Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. [51], No. 290, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 6, 1954 Page: 2 of 8
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EflH?
dh
Wesay, July 6, 1954
' MARKETS
- Rites Set For
1
, 1 i
0,
own .
Dismissed: Mt W. Walker, tM
Ponder.
BIRTHS
i
Denten Hespitel and Clinic
renewed old charges.
*
pital.
Funeral Rites
'i
i
i
. o.
ef in-
the Rose Hill Cemetery in
Fort Worth.
1
after Belton immediately after hie
SPY
‘at Berkley apprehended
'Conttnuad tem Da d
over to county officers during the
Col. Felchlin will leave the Soviet
in my stand that
four grandchildren.
wvernor.
we need
• 'knows I'm in debt.”
mail. We supply oll forms
TUES. - WED.
US
J
I L5
8,4a" 3
In
223 W. OAK
PHONE C-7713
CINEMASCOPE
it.
TODAY'S PERSONALITY
A
Pgte
6
I
WEDDING FLOWERS
elctioms were hold lost Friday afternoon. -
TUES. - WED..
2:
ALAN LADD
a
214 W. Oak at Coder
Phone C-7425
6
A
\
A
4
W\MZA
MEMORY LANE
Igi
0‘"
III
VINCENT PRICE.20/2
TEXAS
BHIA ST IOHN
•HJIIIHTGGTVHN
' 0/
Wk
tor
have instinctively turned to that .child-
prayer and been comforted. Remember?
came out
a million-
to Paris
address.
matter.
Keatin
panying
at the rally in-
ites for lieuten-
Last Rites Set
For Jess Young
flags <
dates
Tivo Fires Are
Snuffed Out
Our personality for today Ie Coral Koenig, senior journel-
ism major from Houston, who was elected president of
Radio Stolen
From Car Here
weekend.
Arrested Sunday were Floyd N.
Dougherty and Ernest Brockett,
both of Denton.
Brockett was arrested on High-
way 24 after an accident that in-
flicted minor injuries to Mrs. Betty
Lou Muse, an occupant of the oth-
er car involved.
was born in Tarr
comber 14, 1989.
Memorial
: Mrs. Si
talked about
check for old
Final Services
Slated For
Mrs. T. W. King
s.ot
Mrs. McKinney
Dies At 78
"Jim, I don't think our daugh-
ter’s old enough to wear a strap-
less gown to the high schobl prom,
do you?”
Father, buried in the newspaper:
"If the thing stays up, then she's
old enough.”—The Laugh, Hilmark.
GAY ROOFING
& SHEET METAL CO.
before election day calling far "the
whole truth."
. N
I
mmionmnnartgmaatssL..,T
Open 5:45 Weekdays
Dial C-5459 for Show Time
TODAY Thru WED.
years and a
for 41 years.
County on Do-
added:
"There i little hope that the
situation which remains untouched
—the Supreme Court Justice who
THIATRI
TONIGHT end WED.
Starts 8.00 8 11:35
K
W, a
("244
A, H
• n;
Captain John Paul Jones, nava}
hero, was born on July 6, 1747;
The Japanese-China War was de-
clared on July 7, 1937 and Ha-
waii was annexed on July 7, 1898.
Alexander P. Kovlyov, second
secretary of the Soviet delegation
to the United Nations, who was
asked to leave on Feb. 3 and who
departed Feb. 10.
Lt. Col. Leonid E. Pivnev, assist-
ant air attache, Soviet Embassy,
ordered on May 29 to leave this
country. He left June 8.
Pivnev’s name made the news-
papers on at least two occasions
during his stay in the United
States, once when he attended the
1951 Detroit air racea and - last
April when he attended a meeting
of the Baltimore chapter of the
American Rocket Society to hear
a discussion of the possibilities of
atomic-powered flight.
The State Department announce-
ment, while saying nothing of the
kind of spying it accused these
men of doing, suggested that the
ouster of the American officers
from Moscow was a retaliatory
move by the Russians. It said this
CO-ED
DRIVE-IN THEATRE
INDOOS AUDITORIUN
A
Members of the Denton Fire De-
partment received two alarms this
morning in time to stop potential
fires before they did serious dam-
age.
The first alarm, at 9 a m., was
to the Clyde Carpenter Construc-
tion Company at 714 East Hickory
street where a hot motor caused
only minor damage.
About 30 minutes later trucks
were dispatched to a residence at
319 Bernard where a skillet and
grease had caught fire.
Firemen reported only minor
smoke damage.
6,000 more beds. We’ll get them.”
Prison reform — “Ask anyone
in the country and they’ll tel you
that Texas has one of the best —
due right mw. i
"Maybe my opponent got sucked
in,” he said. "It's the first ad-
ministration where the governor
w
Farmers Branch; Mrs. Jesse Mae
Murray, Denton; Anita Carter,
_______ -____ be governed
by local communities and not from
— Ami — .
Starts 10:05
fdr attorney general from Fort
Worth and Denton.
Theatre Bonus Coupons
Given end Accepted
Three Arrested
On DWI Charges
City and county officers arrest-
ed three men ever the long holiday
week end charging them today
with driving while intoxicated.
Arrested late Saturday was Jam-
es B. Elder of Denton who was
found driving on city streets. He
was transferred to county officers
who filed charges this morning.
Highway Patrolmen Felix Webs-
’ I f
—WW ..............—- y
Dr. O. 0. Show, past Lleutenant
Governor at Optimist District J,
will install new officers at ths
All four of the Democrat* can-
didates for governor came to Bob
t i yestarday for an old-fashlDned
political rrily and to speak from
the same bandstand on the same
i;
1
ig, in a statment accom-
the report, termed "unfor-
the Clark episode, and he
Wednesday at 9 a.m. to
Methodist C ‘ *
ROUNDABOUT
( Continued from Pags 1)
leu of how they vote. It’s a pi.-
vilege of citizenship to vote for
your choice of candidates and is-
sues. And we don’t mind telling
how we voted on state candidates;
we never take issues on city or
county candidates, since they're
our friends before and after elec-
tion.
I'm very strong in r
local schools should
A
Our services are planned se as not to be a
financial burden on those who remain—
never more than rou can afford.
Shivers Outlines Program
(Continued from Page 1)
age asistance,
Yarborough charged that during
Shivers* five years as governor the
state hadn’t raised the old age
pension one cent, that the only raise
came from the federal govern-
ment Davis added a loud “amen.”
State Counts
52 Dead Over
Long Holiday
> By THE ASSOCIATED PRIM
Texas’ huge Fourth of July cele-
bration—a traitor at picnics, fish-
ing trips, political rallies, baseball
games, and miscellaneous enter-
tainment-left at least 52 persons
dead Tuesday.
Of the reported fataties,
24 were in traffic accidents, 13
were from drowning, and 10 per-
sons were shot to death.
Tuesday morning the death toll
from accidents on the highways
I AW
*
In
"HELL'S DEVILS"
P
Ro
A
-keuls MAYWARD
THE POSTMAN DOES THE LEG WORT
•1 , d . . ' . ..
leadership, was the first state to
make it illegal to hold member-
ship in the Communist Party. We
will continue to fight — and fight
AL
7.
capital Thursday. He will fly to
Berlin with Ambassador Charles
E. Bohlen, who is going on a
month’s leave.
A letter published in the Soviet
trade union newspaper Trud on
March 25 accused Felchlin and Mc-
Kinney and two other Americans.
Trud said the Americana had left
behind on a train, after a trip to
Vladivostok, an intelligence report
on the main cities and stations
between Moscow and Khabarovsk.
The U.S. Embassy at- Moscow de-
clined comment at the time.
The three Russians whose ouster
from the United States was dis-
closed were named by the State
Department as:
Cmdr. Igor A. Amosov, assistant
naval attache, Soviet Embassy,
who was declared personally un-
. General Sheet Metal Work
Gutter top • Spout
Ventllaters
DENTON
Roofing Sr Metel Wka,
m B. MeKhmey. . -0424
^7f era pure, mild
We voted for Allan Shivers, for
Governor, Ben Ramsey for Lt.
Governor and John Ben Shepperd
for Attorney General. Thia was
not a vote of personalities at all.
but one of conviction in govern-
mental issues. We are of the be-
lief that the three above-mention-
ed candidates are on the conser-
vative side of government and we
believe in ‘conservatism’ in the
issues that confront the people of
this state at this time. In our
opinion the three have the state's
best interest at heart; we think
they have perormed their duties
at office in an efficient manner.
St we are for them.
Jock Schmitz A Son
Funeral Hem*
m m. Loevu s, Phono cah
Denton
der, aecident.
Elm Street Hospital and Cliic
Emitted: Mrs. bi Kubicek,
um “TTr
o. D.
ng W. Collins; Mrs. A. C. Salmon,
msrbmroxustin“that“heeded"aea pitals sinc Thave been go
tag up and it was two years over- But that’s not enough_ — w
-
98 $ “ 3
T i
i
First State Bank of Denton
.Member F.D.I.C.
ton in charge.
Graveside services will be held
at 1 p.m. at IOOF Cemetery, under
the direction of Schmitz-Floyd
Hamlett Funeral Home.
Dooley died Monday morning in
a Dallas hospital. He had liyed in
Dallas for the past 18 years, and
was a partner in the Speciebty
Paper Company.
Born in Columbia, Tenn., on
Dec. 18, 1891, Dooley came to
Texas aa a child, and was married
to Miss Clara Curtis on June 30,
1915, in Argyle.
Survivors include his wife; one
daughter, Mrs. B. A. McKenzie of
Dallas; two sons, Brian H. Dooley
and James C. Dooley, both of Dal-
las; two sisters, Mrs. W. B, Bar-
ton of Stonega, Va., and Mrs. R.
T. Bradley of Detroit, Mich.; one
brother, George C. Dooley of Dal-
laa, and three grandchildren. .
A memorialfund for Dooley is
being established at Boles Orphan
Home in Greenville.
gw
29 1 pS
f. _______________— _
to a Fort Worth hospial
Juries received ha aa automobile
" * teat week ia3-
on "Nme"-in relationship to Op-
timism. •
HOSPITAL NOTH
ejedergdhe '
tamingnire
gurcpionard
to
te
V nduuza
2
*
TODAY and WED.
"First Run At Some
Low Admission”
MANMew
ON THE ICY TOP
OF THE WORLD...
TO HOLD YOU
THEHMOmi
(; IN
Austin or Washington.
Old-age assistance — “When I
was a state senator I wrote the
first old-age assistance act in Tex-
aa. Now the state has more people
under its assistance program than
any state except California. I have
asked the Legislature for a raise
in the assistance limit and you will
vote on that constitutional amend-
ment in the November election.”
State hospitals — ''We’ve added
6,000 beds and modernized our hos-
Set Wednesday
• For W: B. Bowen
throe daughters, Mrs. W. R. Camp-
bril of Denton, Mrs, L. L. Womble
at Hereford, and Mrs. A. R. Posey
of Big Spring; three step-daugh-
tors, Mrs. Elwood McDaniel of
Slidell; Mrs. Buri Rainey of Den-
tea and Mrs. O. S. Hamilton of
Dallas; 18 grandchildren, and
right grandchildren.
Bowen had been living in Den-
ton at the residence of Mrs. W. R.
Campbell at‛903 Ave. A in Denton
since May.
aceptable last Feb. 3 and left Feb. .2.
8 tunate
Special t the Record-Chronicle
PILOT POINT — Funeral serv-
ices for Jesa Monroe Young, 60.
former resident of Pilot Point, will
be held Wednesday at 3 p.m. at
the Beck Funeral Home. Young,
who moved to Fort Worth 10 years
ago, died Sunday in the latter city
Death was attributed to a heart
attack.
Burial will be In the Pilot Point
Masonic Cemetery.
Mr. Young was born in Nashville,
Tenn. A long-time resident of Pilot
Point, he married Miss Lillie
Homes here in 1914.
Survivors include his wife; one
son, J. C?Young of Fort Worth;
two daughters', Mrs. John Tschoepe
of Pilot Point and Mrs. Elizabeth
Grissom of Denton; one brother,
Charles Young of Denton; two sis-
ters, Mrs. Essie Kenley of Roanoke
and Mrs. Ila Harris of Los Ange
les, and nine grandchildren.
He didn’t talk polities at the re-
eeption,-but-joked about his eye-
eight when he tried to read a
newspaper without the benefit at
his bifocal glasses. He seemed to
enjoy greeting visitors as bo held
a newspaper, a cup at coffee aad
napkin in his left hand and used
his right one to shake hands.
But he didn't spill a drop.
Funeral services will be held
‘ at 9 a.m. to the First
Church here for Mrs.
I, Sr., who died Tuesday
DENTON COUNTY NATIONAL, BANK
Membev E.D.,C Member Federal Reserve System
_ Tiiiunommssst
e".ca- 0
ah.-"
Mission
A thief, apparently in need o
entertainment, went to the trouble
of removing a radio from a 1964
Chevrolet where it waa parked on
the Sears Roebuck parking lot
Sunday night.
The car, belonging to Charles j
Weeks of Box 306 in Sanger, waa
only one week old.
City Police said today that the I
thief removed the overhead light
inside the car to keep from at-
tracting attention while he was at
work.
The owner said that the radio
must have been stolen between 8
and 10:15 p.m.
Estimated value of the radio
was $75.
LOSE FAT
Wih Bulkette Tablets you eat
what you want—and as much as
you like. Adds harmless bulk to
the low-caloric diet. Absolutely
sate. Will not make you nervous.
First $1.50 bettie guaranteed.
CITY DRUG
Remember when you used to kneel by your
bed at night, in your cotton flannel gown, and
say “Now I Lay Me”? Mother, lamp in hand,
stood close by. That was many years ago but,
strangely enough, on more than on occasion
By MARTHA COLE
BELTON (—Amid bunting and
the last three weeks 33rd annual Fourth at July celebra-
tton of this old Central Texas
town. ulg ■ r
The rally was down in City Park
jat across the Nolan river from
the old stone county jail where
HARMO AWARD WINNERS—No strangers to avia. N.
tion are these two veterans of the Nut. They are U.S. "
Air Force Major Charles . "Chuck” Yeager and Miss P
Jacqueline Cochran, winners of this year’s Hannon In-
ternational Aviation awards as ths world’s outstanding
aviator and aviatrix. Maj. Yeager was honored for his
piloting the X-1A rocket-powered experimental aircraft
to a speed of more than 1,600 miles per hour; Miss
Cochran for becoming the first woman to break through
the hound barrier and for many speed records. (AP
Wirephoto)
Two candidates for lieautenant
______ _ governor and one for attorney gen-
in the heat, candi- oral wore in Belton, too, for the
Denten Hospital and Clinic A girl, Sheila Jane, was bern to
Admitted: Ronald Culluh, Pon- Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Henry Ander-
son, 1401 Anna, Monday at 1:14
p.m. in Flow Hospital.
______________ A girl was born to Mr. and Mrs.
Point, surgery; L. F. DeMar, William Oscar Jenkins, 1310 Neff,
Monday at 3:17 p.m. in Flow Hos-
Mrs. King, a resident of Deaton
for mare than
resident of Rm
CHINCHILLAS
Grades Up to 82.
40% Discount
SETH MASSEY
Registered Chinchillas
519 5. Elm Ph. C-4851
EKrga in the’kmiingAthough, to get pensions for-district hrrdpatwayePom tutstdte"pinkie
nendyTKangca
02 Sy JACK P. SCHMITZ
BEDTIME PRAYER
NOW..They‛re In The Movies
------ ...Md in COLOR! -
LUCILE # I
desi^M
ARNA
• M-G-M‛ Martous SMU*
“THE LONG.
LONG
TRAILER”
au • comczoos cocoa
FLACE
YOUR
ORDERS
EARLY
ROMRSON Florist
Ph.C-2561 501 W. Hickory
Mrs. Ollie McKinney, 78, widow
of D. T. McKinney, died Monday
evening at her home on Tinney
Lane. She had been ill about
three months.
She was born in Palestine on
July 24, 1875, and was a member of
the Church of Christ.
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at 2 p.m. in Jack
Schmitz and Son Chapel, with W.
L. Basa officiating. Burial will be
in Roselawn Memorial Park.
Survivors include two daughters,
Mrs. Roy T. Smith of Austin and
Mrs. C. W. Tinney of Denton; one
son, H. D. McKinney of Fort
Worth; a sister, Mrs. Emmett
Walker of California; four broth-
era, Dial Elkins, Hoyt Elkins and
Arthur Elkins, all of Washington.
D.C., and Malvin Elkins of Fort
Worth; six grandchildren, and six
great-grandchildren.
This is what he said about each:
Higher education — "Denton is
fortunate in having both NTSC
and TSCW. I have always support-
ed both great institutions and al-
ways will. They’ll both go forward
with Texas.”
Drive carefully, you might injure e custemer of mine,
I
Lyle E. Montgomery Co.
Shivers
Southern
about 50 people
Communism — “Texas, under my rchat with him.
refused to throw any light on his
years of service in the department
—Will ever be revived or effective-
ly pursued."
In a minority dissent printed
with the report, Rogen comment-
ed: “Just what evidence Justice
Clark was expected to give to this
committee that it did not already
possess is hot made clear."
Then were mny references to
Clark in the group’s hearings, and
Keating wrote him June 15, 1963,
citing som at them and inviting
him to testify. The justice replied
two days later that "the courts
must be kept Ma from public con-
troversy” and that therefore he
would not follow a "persona! inclin-
ation” to testify. He submitted a
memo commenting on some at the
esses investigated.
'otMCd Argyle Man -
1: JR Funeral services for Bourke
..........-....... James Dooley, 82, former Argyle
resident, will be held Wednesday
at 10 a.m. in' Sparkman-Brand
Chapel, Dallas, with Dr. W. Har-
rison Baker and Dr. Abie Carle-
and his cronies get sucked in and
rich. He knows he has
I-dollar slush fund. He
Funeral services for Wiliam B.
Bowen of Slidell will be held at
2:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Slidell
B hafSwus in Hereford, Texas.
Bowen, who was U, Sunday, i
died at the home of his daughter
in Denton Tuesday afternoon
Survivors include his widow; two
sons, Carl Bowen of Levelland and
Jess Bowen of Phoenix, Arb.;
She was married to T. W. King,
lr., who died Jan. 11, 1936.
Sho was a member of the First
Methodist Church.
Survivors inelude two sons, T. W.
King, Jr., at Argyle and F. P.
King of Lamesa; two brothers,
John Frits of Dumas and Ford
fcwpus "a
LerrrfTTIM 4
CLARK
(ontinuea trom Pace 1)
committee adopted—and which b
reprinted in the document—reada:
“No report shall be made or re-
leased to the public without the
approval at a majority of the full
Committee on the Judiciary."
Rogen also said he had evidence
that there had been "flagrant in
stances at suppression of vital doc-
uments and evidence during the
course of this investigation, either
by Mr. Keating or by members of
his staff,” and that he would ask
the full committee to look into the
SAVE REGULARLY
We invite you tc upen a check-
Im account aad enjoy the
added convenience and safety
of paying bills by check
Base by a sentry. Offic
the sentry as saying he____
Page failed to properly answer the speech was finished. He went to
sentry’s challenge. Fort Worth for an appearance at
Choice Wiegand, 23, of Waco, Benbrook dam. Yarborough went
was found dead Monday at his to Beaumont
home, a JI pistol and cleaning Other 4 “
riRI beside him. An inquest verdict eluded tv
at deatby accidntal shooting ant gova
was returned. . Mineola i
--- tin, and
Frits at Lamesa; three sisters, --m-g --------
. . Jb?B^n^ rf A^riJTSd K’ tw apives sho were iiw turned
outside Russia and wil not return. Ruby Clqmmons of Lubbock. “ *
" “ Mrs. King also is survived by
I TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
| P-^0 PARMaLU with Hydraulic, 8285.
Charlie Taylor Impiement Com-
pany. Decatur.
1WIEELTRILER,new tarp and
sideboards, 704 IOOP Street.
LiVINO Roorirduite. OOi/kood con-
diUcm 104 IOOP Street ________
CAaH for 2 and 1 room house* it
cheap enough Phone C-2O4S
500 BaLOB Johnson Oraaa and Oat
hay, O. T. Prancis, Route 9, Aub-
ryy, telephone 906-P-H, ________
3-ROOM furntahed apartment for
working couple, near TSCW, C-6378.
6-RO6M HOUSX suitable for a apart-
manta, aloes to P*90te.__________
TREAT YOUR DOO to America1* fa»-
orite food for hunting dote Purina
Do< Chow, supplles everything vour
dog needs for top condition Keep
Me tall _wegging on Dog chow. Dick
Bento Grocery and Marlrat. 122 X.
, Hlekory. C-pa.
I •
Sdbr.n ■
ges '
1 A , ’ ’
W. Sycamore; Mrs. Homer Smith
— and baby, 612 Frame; Mrs. Bill
tonight. Smith, 1119 Scripture; Wiley Mann,
will be 512 Congress; Mrs. C. P. Hard
— • wiek, XU Bolivar; Cari Crider Jr.,
5*1
Sheriff Ralph Jeffers, running for
same bandstand on the same re-election, offered free ice water
far the first time to this cam- in a big wooden batrrel.
Be Good To Yourself
Sleep On A
Beauty Rest
ANDERSON'S FURNITURE
219 W. Oak Terms Denton
k 621.4
9 *6.1
VICTOR MATURE
PIPER LAURIE
WILLIAM BENDIX
13
An stimated 3,HO persons gath-
ered under the rim, pecan and
cottonwood trees some on pallets;
some standing, some sitting on the
concrete benches, some just mill-
ing around.
They cheered the most for old •
Cyclone Davis, 73, with his long
white beard and waving arms, who
didn’t need one of these new-fan-
gled public address systems to get
his message out.
< "I've run for every office under
the sun,” said Davis, "and been
elected to one—mayor of Rotan."
For the most part they sat si-
lently while Gov. Allan Shivers
and Ralph Yarborough, an Austin
attorney, exchanged charges.
Yarborough spoke before Shivers
and left. Ten minutes later Shivers
drove up, went to the bandstand
and said he’d heard part of Yar-
borough’s speech on the radio of
the plane he was in.
Yarborough said he wanted the
252
net Jestor te hargeof servicesand burial wi
otei where he peeled be the Rose Hu Cemetery in
who dropped by to
George Hinson of
T. Johnson at Aus-
I Crouch, candidate
TODAY’S LIVESTOCK__
FORT WoarR (AP-ate 6,000:
5.00-13,00; good and cholde elaugh-
ter cnives 14,00-17,80; common and N
meaium 10.00-18.00; stocker steer
calves 13 00-18.00; ■locker yearlings
17.00 down. -
Hoga 500; butcher, hog atead'to
26 higher; bows etcady to 50 hidher:
choice 100-240 lb. hogs 24-76-55.00:
Choke 250-820 lb. hogs 22.00-34.50;
sows 16.00-10.00.
Sheep 4,000; spring lamba steady
to stong; other clqsesstendx: .F°0d
end cbofoe spring lamba 17.60-11.60;
cull to good etaughter yeariinga 7.00-
12.00; good feeder lamin 14 00-15 00.
must be true since there "was no a
foundation whatsoever” for the
Soviet action against them, and
denounced as "baseless” the
charge that they engaged in spy-
ing. In Moscow, Ambassador Boh-
len said no specific chargee were
set forth in the Russian note.
was mounting toward the 31 pre- whole truth about the land deal
dieted by N. K. Woeroar, chief on which Shivers made a profit of
of the statistical division of the I $450,000. He said he's had "the
Department at Safety. The count treatment" from Shivers and "if
was for the hours 12:01 a.m. July you wanta know somebody else
3 through 11:59 p.m. July 5. who’s had “the treatment’ from
During the same three-day pe- this political boss, ask the teach-
EinddthtzfhsaferPWoemderpiee“shve. aarga xarbor
cenuy.reporveauaauues . 4 fice and between times "won’t
dzarmm - ft!Commiltsese
Miss Janie Gonsales, 20, was fa- toube.donee yar--L • for
tally stabbed Monday at her homo He ahargedaxarborouzh,. “.for
I , in Rosenberg, Tex. A 20-year-old I mer district judge, worked hard.
E man wne a ■ a A- AL-- L2--
Pfr rharlaa .TiH1itX| *»d«e. adding-"AU I want is
policeman, was Shot to death Sun- consistency, lets tell the truth
day night at Connally Air Force about things,".
- “* “ Lke Yarborough, Shivers left
3urre
•ONN cm
/GRAHAM-KITT
«8CM AC
CLARY -GHOSTLEY
THE DENTON RECORD-Cn2ONILE
mroomramemmamuunudhmmineuamvaxaqat mmermeremgem----.1, . -..4 --mt-eh n
Roads — "We have the No. 1
system in the United States and it
was built on a cash basis. But
we’ll continue to build more farm-
to-market roads and four-lane su-
perhighways With the cooperation
of the Legislature.
Public schools— Teachers’ sal-
aries have been raised $1,100 per
year since I have boon governor.
EMAMMddMhMdmgmrduzmccerpas
2055*.’
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FAG® TWO
’'1 ' ' 6» ■
Candidates Call
‘For Whole Truth’
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. [51], No. 290, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 6, 1954, newspaper, July 6, 1954; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1449729/m1/2/: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.