Haakon Cheva-
X- Her, tried to tap him for information for the Commu-
X nists and was turned down. Oppenheimer delayed tell-
ing the government about this, then lied about it, lter
told the truth. He continued his friendship with Cheva-
- Her, visited with him as late as last December.
Oppenheimer appealed to the full five-man AEC.
X , Yesterday it upheld the previous verdict: he was a se-
curity risk. The vote was 4-1. The one commissioner
who did not consider Oppenheimer a security risk was
Dr. Henry D. Smyth. (-
The majority of the AEC did not suggest, and
there was no evidence of any land to show it, that Op-
penheimer ever gave any government secrets away.
Smyth stressed this: “ . . . The most important
evidence in this regard is the fact that there is no in-
dication in the entire record that Dr. Oppenheimer has
ever divulged any secret information.”
This, among other reasons given by Smyth as a
defense for Oppenheimer, may trouble many fair- -
minded men who read the record and ask themselves
u what they would havedone if they had been sitting in
I - judgment on Oppenheimer.
2 , Z Yet this particular point hardly bean examination
$ in this case. If there was any evidence that Oppen-
heimer had given away secrets there would have been
no doubt he was a security risk and he wouldn’t be a
L — # • problem for the AEC then. His case would be before a
g
.24
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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/m1/4/: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.