Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 10, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 14, 1956 Page: 2 of 12
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9
9’
THE DENTON K E C 0 K D • C H K O N I C L B
PAGE.TWO
Interviews Set
Bi iefs • personals • Births - Hospital Notes
the
man said. "a give ‘m hell and
-2
• • • Ml
TODAY THRU WED.
preparing themselves for the field
“3770
est number of persons are found
1
. p
||T
4:
Daniel Rejects
I
V
: Debate Challenge
.3
daughters.
— ALSO —
Two Great Features
— AND —
I
4
$
NOW SHOWING
MunsmucxraOON
1
/
9
A
4
MARKETS
**
A
9
r
1
2
Cartoons 8:00
would
Gun
if
COME IN AND SEE US TODAY
IE CRAIN
■ ■■■UM.
RUSS TAMBLYN ANM.GIMFETOAE
i
. 4
i
i
.1
V\H44
ACk
LAST DAY!
k TOMORROW! A
THE
LEATH EH
SAINT
TEXAS
Wa
Women Voters To
Fete Mrs. Daniel
DOUBLE
FEATURE
DOUBLE
FEATURE
MEET THE NEW BOSS
OF TWO-GUN TOWN!
K
I
I
er, Lewisville, Roanoke, Justin,
Ponder, Krum, Pilot Point, Justin
and the other towns of Denton
County, Mrs. Robinson explained.
ri
I
THE
MAN
WHO
JAMS
eOUns
SHOULDER TO SHOULDER
FIVE DESPERATE MEN AGAINST
THE SAVAGE SEMINOLES!
I
I
I
"THE BEASON’S
BEST.. .THRILLER!"
12
a
■u
Few hi res 8:25 fir 10:15
GRIPPING
all the way and at
the end a dramatic
surprise.
Pittman Funeral
Services Slated
For Wednesday
Funeral services will be held at
4 p.m. Wednesday in the Pearl
Street Church of Christ for Mrs.
Raymond A. Pittman, 52, who was
found dead Monday morning in
an automobile at her home.
Justice of the Peace Z. D. Lewis
ruled death as a result of carbon
monoxide poisoning.
Logan Buchanan will officiate
for the funeral service. Arrange-
ments are under the direction of
Schmitz-Floyd-Hamlett.
A native of Childress, Mrs. Pitt-
man was born Dec. 24, 1903, and
was married June 1, 1925. She
today.. I believe the field of dis-
tribution offers almost limitless op-
portunities from the standpoint of
earning power and of service to
mankind.”
attended Childress i
TSCW.
Survivors are four
n•
nt stan « I
SUS, ,
t 1
horm
' ■ a/W"
ATTENTION TEACHERS!
Visit our comfortable Display Rooms. Come in at your
convenience and examine our most complete selection.
The display .rooms are open daily from 9:00 a. m. to
5:30 p. m. and until noon on Saturday, or by appoint-
ment.
Andrew F. Scott
. Funeral services for. Andrew F.
Scott, 72, were to be held today
at 4 p.m. in the Crawford Street
Assembly of God Church with the
Rev. H. A. Johnson officiating.
Mr. Scott died Monday about
noon at his home, 2531 W. Pmi-
rie.
Born in Kentucky on Nov. 17,
1883, Mr. Scott is survived by his
wife, the former Fannie Mae Hahn;
three sons, Austin Scott, Andrew
Scott and Loe Scott, all of Den-
ton: a daughter. Mrs. Viola Grimes
of Denton; two sisters, Mrs. Kitty
King of Van Zandt. Calif.,, and
Mrs. Nannie Beaird of Denton; 16
grandchildren and 11 great-grand-
children.
‘ Burial will be in Roselawn Mem-
orial Park-under the direction of
Schmitz-Floyd-Hamlett.
KNEW
TOO MUCH
Friday morning from 10 to 11:15,
Mrs. Don Robinson, chairman of
the Denton County Women for Price
Daniel, announced today.
The coffee will be informal. It
was arranged by the Denton Coun-
ty women's group to give the pub-
lic an opportunity to meet- Mrs.
Daniel, who was unable to be here
during the first primary appear-
ance of Senator Daniel, Mrs. Rob-
inson said.
Special invitations have been ex-
tended to women voters in Sang-
n
5
r»
Linwood Roberson
FLORIST
501 W. Hickory C-2561
f
■
-
PARAMOUNT pnebeNTs
JAMES
STEWART
DORIS
DAY
Ea ALFReo
2 HITCHCOCK S A
Alive”
HOSPITAL NOTES
Flew Memorial Hospital
Admitted: Mrs. Leo Davis, Jus-
tin. medical; Mrs. James C. Hood,
Krum. medical; Mrs. F. W. Coth-
ern, 1926 Laurelwood, medical;
Survivors are her husband; a
, daughter, Miss Zora Florence Doo-
ley of Justin; a sister, Mrs. W. E.
Stanley of Justin; and a brother.
< L. Guy Garrison of Fort Worth.
TOO LATI TO CLASSIFY
1 ACRE OF LAND ’
4-ROOM house, bath, all conveni-
1 E 3729
g-
MB ' ■
Full wholesale discounts on both trade and library educa- *
tional titles plus prepaid shipment to your school.
One of the largest and most current selections of suitable
library books in the nation.
Quick Service made possible by complete stocks here in our
warehouse.
Only current titles authorised by publishers. You have the
assurance that any book ordered here will be proper for your.
school library. Each book has been carefully selected and
approved by trained librarians. . *
gAEBoats!
SHOOTING
Continued From Page 1
having trouble for four years. He
didn't like him and decided Mon-
day he was going to kill Price.
He walked and hitch-hiked to
the couple’s home on a dairy farm
Monday afternoon.
The stepfather went about his
job of milking cows and his moth-
er prepared supper. The youth
slipped into the trailer house, got
the gun and put it outdoors.
After the meal, he left the trail-
er and waited for his stepfather
to come out. Price came out of
the trailer, jumped into a pickup
truck and Cole began firing.
Cole said he went behind an out-
house and began firing through the
truck windshield. That's when
Mrs. Price ran outside and was
struck by a shotgun charge as she
got to a corner of the outhouse.
Price, whose wounds are not
serious, said he and the boy had
been having trouble since he order-
ed the youth to go to school four
years ago.
_ THE —
SCAR447,
— HOUR
M-G-M
prerem
"The
Fastest
sjomng
GLENN FORD
di"
POANs
HrUC FCIE MM
A a Him
Mrs. Ted Reuss of San Antonio,
Mrs. W. F. Williams, Mrs. John
R. Ellis, and Miss Jane Pittman,
all of Denton, six sisters, Mrs.
Joe Bloodworth of Matador, Mrs.
Bill McWilliams of Wagon Wheel
Gap, Colo., Miss Nell Wood of Wi-
chita Falls, Mrs. Geno H. Brock
of Phoenix, Ariz., Mrs. Roger W.
Clark of Fresno, Calif., and Mrs.
W. A. Sewalt of Denton; two broth-
ers, Mark E. Wood of Almagorda,
N. M., and Harry Wood of Holly-
wood, Calif.; and five grandchil-
dren.
• A l
_ . Dalles Sees—
for Distributive I
Education' Group Peaceful End
Interviews are being held daily
in Room 308 with Denton Senior
High School juniors and seniors
who are interested in careers in
retail, wholesale, and service sell-
ing businesses. The distributive ed-
ucation course is open to both jun-
iors and seniors.
All students who plan to take
the course for the first time should
report as soon as possible between
9 a.m. and 12 noon Monday through
Friday. Students who reported for
interviews in the spring will re-
ceive final instruction before mak-
ing application for training sta-
tiona. Students who are Interested
in getting more detailed informa-
tion before deciding to enroll in
the course are also urged to report
for interviews, it was announced
by Mr. Homer Bronstad. coordi-
nator of di stributive education at
the high school.
“Opportunities for. training are
available to the students who qual-
ify.” Bronstad pointed out. "Dis-
tributive education trainees are
JOHNSON
Continued From Page 1
hard on his "serious” candidacy.
Vice Chairman John Connally
reminded delegates Johnson faced
many grave decisions that that
aa Senate majority leader he oc-
cupied a key convention spot. He
asked the delegates not to try and
see Johnson unless they had some-
thing vital to talk about,
Connally said, Johnson head-
quarters—within shouting distance
of Speaker Sam Rayburn's rooms
—were to be considered Texas
headquarters. The money it would
take to establish an elaborate
headquarters elsewhere could be
better spent in trying to get Texas
back into the Democratic column,
he said.
SEX Eia
XMVUvans
Te’TWINKLE
IN GOD’S EYE
MICKEY ROONEY: COLEEN GRAY
PLUS: SECOND FEATURE!
CHICAGO (P—It wax. as
■ • •
.. ... ; ■.
#5Yd
uusB
2-BEQRQOM insulated horn*, wash-
er .ana Arrer connecttons. Buy
Esdaneuawn
acomgntena- houae,
38,"’, "--3,
MUV14N THU
TODAY THRU WED.
Starts 8:00 & 10:18
The Old Alton Baptist Church Leonard Logan Jr., 805 Allen, med-
will organize a Brotherhood Thurs- ical; Wesley L. Vaughn, Pilot
day night. A barbecue supper will Point, medical; Avis Belew, Route
.......... 2, surgical; Baby Carey Douglas
WORTH HIGHWAY
NOW SHOWING — FIRST RUN
Boy Orator
schools and
Final Rites Set
For Mrs. Wylie
t
PILOT POINT—Graveside serv-
ices will be held in the Masonic
Cemetery at 3 p.m. today for Mrs.
loma Wylie, 103, who died in
Wichita Falls Monday.
Mrs. Wylie was the widow of
Dr. T.N.H. Wylie. She had lived
in the Pilot Point community prior
to moving to Wichita Falls several
years ago. She was born in Ala-
bama Sept. 18, 1852 and was a
member of the Baptist Church.
She is survived by one niece.
Mrs. W. B. Hamilton of Wichita
Falls, two nephews. Jess and Jim
Walker, both of Dallas.
Dr. Fred Eastham of Spring-
field. Mo., and the Rev. J. Frank
Blackburn of Wichita Falls offi-
ciated for the services. Burial was
under the direction of Beck Fu-
neral Home.
Ernest Morris, 215 E. Prairie; kocgi.... . whs.t L. i.r«
Lynn F. Lynch, Sanger; Billy Ja- of employment inwhic hthe larg
LIBRARY SERVICE CO.
2 W. MULBERRY .PH. c-7102
come block N. T. 8. C.
Of Suez Row
WASHINGTON (-Secretary of 1
State Dulles said today after meet-
ing with President Eisenhower
that he is confident of a "peaceful
solution" of the Suez Canal dis-
pute.
In a White House statement, he
said he was confident a formula
would be found at the London
Suez conference which would
"assure dependable international
operation” of the canal Egypt has
seized. <
Dulles made his view known
after a final 40 minute talk with
Eisenhower, a few hours before
leaving by special plane to at-
tend the 22-nation conference
which opens in the British capital
Thursday.
"I go hopefully and with con-
fidence that we will have a peace-
ful solution,” he said.
Standing outside the White
House, the secretary made clear
this government was united with
Britain and France in demanding
international operation of the
canal, instead of leaving it solely
in Egyptian hands.
Services Held
: For Mrs. Dooley
‘ KRUM — Funeral services for
Mrs. R. P. Dooley, 60, were held
Monday afternoon in the Schmitz-
Floyd-Hamlett Chapel with the
’ Rev, Fred Davis of Dallas and the
Rev. W. C. Harkins of Justin of-
ficiating. Mrs. Dooley died Satur-
day afternoon.
Burial was in the TOOF Ceme-
tery in Justin with the following
pallbearers Homer Taylor. O. Y.
’ Myers, Jack Tidwell, Bernard
Brown, Doc Ottinger and Walter
Young.
A native of Allen, Mrs. Dooley
■ ■ had lived in Krum 52 years. She
' attended schools at Justin and
. TSCW.
BLAST
Continued from Page 1
is in the heart of the uranium
mining rea known as the Colo-
rado Plateau, 23 miles west of the
Utah-Colorado border and 89 miles
south of Moab, the plateau's uran-
ium “center.”
The Utah highway patrol re-
leased a list of 12 of the 14 killed:
Robert L. Bales, Newcastle,
Ind.
Henry Gorman. Riverton, Utah
Theodore Cemore Smith, ad-
dress not known
Edna Sisk, Dove Creek, Colo.
William Beryl Harvey, Houston,
Colo.
Roy William Grisson, Pueblo,
Colo.
Mr. and Mrs. Rex Leon Miller,
Clearfield. Kan.
Lynn Curnnet, 1, Winslow, Ariz.
Mrs. Verla Adams and her
daughter. Nancy, 18, Monticello.
One 12-year-old boy not identi-
fied.
The 13th victim was reported
dead on arrival at a hospital in
Cortez. The 14th, a girl about 9,
was desd on arrival at St. Mary’s
Hospital in Grand Junction.
cobs, Pilot Point; Mrs. J. B.
Hampton, Lewisville: Horace
Trietsch, Sanger; Mrs. Edna
Webb, Denton; Mrs. Kenneth
Looper, 1809 Tyler. •
BIRTHS
A girl, Msrilee Anne. was born
to Dr. and Mrs. Forrest Wayne
Cothern, 1926 Laurelwood, at 8:16
a.m. Monday in Flow Memorial
Hospital.
A boy, James Leonard, waa born
to Mr. and Mrs. James C. Hood of
Krum Monday at 1 20 p.m; in Flow
Memorial Hospital.
A girl was born to Mr. and Mrs.
Leo. Davis of Justin Monday at
6:14 p.m. in Flow Memorial Hos-
pital.
A girl. Carol Jean, was born to
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond James
Blakeley, 2306 Beaumont. Tues-
day at 4:17 a.m. in Flow Memorial
Hospital.
Lives Up To
| His Billing
Bi
. Tuesday. August 14, 1936
Euneral Service
Is Slated For
A 2“
1PY e-*
I®
Hi E"M
Stars Condition
Poor After Pills
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. GB-Come-
dienne Martha Raye was rushed
to a hospital here today, in critical
condition after taking an overdose
of sleeping pills.
Her physician. Dr. Ralph Rob-
bins. said the 39-year-old televi-
sion star had taken about 30 sleep-
ing pills and waa "in very poor
condition.”
Miller, 1303 Wilson, medical; Mrs.
Norman Dean Daughan. 2620 Fort
Worth Highway, surgical; Mrs. R.
M Carlisle. 701 W. Sycamore,
surgical; Mrs. Edna Webb, Den-
ton. medical; Mrs. Della Deckard,
112 S. Wood, medical; Mrs. Ken-
neth Looper. 1809 Tyler, medical;
William W. Wallace. Justin, medi-
cal; Mrs. Raymond Blakeley, 2508
Beaumont. medical; Herman
Sims, 330 Ponder, surgical: Horace
Trietsch, Sanger, surgical; Miss
Marilyn Clark, Terrell Hall, medi-
cal.
Dismissed: Mrs. Charles Lind-
sey and baby, Route 2; Mrs. Floyd
Cook and baby, Route 1; Mrs. Otis
A. Strickland, Aubrey; Mrs. Clar-
ence Stewart, 222 Ave. G; Mas-
ter Ronnie Perry, Hebron; Master
be served in the education building
at 6:30 p.m. Officers of the Den-
ton County Brotherhood will set up
the organization. • ’
A fund for Billy Jack, Carter,
who was seriously burned Ahg. 2,
has been started at the McBride
Service Station, 416 E. McKinney.
Carter was operating a cutting
torch at a wrecking yard on the
Fort Worth Highway when a gaso-
line tank exploded. He is the son
of Mrs. Calvin Kline, 2302 N:Lo-
cust.
---1 ■- iw i i ■ nr—i--ig_jat ----e— 'uj. fssaea—-
Town Topics
metaphors <straight and mixed),
rhyme, puns, catch phrases and
long, rolling sentences that began
innocently, gathered speed and
crashed like angry waves on the
Republican beach.
OPPOSITION ASSAILED
He assailed the GOP opposition
with cries of "Nixon, Dixon and
Yates” ... "party of privilege and
pillage”. . . “the Republican triple
B—Benson, below parity and bank-
ruptcy."
He said President Eisenhower
"cannot Jim Hagertize his way
through this whole campaign." He
said, “The farmer has been de-
vitamized by the GOP and Benson
ized by Ezra B." He said. “Foster
(Dulles) fiddles, fritters, frets and
flits," called him alternately the
"wandering minstrel" and "the
unguided missile."
The cheering, howling delegates
In the blue-trimmed convention
hall loved it, though they seemed
to run down on steam toward the
endr Not Clement. His energy and
breath control showed no letup.
A literary purist might argue
that the length of his sentences
left you breathless and his meta-
phors occasionally wrestled each
other to the ground.
SLANDER CHARGED
Item: "That kind of double-
faced campaign by the opposition
— the vice-hatchet man slinging
slander and spreading half-truths
while the top man peers down the
green fairways of indifference —
will not be tolerated by the Demo-
cratic party.”
Item: . . There is righteous
ground for objection that the
farmer’s income is being ploughed
under 26 per cent these past 3%
years by the party that said when
it came into power that it was
going to be tall in the saddle for
big business— and has kept that
promise with the highest batting
average in the history of Ameri-
can politics."
Toward the end. Clement recit-
ed a catalogue of what he called
Republican sins, his arms up-
raised, sweat streaming down his
angry, handsome face, down his
blue collar, blue shirt, blue suit.
Before each stipulated sin of the
enemy, he asked, "How long, oh,
how long" would they be tolerat-
ed. There were a dozen "how
longs."
And at the very end. his fist
raised high, he shouted, "Precious
Lord, take our hand. Lead us on!"
Houston area Tuesday with a TV
address and a rally for precinct
workers.
Yarborough, in a TV speech, as-
serted Daniel was the “handpicked
heir to the Shivers throne.”
He said the State Democratic
Executive Committee had en-
dorsed Daniel as Gov. Shivers’ can-
didate.
"In letters being mailed over
Texas this week on the official
stationary of the Shivers State
Democratic Executive Committee,
the Shivers machine ia attempting
to perpetuate itself in office by
electing its handpicked candidate,
the junior senator, to the gover-
norship,” Yarborough ■ asserted. "
Daniel said in a TV speech he
deeply resented “the charges, al-
legations and insinuations that
anyone who works in government
is automatically suspect to some
sort of misconduct or wrongdo-
Ing”
He said "All of us want the true
facts developed” and that he would
ask the Legislature to authorize
a citizens' law enforcement com-
mission to investigate and “lay
bare the true facts for all Texans
to see.”
DUVAL V OTES
Yarborough also criticized Dan-
iel for the votes he got in Duval
and other South Texas counties.
"My opponent carried every
border county controlled by a pis-
tol-packing border boss b votes
over me of from two to one to six
to one. Such coerced votes are
those he boasts about as express-
ing the will of the people,” he
said.
engea,iomiiegenat-on anghway Women voters in the Denton and
14. wher heip Tnance. । Denton County area have been in-
w F “ptii HAMIITON vited to a public coffee honoring
' c-2560 realtor c-7872 ' Mrs. Price Daniel in Hubbard Hall.
SALE
1′11 । J’hN
except •mailer house on payment.
c-Mis. _____________-
septemrS E tapeoladr bIm, 4
rooms (i bedroom) bath, garage,
range, hesters, Frigidhire and wn-
ter furnished, 2 block of N, T.
main campus. Don't phone please.
SO at 1111 W. Bycamora.
RFrorBALE:small houae
turnished, beautiful oak trees on
the lawn! Exclusive.
MREL EVERS
-4155___c-4243
1 arDnOOM furnished nr untur-
< nthed house in Mozingo nddi-
tton 1811 Tyler C-7S37. ’____
FOB dAu*!M6Y CherroiaTJon ver-
tibie Qir 26" Bicycle no Baee
accordtan. 1111 Unden Drive.
TwosLQck$irN,*r,s.c.
• 5 Md 1 room furnished apart-
. menta. Siean, coupies oly, C-6044
H heaven” speech.
I But Frank G. Clement, 36. gov-
g ernor of Tennessee, boy orator of
4 the Cumberland and an old-fash-
; ioned spellbinder, lived up to his
advance Monday night.
i His keynote speech had evange-
a llcal fervor, ungentle humor, thun-
■ der, searing derision of the opposi-
■ -tion, songs of sweet harmony for
5 the home team and a ringing bat-
m tie charge. It had alliteration,
T
A special project by Dr. Vladi-
mir Walters, sponsored by the Of-
fice of Naval Research, at the
American Museum of Natural His-
tory, will investigate the metabo-
lic efficiency of large, fast-swim-
ming marine fishes.
PARLEY
Continued iron* Page 1
plank till last.
"I feel confident of a platform
that the convention will approve,”
he told newsmen. To questions, he
said yes, that included civil.
rights.
Some sources said advisers of
Adlai Stevenson and Averell Har-
riman. the top-running presiden-
tial aspirants, were being consult-
ed quietly.
In the face of pleas for party
unity, Southern delegations re-
mained hesitant to commit therh-
selves on presidential nomination
candidates until the convention de-
cides whether the party should en-
dorse the Supreme Court's deci-
sion barring racial segregation in
public schools.
"2m" ."57
na
a. u0 m226a
hua ' ‛
LIVESTOCK
FORT WORTH. (A/P) Hogs 1,-
300: steady to 25 higher; choice
17.00-17.30.
Sheep 4.000; 60 or iore lower;
good lmbs 17.00-18.00; stock lambs
12.00-15.00; ewes S.M-4.76; year-
llnp 10.00-16.00.
Cattle 5,600: calves 1,700: steady:
good end choice steers, yearlings
1e.50-21.00; common and medium
10.00-16.60; fat cows 9.00-11.00;
good and choice calves 14.60-18 00;
lighter 16.60 doom: common and
medium 10.00-14.00; etock steer
calves 14 00-19 00; stock steer year-
lings 13.00-17.00.
NO MONEY DOWN
FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY
1950 Pont. Conv. .... $295
A 1950 Chev. Del. .... $350
: 1949 Buick Super .... $295
1950 Ford Custom ... $475
; 1951 Ply. 4-dr.......$425
McClendon used cars
, 209 8, ELM C-4260
- FdH 8ALE: Modern. 2 bedroom
home on Cleveland Street, only
• 64250, erms,
S. I. SELF
__106 W. McKinney___
FOR Rent, unfurnished, 1 bedroom
■ home hear N. T. 8. C. 840 per ;
month.
' S. I. SELF
106 W. McKinney____
Mr Bent: Unt urn ished 8-bed-
room duplex apartment. Bell ave-
nue. 860 per month.
S 1. SELF
i _ * *' McKinney
FOR 4ale: Nome', 476 monthly tn-
By WHITEY SAWYER
, L The Associated Press
Seh. Prke 9ori campaigned in
South Texas Tueshay after again
refusing to meet his gubernatorial
opponent, Ralph Yarborough, in a
debate.
Daniel Mid he had “stated pub-
licly I would not engage in a de-
bate with any candidate who deala
in personal a ft a c k a, personal
abuse and untrue and misleading
statements." f
Yarborough accepted an invita-
tion of the Young Democrats of
the 10th Senatorial District at Fort
Worth to the debate.
YARBOROUGH RALLY
Yarborough campaigned in the
en'scolocossjic,
. -c
CALL TO ORDER
Paul M. Butler, chairman of the Democratic national
committee, raises the gavel to call to order the Demo-
cratic party's 32nd national convention in Chicago.
: lAP Wirephoto)
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 10, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 14, 1956, newspaper, August 14, 1956; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1453208/m1/2/: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.