Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 153, Ed. 1 Sunday, February 2, 1958 Page: 2 of 45
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Denton Record-Chronicle and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Denton Public Library.
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1
.. I
(
N
2,
. PAGK TWO
Town Topics
—
i.m. in th* home of
P.
Ill
•k
v
%
DR. SVLUVAN
I
he had to stay all night with the
Duval Clerk.
Y
ODESSA. Tex., F ib. 1 U—Dist.
CAR TAG SALES
OPEN IN RUSH
GROWING FUND
Welht
12.20
Elm Street Hospital A Clinic
Visiting Hours: 9:30-11:30
• m..
Butler Funeral
pg *
8
We Are Proud to Announce
Rites
heduled
BRUCE C. COATES
*t
1
Rites Held tor
be ia Denton IOOF
25th Anniversary
Cai
will elebrate
their
PILOT POINT
DENTON
I
WW
7 f
NOW! FREE 10-DAY SAMPLE
MARKETS
)
4
SUNGLO PORK-ETTS COMPLETE 14% HOG FUG
85
»
• ।
FT. WORTH HWY.
DIAL DU2-8781
7
A
T
Auui
haldn
K
0M
9
Poll Taxes In County
Near High 9,000 Total
Injured Youths
Remain Critical
Jones Rites Are
Scheduled Today
Funeral services for John W.
JOE BARNS MOTOR CO.
. . Dodge - Plymouth
702 S. Locust DU2-9648
funds.
I are
USED CARS
8TRUCKS 7
2900
3000
3100
3300
3300
3400
3300
The Denton Preparatory School
Board of Directors will meet Mon-
> 4
• )
loy of Bridgeport, Mrs. Earl
cer of Decatur; Mrs. W. L.
"but for me t
the jury would.
He said thi<
S p in. Th* couple has invited their
friends and relatives to call.
f pass this case to
be a cowardly act.
was the first time
Burial will be in Denton's IOOF
Cemetery under direction of Den-
ton's Jack Schmits A Son Funeral
Home at 4 p.m.
having
parked
the am
lot wm
ing.
« unless the city made him.
» were parked on the lot.
mil* patrons came and went at
item's newest restaurant, resi-
cipate no trouble selling tickets
to the event.
The ticket sale will begin Tues-
day afternoon after Kiwanians re-
ceivethem from ticket committee
Pat Boone Visit
Expected To Up
Minstrel Sales
Chapel
Burial 1
Cemetery
Mr. Bu
rial Hosp
26. 1874, I
farmer 4
hardwar;
He was
town Bipl
Order t
their street clogged with
cars and traffic. He said
Die room on the parking
id keep this from happen-
Dunn of Decatur.
Pallbearers were Maj. Glenn C.
Bell Jr., W L. Bell. Howard Bell.
J. Robert Rell, Frank Bukak and
David Bavin “
Vee
11,48
R-C Wise County Bureau
BRIDGEPORT 4Special) - Fu-
neral services for Mrs. Richard
Hartsell, 60, of Chico will be held
today at 2 p.m. in the Chico First
Baptist Church.
The Rev. Roger Bank, pastor of
Ber died in Flow Memo-
tal Friday. Born in Feb.
Mr. Butler was a retired
nd former owner of a
store in Sanger,
a member of the Down-
e Class and Independent
Odd Fellows lodge.
I
/
(K
E
V N
,T\e
i anxious than
e Duval County
williams said,
Their arguments, however, baf-
fled city commissioners and Teel
•t since Teel said there had been no
violation of the city ordinance at
HUFFINES MOTOR CO.
Lewisville, Texas
from the U.S. Weather Bureau.
The forecast calls for mild
days and rather cool nights.
No rain fell in Texas Saturday
and none was forecast for to-
that he almost decided then to go
back to using horses for his house
calls.
He also recalled that during the
Dismissed: Mrs. S. G. Allen and
baby. Lewisville; Joy Parker. Kel-l
Ward, father of eight, died from
a shotgun blast which ripped into
his right chest, Cooke County Sher-
iff O. E. Whisnand told the Rec-
ord-Chronicle Saturday.
The sheriff said the shooting evi-
dently occurred following a discus-
sion concerning a debt.
Funeral services for Ward are
scheduled today at 2 p m. in Ver-
IE1l
Judge Sterling W J
- returned an instruct
not guilty in the mi
trial of Amando G
Garcia, former cl
staff were out of the trying pan
and into the fire Saturday as open-
_______ anniversary today
with an open house from 2:30 to
tion of Bridgeport’s Hawkins Fu-
neral Home.
Mrs. Hartsell died Friday in a
Bridgeport Hospital. She was born
March 28, 1897, and was a member
of both the Chico Baptist Church
and the Order of the Eastern Star.
Survivors include her husband;
three sons, Peto Hartsell and Bill
Hartsell. both of Chico, and John-
ny Earl Hartsell of Brownwood;
five daughters, Mrs. Horman Mal-
Patterson Rites
Planned Today -
Funeral services for Mrs. L, C.
Patterson 25, of Houston will be
held today at 4 p.m. in Denton's
Faith Tabernacle • Assembly of
God Church.
The Rev. Herbert Johnson will
officiate, and burial will be in the
Roselawn Memorial Park under
direction of the Denton's Schmits
A Son Funeral Home.
Mrs. Patterson was born in Den-
ton Feb. 7, 1932, and lived here
until her marriage to L. C. Pat-
terson in 1949, when she moved to
Houston. She died in Corpus Chris-
ti Thursday. •
Survivors include her husband;
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Smith of Denton: two sisters. Mrs.
Juanita Copeland and Mrs. Chris-
tine Sharber, both of Denton. and
two brothers. Edwin Smith of Fort
Worth and Wilbur Smith of Den-
ton.
M: 100 for bouse trailers; 173 for
motorcycles; and 130 for dealers.
Cost of license plates for pas-
senger cars is as follows;
tiker of Bowie, Mrs. G. L. Haley
- " "‘orth and Mm Lynn Mow-
presentation in the NTSC Men's
Gymnasium.
Kiwanians will underwrite the
show by purchasing 20 tickets at
$1 each, and will sell the tickets
to the public at the same price.
Tickets may be obtained only
through club members. The pro-
ceeds go to support the Denton
Kiwanis Children’s Clinic, a non-
profit organisation set up to give
medical aid to underprivileged
children of Denton County.
day at 7:30 ,
J. F. Ross, 1114 Brightwood.
that he had ever given an in-
structed cas. 2.
ma today
verdict of
propriation
la. Jr.
of Duval
late and Advanced, each Monday
night, 8-*.
Posture and Weight Control, each
Monday, 7-8.
Garland Man Fined On
Intoxication Charge
James S. Day of Garland, on a
plea of guilty to a charge of driv-
ing while intoxicated, was fined
$50 and was assessed court costs
SATURA
-the famous moisturizer
by Dorothy Gray
Bcnuse we're wo sure Satara willmake anotabie difference in
your looks-this extraordinary, pink, grenselesa moisturizer to
now offered on trial. With every regular purehase-a free 10-day
sample! If not satisfied, return regular purchase for full refund
. Ofer applies to Batura Creass.WA0 and 83, and Salure Le4toa.lt.
-Record-Chreniel Dhole
SANGER'S DR. SULLIVAN IN 1956
urvu
09
Funeral services for Claude Bell
former Denton County resident,
were held Saturday in Jack Sch-
mits A Son Funeral Home Chapel.
Rev. James Bass of the Kessler
Park Baptist Church of Dallas of-
ficiated. assisted by J. W. (Dad)
Pender of Denton.
e--.-....,60n6,v..,.0 ....... ..HM 12.67 I
my Laney. The tickets will be trucks; 1,600 for farm trucks; 250
2 p‘
2
We,
(guarantee
iMrearat
county, was accused of misappro-
priating $36.80 to
Eight similar in
still pending agai
<40^^
? Air
- 0s "
• ij 9 “
.4"
memrE-
Funeral Services Will Be Held Monday
"--g
/
LEWISVILLE (Special) - Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Tucker, SM Milton,
Lewisville, wi ‘
23th wedding
patient.
Once during those early years
he had to swim the swiftly rising
waters of the Elm Fork of the
Trinity River in order to make
an obstetrical call.
Six years after ho began his
practice in Sanger. he married the
former Miss Charlotte Gambill on
June 14, 1916, in Bolivar. He was
active in the practice of medicine
for 47 years, and had his office in
the rear of the E. M. Acker Phar-
macy in Sanger.
FIRST TO OWN CAR
Dr. Sullivan often recalled with
a laugh that he was one of the
first men to own an automobile in
the Sanger area. In telling of his
experiences once, he said that
y its case it
{ present evi-
ent audit had
y funds. Such
presented, he
Judge Williams
th* state to prov
would have had t
dence that a comp
been made of cou
evidence was no*
ruled.
"No one is mqte
I am to clear up khe
situation" Jud 1
" T•m*M* eV -wM
Still astounded by the heavy flow
of poll tax payments, Denton Coun-
ty Tax Assessor-Collector Newt
Seagraves predicted Saturday the
total voting strength will exceed
», ooo.
This total, he said: would cer-
tainly rank as the largest for a
non-presidential election year in
his memory. Already, the figure
has reached 8,349, about 1,200 of
which are exemptions. Total for
Sanger Stork’s
Best Pal Dies
Jones, 86, of Dallas will be held _ . .
at the Campbell-Funeral Hom* the church, will officiate, and in-
Chapel in Dallas today at 2 p.m.' terment will be in Thomas Ceme-
........ _ . ----tery near Bridgeport under direc-
that time. Teel said when the or-
dinance was violated th* delega-
. tian would have a case.
Klein has said that he purchas-
•d th* land as a means of protect-
f r ing Westway Street residents from
him.+ day
id that for
Minister’s Rites
Planned Monday
Funeral services will be held
in Denton Monday forthe Rev,
Henry D. Martin, 80-year-old re-
tired Baptist minister who died
at his home Saturday.
Services will be at 10 a.m. at
Highland Baptist Church, of which
the Rev. Mr. Martin was a mem-
ber. A clergyman for some 50
years, he had been a Dentonite
for about five years. He lived at
2200 W. Prairie.
Before his retirement he had ■
served churches at Desdemona,
Sodville and Caddo.
Survivors include his wife, two
sons, Jerry L. Martin of Denton
and Harold Martin of Mineral
Wells; two daughters. Mrs. Ben
F. Thompson of Kerrville and
Mrs. C. D. Porter of Kingsville:
three sisters, Mr*. Ava Hodge of
San Angelo, Mrs. L. R. Alexander
of Corpus Christi and Mrs. Alma
Bryant Of Ingram; two brothers.
Morgan Martin of Big Spring and
Ed Martin of Dallas: 10 grand-
children and six great-grandchil-
dren.
Burial will be in Woodland Me*
mortal Cemetery in Mineral Well*
under direction of Goen Funeral
Home of Denton.
Funeralsj »Benjamin F.
Butler, 83,of Pearl, are sched-
uled for 2 p.m. today in Denton’s
Jack Schmitz A tea Funeral Home
ter, Judy Ann Parker, Keller.
BIRTHS
A boy, Ricky Don. was born to
Mr. and Mr*. Donald Ray Calvert.
Frisco, at 11:06 p.m Jan. 11 in
Flow Memorial Hospital.
A boy was born to Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Dale Collins. 313 Wain-
wright, at 7:47 p.m. Jan. 31 in Flow
Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Jones, a former Denton
County resident, died in Dallas
Friday after a lengthy illness.
Born in Henderson County, Tenn.,
in 1891, Mr. Jones lived in Denton
County from 1901 until 1935 When
he moved from Denton to Dallas,
he gave up his profession as an
undertaker to become a salesman.
Survivors include his wife, of
Dallas; two sons, Floyd A. Jones
and J. W. Jones, both of Dallas;
money. In his memory was the way Sea-
Funeral services for Dr. Sulli-; grave* described Saturday’* lie-
van will be held Monday at 10 30 ense tag sales. He said th* office
a.m. in Snger’s First Methodist doors were no sooner open before
Church. Burial will be in Denton's I customers started filing in to pur
WO
3 Per Hundred
FORr WORTM, Feb. 1 (AR) - Livestock .
compered »• last week: Cattie, calves M>
1X30 oft, host strong is 50 higher, lambs
1.00-2.00 lower, feeders 50-1.00 lower, old-
•’ sheep ateady t« weak.
Steer 14.60-28.50, cowa 9.00-19.00,
calven 12.00-26,50, stock calves M.oo
down atock yearlings. 35.30 down, feeder
stoen 23.25 down,
Slosing hog top 11.00-21.50.
Lambs 17.00-24.50, yearling wethen 30.30
down, old wethers 16.50 down, 9.00-
10 50
Preston and his staff logged pay-
ment of 132,251.34 in school taxes
Friday and in Saturday morning's
mail. Neither Buttrill nor Sea-
graves had a total Saturday/
The deadline on county, city and
school taxes didn't affect those
persons who chose to make their
tax payments in two installments.
Those splitting payments on city
and school taxes have until March
31 to make their second payment,
while those splitting county pay-
ments have until June M.
The county tax office was open
until th* midnight deadline Fri-
day for those paying poll or coun-
ty taxes, and Seagraves said his
staff was "plenty busy" until
about 10 p.m. After that, he said,
business slowed down considerably
and tabulating of poll tax receipts
was begun.
Payment of poll taxes cam* in
a whirlwind finish for Seagraves
and his staff. Of the current to-
tal, 5,638 poll tax payments were
made in January. It’s not un-
usual for the last month to be the
heaviest in payments, Seagraves
said, but the volume this year did
surprise him.
Payment of poll dtaxes qualifies
voters for at least four major elec-
tions this year: election of school
board members throughout the
county, city elections, first and
second Democratic primaries and
the general election. In th* gen-
oral election, voters will be able
to choose state and county offi-
cials, and will vote on nine state
constitutional amendments.
SANGER (Staff)—Dr. John M. | or more miles away from Sanger,
Sullivan. known in Denton County I " "
of 827.40 Saturday by Denton
Spen- County Judge W. K. Baldridge.
Whit- He was also sentenced to three
days in county jail, and his driv-
. .. .. er‘s license was suspended for six
; and 21 grandchildren. months.
nie Keel Funeral Home Chapel
here. Burial will be in Fairview
Cemetery. ------------— ■
Survivors Include Ward's wile,
Lois: three daughters, Mrs, Rich-
ard Dolph of Atwater, Calif.; Mrs.
Orville Scattof Thackerville. Ok-
la., and Miss Lillie Bell Ward of
h our nt* UtiM Manager. Mr. Costes hM
17 mn of eutomobile ekperienc, 13 mn
•• this in Denten. He invites hit triends i«
visit him in the Service Department ene
promises In give the best service avallebie
to the eutomobile and truck ownen
Denton Cgunty. We Service all makes and
modeis of eutomobiles. In edding Mr.
Coates tn our organisetlon we have taken
enother step it give our eustomers the very
Best Service.
. Last rites for Benjamin Martin
Linenschmidt of Blue Mound com-
munity were held Friday at th*
Blue Mound Methodist Church with
th* Rev, Fred MeGee, pastor of
th* church, officiating.
Burial was in Blue Mound Cem-
story. /
Mr. Linenschmidt died Wednes-
day at his home.
Pallbearers were Otto Schertz,
SUNGLO BROILER FLAKES 20% PROTGIN
MH
. “ PerHundred
death of Walter Ward, 41-year-old
Bell Funeral is
Cooke Cuunly. Thursday in Held In Denton
Jury To Hear
Shooting Case
GAINESVILLE (Stafl)-A Cook*
County grand jury will decide
whether or not J. D. Neal, who
lives nine miles northeast of
Gainesville, should go to trial in
connection with Friday night's fat-
al shooting of a Denton man.
No formal charges were filed
Against 48-yar-old Neal in the
3
THE DINTON RECORD.CHRONICLE
10.54 Admitted: C. R. Johnson, 800
200) Ruddell, medical; Dan Wren, 723%
21.12 1 Forrest, medical.
WHITE
•e* tetemtemewe •pepee •*eeeemdennnnn '
errmregeeme • ey• neimaese, w euw •
13.07
1246 _______________
18.01 3-5 p.m., 7-8:30 p.m.
The breakdown for 1968, besides
chairmen Jack Jefferson and Tom- passenger cars, shows 3.340 for
2
>. 8
% . Edb LFAVE A MORTGAGE-FREE HOME
B < M3 ’ Give your loved ones the protection of
E7"9VA our Mortgage Liquidation Policy that
■ -M provides the funds to cancel your mort
su sfirisajasar" rw
State Reserve Life Insurance Co.
1020 North Locust DU2-3525
distributed at the regular Tuesday for truck - tractor; 1,400 for trail-
noon club meeting at Hubbard ---—- -........... ■— 1 1 ■
Hall. ,1 TEXAS WOMAN’S UNIVERSITY
The minstrel is scheduled for ANNOUNCES ORGANIZATION
OF NIGHT CLASSES
Rusiness classes will register
Feb. 3, 7 p.m., room 812, Educa-
tion Building:
Shorthaad oeeoad semester and
for those wishing to review. Tues-
day and Thursday, 7,8:30.
Typing, Beginning, Intermediate
and Advanced, Monday and Wed-
nesdav. 7.8:30
Calege of Health, Physical Eda-
cation and Recreation classes, reg-
istration in office of Dean *f Ad-
missions-Registrar prior to first
class meeting Feb. 18:
Swimming, Beginning, Intermed.
SUNGLO LAYING ALL MESH PELLETS & FLAKES
“Per Hundred
BROOKS
DRUG STORES
"We Give S&H Green Stamps" —
225 West Hickory DU2-2565
Burial was in Denton IOOF with nationally known singer
Cemetery. 1 Pat Boone scheduled for the 32nd
Mr. Bell died Friday in the home । Annual Kiwanis Minstrel show
of his daughter. Mrs. John T. T. | Feb. 22. Denton Kiwanians anti-
3600
' 3700
day Uornlng that Klein had agreed
not % direct traffic into the park-
inf! Jot but also would not block
. it
general fund and 25 cents to the
county.
Still to be totaled are poll tax
receipts from two deputies and
numerous written requests for re-
ceipts. Seagraves said he hoped
to have the final figures ready by
Tuesday.
Meanwhile, some more pretty
important taxes were rolling in
Friday, also. Full payments of
city, county and school taxes
and two sisters, Miss Julia Jones of Fort Wort
of Denton and Mrs. Clarence John*- of'’Chico
son of Texoma, Okla. - E-a---
plates will run, numberwise, as
NR 1850-9999 and NS 10-8549.
20% SUNGLO LAY FILLETS & FLAKES
$450
“r Far Hundred
Ing sales of car license plates fol-
________________________lowed on the heels of Friday's poll
depression many of his patients tax and county tax deadlines,
paid with farm produce instead of The greatest first - day sale rate
def ts of Westway Street continued
to' ake a dim view of the prospect
of having a parking lot staring
t m in the face on land that un-
d a city ordinance is now ton-
41/for residences.
i Late la the afternoon they began
tb zather in small groups and fin-
ally the larger meeting resulted
Saturday night.
P The hassle began Tuesday night
/at the City Commission meeting
i when a 10-person delegation from
Westway Street aired its views op-
posing the parking lot. ' They
claimed they bought their houses
f in that area under the belief that
. thsaresidence toning would be up-
The group claimed that using
- th* land behind the restaurant for
A a parking lot would lower consid-
913 erahly the value of their land Tho
parking tot to on Fulton and West-
way.
Denton; five sons, Rachel Ward,
Hartsell Funeral
grahnacSildren is Scheduled Today
MORE OF SAME
IS PREDICTED
as the stork's beat friend, to dead
at 73.
Considered one of the county's
few remaining pioneer doctors, he
died in Flow Memorial Hospital in
Denton at 10:30 a.m. Saturday. He
was just five days away from his
73rd birthday.
Dr. Sullivan was born Feb. T,
1883. In Denton County and was
educated in Denton County schools.
He had to borrow money to enter
the old Fort Worth University Med-
ical school, which was later ab-
sorbed by the Baylor University
medical school.
He was graduated from school in
1810, began his practice in Sanger
the same year. He often said he
regretted that internship at large
hospitals was not compulsory at
that time. , He chose to go into
practice immediately rather than
to interne because, as he said, he
wanted to make tome money to
pay his debts. He said he always
regretted not having interned be-
cause "it would have made a bet-
ter doctor of me."
3,888 BABIES
However, residents in the San-
ger area rarely complained that
he lacked medical knowledge. In
1956 he estimated that he had, in
his 48 years of practice, delivered
some 3,500 babies in the Sanger
area — and he called that a "con-
servative estimate."
During those early year* of
practice he made his house calls
either on horseback or by horse
and buggy. If a call took him 10
Another day of fair weather
was predicted for the Denton
area today and prospects of
the generally fair weather hold-
ing over until Monday were
good, according to a report
A. H. Linenschmidt, Henry Triet-
sch, Herbert Schertz, J. R. Much
and Walter Trietach
Tuckers Observe
E. Shelton. 1838 Scripture; Mrs.
. W. C. Irvin and baby, Sanger;
11-88 Mrs. Clyde Carroll, Lewisville.
_Cle
Not Guilt
shortly after he bought the Model
T Ford, the automobile became Denton County Tax Asseuor-Col- (
stuck in a mud hols He added lector N*wt Seagraves and his
Two Denton youths Injured in a
crash last Sunday remained un-
conscious and in critical condition
for th* seventh straight day Sat-
urday.
Glen Edward Wood, 22, cotinued
to be reported critical by Flow
Memorial Hospital officials, while
19-year-old Johnnie Briggs was
reported in the same condition at
St. Paul's Hospital in Dallas.
The two youths received head
injuries and bone fractures in the
early morning hours last Sunday
when the car in which they were
riding straddled a bridge railing
on U.S. Highway 877 south of Den-
ton and crashed into a creek em-
bankment.
Roselawn Memorial Park under chase plates.
direction of Jack Schmits A Son C. B; Cowan of 1812 Bolivar was
Funeral Home of Denton, the first Denton Countian to buy
Surviving Dr. Sullivan are his his 195a license plates. It was just
wife and two sons, John L. Sulli-1 8:15 a.m. when Cowan walked out
Van of Sanger, a prominent Den-1 of the office with license plate num-
ton County attorney; and Nelson । ber NR 1803
Gambill Sullivan. tofDenton.a- Seagraves reminded Denton
businessadministration statt mem County resident Saturday of the
Ala aurviving ire two brothers, necessity of having • 1967 recelpt
Dennis Sullivan and Frank Sulli-
van, both of, Denton; and a sister,
Mrs. Virginia Overcash of Harlin-
gen; and two grandchildren.
a comparable year, 1954, was 7.855. flooded the offices of city tax col-
Total revenue from the tax pay- lector W. D. Buttrill, Seagraves
ments amounts to 312,850.75. Of and school tax assessor-collector
the 81.78 tax, 81 goes to the state I Lee Preston before the midnight
school fund, 80 cents to the stat*1 deadline. .
Survivors inelude a brother, Jim
Butter jof Harlingen, and a niece,
Mrs. P. Johnson of Aransas
Pass.,
Lok • :
• (Continued trom Page 1)
PERSONALS
Mr. aad Mn. Donald K. Henrich
and daughter have returned to
Denton after Henrich’s discharge
from the .S, Navy. The family
will live with Henrich’s parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Carl W. Henrich,
1515 Oakwood He received his
discharge in New Jersey.
HOSPITAL NOTES
Flew Memorial Hospital
Visiting Hours: 10:30-11:30 a.m.,
3-4 p.m., 7-8 p.m.
Admitted: Benton Boyd, 1404
Broadway, medical; Walter Pas-
chall, 833 Anna, medical; Mrs.
Leona Maxwell, 3431 Crestwood,
medical; J. T. Arnold, 1434 Pan-
handle, medical; Roy F. Godi,
MU W. Prairie, surgical; Miu
Ernestine Rubalacaba, Roanoke,
surgical; Jackie Huggins, 706 Myr-
tle, surgical; Muter Michael
Scalf, 2025 Denison, surgical; Mas-
ter Jame* Matheson, 800 E. Oak,
medical; V. D. Burch, Route 1,
medical; Mrs. J. L. Neal. Lewis-
villa, medical; Mrs. Don Ray Cal-
vert, Frisco, medical; Mrs. Fan-
nie C. Kelly, Route 1, medical;
Mrs. D. L. Collins, Jr., 813 Wain-
wright, medical; Mrs. Mamie
Stenchomb, Route 2, surgical; Mr*.
Aubrey Vaughn, 1212 Johnson,
medical; Crow Wright, 1923 Scrip-
ture.
Dismissed: Master Joe David
Hopkins, 1507 Oakwood, James
S. Morris, Argyle; Mr*. J. L.
Christ}’. Lubbock; Mrs. R. A.
Gammon, 004 Bell; Herbert D.
Forchener, Route 3; Mrs. Helen
Allen, 1318 Linden; Mrs. Cora Ar-
buckle, 303 Bonnie Brae; Mrs.1
Milton High, Justin; Mrs. E. P.'
Fisher, 1021 W. Oak; Mrs. James
Complete
Selection
For The
HOME •
. . r
Linwood Roberson
FLORIST
DU2-2561 50! W. Hickory
I of auto registration and the auto's
-title when registering this year.
The requirement of the title to
, new this year. Heretofore only pre- ,
Mentation of the previous year* Mr. inenschmidt
receipt was necessary for new reg-
l istration.
Denton County has been allot-
ted. 38.713 license tags, with 16.690
set aside for passenger cars. But
it probably won't bo enough.
More than 33,ooo vehicles were re-
gistered during 1957.
Seagraves expect* the county to
show about a seven - per - cent
increase in registration* over last
year.
Th* 1858 whit* -' on - black I
Mg
WHITE'S BIG 1c
SALI Starts Mon.
John Marshall ciien Iriek
V
CALVERT FEED STORE
1 3800 •mAu-w-,,, -g-
1 32000 • ' .. 20.5V
4000
..........••• • • ' ........ L . . • w
4 100 ........................ 21.65
«00 ................ 22.18
4300 wy----. 22.ro
23,23'
4500 -------------------23.76
*» ..........................25.30
4700 0M,(........ ............................... 25.85
4800 ... ' 94 dO
4000 .............
-MUM* • • 26.95
5000 .............. 25,50,
a—e—
a A
a
T ---------
anuce C. cOATEs
AT"
.i' Ne *. Br80
..
PHONK
Briefs - Births - Hospital Notes
tw in lima.....a ii 1
fh ,
u J A
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 153, Ed. 1 Sunday, February 2, 1958, newspaper, February 2, 1958; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1453303/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.