Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 169, Ed. 1 Monday, February 16, 1959 Page: 2 of 10
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1
I t
N
T
A
BUSINESS IN DENTON
Merger To
No Quick Effect 27 Jailed
TODAY'S DEATHS
4 <
11
»
?
■■
OF ALL PLACES
Texas Lauded In
Merry England
Coulter Rites Set
6
'am. Awards will
LAKE DALLAS - George W.
Coulter,
The
h Iov9...inw.,.ttnyw
(dam
of
A•
The Rev. BB Burton,
ks
all of Lewisville; two sisters, Mrs.
JR
of
ughan
MARKETS
Clay Moses of
Funeral
KMT WontW (A) — Mogs 800, week
» stock-
m’aamderezas
HELPING KIDS IS AIM
I
I
; up
rood
clinic in 1938.
Mrs. Chitw
has
Cerpeted living
Owner,
Mr.
TODAY'S CITIZEN
L
V
Banrow Insurance Salutes
t
Aho Star * ,
I
of
(
the Danton County Civil Defense unit.
N
PRICES
Plenty Of Fiee Parking
117 South Itai
Dial DU2-9620
f
__
it
it
i
ttMm
O-E
RIVE-
-1,11,
39
MONTGOM
MARION
^^RDl
INE ARTS
AFLOWEPS
KUNNINC/
SOME CRMt
6
ut
d n
Harris Funeral
Held In Church
Houchin Rites
Set At Sanger
in the Goen
I of Denton.
Hilliard Rites
Held in Denton
FOR ALL
OCCASIONS
SANGER
services for
I
I
LAST TIME TODAY
Features 7:00—-9:15
MOP LANGE-BARSARSRUSH-MAYBRT
1 cuy.EowDDUrmem.ewONKwe
!
1________________________________________
Talephone and Electronics Corpo-
ration.”
Harry West, district manager
for the company in Denton, says
km sALT Desirable to tren,4room
hosue, recently redecorated. Near NTSC.
Cell owner, 2-8610.__
4
7
Flood Threat
Eases Along
Wabash River
aan *
oe Me
aww 4.
Siw Am
William Edger Houchin of Route
2, Sanger,.
Mrs. Martha Ellen Stanley of
Route 1
ttfYIM T4ATMK
Now Thru Wednesday
Starts 6:55 8 10:10
1
I
t tors, Mrs. Vaughn Blakley of n-
! nis and Mrs. Billy White of Stony,
I two sisters, Mrs. Russell Helton of
By BOB PORTEB
URecord-Chronicle Staff Writer
Funeral
Set For Chapel
Mrs. Martha EDea Stanley, 11.
died suddenly this morning at the
home of a granddaughter, Mrs.
Former Stony
Resident Dies
a
I
Last rites for Loonie Thomas
Hilliard, 61. of 1106 Wilson were
PHONE DV2-2551
Briefs • Births * Hospital Notes
Rites Held For
' Former Resident
Funeral services for Mrs. W. E.
Hufthines, 53, of O’Donnell. 81 form-
er Denton resident, were held Wed-
nesday In the First Baptist Church
ger; a sister, Mrs. Mary Howard
of Fort Worth; a brother, Jim
Houchin of Ardmore, and one
grandchild. '
in swep-- --—.---
University of Alabama was third.
Ben Chappell of the speech fac-
ulty accompanied the team
Linwood Roberson
Florist
501 W.Hickory DU2-2561
Fort Worth; Clifford M
Forestburg and George__
of Corpus Christi, and three grand-
children.
Stony and Mrs Johnnie Moore of
Fort Worth; a brother, E. A. Phil-
lips of Ennis, and three grandchil-
dren.
, Lake Dallas carpenter,
and resident of Denton
(Continued From Page 1)
Center, the Children’s Medical Center, the Rheumatic
e-g
1 upus AW
BEE.REED,k.
^HMYGoSl
Twg0
the Sylvania com-
- -----d. "Since we are
moving towards the use of more
electronic equipment in the tele-
phone industry, the merger should
benefit us greatly.*'
BRANDO CLIFT
DEAN MARTIN
518-25, stock steer celves $23-33, sieckw
vearlings MO down.
Sheep 3,100, ttMdyi ge0d and eholce
npring tambs »>•-») seme old crop lambs
SIT-ISf ewa $e-s0.
Him In Command of Heat
AB In Engiisht
ADMISSION—70e-80e-8fc
-
j, '
of O'Donnell; six brothers, Otis
Maughan of Denton. Carl Maughan
of Vi--------- “—he
Lewisville Cub Pack
Program Set Tuesday
LEWISVILLE (Special) - The
second annual Blue and Gold Ban-
quet of the Lewisville Cub Scout
Pack 163 will be held Tuesday at
7 p.m. in the Lewisville Elemen-
tary School cafetorium.
George Wood, Denton, of the
Chisholm Trail District, will pre-
sent the pack charter to the Lew-
isville Lions Club president. Bill
White and to kwtitutional repre-
sentative Mack Bogard
The service theme will be used.
t m lower, eheice
600,
during the progri
be presented.
"Enemy Below" and
Me And The Colonel"
"THE
Devil's
General
i of Route 1
services will be held
TODAY Thru
TUESDAY!
***
HIGHEST RATING!
—New York Daily News
Staring
CURT JURGENS
In the vole
• that won
"Best
EeMdhme Actor
d hh Award
dmd2 Venice
hbi 9 Film
8% F
Mbr-m
cQuwbeto f
—Also Starts 8:45--
worker, died at his home Friday
at 3:15 p.m.
Pallbearers included Robert Hil-
liard, John Hilliard. Cleve Hilliard,
Jack Hilliard. Lester Burr and
Sam Taylor.
casting.
Conant and Clark teamed to win
the first . place trophy in tradi-
tional debt, their second tourna-
ment victory in a row.
Competing to cross examination
debate for the first time, Wayne
Calloway of ” Wichita Falls and
Mike Koury of Tyler placed third.
Other individual honors included
Koury's second place in humorous
speaking and Callaway's third
the merger will have no immedi.
ate effect on the telephone service
in this area. "The merger was
made to give the General system
of Lubbock.
Mrs. Hufhhines died last Monday
to St. Mary’s Hospital to Lubbock.
Mrs. Huthines was born in 1905,
She moved from Denton to Lynn
County about 38 years ago, and
was married to W. E. Hufthines
Koefod, 1380 Myrtle, medical; Mrs.
Ernest Stephens, Austin, surgical.
Dismissed: Mrs. Roger. Adam
son and baby, Route 3; Miss Vir
ginia Langley, 1404 Maple; Jack
Stephens, 1713 Greenwood; Mrs.
Kenneth Spillman, Stewart. Lanej
Jerry Don Henderson, 3036 W.
Oak; Master Jimmie Charles
Cross, Route 1, Aubrey: Newton
Isaac Beck, Pilot Point; Mrs. John
Henry Peace and baby. 730 Wain-
■Uday, Febtwery M. W
Student Theatre
ESTRYOF
VMM
. 4
A
rs1
(Special) — Funeral
William Edger Houch-
aachdevti.MnaaiShprkasSwk:
GASSAWAY PHARMACY
"Your Personal Pharmacisr
and the Rev. D. W. L
tor of the Wells Community
tint Church, officiated. Interment
was to the Rest Haven Cemetery
F t s t BI L J11IH JTrm, is
conditionena, lerue
room, dining voo
DU2-6657.
the Young
Lions A I
a
Fever Clinic, the Diabetes Diagnostic center and the
Bradford Baby Hospital in Dallas and the Children’s
Hospital in Fort Worth.
Thi
FORT WORTH - Mrs. Ira Hunt.
59, of Fort Worth, formerly of
Stony, died in Fort Worth's Harris
Hospital Sunday at 7:30 p.m.
Time of the funeral has tenta-
tively been set at 3 p.m. Tuesday
in the Gause - Ware Funeral
Home of Fort Worth. Buriai wS
be in the Jackson Cemetery of
Krum.
Mrs. Hunt was born to Kaufman
County Sept. 13, 1899, and lived to
Stony for a number of years.
Survivors include a son, Phillip
Hunt of Fort Worth: two daugh-
I
I
I COL J. B. McCAULKY... •
| ., i of 1509 Unden. Col. MeCauley is coordinator of
Okla.; a brother, Tom Coulter of
Carnegie, Okla., and six grand-
children.
Tuesday at 2:30 p.m. 1
Funeral Home Chapel______
Interment will be to Roselawn
i
-ommmmmim
GOOD RALED OATS, 40c
w. v. Tonniliff, DU2276
OW Transferred-
Wi Eqyity, 3-bedrgom brick, IM baths,
centrel heat, no wirng. Aasume so
gy. $5.4 pent GA ion 1101 Siere
Four Debaters
From NTSC Win
High Awards
Four members of the NTSC de-
bate and forensic team combined
efforts to win five individual hon-
ors, first place in debate and the
sweepstakes trophy at the Gulf
States Speech Festival to Hatties-
burg, Miss., over the weekend.
Leading the NT speakers were
Al Conant of Waco, who captured
first to extemporaneous peaking
and second in dramatic interpre-
tation and Robrt Clark of Denton,
who won first in television broad-
Two Men Held Here
On Car Theft Rap
Denton police today are holding
two men arrested early Sunday
morning in Danton for a Dallas
car theft.
The two men, wanted by the
Dallas FBI office, were arrested
by patrolman Hugh Lynch about
1:30 Sunday after Denton police
had . been notified the pair may
haybhenpttdndhowenr, ntoso
Ford, described by the FBI, at
North Elnp and McKinney.
FBI men were due to Denton to-
day to return the two men to Dal-
las to face car theft charges.
~ l rne
4
A_______
- e Kiwanis club began the clinic program in the
1920s, and an office was set up for the incorporated
L. ICC. Mrs. Chitwood has been associated
with the office, located in the Morris building, for
. 20 years.
The Kiwanis Club devotes the month of February
to raising money for the clinic. It sponsors ancannual
minstrel show to gain working capital. This year’s
show will be held in the Denton High School auditori-
um Feb. 26 and 27.
Lewisville IOOF Lodge No. 324.
Survivors include three sons,
George Wesley Coulter of Kansas
City, Mo., and William Thomas
Coulter and Floyd Willis Coulter,
both of Lake Dallas; three daugh-
ters, Mrs. Ed Painter. Mrs. Gene
Bradford and Mrs. Jimmie Ellis,
held Sunday in the Schmitz-Floyd-
" Hamlett Funeral Home Chapel.
The Rev. J. L Vandergrift pas-
tor of the Denton Free Holiness
The Cunningham Studio, 1322
W. Hickory, is celebrating its 12th
Anniversary in business Tuesday.
Coffee will be served visitors of
the studio Tuesday and nine door
prizes will be given during the
day. “We don't plan to be taking
any pictures Tuesday, just visit
with those who stop by to see
us," says Mrs. R. A. Cunningham,
owner of the studio.
The studio has been enlarged re-
cently. The reception room of
the studio has been remodeled,
and new combination dressing and
sitting rooms added and the studio
room and darkroom portion of the
studio was made when the area of
the building next to the studio,
which was formerly occupied by
a cleaning company, was acquired
by the studio.
• • •
Speaking of anniversaries. It
should be noted that the second
anniversary of the Little Apple
barbecue stand at 327 Decatur Dr.
was celebrated Sunday,
Owners of the Little Apple are
Clarence Cunningham and Harold
Gage.
formerly of Stony surgical; Master Randy iLawrence
-mNY • owu* __ K.n 120 Murtle medieal: Mrs.
urton nastor Ellen Calvert on July 20, 1920.
ENlana.oak Mrs. Coulter died in August 1957.
ewas.nmembegsordhetake
a Dallas Church at enmt ana we
THE CHARTER
(Continued From Page 1)
les and recommendations for chan-
ges and give final approval by
June 1.
Procedures for preparation and
submission of the budget are de-
tailed in Section 8:03, providing for
wha's considered a more busi-
nesslike approach to the budget-
ary problems and for a systema-
tic control over the budgetary pro-
cedures.
Provision is made for a public
bearing on the proposed budget
each year.
Under the new charter it would
be difficult for any administration
to make expenditures that have
not been included in the original
budget.
In case of grave public neces-
sity, emergency expenditures could
be authorised only after the affir-
mative vote of tour of the five
members of the council, as an
amendment to the original budget.
And in every case where such an
amendment is made, the public
must be so advised through the
publication of the resolution adopt-
ing the amendment-
^TUESDAY: Planning and Zon
The merger of the two companys
was approved by stockholders of
both firms during meetings Feb.
The first all electric Medalion
home to be built to the Denton
area was completed last week.
The house, Which was construct-
ed by the Denton contracting firm
of Wilson and Matheson, is located
on the eastern edge of Garza-Lit-
rey highway about four miles
south of Highway 34.
The house features a heat-pump
unit which is both a heating and
cooling unit. Other electrical units
to the house include disposal, re-
frigerator, cooking range, and
washer and dryer fixtures.
The air conditioning and heating
unit employs a heat pump, the
latest wrinkle in the air condition-
tog field. The interior section of
the unit is no larger than an ordin-
ary room air conditioner, but is
sufficient to control the entire
house.
The house was built for David
Harrington of Dallas.
rrE DENTON -RECORD-CRRONIcLE
The General Telephone Corp.,
Electric Products Inc. to form a pany. •• he said
new corporation named, “General Movine Ard
in, 71, of Route 2, Sanger, will
be held Tuesday at 3 p.m. to the
Bolivar Baptist Church
- The Rev. F. B. Huey Jr., pastor,
will officiate. Interment will be in
McCombs Cemetery under direc-
tion of Sanger's Sullivan - Floyd-
Hamlett Funeral Home.
Mr. Houchin, a resident of San-
ger for 12 years, diled in the Mc-
Kinney Veterans Hospital Sunday
at 7:18 a.m.
He was born in Tarrant County
May 30,1887, and was a member of
the Baptist Church. He was an ar-
my veteran of World War I, and
was a retired farmer.
Survivors include a son, Tom
Houchin of Sanger; two daugh-
ters. Mrs- Bessie Cole and Miss
Billie Jean Houchin, both of San-
TOO LITTLE AND TOO LATE -
Janie Collins makes a futile attempt to douse the fire that soon consumed her small
tenant home near Pickens, Miss. When she discovered the fire she grabbed a pail
and ran to a nearby stream for water. By the time she got back, the little blaze
had become a roaring fire and moments later all that was left was the brick chim-
ney—a perfect example of the stunning speed of a country fire.____________________
HIGH HONORS
(Continued From Page 1)
for disaster operations, in the de-
velopment of state capacitiel for
disaster operations, in the organ-
ization of federal agencies into a
single disaster team, and in signi-
ficant reduction in loss of life and
property during disasters.
As head of OCDM’s Southwest-
ern headquarters, Wilson coordi-
nates the federal government’s
disaster relief and mobilization
planning activities throughout Tex-
as, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Louisi-
ana and New Mexico.
Wilson is a former member of
the University of Houston faculty
and while living to Houston also
was director of the Houston March
of Dimes campaign, director of
Houston civil defense and execu-
tlVA aggigtant to oilman-philan-
y4vw mw--v-•" T"zIm-Iwnm
thropist Robert E. Smith.
A delegate to President Elsen-
hower’s White House Conference
on National Defense in 1955, the
director also has been a member
of the U.S. Civil Defens-Council
and of the Public Advisory Com-
mittee for the Federal Civil De-
fense Administration.
He and his wife, Joanne Guest
Wilson, have three children, Wel-
come Wade IL 7; Cynthia, 8, and
Pamela, 4. __ _________________
a wmmm---IB•
MNIMER•ATWRKNNWDV/Nm
NANcVGATSwDW I
rose to their feet, chorused the
toast to the Texas governor and
then downed their wine.
It was the annual dinner of the
Anglo-Texan Society, an organiza-
tion of Englishmen who love the
Lone Star State Bossom is presi-
dent of the society and an honor-
ary citizen of Texas.
DALLAS SPEAKER
The first speaker was Col. Gor-
don Simpson of Dallas.
“We all favor understanding be-
tween nations," he said, “and I’m
glad that everyone here under-
stands that Texas is the greatest
state to the Union."
"Hear, hear,” shouted his Eng-
lishmen audience.
Simpson said Dallas now has a
chapter of the Anglo-Texas Soci-
ety and he hopes more units will
spring up in Eis home state.
The next speaker was a London-
er, Dennis* King-Farlow.
“It is fitting that we dine tonight
in the Mother of Parliaments,’* he
said, “to honor the State of Texas,
of all the countries in the world,
Texas has the most."
“Hear, hear."
BRITISH SPEKERS
Other speakersall of whom
praised Texas—included the Earl
of Bathurst, Lady Margaret
D’Arcy and Michael Bryceson,
chairman of the Anglo-Texan So-
ciety.
The dinner broke up as Big Ben
chimed 18.
"We must continue," said Sir Al-
fred. "everyone to my house."
And continue they did, until ear-
ly this morning, at Bossom’s mag-
nificent home next door to the
London residence of Foreign Sec-
retary Selwyn Lloyd.
CNN* 2,000, . L. ... _
«n weak, gon4 to Mm steen $2527 SO,
lower orad IIS* fat com $10.0-20,
■wl *n4 ehetc celves $26,29, lower qredes
More than 2,000 miles of Inter-
state Highway have been complet-
ed since mid-1356, and work is
under way on 3,200 additional
miles.
WHEN YOUR DOCTOR )r-
REACHES FOR THE RHONE
TO CALL IN YOUR PRESCRIPTION g
REQUEST THAT HE CALL
GAMAWAY PHARMACY . . . DU2-9730
Year Prescription Will Ra Home Ry
• he Time Yaa Got There.
was to Oakwood Cemetery.
Hilliard, a construction
at $3,660,600 by Inspector Edward
Carey of the Police Narcotics Bu-
reau.
Authorities started the lightning
raids at 8:30 Saturday night, and
continued until 8 a.m. Sunday.
Raids were made in Manhattan,
the Bronx and Queens, and agents
reached out into Long Island and
New Jersey to round up suspects.
Those arrested were described
by George Gaffney, regional head
of the federal Bureau of Narcotics
as higher-ups in the ring import-
ing heroin from Europe. "These
are not small fry,” he said, "but
importers, wholesalers and dis-
tributors." None of them used
dope, he said.
' The only raid that was bigger,
according to Gaffney, was made
to Elmont, N.Y., in January 1358
when 35 pounds of heroin was
seized and 17 persons arrested to
New York, New Jersey and Penn-
sylvania.
Of the 37 arrested, 34 were in
federal custody, charged with pos-
session of narcotics. The other
three were arrested in a raid at
a Queens apartment, which offi-
cers said uncovered more than 23
pounds of heroin and 850,000 in
cash.
onsvioM include her husband;
a daughter, Mrs, B J. McLaurin
Mrs. Stanley was bora Nov. 27.
1887. to Bradleyville, Mo She
spent most of her life to Missouri,
but had lived in Denton for the
past 20 years.
Survivors include two sons, H.
L. Stanley and J. C. Stanley, both
of Denton; two daughters, Mrs.
Alice Hammons of Marysville,
Calif., and Mrs. Mary Keller of
Albuquerque, N.M.
NEW YORK (API—Federal and
city narcotics agents held 27 per-
sons in custody today after a se-
ries of raids that uncovered what
— the officers said was the second
of the electronic largest amount of heroin ever
- seized in the United States—more
than 32 pounds of it.
- The value of the pure heroin,
after being cut and sold to ad-
dicts and pushers, was estimated
,k -2
heC .»
...... a#. aaa.a W.l
- Press Phot
speaking and Callaway
place to persuasive speak
Schools from iAlabama, I U
X EX At Lake Dallas
men. The beat school, Mississippi
Southern, placed second to NTSC
A mighty tot a peopto have I
Came Running to see this en- I
tertaining picture. You’d I
better come Runnning too. ■
It’s week engagement wiu ■
end Wednesday. ■
ess I
County for 33 years, died at his
home today at 2:30 a.m. He was
64.
Funeral services will be held to
the Lake Dallas Church of Christ
Tuesday at 2:30 p.m. Burial will
be in Chinn’s Chapel Cemetery un-
der direction of the Jack Schmitz.
A Sons Funeral Home of Denton.
Mr. Coulter was bora Oct 31.
1894 in Farmersville. An army
veteran of World War I, he mar-
ried the former Miss Elizabeth
wright; Baby Sheila Kay Stam,
3623 N. Kim; Mrs. Charles M.
Simmons, 906 Haynes; Miss Cheryl
Jeanette Hester. 632 Fox, Lewis-
vyille; Master James Luther Hee-
ler, 652 Fox, Lewisville; Miss Sar-
ah Ann Hester, 662 Fox, Lewis,
vine; Master Jackey Cogdell, 313
Ruddeil; Mrs. Grace M. Tate, 1818
Bolivar; Mrs. Leonard Elbert,
Lake Dallas; Miss Anne Davis,
Krum.
Elm Street Hospltal a CUnie
Admitted: Master Terry Lynn
North, Krum, medical.
Dismissed: Mrs. Wilford Holmes,
2831 Stella.
BIRTHS ..
A boy to Mr. and Mrs James
Runions, 1107 Normal, at 7:17 a.m.
Fob. 14 to Flow Memorial Hospi-
tel.
A boy to Mr. and Mrs. Jay Ire-
land, 322 Panhandle, at 3:48 a.m.
Feb. 14 in Flow Memorial Hospi
tal.
A boy to Mr. and Mrs Bo Har-
ris, Route 3, Sanger, at 8:43 am.
Feb. 14 la Flow Memorial Hospi-
tal.
A boy to Mr. and Mrs Felix
Clearman, 1334 Chestnut, at 11:33
a.m. Feb. 14 in Flow Memorial
Hospital.
By EDDY GILMORE
LONDON (AP)-Sir Alfred Bos-
som stood in the House of Com-
mons dining room last night wav-
ing a Texas cattleman's hat and
praising the Lone Star State.
Above the veteran Member of
Parliament hung two flags—the
Union Jack and the flag of Tex-
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The farming area near Oaktown,
Ind., became the main center of
activity along the flooded Wabash
River today as the danger in up-
stream communities appeared
easing.
National Guardsmen were sent
by Gov. Harold W. Handley into
the Oaktown area, about 40 miles
south of Terre Haute, to strength-
en an old levee. A break in the
levee would flood thousands of
acres of farm land.
Dry weather prevailed in the
flood sones and also to wide areas
throughout the country east of the
Rockies. The country’s wettest re-
gion was in the Pacific Coast.
Last rites for Mrs. Billie May
Harris, 84, of 2002 Cherrywood,
widow of the late L. L. Harris,
were held Sunday afternoon to the
Little Elm Baptist Church.
The Rev. Al Murdock, pastor, of-
ficiated. Burial was to the Little
Elm Cemetery under direction of
Denton’s Jack Schmitz & Sons
Funeral Home.
Mrs. Harris died at Denton's
Flow Memorial Hospital Friday at
1:05 p.m. She was a pioneer of
Little Elm.
Pallbearers included Richard
Harris, Herbert Harris, Leon Har-
ris. Willie Carpenter, Syrell Car-
penter and Dabney Sims.
h^KSTown Topics
Visiting to the home of Mr. and
Mrs.B.F. Chastain, 1012 8. Myr-
tie, were Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Johnson and Mrs. Ed Johnson, all
of Waco.
The Helea Parks Circle of the
Grace Temple Baptist Church will
meet Tuesday at 3 a.m. at the
home of Mrs. Robert Sherman,
2228 Houston PL
The Ladies Auxillary of Carpen-
ters Union No. 677 will have a
called meeting Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. to the Union Hall.
A member of the Denton Chart-
er Commission will discuss Den-
ton's proposed now city charter at
a meeting of the Civitan Club to-
night at 7 at the Steak House.
John W. Brooks is Civitan presi-
dent.
HOSPITAL NOTES
Flow Memorial Hospital
Admitted: Mro. Wilmer Wallace,
807 Lakey, medical; Miao Lzabeth
Piburn, Route 1, Roanoke, surgi-
cal; Mrs. Ida Ramsey, 520 Bolivar,
accident; Jack Burkholder, San-
ger, medical: Mrs. James Run-
ions. 1107 Normal, medical; Edgar
T. Brown, 438 Bryan, medical;
Mrs. Bo Harris. Route 2, Sanger,
modical; Baby Donald Geno Shel-
by. 151 Parnell, Lewisville, med-
ical; Miss Carla Gale Murphree.
2902 N. Elm, medical: David Thur-
man Redden, 310 Bonnie Brae,
medical; Mrs. K, N. Morris, Oki
Fort Worth Highway, accident;
Mra. Jay Ireland, 222 Panhandle,
medical; Miu Anne Davis, Krum,
medical; Mrs. Felix Clearman,
1934 Chestnut, medical; Mrs. Arth-
ur O. Miller, Pilot Point, medi-
cal; Mrs. Raymond J. Blakeley,
1704 Boyd, medical; Bryant E.
Nuckels, 1802 Wayne, medical;
Noble Grant Jackson, Pilot Point,
■ k 1
E>
2ag.a
Ti N
• J.
.142'_ '
' PAGE TWO-
"My lords, ladies and gentle-
men,” shouted the red-coated mas-
ter of ceremonies, "please charge
your glasse. The tout is—to the
Governor of Texas."
Big Ben, the giant clock, chimed
the hour outside. Men to dinner
jackets and ladies in ball gowns
FOUR-POWER
- (Continued From Page 1)
place, which would be fixed by
mutual agreement. The place and
data should be settled through dip-
lomatic channels.
“The conference should deal
with the problem of Germany in
all its aspects and implications."
The aspects which would be
dealt with include such immediate
issues as the Western demand for
reunification of Germany, the So-
viet plan to oust the Western pow-
ers from Berlin and to make a
peace-treaty with the two halves
of Germany; and other issues re-
lated to Germany such as broad
questions of European security
and of the possibility of disengage-
ment of Soviet and Western forces
to central Europe.
DANGER TO PEACE
The Western powers told the So-
viets that if the Communists try
to cut the lines of the Western pow-
ers into Berlin "the danger to
world peace" should be evident.
And, once sgain, u in an ear-
lier note on Dec. 31, the U.S.,
British and French governments
asserted their determination “to
uphold by all appropriate means
their communications with their
sectors of Berlin."
West Germany upheld the posi-
tion of the Western powers in a
parallel note, officials here said,
but technically the proposal of an
Eut - West meeting comes from
the three powers which have oc-
cupation rights in Germnany along
with the Soviet Union.
Russia’s Jan. 10 proposal for a
28-nation conference to write a
German peace treaty got a brush-
off. The Western notes were a
reply to the Soviet communication
and the call for a foreign minis-
ters meeting was in part at least
a counter-proposal.
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Mission, officiated. Interment
VILLAGERS
(cntinued From Page 1)
feed the few cats and chickens
left behind. From time to time
they leave their houses, walking
through empty streets, looking up
at the mountain.
They read about their danger
once a day. The narrow-gauge rail
line up to Zermatt brings them
the German-language newspaper
read in the Mattertai Valley.
Occasionally a hush descends
over the bare and deserted ham-
let. The wind and distant noises
from the mountains cease. There
is sudden stillness on the village
streets.
LIVE IN FEAR
“Wo live to fear and we don’t
sleep any more," murmured
Burgner’s wife. She toddled a
neighbor's child on her knee while
his mother sought food la the re-
maining grocery stone.
"If we should hear the slide
coming," said Burner, "we would
go down to the cellar—if we have
time. It would be useless to run
outside anyway?
When the slide does come, it
will be the second time the Burg-
ners have lost their home. Resi-
dents of southern France for
many years, they returned to his
native Herbriggen when France
feU during World War II. Penni-
less to 1942, he and his wife
worked hard, bought their own
home and raised their three chil-
dren. All are grown and away
from home now.
Burke of Denton and Mrs.
Mays of Tishomingo.
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 169, Ed. 1 Monday, February 16, 1959, newspaper, February 16, 1959; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1453470/m1/2/: accessed June 20, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.