Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 62, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 17, 1957 Page: 2 of 20
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Ouraday, October If, 1957
—PAGE TWe
7
-
A
*
f
"1
p.
1
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Whitehead,
* I
ton. Funeral services will be held
The Denton Chamber of Com-
hes.
Race With Rocket
its race
the Denton area approximately
tions this morning extremely dif-
Fi
HELD OVER
U)
THRU THURSDAY
Jerry Holleman.
for residents.
- er
of $18,000 subseribed or paid in
a
THE
1
has hopes that the entire amount
PRIDE
will be pledged very soon.
I
w
l
reation director after only one per-
of
I
material in such files would be
l
com-
Mne088
t
Ch
J
TODAY ONLY
MARKETS
a
■ *1
Own.
with his surroundings.
E
3
r
CICIL! AUBRY
J
• Ah Pieve Imuw • Jecque Sorne
4 "BLUEBEARD"
t.
1011 s. ‘Industrial Blvd. • DALLAS
I
I
9
. •
*
4. I
M
I'
8
M
r
, ELVIS PRESLEY
4
S
ARAGONBALLROOM
21
THI MIGHTY
. ONI IS HUI
WHO'S YOUR FAVORITE
ELVIS PRESLEY or PAT BOONE
LOVE Me
Tender
Rites Today For
Mr. Abercrombie
STUDENT ART E. Side of Square
The Hiarious "Trut" Ahout A T-Wite Huzband:
Rag Fire Causes ,
Foul Aroma For
1942, and also
1947 deal with
Collin Goodwill Bag
Collection Planned
of
Mt
co
<1»
P*
to
of
Boyd Girl Is
Chosen Queen
Of Reunion
was appearing
effective lobby
' 1
N,
4 mighty nice friendly, private and
handy place to do business
tai
ent
1n
p'
pe
KARNITE
50c Per Car
NOW BOTH ON THE
SAME BIG PROGRAM
The Most
Vou’ve
• Mrs. Sudie" Crain, 1008
land. had as guests her daugb-
ter and husband, Mr and Mrs.
r
ft
e
Sheep 500, steady good and cholce lamba
21.0021.50, feeder lembs 19.00-20.50.
and Mrs: Richard Geeteh, their
son-in-law and daughter of Fort
Worth
Guests ia the home of Mrs, M.
E. Meredith are Mr. and Mrs. W.
MeKINNEY (Special) — Good-
will Bags for use of citizens of
McKinney and Collin County are
being- distributed and will be col-
lected Sunday. Bob Mickman, dis-
trict Scout executive, has announc-
ed
Hickman said that these bags
are being distributed in McKin-
ney, Celina, Farmersville, Wylie
and pickups will he made to each
locality on October 90.
.st
n
Jq
H
M
- FOR
AU.
OCCASIONS
ANO THE
PASSION
FRIENDLY FINANCE COMPANY
111 1. Hickory Joe B Wankan. Loor Mgr. DU2-5880
58
P—o
I I
1a
re
Newsmen asked Faubus yester-
day what he thought might happen
•nd
Rock"
"First Run At
The Same Law Adm."
CO-ED
DRIVE-IN THEATRE
INDOOR AUDITORIUM
k
With
CARY GRANT
As The Pride
SOPHIA LORIN
Ab The f lama
FRANK SINATRA
I As The Passion
%3-
M""y2
T
I
I
I
I
V MGM-
A AATMIUR IMtl raooucTON
FRED ASTAIRE
CYD CHARISSE.
program. to be held in the Den-
ton Junior High School auditori-
“ Amed
Areiete.
PCTUN
_________ officials sajd. how-
ever, that in naming Larson, Ei-
Attendance at Central High yes-
terday was 1,724 with 239 absent.
School officials attributed some of
the absences to influenza
All but 8 of the 65 students who
were suspended for walking out
in a recent protest demonstration
against integration have been re-
SUCCESSOR
To succeed Larson as USIA
today. It —___ ____ ..
dropping closer to earth—and in-
Staff Special
SANGER — Sanger residents, if
they didn’t know before Wednes-
day night, will know for a long
time what the odor of smoldering,
wet rags is like.
A Johns - Mannsville truck,
loaded with baled rags enroute to
has served as ambassador to Iron,
India, Yugoslavia anil NATO and
LOOPHOLE
- "You mean if a lobbyist wines
and dines me for nine days and
never discusses legislation. that he
can feed me sardines and crack-
ers on the tenth day and just re-
port that?"
"I think it's got too many loop-
holes," said Sen. Jimmy Phillips,
who has his own bill on lobby con-
Big, Bouncy
and SJ
BEAuTFuL!2
VEg AN
spends more than $25 in behalf
of legislation would also register.
One of his first ,widely acclaimed
works,- "The Stral
McKinney United
Fund At $18,000
T. Meredith L.
Houston and. Mr.randNrs,Jack
L Meredith of Fort Worth.
g
E
h«w. VI3 N, Eim, DU2-4826.
SOUTH Site,' ntOliv ^umlihsd apartment,
relieble person or MURI*. 825 Denton IT.,
Du2-4768.
NEWIY Decotated. inside, -bedroom unfur- ll
ri
f’ ’ //
a JANoi
ot
N
WASHINGTON W—The United
States intends, to pay more nt-
tention. to psychological warfare
as a weapon. In the cold war
before the House group which was
appointed to determine whether
regulatory agencies are carrying
out the intent of Congress.
Rep. Moulder (D-Mo), commit-
tee chairman, has said the CAB
has refused to allow access to per
tinent fites and records.
political speed
Informed of
Mge a
SIND
FLOWERS
Whipple also said the observa-
’ niis received unofficial re-
FORT WORTH (AP) - Hogs 700, off 25,
choice 18.00.
. The rocket toay was again
sighted in the northwest sky and
RICHARD [GANI
nrnnA naqry I
UEBRA rAGE!!
Ke
.i
in Tori Worth spotted the obje
this morning but reported the sat-
ellite itself was not visible even
through telescopes
DENTON PERSONALS
Mr. and Mrs. John E. Yar-
brough Tuesday night entertained
the employes and families of Yar-
brough Furniture Co. at their home
1818 Greenwood. Attending were
Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Robbins.
Mr, and Mrs Phillips King. Mr.
AMPU5
STEVENS
JekSOode
. DO..OTNY MALONE
Shi
n""
"wholly without basis in prece-
dent or law.”
Instated. The day the Negroee
first entered Central, about 700 i
white students stayed at home but
just before the walkout attendance
reached a peak of 1,783. Since then
absences have averaged 225 to 2W
daily.
Ever Met
MARK
senhower was doing more then
giving him a new post behind the
scenes where he would be safe
from Democratic attack
The job to be filled by Larson,
they said, is an important one be-
ause it gives the Eisenhower
administration a qualified official,
unburdefted by daily administra-
tive problems, to concentrate full
time op the propaganda aspects
♦ g nW axtst us.&
Oi Enc K 01(1 WRre
SENATOR’S CHARGE
- On Capitol Hill, Sen. O'Mahoney
(D-Wyo) said that "what this
country -needs is not propaganda
but action.”
1
k ■
M <
I
■ T
po
in
ar
recording of the time
Sputnik has been reported trail-
ing the third-stage rocket almost
since its launching by Russia
nearly two weeks ago.
TMt UW first" time three
trol. PfiBltpjL branded ^SHTh's as
"too loose" ahd "not logical."
Camus was born into"a family
of farmhands at Mondovi, Algeria.
Nov. 7. 1813. His mother was
Spanish. His French father was
killer in the Battle of the Marne
in World War I, before his son
knew him.
Camus has weathered varied
living conditions and won a bout
with tuberculosis. He has worked
as an automobile mechanic, ship’s
broker, meteorologist and clerk.
He started writing when he want
to France at the age of 28, just
before World War II began. As
a journalist h high point was
editing the Paris newspaper Com-
bat after the war
I
fl
5:25 a.m. Friday and will be visi-
ble to the naked eye, it was learn-
ed today. A moon-watcher team
O'Mahoney said that while the
1
. I
. .
I Ok that
/'RiU Roll
I
I
so thought he saw Sputnik.
All these times were at—or close
to—5:17 a. m
They will be.mthecked later
against an automatic electronic
ney. Miss Rosemary Lockhart. G.
C. Yarbrough. Mr and Mrs. Mal-
colm Garrett and.Mrs. Opal Dar-
nell ■- ’
Word has been received here
that Ed Daugherty of Commerce
was killed in an automobile acci-
dent near Commerce Weduesday.
Mrs. Daugherty, his wife, is the
grandadughter of Mr. and Mrs.
C. P. Masters of 1428 Knight, Den-
watchers in the Boston
placed it so far behind.
LIGHT FLUCTUATES
date was fixed for the change. .hut
James C. Hagerty, White House
press secretary, said it will oceur
soon.
The surprise appointment re-
moved Larson from the agency
where he has been a favorite tar-
get of congressional Democrats,
who objected to his Republican
P4rp,--‘"
omniacS* J
PHONE 1)12-2551 i
Briefs - Births - Hospital Notes
in the Huse, the State Affairs chief. Eisenhower selected George
V. Allen, a career diplomat who
estimated—at 888 miles. Now, I wjs todtay speculating about rail- Aet 16inFlow.Memortak Hospl-
tiFUl T- s 4 » nhm it g-, inda enong Ap+ine: tn gon giqor tal.
TOT DEAD
(Continued from Page 1)
Dallaa County sherilf’s office car.
A couple of workmen near the
Steelman residence said they
heard a terrific blast and saw
smoke coming from the southwest
comer room of the house. Sec-
onds later, they said, another
blast rocked the .house, knocking
out window glass.
The Steelmans' next door neigh-
bor, Mrs. Sally Wardaw, said she
heard two blasts and saw Mrs.
Steelman and her 5-year old
granddaughter run out of the
house, screaming for help. Mrs.
Wardaw said she went to the high-
way to try to flag down some
cars. She said that Mrs. Steel-
man then attempted to re-enter
the house to rescue Vicki but the
heat and flames blocked her path.
The blaze could be seen from
as far away as Denton and Car-
rolton and the highway was jam-
med with onlookers.
er liaison between USIA and the
State Departihent."
Partly as a result of opposition
to Larson, the Democratic-con
analrpaymoo-yix“nproprtatiomu:
There have been rumors since
then that Larson would resign, but
Hagerty said the fund cut was
not a factor in his change of jobs.
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. W-Satel- the same point in the sky where u is open 40;hepulie wi
lite Sputnik appeared to be losing Sputnik was later observed. ' tm “8oete
its race around the world with its ..... Th- "uiehihiw a-vice usea t.
rosagrsormpsmdosazat A slight FhU* and the brighten- proPi svus"k. th® SSfie
troppint APPser 4 eattthen hinedawnmadean three observa- satellite, into space will be over
r
it is about 550 I ing a second meeting to consider
applicants for the post of city rec-
anaar," written in
"We Plague" in
NoMh Africa. His
Official Hits
File Opening
WASHINGTON m-James R
Durfee, chairman of the Civil
Aeronautics Board. said today the
personal ftles"of board members
should not be divulged to Con-
grass
He said that "once a congres-
sional committee has, by compul-
sion. probed the personal thought
processes of the members of an
'independent' agency, independ-
ence of judgment is destroyed for-
ever.”
with their own personal assist- from Army officials here qn when
ants" the defederalization will take
Moulder said CAB’s action is place.
and Mrs. Jerry Lam, Mr. and Mrs. ______
Boss Toomer, Mr. and Mrs. Arche • Bill Gage of Big Springs
le Alley, Earl Smith. Sandra Gall! “ .. 77 .
Smith. Clark Compton, Earl Kin- 801 Cordell, had as_ guests Mr.
President Eisenhower served
notice of this yesterday when he
picked Arthur Larson, chief of the
U.S. Information Agency, to be his
’
ve
st
Always The Seme
Reasonable Adm.
*-
Never A Price
Squeeze At The Co-Ed
"One. thing about the appointment
la that it should mean much clos-
tracked as it passed just above .The pile was. still smoldering this
---------morning. continuing its rank odor
to a smaller orbit—was moving
ahead in its relative position in
the sky.
Three moonwatchers on the roof
of the Harvard Observatory
thought they saw the smaller
Sputnik trailing the much-bright-
er rocket at- Approximately 5:17
a. m. EST. The rocket had been
sighted at 4:52 and at 4:54 reached
today in hopes of, making more —
progress than senators did yester against Russia,
day on a lobby registration bill. President F
' Silk
Stockings
1 o -
TOO LATt TO CLASSIFY
u»*ot cal o. F. Smith, sin-rm. #
Within an hour a wood-frog can ________ _______
change the color of his body from calves 20.00-23.50, heifer
dark green to light tan to blend
special White House assistant on
steps to counter Soviet propagan-
da campaigns—including . that
which soared with the Russian
satellite.
troops were not wanted in Texas
for any purpose and that he not
Interfere with operation of the
public schools; another would ask
the President to bar from Texas
Negro servicemen who are 'mar-
ried to whites.
Martin admitted. "There's plen-
ty of ways of going around this
bill."
No funds or officials are pro-
vided to supervise the act. neither
are there any in the other ver-
sions offered in both Houses.
The Hillsboro senator told the
committee "as long as the lobby-
ists don't discuss legislation, they
don't have to report.”
_ He preplied in the affirmative
when Chairman Wardlow Lane
asked:
the star-group known as the Pleia-
। des, or "Seven Sisters," and then
past the constellation Orion. Its
by
he
we
“We believe that there remain.*
only one relatively small area of
difference as to the procedures of'
this investigation." Durfee told
the subcommittee. "This pertats
to the withholding of personal files
of board members and communi-
cations. oral er written, between
board members themselves and
t . I
a plant at Fort Worth for process-
ing into shingles, caught fire
---- north-of-towa-aboat -pem. Wed-
—e i nesday.
area . Pulled into town near a fire
plug, the truck later was driven
to the city dump grounds, where
a wrecker from Bels Garage help-
ed dump the smouldering cloth.
‘E-I THUATRS
Attention To
Water Action
AUSTIN w_Legislators turned
their attention to water measures
' merce board of directors will hold
. . । its monthly business meeting Fri-
Sputnik Behind Insam"u
I . ._____ show to be sponsored by Denton
(Continued from Page 1)
erally orderly situation" at Cen-
tral High.
Brucker also ordered 8,300 Ar-
kansas National Guardsmen de-
federalized. That left about 1,800
guardsmen on duty.
So far there has been no word
Linwood Roberson
FLORIST
Ml W. Hickpry DU2-2561
Stam and m4Y
and dansas •
and Y
romanees ia UA
M-G-M’s gay t
flming of Iba W
Broadway to! 1
,9 .
" mt " t
WHY MORE
When You Cen Buy
a Big LUSCIOUS T
HAMBURGIR for 25c
Bottled Drinks 5c
Self-Service
Come Aa Yeu Are
JOHNNIE’S DRIVE-IN
1 Blocks North ef
Square on Locust
participate in "forced integra-
Uon."
• * 0 • ■ > — -- 7 • ' . . 1 -
THE DE N T 0 N o R D CHRONICLE
1 in
Ca
Police Look For
Suspect In Theft
The search continued today for
a man who is believed to have
stolen 8180 and a wrist watch from
ran Idabel, Okla., manin Denton
- Tuesday night.
/ Denton police Wednesday found
a suitcase believed to belong to
the subject hidden near the Eagle
Courts. the scene of the alleged
theft. Buck Larane, who was vis-
iting in Denton, reported the theft
Tuesday night to Denton police
and a full-scale investigation en-
sued. :
Larane had given the man a
ride from Joplin. Mo , to Denton
and had offered him the opport uni
ty to relax in the motel room
while Larane cleaned up.
Police Chief I. E. (ndy) An-
derson said this morning that more
information was expected on the
men when he receives a report
from Missouri police.
attle 1.000: calves 300, steady; medium
end lew grade steers, heifers 13,00-18.00,
fat cows I3.SO-1S.30; good end. choice
calves IS 00-31.SO; common end medium
<3.00-19.00; good end choic dock steer
calves 20.50
Sen Crawford Martin, sponsor
of a bill which follows generally
recommendations of the Texas
Legislative Council, had rough
ileddlng befors Ihe Senate State
Affairs Committee. It recessed un-
til Monday after a throe-hour
question-and-answer match on the
lobby - registration bill Martin
backs.
‘ RACE HILL
FRENCH
(Continued from Page 1)
same crossroads: the police are
foL"ie g . Among material withheld were if guardsmen restored to his
Interagency communications on m.
modesty and classical restraint j in
between what he calls the physi- nn ..utun, ,
cal or mora "hangmen" of the members’ eraonsyany.a
extreme left and right. nMmoers personal files.
r •.
I eha.-
1 .
‘ ‘ 1.
_ - ____ ____mand werec ordered to enforce in-
ternational aviation routes, work-1 tegratlon at Central-High.
ig memoranda of a board mem- The governor replied that he
ber.and . _ aasistant, and CAB thought many of them would re-
~ see " sign from the guard rather than
"Once this Independence
Funeral services for Robert
Crawford Abercrombie, 82. of 1905
Morse, who died Wednesday at
3:30 a.m. in Flow Memorial Hos-
pital, were to be held today at
3:30 p.m. m Schmitz - Floyd-Ham-
lett Funeral Chapel.
The Rev. Martin Thomas, pas-
tor of the First Presbyterian
Church, was to be in charge of
services. Interment was to be in
the Roselawn Memorial Park.
Mrs. Abercrombie was born in
Greenfield. Man., Nov. 9, 1874.
and had been a Denton resident
for 13 years. A retired construc-
tion worker, he was a member of
the First Presbyterian Church of'
Denton.
Survivors include his wife; two
brothers, Ed Abercrombie and
Williams Abercrombie, both of
Greenfield; and a Deice, Mrs.
Dick Harris of Denton.
. - *
Royal Stephenson of the Greater m"
McKinney United Fund campaign ■ ""TrTr
now in progress reported a total ■ 7J A V ▼ I
IP
gone, the integrity of judgment is
j lost forever," Durfee added in tes-
timony prepared for a special
House Committee on * Legislative
Oversight.
cash Wednesday afternoon. The
IBS? goal of the Fund has been
set at 894.880.
Turrentine pointed out that I
while the total reported is some m
$8,000 short of the announced goal B
there are still a number of in-
dustries and committees who have, -
not turned in their cards and he
most recent book is a collection
of short stories, "The Exile and
the Kingdom."
. ■
Seven of the signers of the Dec-
laration of Independence were
more than 00 years old.
earth satellite.
•‘I don't think'that's the answer
to Sputnik and I don't think Lar
son or anyone else can make it
an answer," he said.
Sen.' Mansfield, (D-Mont), a
member of the Foreign Relations
Committee, said "I do not believe
they could have pleked a better
man than George Allen" for head
of USIA
"He is a career man with a
wealth of experience," he said.
homes, income property, farma, renches, । m
Texas and Oklahoma. | ■
MODISH A-Aoom dvplex, 220 wteHia,' wmK 1
ar connectioma, insulated, textone walla, ! _
Hrapa 4; 5 teouS, 0U3 73W B
RWAY Vacuum cloaner,withattachmenta, B
0 real barain. Dial DU2-5512.
FOR SALE; Washateria equipment Ineluding 1B
tr^tn and machines, will tall pleces tap- B,
arately Phone PU2-9086.
2BE DROOM Urfurniahed tovae in Northwest . I
Sectiom of City, additional information IB
1301 IHWtay. "
Committee sent to subcommittee
two resolttions drafted by the seg-
, regation bloc. One would tell Pres- _________________
and daughter* w i idant Eugnhowar that federal now is ambassador to Greece. No
flcult according to Marshall Melin,
moonwatch coordinator. •
Ralph Stevens of Arlington,
looking through his moonwatch
telescope said, “I definitely saw
something copper-colored” cross
the field of view.
Richard Elliott of Stoneham said
^“"^uXy*^
. EDDI wiuLIS -gr
A girl was born to Mr. and
Mra. C. A. Redfearn, Route 2, Oct.
eon turned up to apply for the job 16 in Elm Stree 1 Hospital & 1 lin
at a board meeting Wednesday ' I:____________
rui------"iSolons Turn
1 OWN 1 OPICS
Wile number five
We a Pen Oriental *
Wilh • thousana tmieks
$o (entimental X - ,
. LhetALUESERD >4WM
OLher emoue
And -haitehed har tie
(• the ether shiore.
An rh DRIVE IN FRIDAY.
UWJ-E• THEATRE SATURDAY
ne
nt
h»
F.
administration had been cutting)
™ , —- — -s------ back on defense funds and man-
The bill would require profes- --------------------------7---- ]
sional lobbyists or those who, as
an employe of a company, lobby Ferguson Funeral
for legislation to give this Informs- c - “ _ _ , _
tion to the secretary of state. Any- bcheduled | oday
one working for another who
ed
th
' co
3
Funeral services for Mrs. E. L.
— presldent..et
"inasbehalf.of.an The Rev. L k Armstrong was 1
"But gi-qptt,regista onaet "-to be in eharge and burial, was to
but sa a Martin s Deeded changes be in Roselawn Memorial Park un-
der direction of the Goen Funeral
Home
Pallbearers were to be Virgil
Allen, W. E. Ramm. Boyd Arm-
strong, Everett Barnett, Harve
MeKINNEY (Special) — Co . Gray and Fred Clark
Chairmen Audie Turrentine and mm-a
mgyeactosshhesla“ekinscdpe, Sanger Citizens
Hugh Armoy of South Naitj al-
night.
Board chairman John Shrader
said the four members of the
board present at the meeting qr
Mrs. Hal Norgaard, Walt Parker,
Miss Nette Shults and Shrader —
gave the single applicant a form
to fill out and return to them.
The man is,G. H. Austin of Dal-
las. who is at present serving will)
the Dallas Recreation Depart-
ment.
Shrader said the board did not
want to award the post until it
could choose from a number of
applicants. He said a second meet-
ing to accept applications would
probably be called in the last week
of the month
Ike Choice Signals
New Publicity T ack
power, the boviet had been suc .
ceeding with missiles and an ...
-Record-Chrenicle 3t»H Phote ton. Funeral services '
ROSIE REED, ON COUCH, TO REIGN SATURDAY ! Friday in Commerce.
Duchesses, Left To Right: Lois Peel, Christine. Sydow And Elizabeth Zorns
Approximately 40,000 pounds of
is light fluctuated a great deal. range were destroyed in the blase,
Scientists said the rocket is now , believed to have started,: iron’
14 minutes—or about -4,200 miles 1 "Parks from the truck s diesel ex-
—ahed of the satellite. ' haust. The truck was 001 damag-
Dr. Fred L. Whipple, director" ed.
of the Smithsonian Observatory. . '
'Hie CAB chief was summoned -fardheheanekag"orensmteinamnckBoard May Set
Another Session
andmay falito ““""’For Filling Job
A week ago the rocket's maxi- i
mum distance from the earth was The Denton City Park Board
Whipple said.
Durfee said in his prepared tas- miles
timony that certain interagency T
communications in CAB files lory_________ 1V1B,
should not be made available un- ports from amateur observers w
til clearance is obtained from the a double object being seen when
other agency or department in- the Russian rocket passes, but
volved. i that the evidence is not yek strong
Durfee said 98 per cent of the enough that the rocket has split
material in such files would be into two sections.
.. “
BERNARDIN’
( in* ‘ ।
I_ K
.L I
“utN- I
R-C Wise County Girl
BOYD—Rosie Reed will reign
ss homecoming queen over the
second annual Boyd High School
homecoming Saturday night. A
sophomore. Miss Reed was elect-
ed by the student body and win
be crowned during halftime of
the Boyd-Kennedale football game.
Runnerups in the voting will al-
so be on hand as the queen's
attendants. Attendants are Lois
Peel, freshman; Christine Sydow,
junior; and Elizabeth Zorns, sen-
ior. Miss Reed won over the
other finalist, Miss Sydow, in a
Tuesday runoff balloting.
The annual homecoming will
officially get underway with reg-
istration set for 4:30 p.m. in the
high school gym for the antici-
pated 800 exes and ex-teachers, it
was announced by Brown, secre-
tary of Boyd High"s Ex-Students
Assn.
Following registration a dinner
will bo served between 6p.m.
and 8:48 p.m. at the school cafe-
teria.
Sam Moore, a former Instruc-
tor at Boyd High, win deliver
the principal address at the 7
p.m. meeting of the exes Other
forms of entertainment are being
lined up for the program. Offi-
cers will be elected.
Reservations were still being
taken for the event today under
the direction of Elmo Wise at
Rhome. Pat Goodger, Nadine
Smith and Orlanda Shiflet in
Boyd.
t PRICKS
General Adm._____90e
AU Students ______50c
Children ........ .20e.
MN/ Dowlas J. Healy. USN,
who was serving at Yorktown, Va.
was released from active to In-
active duty laat week, and ia back
in Denton now. He is the son of
Mrs. Lena Beaty of 810 Pacific.
Mr; and Mrs. M. H. Hare. 1108
Congress, have returned from a
visit to North" Carolina.
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Morris,
Jr., 903 Stanley, are parents of a
daughter, Karyn, born this morn-
ing at 8:80 at Harris Methodist
Hospital in Fort Worth Grand-
parents are Mr 1 and Mrs. Ches-
ter Morris Sr.. 710 Thomas.
Heve aa item of tatervst for-
Town Topics? Friends er rela-
tives from oat of town visit-
lag you? New grandchild?
Peath is the family? Don’t
hetoate to call the Record-
Chronicle, DU2-2551, jest ask
ter Town Topics. ' If you pre-
ter. drop a card to Box 451.
Denton.
HOSPITAL NOTES
Flow Memorial Hospital
Visiting Houra: 10:30-11:10 a.m.,
3-4 p.m., 7-8 p.m.
Admitted: Melvin Taylor. 816
' Rose, medical: Mrs. James Broad-
way, Sanger, medical; R. G. Hut-
cheson. 228 Bryan, surgical; Put
R. Lester, Lewisville, medical;
Frank J. Carbett, Oklahoma City,
surgical; Mrs. Roy S, Brooks.
Justin, medical; Master Tabor
Domotor, 214 Bernard, medical;
Mrs. Fred Pennington, Greenwood
medical; Wesley Tipton. 1018 Col-
lins, medical; Master Danny Red-
ing. Aubrey, accident
Dirhaygcr. Mfa F U p,u.
* ntrmwnersvutIvrerEsI,HNET
gett and baby. Dallas; Mrs. J. M.
Denison and baby, 1402 Boll ver;
Mrs. Kenneth W. Young and ba-
by. Garland; Mrs. Cora Arbuc-
kle, 303 Bonnie Brae; Mrs. Ten-
nis Travis, 700 Bradshaw; Mrs.
Marie C. Rowe. Dallas Drive:
Miss Carolyn Sue Thorne. Lewis-
ville: Gene Tosh. 803 Avenue B.
Elm Street Hospital & Clinie
Visiting Joura: 0:30-11:90 a.m.,
3-3 p.m., 7-8:30 p.m.
Admitted: Eugene Smith, San-
ger, medical: Mrs. C. A. Redfearn
Route 8, medical; Mrs. Sam Gen-
try. 411 Center, medical.
Dismissed: Mrs. Ella Potter,
I General Delivery, Denton: Mrs.
Billy Forgey and baby, 1615 Un-
derwood.
- BIRTHS
I A girl. Bettie Jaye, .was born
to Mr and Mrs. James Abner
Broadway, Sanger, at 7:11 p.m.
Rebekah Lodge No. 18 will be held
Friday night, instead of Satur-
day as previously reported. The
...... .z . -r s ' _ . - _■ ■
available readily and that the bal- ' ------—-
ance can be made available un- i yryvrpI I DANI-
der a clearance procedure Lal ■ ■ Laa KUCK
k.m
v W
Bh * - > Vaw]
vf.
q. -in-
1
JANISPAIGEPETERLORRE
• -umc•
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 62, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 17, 1957, newspaper, October 17, 1957; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1450054/m1/2/: accessed June 20, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.