Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 216, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 11, 1956 Page: 1 of 16
sixteen pages : ill. ; page 21 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
1
FAIR AND WAR
"s
Head Commission
Honored
+
Two Killed In
OUTSTANDING NTSC BUSINESS STUDENTS
Chico Blast
The injured man. Verser Greer,
mediately opened a study of the
2859ME
STATE OKAYS COUNTY
.. a
various reports from City (engineer
FOR DROUGHT SETUP
eral months has faced serious over-
After electing Brooks chairman.
to have taken the effect
blew the cab from the shovel, kill-
berry. Denny Vinson recently re-
run for the of-
Two Lewisville
WORLD
EVENTS
. Worth Press. Garrett said:
Six Killed In
Plane Crash
See BLAST, Page 1
Youth Recreation
Report Scheduled
she had six pairs of trousers, four
ed in mid-summer.
WEATHER
Serving on the recreation com-
cluhs;
city
warmer
repre-
school
and Dr.
Donnie Cotteral, NTSC, Dr. Lois
mar State College, *65,300; Col*
east of Denton at 3 a.m. today
100; Prairie View, *18.700; Texas
ton high school student and the
P m.;
Fish- ■
(4)
9
1
05:
Club Youths Vie For Awards
in Annual City Stock Show
KEFAUVER TAKES
ON CONFIDENCE
Youths Held For
School Break-Ins
New Regime
Takes Over
Mother Of Four
Held For Theft
State-Wide
Award Again
H. Grady Creel Jr., City Secre-
tary W. D. Buttrill and City At-
torney Teel.
The city has been operating in
r
[ j j
of
in-
55
38
82
and told Barnes she had been at-
tacked.
Barnes found the suspect in *
field behind his mother’s house
plane were identified as: Willard
Turner of Lubbock. the pilot; L.
T. Foster, a Lubbock contractor;
Don Portwood of Lubbock; L. T.
McKinley of Lubbock, and R. D.
McDonald, cotton compress owner
of the second plane.
The woman lives east of Keller,
the sheriff said.
Man Is Accused
Of Attack On
Schoolgirl, 14
A 24-year-old Denton man, ac-
cused of the rape of a 14-year-old
Denton girl, was taken into custody
today by Sheriff Wylie Barnes. '
The high school student reported
to Barnes Tuesday evening that
the man had picked her up after
school and had taken her to Forest
Park Zoo in Fort Worth where the
alleged attack occurred.
When the couple returned to
Denton, the girl told her mother
of the attack. The girl’s mother
immediately brought her to the
sheriff where the girl signed a
statement.
The commission appointed Jbhn
Potter acting finance examiner on
the staff.
Other allocations included the
University of Texas $204,900; Tex-
as Tech *132,700; Arlington State
College *107,900; Texas A&M $82-
300; Texas Western, *43,400; La-
State, $37,000; Sam Houston State,
*40,400; Southwest Texas State,
$42,900; West Texas State, *34,400;
Stephen F. Austin, *32.100; Sul
Rom. *6,100, and Tarleton State.
*2,300.
when 700 to 1,000 pounds of dyna-
mite. evidently which had not gone
off in an earlier blast, exploded. ■
MACHINE DEMOLISHED
The powder charge, which wit-
Generally fair and little warmer.
TEMPERATURES
(Experiment Slation Report)
DENTON AND VICINITY: Faf.
and warmer this afternoon and
tonight. Thursday partly cloudy
and mild.
WEST TEXAS: Partly cloudy and
Rogers Teel, re-elected to a two.
year term as city attorney, also
was sworn in Tuesday night.
Floyd, Jost and House each will
serve two-year terms on the city
commission. Huey was elected for
a one-year stint, to fill thq unex-
pired term of Vinson.
REPORT GIVEN
As the new commissioners took
ing: Good through Friday. .
Denton County rainfall so far
this month: .06. So far this year:
3.9*. T*s time last year: 3.84.
nesses said must have been fairly
close to the surface of the
said a meeting between CAA of-
ficials. the council, and the Den-
ton Chamber- of Commerce would
meet April 16 to seek use of run-
ways at the airport for a drag
site.
Two Argyle juveniles were ar-
rested Tuesday by Denton County
Sheriff Wylie Barnes for the break-
in at the Argyle High School on
March 21.
Barnes said today two more Ar-
gyle teen-agers were implicated
and would be picked up today.
A theft of *11 was reported in
the burglary.
we made a mistake in estimating
the seriousness of the feed situa-
tion in Denton County.”
After talking with Shrauner at
noon and after considering the
possibilities of an error. Rattan
expressed optimism that the appli-
cation would be reconsidered, pos-
sibly approved by the close of the
week.
Members of the Denton County
A 37-year-old woman, the moth-
er of four children, was arrested
by Sheriff Wylie Barnes in Roan-
oke for shoplifting in the Sea-
graves Dry Goods Store there
Monday -vening.
After the woman left the store
Monday night, the owner of the
store reported 8 theft of his daugh-
ter-in-law’s purse containing *16,
and some clothes from the store.
When Barnes caught the woman.
Finis Baker, church facilities
and programs; Zeke Martin, pub-
lic schools; Katherine Donham,
scouting; J. L. Carrico, service
At Gty Hall
William F. Brook* Jr. was
elected chairman of the city
commission as a new regime
took over at City Hall Tues-
day night.
Four freshman commis-
sioners, elected by voters in
the April 3 city election, took ,
the oath of office. Brooks,
the lone holdover commis-
sioner, has one more year to
serve on his two-year term.
Charles S. Fayd, W. M. (Wimpy)
Jost. L. A. (Bill) House and F. B.
Huey Sr. are the four newcomers
sworn in Tuesday night.
The incoming commission im-
Special to the Record-Chronicle
LEWISVILLE — Denton County
Sheriff Wylie Barnes is investigat-
ing two thefts in Lewisville, one .
a 1953 Chevrolet from the used car
lot of Huffines Motoi Company and
the theft of *163.86 worth of lum-
ber from a house under construc-
tion.
Both thefts occurred Monday the
sheriff said, the car being taken
about 2 p.m. and the lumber some-
time Monday night.
Sheriff Barnes said that the car
theft drove to the Huffines lot in
a borrowed 1946 Ford coupe and
was looking at the cars for sale.
When one of the salesmen went
in to check on insurance and par-
rying charges on the Huffines car.
the youth drove the car off the
lot leaving the Ford and its con-
tents. —..... --- t
Monday night a new shipment
of lumber, a gallon of plastic ce-
ment and two rolls of 90 pound
slate white were taken from the
new Ralph Miliken home in the
Miliken Addition which is being
built by Johnny Walters, Barnes
said.
Sheriff Barnes said he didn’t be.
lieve the two thefts were commit-
ted by the same person, and add-
ed that he knows the identity of
the person who took the car.
cuts and bruises.
OFFICER PRESENT
Prior to the, accident, D. C. Har-
per, an official from the Dallas
office of the company, had been
inspecting the quarry and had just
returned from there when the ex-
plgsion occurred at 11:35 a.m. in
the absence of Quarry Superinten-
By JIM NEAL
Record-Chronicle Staff Writer
CHICO — Two Bridgeport men
were killed and a Chico man ser-
iously injured Tuesday when an
electric shovel struck a dynamite
charge at the Southwest Stone
Company quarry one mile south-
east of here.
Killed were Carmon Bailey, 41,
the shovel operator, and Norris C.
Parsons, 50, a shovel mechanic
who was riding the giant machine.
ALLEN’S WIDOW TO
GET HALF MILLION
NEW YORK u_Comedian Fred
Allen left half his estimated one-
million-dollar estate to his widow,
as well as the income from the
other half.
Allen, whose real name was
John F. Sullivan, died of a heart
attack March 17 at the age of 61.
His will was filed for probate
Tuesday.
Complete reports of progress on
plans for a city-wide recreation
program in Denton will be pre-
sented at the May meeting of the
Denton Youth Council.
Mrs. Hal Nbrgaard, committee
chairman, said this morning that
a special youth committee of Den-
ton High School is completing tab-
ulation of results of a survey of
NEWARK, NJ. n-Sen. Estes
Kefauver left for Washington ear-
ly today after a five-day cam-
paign in New Jersey for the state’s
36 votes in the Democratic con-
vention.
The lanky Tennessean said he
figured on winning from 16 to 20
of the possible 56 district dele-
gates in next Tuesday’s primary
He predicted be "will go to the
convention as front runner and I
will get the nomination."
A Streamlined Report
Of Important News
, ayyn mag mb
O AI
See the Olympia Typewriter. (
Denton Typewriter Exchange
trip to Fort Worth.
The man was being held in Den-
ton County jail at noon 'today,
pending arrival of Fort Worth au-
thorities and formal filing of
charges, Sheriff Barnes said.
. ♦
Receiving plaques as outstanding NTSC business stu-
dents in their fields of study are, left to right, Bill
Reasoner, Dallas, marketing; Bill Hooks, Henderson,
insurance; Coleman D. Barnett Jr., Mineola, banking
and finance; Troy P. Miller Jr., Sanger, management;
and Kenneth A. McCrady, Forreston, accounting. Pre-
Greer, who was sitting on a
rock some distance away, was
eating his lunch prior to placing
new powder charges for the day’s
second blasting. His back was
turned when the explosion occurr-
ed and the blast hurled the shov-
el’s cab over his head, lifted him
from the rock and threw him to
the floor of the quarry. Witnesses
stated that the akin of his back
was riddled with ehips of stone and
gravel, and said that "it looked
like he’d been hit by a load of
buckshot."
Mentation was made at the annual honors banquet of
the NTSC School of Business Administration Tuesday
night. Award-winning January graduates not present
for the picture are Mrs. Beverly Russell Sandlin, Dal- .
las. business education, and Mrs. Angela Raynaud
Smith, Fort Worth, secretarial science.
—
QUICK ACTION WANT.
■' ADS. DIAL C-2551.
■ . ’ n
dent A. E. Krum, who had gone
for lunch. Harper took charge *
the rescue operation*, which _
volved damaged high-tension elec-
tric wiring that had powered the
For the second year in succes-
sion. the Denton Record-Chronicle
has been named winner of the
state wide award for Texas’ out-
standing special conservation edi-
tion published by a daily news-
paner.
The award is based on the Rec-
ord-Chronicle’s conservation ’ edi-
tion published July 3, 1955.
Last year’s state award also was
won by the Record-Chronicle for
its outstanding conservation edi-
tion published in 1954.
The competition is sponsored by
the Fort Worth Press, which will
present the 1956 plaque award to
Publisher Riley Cross at the an-
nual conservation awards banquet
Friday evening. May 4, in the Tex-
as Hotel in Fort Worth.
Announcement of the Record-
Chronicle’s two-in-a-row feat was
received from Marvin Garrett, soil
conservation director of the Fort
UDALL ON GUARD
AGAINST STORMS
UDALL. Kan. um — Smashed to
pieces by a tornado while asleep
last year, thia revived town has
, posted an all-night guard to make
sure an alarm is sounded if an-
. other tornado appears.
An observation tower built south-
west of town is manned from 6
p.m. to 6 a.m. every night, with
114 citizens taking turns on two-
hour shifts.
High ......................
Low ......................
High year ago ............
Low year ago ............
Sun sets today at 6:58
rises Thursday at 6:03 a.m.
ground
it did,
WEATHER
all public school children here,
and the results should be known
soon.
. "We realize," she said, "that a
good recreation program that in-
cludes swimming pools, tennis
courts, a youth center, and similar
recreational facilities cannot be
developed overnight."
FACILITIES CHECKED
“But we have to have a starting
point, and the best place to start
is to see just what our city’s youth
want in ths way of recreation,**
she said.
"Denton is lacking a long-range
planning program for recreation,"
she told members of the youth
council last night. "We don’t want
our youth five years from now to
point an accusing finger at us be-
cause they have no good recrea-
tion facilities."
"Organization of the Denton
Youth Development Council is the
first progressive step in prevent-
ing such a situation,” she added.
COMMITTEE LISTED
________ ,__eating that was where the sports-
iege of Arts and Industries, $23,- men were heading.
The five men on the second
7 NTSC
Students
Timmons, TSCW, and Dr. Ethelyn
Davis, TSCW, advisory members.
___- _______ _____ _ _____ In other business last night,
talking to his wife about the Den. Byron Munson, chairman of ths
-- -4 -2 41 youth traffic safety committee, Southern,
Ci
$29,900; East Texas
quet, Mitchell suggested that the
corporate idea in this country is
not old. It has been in the past
quarter-century, he said, that the
class of professional managers has
gradually replaced the owner-man-
ager who built his business as an
individual enterprise.
“An outstanding development in
the new management science is
that a business organization must
have service as its basic concept
if it is to succeed,” Mitchell de-
clared. “But profit is not some,
thing to be ashamed of because
profit is essential to the operation
of that service."
HIGH AIMS
The speaker emphasized that tor
a corporation to grow in keeping
with the service ideal. it must
provide the means for its people
to grow — not just in terms of
salary, but in terms of the kind of
See AWARDS, Page 2
— - ' 1
the new commission quickly
named Floyd vice chairman.
TERMS END
Brooks took over the gavel from
outgoing chairman Richard Talia-
ferro. Other commissioners whose
terms ended Tuesday night are
R. B. Gambill and Claude Castle-
51, powderman for the company, luo-m-y -pyugu - auug -
was reported in fair condition to- city’s financial status, hearing
day at Bridgeport H(«pital,
Newspaper reporters and pho-
tographers were barred from the
During the noon telephone con-
versation. Shrauner told Rattan
and Edgar Lynch, chairman of
the county committee, that "the
door is not closed” to Denton
County’s application for designa-
tion as a disaster area.
“That’s why we deferred action
on the application rather than
ignoring its plea altogether,’ ’he
told the two. He made a similar
statement to the Record-Chronicle
Tuesday morning.
Rattan told the Denton group
that reports to Shrauner and other
members of the state committee
that a surplus of hay existed in
the county came from Denton
County residents. Rattan said he
See DROUGHT, Page 2
“Your editton was indeed a wor-
thy winner, and it topped the most
vigorous competition ever to fig-
ure in this contest. Special ap-
plause is due you for this year s
achievement.”
Both the 1954 and 1955 conserva-
tion editions were edited by Allen
Bogan of the Record-Chronicle
staff.
Cross and Bogan will be among
the honor guests at the May; 4
awards banquet, which annually
attracts outstanding conservation
farmers, agricultural officials and
business leaders from over the
state.
The Record-Chronicle conserva-
tion edition of 1965 highlighted
stories and pictures of farms,
farmers and activities of the vast
Denton-Wise Soil conservation Dis-
trict. which embraces 793,000
acres.
the calves.*
Judges for the event were Jack
Bourland, representative of Swift
and Co. of Fort Worth who plac-
ed calves, and a representative of
Quaker Oats Co., who was judge
of the hog show.
Auctioneer in this afternoon’s
sale was Cecil Ward of Gaines-
vine.
which in the past had approved its
recommendations, bt which this
time placed more emphasis upon
suggestions by other people.
STATEWIDE PANEL
The state drought committee is
composed of directors of the state
organizations of Soil Conservation
Service, Farmer’s Home Adminis-
trattou, Extension Service. the
state ASC chairman, plus a rep-
resentative of Governor Allan
Shivers’ office. With exception of
the governor s representative, the
local committee is composed of
representatives of the same gov-
Commerce and the Denton County
Livestock Association, sponsors of
the event. o
The show featured 27 fat calves
and 33 hogs, fed out as livestock
projects of 4-H end FFA mem-
bers in Denton County during the
past year.
Most show officials this morn-
ing. after viewing the exhibits,
agreed that quality of the animals
far exceeded that in previous
years when larger numbers were
entered.
Judging of calves and hogs be-
.Plans already -are being made belts and a pair of atppers.
for the 1966 edition, to be publish- “ . - —
CHARLES C. ORR JR.
Orr Named To
TSCW Post
Announcement of the appoint-
ment;of Charles C. Orr Jr. as
busines manager for plant opera-
tions at TSCW, effective April 16,
was made today by President John
A. Guinn.
Orr has been -employed by the
City of Denton since 1948, holding
the position of director of finance
during the past year. He had been
city secretary since 1950.
The new TSCW business mana-
ger. 34, was born in Little Elm
and is a 1940 graduate of the Den-
ton Public Schools
He attended Texas A&M College
1941-43, and enlisted in the U.S.
Army in February of that year.
After being instructor in infan-
try heavy weapons at Camp Bland-
ing, Fla. from August, 1943, to
August. 1944, he went overseas to
Europe as squad leader and was
wounded in the Battle of the Bulge
Jan. 2, 1945.
He is married to the former Lu-
cille Armstrong, and they have one
child, Cheryl Ann, 5. The Orrs
live at 2311 Fowler Drive.
Orr is a member of the Denton
Rotary Club, serving as director
at present, and until recently was
director of the Denton Civil Serv-
ice Commission.
At TSCW he succeeds Frank D.
Fuller, who is moving to Abilene.
“We are pleased to welcome Mr.
Orr to our staff,” Dr. Guinn said.
"A man of his capabilities will be
invaluable as we face the increas-
ing demands of a period of rapid
growth and development.”
scene of the blast. According to
witnesses, Bailey’s two-yard capa- .. .
city shovel was digging in a fresh- the red and during the last sev-
ly-blasted section of the quarry ce:-----2; —--------------
shortly before the noon break, draft problems.
omzumannmenroxememtxaraxe rEtrmemgmzm
Brooks Named To
» .a — '
A Growing Newspaper For A Growing Are^1''
DKNTON, TEXAS. WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL IL 1M4 * '
—-------‘ne-----------------------------------
assmm Thefts Probed
gan simultaneously at 10 a.m., wazini.
this morning, and sale time is set SOUTH CENTRAL, EAST TEXAS:
for 1:30 p.m., leading off with the - -
grand champion calf, followed by
all hogs, then the remainder of
A physician examined the girl sentative; Pat Hamil
board representative;
JALAPA. Mexico (—Six Texans
were killed when their small air-
craft crashed into the slopes of an
extinct volcano about 25 miles
northwest of here last night.
Lubbock, Tex., police identified
five of them as: Ray Watson, Lev-
elland sport store owner; Paul
Lawrence, pharmacy owner from
Big Spring; Morris Davis, coown-
er of a Lubbock prescription lab;
Charles C. Coffee, well - to-do
Lubbock farmer, and Quinn Hen-
ry of Lubbock, a professional
pilot.
The sixth man was not defini-
nitely identified, but Weldon
George, part owner of an aircraft
dealership at the Lubbock airport,
said Arthur Chase of Lubbock told
him he was to be the co-pilot on
the plane with Henry.'
The six men were part of a two
plane fishing party of 11 men.
All were described as middle-aged
businessmen.
The second plane did not crash.
Five men were known to be
aboard it.
Carl Maxey of Lubbock, owner
of the crashed plans, was also
identified earlier as one of the
victims when his papers were
found, but he was found safe in
Lubbock.'
Tull reported that he had given
Chase, a former employe, some
of his credit cards to uss on the
trip.
Although cause of the crash was
not determined, it was believed
the route had been lost due to a
heavy mist.
Papers found at the crash scene
showed the six men had authori-
zation for a five-day fishing trip,
and a map was marked at the
town of Ciudad del Carmen. indi-
r / '
-
< ; --
Monroe said the Denton cham-
ber would follow the state recom-
mendation with local telegrams to
the national committee, urging
their approval of the proposal
MISTAKE ACKNOWLEDGED
Reconsideration of the county
application by the state committee
followed telephone conversations
Tuesday between Tom Rattan, dis-
trict representative for the Agri-
cultural Stabilization Committee,
and Robert Shrauner of Dumas,
state drought committee chair
man.
Rattan told members of the
county committee Tuesday, after
conferring with Shrauner that “we
perhaps made a mistake in esti-
mating conditions of Denton Live-
stock producers and dairymen."
The county committee Tuesday
afternoon had issued a new appli-
cation for inclusion in the emer-
gency feed program. The applica-
tion was remade after the state
committee had deferred action on
a March application made by Den-
ton County.--------------
Rattan told the county commit
tee Tuegjay morning that he only
reported crop conditions in his dis
trict. which includes Denton Coun-
ty. to State Drought Committee
Chairman Robert G. Shrauner of
Dumas, and made no recommenda-
tions for action.
RECOMMENDATIONS
However, in an afternoon session
with the county group, he indicet-
ed that it was his job as personal
observer for Shrauner in this area
to maks recommendations to
Shrauner for action by the state
committee.
He told the county committee
following a conversation with
Shrauner at noon Tuesday “that
both Shrauner and myself think
mittee with Mrs “Norenard are- state colleges, based on enrollment
- - - “---“5* gains between 1964 and 1955.
Won Ry R_G
of Fort Worth at the Hilton Hotel. VV UII • V IE"N
In his address at the NTSC ban- \ •
ing Bailey instantly. Parsons died signed in^er to
only a few minutes after help (ice of mayor
arrived.
FT# 80 EASY TO PLACE
By NORRIS JACKSON
Record-Chronicle Staff Writer
Denton Cgdty this morning was
placed on the recommended list
for designation as a drought dis-
aster area by the state drought
committee.
Word of the reconsideration of
the county's application came
from Lynn Rhodes of Austin, as-
sistant to William L. McGill, state
coordinator in defense disaster re-
lief and a member of the state
committee.
* Rhodes fold Denton Chamber of
Commerce President Stanley Mon-
roe that the state committee had
recommended Denton County, as
well as Maverick and Dallas coun-
ties, to the national committee for
approval.
He also advised Monroe that the
committee was going to increase
. government cooperation from *1
to *3 per hundred on grains.
n."!0n
.......— -
- ,
-------- —
A
committee expressed concern over E
action of the state committee, E
Awards Presented
■ For Achievements
I . In Study Fields
■ American business man-
9 agement must continue to
■ find better means of provid-
9 ing employe growth and work
9 satisfaction, 350 guests at the
E annual NTSC School of Busi-
9 ness Administration honors
■ bankuet were told Tuesday
I night.
The speaker was Ben H. Mitch-
■ ell. executive vice president of
■ Employers Casualty Company of
9 Dallas. (See picture Page 3. Sec.
1 1).
■ Winners of awards as outstand-
ing students in their fields of study
• were announced at the banquet.
They are Kenneth A. McCrady,
Forreston, accounting; Troy Phil-
lip Miller Jr., Sanger, manage-
ment; Bill Reasoner, Dallas, mar-
keting; Bill Hooks, Henderson, in-
surance; Mrs. Beverly Russell
Sandlin. Dallas, business educa-
tion; Mrs. Angela Raynaud Smith,
— Fort Worth, secretarial science;
■ and Coleman D. Barnett Jr., Mine-
‘ ala, banking and finance.
McCrady also received the Delta
I Sigma Pi scholarship key as the
■ outstanding student in business.
Miller to foe son of Mr. and
I Mrs. Troy P. Miller, Route 1, San-
I ger.
Mrs. Sandlin and Mrs. Smith,
K both January graduates of the
j college, were unable to be present
■ to receive their awards.
ANOTHER HONOR
Meantime, another NTSC busi-
I ness student. Porter Henderson
1 Jr. of San Angelo, was being hon-
■ ored in Fort Worth as one of five
■ outstanding male accounting stu-
l dents in five Texas colleges. He
H was a guest at the second annual
DEAR GOVERNMENT: PLEASE
GO GET LOST - TAXPAYER
BALTIMORE w — "Refund due. Refund due. Refund due
Refund due. Refund due.” And so on 45 times.
This bit of stream-of-consciousness writing appeared on the
outside of an envelope received recently by the district director
of internal revenue here. Inside-yes, an income tax return.
The local office also says it received another return in an
envelope with black, and decorated with a spotchy picture of a
weepy citizen and “Please Get Lost.” And at the bottom:
"Withhold thy laughter, stranger!
For thy face is mirrored here
★ K PAGES PRiEE-FIVE CENTS
Rogers Carlton, member of the
Denton High School FFA chapter,
this morning made a double win
in the hog division of the annual
4-H and FFA Stock Show and Sale,
exhibiting both the grand cham-
pion and reserve champion bar.
row.
Fifteen-year-old Hubert Davis of
the Slidell 4-H Club showed his
880-pound Aberdeen Angus to the
grand championship of the calf
show after earlier sweeping the
heavy class show."
Reserve grand champion of the
calf class was an 830-pound Here-
ford entered by Tommy Stockard,
.-hau af aha I nknzinuzilla II A
IIICTDCI Oi inr EWNV*E rrn
chapter. The calf was champion of
the light <*aif class. -
This afternoon will hear the auc-
tioneer's chant and gavel as the
fat calves and barrows go on the
auction block to end another suc-
cessful year of project feeding.
Contestants will be vieing for
the mythical grand and reserve
grand championship in both calves
and hogs. They also will be com-
peting for *275 in cash money of-
fered by the Denton Chamber of
office, City Finance Director
See CITY, Page 2
A general alarm pickup on
a Dallas, ex-convict, who of-
ficers said was released from
prison last month after serv-
ing a sentence for burglary,
was sent out by Sheriff Wylie
Barnes Tuesday, after discov-
ery of the theft of an automo-
bile from the Huffines Motor
Company in Lewisville Mon-
day * "
The suspect to William Jahugh
Barnes, 22-year-old Dallasite,
the sheriff said. 1 ■
---I.
HAD YKAK OF DAILY SE»VICK- NO. 81«
. 1 1 . "'■■.in । I" । .............. ........... «i ........................ in
Gty Colleges
Get $97,700
A total of *97,700 has been al- .
located by the Texas Commission
on Higher Education to the two j
Denton coleges
NTSC win receive *67,700 extra .
salary funds next fall, while $30,-
000 is earmarked for TSCW.
The sums were part of a total
of one million dollars allocated by 1
the commission to 18 universities
in the state. The last legislature '
appropriated that sum for teach- 1
ers’ salaries during the 1956-57 1
school term.
The legislature directed the com- ’
mission to allocate the funds to ’
- J /
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 216, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 11, 1956, newspaper, April 11, 1956; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1453101/m1/1/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.