Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 305, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 28, 1957 Page: 2 of 39
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PAGE TWO
Graham Gets
g J
V
$
Car Accident
—Briefs- Births - Hospital Notes
e
T. A. Tarver had aa guests Mr. Amarillo visited with the Rev. and
. ej
A".
“a
Thursday, Ji
Ordered To
End Race Bar
Hard To Find
outset
placement law.
be cut by 10 per cent to reach a
new import quota.
A second group- of importers, sidered information of the highest
MARKETS
11
11
NEW YORK, July 17 IP—The higher than we ever expected."
FORT WORTH (AP) — Lvestock
could continue to send into that
as much as they desired.
voyaged to the
sponsors of the exhibit said, “We unity and friendship.
reported to tie averaging about
friends on a two-wek trip to Chi-
increasing shipments have forced
I
No one has been able to figure
and
in
below the sone
ict was signed.
The prospect of a federal court
DENMAN
were
dARDWARE INC.
Northside Squore
R AF Cancels
1
AFTER CHURCH
Winnsboro, June Davis of Free-
BRING THE WIFE AND KIDS TO
Air Conditioned
RAY'S CAFE
for Sunday Dinner
of the
12
tew,‘d
%
¥
.Z
»
t
f
(
J
hematitn
13 -
X
1
/
WI GIVE
GREEN STAMPS
Wheel Irin room
ti room. Like
owning two ir
Austin College Choir
Sets Europe Concerts
I The purpose of the new arrest
wave was to crush suspected un-
cutbacks
curtailed
for Lester Davis, 41.1 Ruddell, who
died Friday in Arizona while en
companies, would be those bring-
ing 20 000 barrels or less per day
into this country. This group is
made up largely of newcomers
‘t
j
/4
propulsion type, told a reporter
today:
' I
■’ V
PORTABIE
AIR CONDITIONERS
NEW POOL USE
DUE WEDNESDAY
The Denton Country Club’s
new $7,674 swimming pool will
be ready for use Wednesday,
officials said Saturday.
Construction of the new pool
an English trust fund set up to
berth and maintain the ship at her
future home in Plymouth and to
provide Anglo - American scholar-
ships. The remainder goes to May-
flower Ltd.
It costs 93 cents for an adult to
Alamos, N.M., are guests of Mr.
and Mrs. C. R. Chapman of San-
--------------.------------
Vernon Bates of Tulsa, Okla., is
visiting Mrs. Mary Ready of San-
ger.
Sharon McReynolds of Lubbock
F
TOP SECRET
The Navy says that it cannot
disclose statistics which are con-
tal employe In Denton for several
year. ■
Survivors include four sons, H. j
S Davis of Denton. John Davis of ’
• Aveileble in Cernetion Pink, Cleud
Grey. MM Oren, Mos
Antique White.
• Revolutienery tew em,
■edob oesteso m etenderd III vel
Boo. give lowut «♦* inetelletien
end ee«'OSes.
• Inetent coeling.
A V«MI _g Mtekt A- J—
• “w" "I r‘W I •V"IWU.
Cabinet Group A-Sub Proves
May Ask Slash
civil rights bill pending in Con- of the room 20 feet away from
grans becomes law. "h ---J *" —*
42
te-
-
MONTGOMERY. Ala.. July V
(—A group of state senators pre-
dicted today that voter registra-
tion machinery may break down
in some Alabama counties if the
BUDAPEST. July 27 UP—Usual-
ly well-informed sources herd es-
timated today, that thousands of
SIND
FLOWERS
GINA AWAITS ARRIVAL
Italian actress Gina Lollobrigida, who is expecting
the birth of her first child any day now, relaxes with
her husband. Dr Mirko Skofi in the garden of their
villa just outside Rome. (AP Wirephoto)
cago. 111.. Canada and along the
Eastern coast.
A son was born to Mr. and Mrs.
Wilbur Barthold of Valley View
July 24 in a Gainesville hospital.
Sgt. and Mrs. Jimmie Robin-
son and their three children are
Mr. and Mrs. Luther Greer of
Ponder had as guests Mr. and
Mrs. Lester Watson of Pennsyl-
vania, .Mrs Curtis Shillenburg of
Fort Worth and Mr. and Mm Jess
Vaden of Oklahoma.
Olan Gotcher of Los Angeles,
of Valley View had as guests Mr.
and Mrs. U. J. Butler of Dallas. '
-nA _N,, 1 a, w,t-An and
have walked her pegged oaken
decks. By Nov. 12. when she is
scheduled to return to Plymouth,
C. N. Smith Dies
In VA Hospital
Funeral arrangements for Clar-
ence Neal Smith, 65. 614 Railroad,
who died in the McKinney Veter-
ans Hospital Saturday, were in-
complete Saturday night, at the
Schmitz-Floyd . Hamlett Funeral
pending Saturday at Jack Schmitt as
A Son Funeral Home in Denton ' "
main indefinitely
of detectability.’* ■
if H
.? el ■ I
PIER RENT And Mrs• Buter of.Daasi FORT WORTH (AP) - Lvestock
Five per cent of the gross re- Mr. andaMrs. 2,- Watson and compared to last week: Steers, hei-
ceipts goes to New York City for! Mr and Mrs..T.3 Carson and I fers weak tob0loyeri cowa, calves
Calif., to visiting with Mr. and
Mrs. L. L. Gotcher of Ponder.
L, H. Robinson and family 9
California have returned home
after a visit with Mr. and Mrs. C.
C. Ashcraft of Ponder. . •
Mrs. Trey Webster of Ponder
visited with H. C. Webster of
Wichita Falls who underwent sur-
gery in a Wichita Falls hospital.
Mr. Md Mrs. W. L. Jarmen of
Ng. ® Hungarians—perhaps as many as
MM “ | 10,000—4have been arrested in the
latest nationwide roundup by
! Communist police.
ii ,
e,**
a four-year Navy veteran
Korean conflict.
Eight Die In
Wednesday, July
NOW A*
DENMAN HDW..
Compai
All tl
1b
t2
Christ.
There were 384 "decisions for
Christ” tonight, bringing the total
for ihe crusade to 38,969.
• means that * it cannot be hunted I the county.
to exhaustion of its power source Wise county residents may call
is true in the case of the the Denton office to report all
diesel • electric submarine. This types of news and for advertis-
fact alone greatly complicates the ing insertions. The phone number
may be ______
inces. The most conservative es-
the surface of a calm sea ould
be seen from an aircraft.
The fact that an atomic powered
submersible can plummet so far
down itself creates complications
for the second method of sub-
hunting—sonar. This sound detec-
tion and electronic search equip-
ment is severely handicapped by
the thermal layers in water-
strata of cold water which reflect
hack the probing "ping" of hunt-
ing destroyers and aircraft using
droppable listening buoys.
The nuclear submarine experts
do not contend that it is utterly
impossible to find a deeply sub-
out a way to funnel the sightseers
in and out of a narrow passage
which leads to the captain’s
“great room” — an odd-shaped,
sloping cubbyhole about 7 feet by
Home in Denton.
Mr. Smith, born in Bonham in
1892, was a veteran of World War
I and a member of the American
Legion and the Centnd Baptist
Church. He was employed by the
Hodges Termite Control Co
He is survived by four sons.
Clarence E. Smith and James Ray
Smith, both of Denton, William J.
Smith of New Orleans and Jerry
Wayne Smith, with the U.S. Navy
in Seattle; a daughter, Miss Max-
ine Smith of Denton; two sisters,
Mrs. Odessa Farmer of Denton
and Mrs. Lillian Russell of Dal-
las; three brothers, Earl Smith
of Plainview, Kan., and, Stacy
Smith and Paul Smith, both of
Denton; and three'grandchildren.
4
scroll to the North Carolina
preacher for drawing the largest
number to a single event at the
Garden.
Irish said there had been many
the figure may reach a million. _______
Despite the stream of visitors j visit the ship, 42 cents for a child,
anxious to see how the Pilgrims 1 The crowds overwhelm the little
is 6-9961.
CIRCULATION
J C. Montgomery will continue
। to supervise distribution of the
it can’t be detected
new world, a ship which was built in England
COMPLAINTS
“There ought to be a guide.”
one woman complained. She
looked in at the blocked-off bosun’s
quarters and added: “After wait-
ing half an hour to get aboard It’s
disappointing to just look in a
couple of doorways."
Occasionally a member of the
crew who sailed her from Eng-
land does pop up from below decks
in 17th century sailor dress. He’s
quickly surrounded by tourists
with pent-up questions. On the
deck, however, a Pilgrim miss de-
livers a brief talk via loudspeaker
each half hour to the waiting
crowd.
and ranch readers same-day de-
livery as the dale of publication.
Carrier routes will be establish-
ed in each community in Wise
County.
Town Topics South Texas
timates are that 1,500 to 2.000 per-
sons have been seized
Among those arrested are peo-
ple believed to have been active
in, or to have had some connection
with, last October’s uprising. Oth-
ers are peple believed to have
in the business or small inde-
pendent concerns. Under the1 “The performance of the Nauti-
reported plan this group might lus has exceeded our highest ex-
.receive some slight increase in pectations."
this country
Pedudtel
"Menson RADIO, NSW TOM
... £
daughters of Fort Worth were
NEW 1957
xon ()itif! K,/
KENEDY, Tex., July 27 • - .
Two 1957 model automobiles col-
lided headon about 'four miles
south of this South Texas farming
center today, killing eight persons
and injuring one other.
Five wore killed outright when
the two cars smashed into each
other on Highway 21. Three others
died a short, time later in a
Kenedy hospital.
Four were members of an Ingle-
side. Tex., family. They were Mr.
and Mrs. Henry Henry Moas. 37
and 34; a 2-year-old daughter; and
Moas' 15-year-old stepson, James
Lee Michael Acron.
Another daughter, Leslie, I, was
critically injured.
Also killed were Marvin Hardy,
31, Beatrice Hardy, 41, Joe Bar-
rientes, 22. and Jesus Jimenez, 37,
all of San Antonio. AU the San
Antonio persons except Jimenez
were killed instantly.
Mrs. Moas and her daughter
also were killed upon the
impact. Moes and his stepson died
at the hospital.
Police said the Moas car was
traveling north and tha tether car
was headed south.
Kenedy Chief of Police Ross
Schuster said both cars were de-
molished. He said they were 1957
model tFords'.
Schuster said a motorist who
was following the Moas car told
him that the Hardy car pulled out
of its lane to pass another car and
met the Moas car head on.
Schuster said the two vehicles
came to rest about 12 inches
apart, parallel with the highway,
on the left hand lane going south
Traffic was blocked on the route
for about an hour and a half.
Schuster said he thought Moas
was employed by Shell OU Co. in
Ingleside. He said identification on
the San Antonio person's bodies
indicated all resided at 239 Beach
Haven Drive in San Antonio.
much longer.
3. Independent of the atmo-
.. - ... ..new sphere—a nuclear submarine re-
resenes. They argue that this •» quires no oxygen for combustion
Mrs. Shaw is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. G. K. Taylor, life-
time residents of Decatur. She
was born, reared and educated in
Decatur. Her husband is John R.
Shaw, who is employed by a Fort
Worth contractor. They have one
daughter, Pamela, who is 3%.
Mrs. Shaw is an active mem-
ber of the Fundamentalist Baptist
Church in Decatur, and this fall
wiU serve as corresponding see-
the injunction Judge Bryan issued
July 31, 19M. restraining the Ar-
lington School Board from denying
students admission because of
hopeful sign
What the British will do in the
next few days is not clear. If it
turns out the rebels had only
evacuated the areas, it is possible
the Trucial Scouts led by British
officers (will move into Oman to
help the Sultan's weak forces hold
out A battalion of/scouts is now
stationed here.
berry, medical.
Discharged: Mrs. W. O. Camp-
bell, 710 Gober; Mrs. A, W. Gel-
ler, 214 Haynes; H. O. Franks,
619 Carroll; Mrs. John F. Wright.
1302 Norman; Mrs. Frank Kin-
,eco. । raid. 613 Texas: Jack Beaty, Aub-
nolds of Sanger. । rey; Mrs. C. W. Robinson and
Mr. and Mrs. Hollis .Staples of baby, 621 Austin; Mrs. Henry
Sanger had as guests Mr. and Benson and baby, Lewisville,
Mrs. W. S. Perkins and daughters 1
ate delivery.
Mulkey, 27, moved to Denton
with his parents. Mr. and Mrs.
W H Mulkey. in 1936. He was
educated in Denton Schools and
attended NTSC.
He wis’ married to the former
Miss Montgomery of Decatur,
July 3, 1953. in Denton. He and
Mrs. Mulkey have three children,
Penni L'Jon. 4, Charles Rodney,
3, and Cynthia Lee, two months.
r 2"A — Ai sa. - MM1IC> 1V VAJKEI । vs VOIIVMDV IVI
a threat to the national security, of fuel and needs no electricity
justifying the requested action by drawn from batteries-- it can "re-
the President: ; ma- nee me- hj— *-
Denten Man
Dies On Trip
Funeral arrangements
K ’ "N
VNgg
Since the Nautilus was launched
in January 1954 she has steamed
about 82,000 miles, much of it
while submerged. The Nautilus
joined the United States fleet in
April 1953
How well has the Nautilus
worked out in operations with the
retary of the Decatur Junior
Woman's Club. She -also is an
active member of Epsilon Sigma
Alpha sorority.
Her husband is a Mason and
is also an active member of the
Decatur Shriner's Club.
al significance at the Garden but
thut Graham's New York crusade
had left a much greater impact
than any other event.
Attendance at the Graham Gar-
den meetings, including the 13.000
who were present tonight, now
totals 1.175,000. He began his cru-
sade May 15 and has given 65
sermons at the. Garden. Tonight's
attendance was among the small-
est.
The previous record was set by
Ringling Bros. Circus in 1944—
1,162,000 spectators for 93 perform-
Ehces.. " ——«
Graham spoke tonight on "prob-
lems of the American Home.” His
text was St Msrk 10:2-"What
therefore God hath joined together
let no man put asunder.' The pro-
gram was televised nationally
over ABC-TV.
He said that America can lie no
stronger than its homes it ir im-
possible, he added, to have a hap-
pv home unless it is centered' on
exploration for
would be averaged up. The re- fleet?
suitant annual average then would
antisubmarine warfare problem
and gives nuclear powered sub-
marines a much greater chance to
escape should they be located."
He added that all of this means
that the submarine force of the
future “should not suffer the
lasses of the last war.” During
World War II a total of 52 Amer-
ican submarines were lost; the
1,100,000 barrels per day and
increasing at a rate which would
bring the rate to about 1,200,000 '
barrels by Jan. 1.
Domestic producers contend
visiting Mrs. C. E. Lantrip of
Aubrey. Sgt. Robinson is en-
of Sanger and Melvin Chapman of I
Fort Worth attended funeral ser- i
vices for Mrs. Debbie Cope Eola
and visited with Mrs. N. 11. Chap-
man of Coleman.
R. L. Mallow and Mr. and Mrs.
D. H. Minick had as guests Mr.
and Mrs. A. W. Mallow of Odessa.
Mrs. Jean Swank ef Sandy visit,
ed with Mr. and Mrs. Jack Slay-
ton of Cross Roads.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Smith
of Floydada were guests of Mr.
and Mrs. H. Testerman of Cross
Roada. *
Miss Jo Ana Barks, daughter
of Mr and Mrs. Joe Burks. 312
Marietta, returned from Brady
this week where she visited her
aunt and uncle. Mr. and Mrs S. J.
Carmichael. Robert Carmichael
accompanied Miss Burks to Den-
ton.
. route to California to visit a
daughter.
Mr Davis was married to the
former Miss Hettie Latham in j
C rthage in 1916. He was a pos
garian people that the recent
purge in Moscow might lead to a' events of national and internation-
' more lenient policy by the Rus-
I sian-installed regime here.
is visiting Mrs. Hattie McRey-
nolds and Miss Pauline McRey- |
10—where the Famous Mayflower route from Rochfort, France to SHERMAN, July 27 U-The
Compact was signed his new station at Fort Sam Hous- Austin College Choir, which has
"onne - Nrs. y......an mhureheregun as fix t
the roped-off end of the passage and children of Pearl City, ’U”! the Southwest for 11 years, de ।
----------- " " I visited friends in Aubrey. | parts next Sunday for a European
Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Chapman i concert tour.
Funeral services for William
Scott Johnston, a resident of Den-
ton County for 10 years, will he
held Monday at the Hugh Moore
distinguished from the major secrecy.
But one officer, well versed in
UUIptS KucD UU vuw avin UsLy IUI ."4% "‘T W °V —-NEI: VW9s S44VF#
nine rent Twentv ner rent ns tn son, all of Garland ; 1.00 orr: stockera 50-150 lower;
pierarent: Twenty per cent goes to Mr. and Mrs. T p Parker good. 21,09-23.00:0 choice 24.40: ;
standard 1 7.00-20.00; atandard and | mara umite far Ika —ai aaa
good hejfers 17.00-22 00; choice to । •U unuw M ICE 21 222
— “; cows 14.50-16.S0; good calves
isoo-sooo; cholce to Si .00; stand-
daughter of Valley View leave good
Monday for a pony show in Perry, 2300;
Okla.
Mayflower II. replica of the Pil-
grim ship, bobs at her Hudson
Hiver exhibition pier attracting
6,000 visitors daily.
Since the 92-foot ship arrived
here three weeks ago trom Ply-
mouth, Mass., 125,000 persons
her home port at New London,
Conn., last week from a cruise Axis forces lost 996. ------
to the Pacific. BrG ADVANTAGE
THE—D L 5 T O N R ECO R >- CHRONICLE
; On this latter point, the ofhcer ( News correspondents also will
said: ibe developed in each community
"Of special Importance is the in order to give complete coverage
. fact that its extreme endurance of news and social activities in
Hungarian police claim to
have smashed 40 groups accused
of espionage and subversion. They
also announced the arrest of a
group allegedly headed by Count
Karoly Khuen-Hedervary and in-
cluding several former big land-
lords and factory owners, classi-
fied as "fascists and reactionary
elements" who allegedly plotted
with Joseph Cardinal Mindszenty
to restore capitalism in Hungary.
submarine problems, both of the
conventional engine and nuclear
Injunction to compel the county
boards of registrars to add thou-
sands of Negroes to the voting
lists would make it difficult if not
impossible to get board members
to serve, the legislators agreed.
VOTING MACHINERY
Consequently, they said, some
counties, particularly the 13 where
Negroes outnumber white resi-
dents. may be left without the ma-
chinery to register any new
voters, white or Negro.
Registrars are appointed by a
board composed of the governor,
state auditor and commissioner of
agriculture. They serve four-year
terms coinciding .with the terms
of those officials.
A member of the Madison Coun-
ty board, Mrs. Martha Witt Smith,
said all three members of her
board would “have to resign un-
less we get some protection?'
Mrs. Smith, who is a reporter
on the Huntsville Times and
serves on the registration board
as a part-time job, said the board
there is concerned primarily over
the threat of damage suits against
the members.
PROTECTION
“Nobody with an income or
property or potential income or
•ven a pension could yafford to
take the chance of losing every-
thing he has," she explained.
"nless we get some protection,
no one could afford to serve on
the board except paupers or those
who are willing to register every-
one who walks in regardless of
qualilications."
Madison County, in north Ala-
bama, doesn't have the heavy pro-
portion of Negro population that
confronts other counties la the
southern part of the state.
derground preparations tor a new
ranti - Communist revolution like ,
; that of last October, according to
a statement made Thursday by
WASHINGTON, July 27 I-.
More than two years of tactical
testing of the Nautilus has demon-
strated that a nuclear powered
submarine is all but impossible
to Katori
The Nautilus—first. “Model T"
of the Navy's growing atomic
submarine fleet — came back to
of Detroit, Tex., Mrs. and Mrs. I Mr. Johnson, who lived at 2252
Leonard Sairdo of Atlas, Okla,. Scripture, died Saturday night at
and Mr. and Mrs. John Burton of Flow Memorial Hospital.
Duncan, Okla. Born June 9, 1278, in Arlington,
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Bertis and he was married to the former
. Scroll Award
Grip Hungary From Garden
had some standing in previous gov-
ernments.
Some in Budapest believe this
new police activity mav. be a pre-
lude to a series of publie trials to
be staged in September for the
purpose of showing that there was
“imperialist inspiration and inter-
vention" last fall.
ANOTHER AIM
Another aim is believed to be
to crush any hope among the Hun-
NEW YORK. July 27 UP -
Evangelist Billy Graham received
a scroll from Madison Square Gar-
den officials tonight for setting a
new attendance record at the
famous sports arena.
Ned Irish. Garden executive
vice president, presented the
permissible imports. I Then, emphasizing that it should
The Pacific Coast would be be remembered the Nautilus is the
excempt from the import restric- first nuclear powered submarine
Uons. Thus Canadian producers ever built and that her features
- ■ • - - Will be grently improved" in
boats now building or projected, I
Funeral Home in Arlington.
Schmitz - Floyd - Hamlett Fu-
neral Home of Denton is hand-
ling arrangements.
ALEXANDRIA, Va., July 27 W
- U.S. Dist. Judge Albert V.
Bryan today ordered that segre-
gation of public schools in Arling-
ton County, Va., be abolished, be-
ginning in September.
Arlington is a populous suburb
of Washington, D.C., a city which
has integrated schools.
The effect of the ruling is to
leave intact, with minor changes,
Mr. and Mrs. Glea Miller of
Memphis. Tex., are visiting Mr.
and Mrs. V. H. Ward of Sanger.
Mrs. Nita Burton of Sanger had
as-guests Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Bur-
ton of Albuquerque. N.M.. Mr-
and Mrs. Oliver Gooch of Ard-
more, Okla.. Miss Virginia Gooch
oi Boston, Mass. BIRTHS
Gary Don Mallow ef Bartles- A girl was born to Mr. and Mrs.
Ville. Okla., is visiting Mrs. R. L. Paul N. Anderson TOT Woodland at
Mallow and Mr. and Mrs. D. .50 ____
Minick in Sanger
Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Chatfield of Johnston Rites
Sanger were guests of Mr. and X
Mg. Wade Walker in Oklahoma Slated Monday
choice 23.80-24.50; good and choice
•tock hotter calves 19.00-23.00;
choice 23.50-24 50; good and choice
stock heifer calves 18.00-21 AO; me-
dium_15.00-17.00; medium and
good stock cows 12,80-11.25.
Hogs 76 hither; 200-240 lb. 22.60.
S jra 40 2880122000;
* Chi and good 17.00-20.50: utility and i
good shorn yearlings steady 15.00-
17.60: shorn ewoe 60 up 7.00-8.00;
common to good feeder lambs' up
60 At 14.00-12.00.
and Mrs. Dick Range and sons of
McAllen and Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Wingate and children of Blanch-
ard, Okla.
A son, John Lyan, was bora to
Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Spinks of
Ryan. Okla., July 12. Mrs. Spinks
is the former Barbara Colo,
daughter of Mrs. Faye Cole and
the late John Cole of Sanger. Mrs.
Cole and Sara and Lee Cole are
visiting in the Spink home.
Kay and Mike Allen of Las
merged boat. They do say that
area as much as they desired. wu.u" vuK" Mw:it can remain hidden below the
c«nn*t^ miX^tggesi tha^ 1 daomsmndehinmgnsns“hn‘ndntea
gg sesz kt : 20 knongrgusmderzeadglhorgakan 1 have given up away1.
mhar got marmn’or comstptmasawt WISE OFFICE
were imposed. Imports now .are j reach a hunting ground faster and
run down targets which could "Continued from Page 1)
escape from ordinary submarines, special news and advertising pag.
NO HEL WOES en as necessary each day to give:
2 With no fuel replenishing lull coverage of news events and
problem, it can remain on station social activities. Mulkey explain-
in the distant hunting ground ed
Zebras, marching in file across
the Africa veldt, are seldom heard
But, they are not quiet. They
make a sort of "quaag quaag"
sound resembling a slight cough ’
I Minister of State Gyoergy Maro-
, san.
* SENT TO CAMPS
Informed sources said those
seized are men and women of all
ages, ranging as high as 20 years.
Most of them ‘have been sent di-
rectly to concentration camps.
The roundup, which lasted at least
a week, is the largest since the
Russian army crushed the revolu-
tion last November.
The best information available
here is that the arrests started
SHARJA Trucial Oman July 27 Chronicle by • Pm- may call
i» Th. rid of Sultan Montgomery at 2722 for immedi-
winnsooro, June navis 01 r ree- i “-The red flag of the Sultan was - -•
port, and Haggai D. Davis of New reported flying over rebel strong-
Orleans; three daughters, Mrs. I holds in Oman and Muscat today.
Gladys Harris nf Denton, Mrs. and the British called off their jet
opal Evans of California and Mrs. ' fighter-bomber*.
Jane Taylor of Victoria, and 18 After three days of rocket-blast-
grandchildren. ing at rebel-held forts RAF planes
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Sut-
spokesman for Mayflower. Ltd., j asa symbol of British - American Jim Chaney end Darrell Me.
-------— ----- _ .. Cool of Era are in Nebraska fol-
figure we won t be in the black i Only about 25 persons at a time lowing the grain harvest,
until October. Expenses run a lot i can stand on her quarter deck and - ------ —
---- 1 '. 1 a similar number on her upper
। A I _ A ' deck. Visitors are not allowed in
Alabamans See thampedp quarerrslonndbdangerouq:
’ ly steep ladders.
"" D.C. Suburb
daughters have returned to ban-: Millie Norman,- who survives.
ger after visiting relatives in Other survivors include two
Bowling Green, La., and Cyrene daughters. Mrs. Jack A..Gray of
and Middletown, Mo. | Denton, Mrs. Philip Myers of
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Nance, Mr.' Wichita . Falls; three sons. Nor-
and Mrs. BiUy Ed Nance, Mrs. manJohnston, Stephenville: Ver-
.. 1 —,m2 , , . non Johnston, Dallas; Elton John*
Minnie Rodgers and Mrs. Vesta ' 6ton, McLean; one sister, Mre.
Wiggins, all of ganger, attended 1 w. B Collins of Arlington; 13
the Rogers family reunion in grandchildren and 12 great-grand-
■ Greenville. ! children.
Me - m An -w-m- Sixteen youths of the Arcadia _
GA %/E ArATAIAI. I 1 Park Methodist Church of Dallas
66 VIdVO)W6E° 11 were guests of the 'alley View
• - Methodist Youth Fellowship.
.Mr. and Mrs. Timmy Carson :
Of Oil Import
WASHINGTON, July 17 * -
reports circulated today that the
President’s oil imports cabinet
committee, shortly will recom-
mend that imports bo restricted to
about one million barrels a day.
The issue has been pending for
months, with domestic producers
urging a curtailment. The State
Deparmtent has been concerned
because of the effect of- such a
curtailment would here on Ven-
ezuela and the Middle East.
Under the plan the cabinet
committee is reported ready to
recommend to President Eisen-
hower are these three features:
imports by major shippers for
the three-year period 1934-55-56
a F#6. 1
.(Ak8 FOR
d ALL
g OCCASIONS '
Linwood Roberson
, FLORIST
MI W. Hickory Dl 12-2361
race.
This ruling was upheld by the
4th Circuit Court of Appeals and
the Supreme Court declined to re-
view it, thus leaving it unchanged.
In the current proceedings.
State Atty. Gen. J. Lindsay Al-
The atomic submarine, he said, mond Jr., sought a delay of Judge
has a big advantage at the very Eryan 8 order pending a. Supreme
- Court ruling on the state's pupil
Mrs. H. H. Moody of Valley 1 ard 16.00-18.00; good stack suers
View has been released from the 18.00-21,00;, choic. 22.00 - 23.001
E-"a.i common 1100-1100; medium and
hospital. good feeder heirers 15,00-19.00:
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Taff and choice 20,0-00-21 00. good ante
chores atock steer caives 19.00-23,00
m • । A n , Record-Chronicle in Decatur,
K one I 111 fl Im ou pending availability of housing for
LEd III UII UIIldIl Mulkey's family. Subscribers who
do not receive their Record-
vsanamrfaea
FT T 59. ua
nn}
17. and ended
although it still
1
—* Your Choice off —
BAKIDTLEKEY adn DRESSINC
GrILLID CMOci CLum"STEAK
• Butter Pees • Snawflake Poteton.
• Gardea Fresh Selad • Coffee or Ice Tea
• Strewberry Ice Cream
Adults 75c Children's Plate 50s
-------------— [switched to dropping leaflets again
c • a 1 A t telling Omanis to swing behind the
3m1th Funeral pro-British Sultan and' for the
gal l ret i 'rebels to quit
I "lanned I oday Throughout the British assault,
• the strongholds flew the white H> u
Funeral services for Mrs Her- flag of the mam of Oman, reli-
ace Smith of Fort Worth will be gious leader Ghalib ben All who
held at 2 38 pm. today at ths' came back from Saudi Arabian
First Christian Church of t tantan exile to try to overthrow Sultan
Burial will be in Shiloh Cemetery Snid bin Taimur.
in the Corinth cmanunity-----------j—Whether the flylag of the Sul-
The former Mise Frances Mea-tan’sfag was definite indication
dows, daughter of Mr. and Mr., the.rebels had given up under the
Jack Meadows of Corinth, Mrs. Eritish pounding.was.not known
Smith died Friday night in a Fort here. But the British took it as a
Worth Hospita after a lingering
illness.
visually or by radar because it
stays submerged. NucTar sub-
hundred feet deeper than ^ PROJECT IN RED
tional boats. On a bright day the '
loom of a submarine just below! AI • TVI l f R l
Crowds Mock lo
S Vote Trouble
throughout the county, giving farm L
• The Annual Meredith-Enlow re-
union wiU be held in Denton City
Park next Sunday. ' -
Mrs. Georgia Bishop died in
Oklahoma City Saturday at the
home of her daughter, Mrs. Jew-
eU Hamm. Arrangements are
pending at the Jack Schmits and
Sons Funeral Home. >
PERSONALS
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Tarver and
PT2.
4 hc,
2" ' /
Ku.."ha /
Mass Arrests
is part of a remodeling and
enlarging of the club's facili-
ties which has been going on
this summer.
Although some of the remod-
eling jobs will not be cemplet-
ed by Wednesday, the club
will reopen and the 26x48 foot
pool will be ready ‘for mem-
bers’ use.
I tummm
in addition to her parents, she
is survived by her husband, a
daughter, Ruth; three brothers,
Jim Meadows and John Meadows,
both of Fort Worth, and Charles
Meadows, who |g h the armed
forcea,
Mrs. O. R. Looper of Aubrey.
Mrs. J. P. Simmons aad sea,
Wayne, 200 McCormick, have re-
turned from visiting relatives in
Baton Rouge, La., and Texarkana.
Ark.
HOSPITAL NOTES
Flow Memorial Hospital
Admitted; Miu Dobra Miller,
Gainesville, surgical: B B. Mal-
lory, Irving, medical; Mrs. Rob-
ert Westover, 1209 N. Locust,
medical; Robert Hoyt Watson Jr.,
Roanoke, medical; Mrs. W. H.
Holbrook, 410 Bradshaw, medical;
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 305, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 28, 1957, newspaper, July 28, 1957; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1449984/m1/2/: accessed June 20, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.