Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 200, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 26, 1957 Page: 2 of 10
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THE DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLE
DOCTORSAYS_-
Briefs - Births - Hospital Notes
The bill was sent to subcom-
HOSPITAL NOTES
sur-
started.
I
Divisions for 4-H Club and Fu- -
223 W. Qak
Dla)
Mrs. Cashion Dies
t
*
truck-driver husband, Walter Cros-
•___
itical punch on both
to
Croaby.
to each, are:
Investigations were brought to
fraud or SEC violations.
East Side of Square
Icdpus I
NOW PLAYING
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fl
1
r
9
!
“ MERLE OBERON
ALL MATS 50c
0
DIDICATD TO> wm
Harry Ray
C-5814
»
1
Cartoons 7:10
Features 7:30 8 9:30
zacmtpyle
smubammssnei
tn
\
50$
terrier, "Doc" and
Itoi. "Al
SO* Him. C-7266.
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—
LAST DAY!
TEXAS
I TOMORROW! t
C
CHAIN
Gt
any i
which
when
Times Changed
For Rehearsal
$16,000’ she had earned. She was
left with 15.500. Bloomgarden went
on to defeat Dr. Henry Noble Mac*
12,
C-1
I
I
Too Bad
ShegBad
f
1,500 Due For
Youth Fair
At Decatur
actor in the
ive Me Tender"
WILD AS
THEIR MUSIC!
CRAZY AS
THEIR LOVEI
$71,800,
that as
WEDNESDAY . rHURSDAY
Academy Award Winner
STUDENT
ART THEATRE
other leaders,
beating the He
tian year poll
2 Performances Daily
At 2 and 7:30
Four Gties
To Get Help
For Radios
worst support
world” for his
v1
-1
cniyme MES LYDON DONHNGGERTY CLAUOW BARRETT
STASH THURWAY FOrTsAn-”
J
n
hatred
de". Re-
To Ray
HAPPY
EASTER
I
I
7 Sex Perspective
Confusing Child
— also —
Starts 9:00
PLUS: SECOND FEATURE
MURDER STRIKES WITH A FEARFUL WEAFOR
. thia
TODAY THRU TUES.
Starts 7:15 8 10:20
had won the largest fortune of any
contestant in a single quiz show
— $129,000.
Bloomigarden took the crown
when Mrs. Nearing, a lawyer.
they are
action
I
I
I
I
mory Barton
c-fs6
three great grandchildren.
Funeral will be held Wednesday
at 2 p.m .at the Aubrey Methodist
Church. Burial will be in tho Ma*
sonic Cemetery at Pilot Point un-
der the direction of Smith Funeral
Home.
on a question about island
.. Two weeks ago she had
had served as acting judge in
county and district courts, and was
a member of the Texas and the
Denton County Bar Assns.
He was a member of the First
Christian Church where he par-
ticipated actively. He married the
former Willie Fay Lanham May
11. 1918 and attended Lewisville
schools. He was graduated from
Cumberland University School of
president emeritus of Vaasar Col-
lege. and now has $21,000 to his
credit.
000 damage suit.
The verdict, reached after eight
days of hearings here before Judge
Jack Gray, recommended a finan-
cial award of 010,000 to Randy
Crosby, son of Mrs. Thelma Crosby
of Fort Worth who brought the
action against the MissouriKan-
sas-Texas Railroad.
Changes in rehearsal times for
the Denton Centurama were made
today by Harry S. Dorrington,
business manager of the Centen-
nial Commission.
Rehearsals in the Bronco Gym-
nasium at 3:30 p.m. today will in-
clude the trumpeters, cadets, Boy
and Girl Scouts, sailorettes. Miss
Columbia and states, and Texas
Republic queen and attendants.
At 7 pan. Tuesday the Com-
anche and Caddo Indian groups
will meet in tho Bronco Gymnas-
ium for rehearsals.
leaders were reported laying the
.roundwork today for a Jan. 1.
IBM. Income tax reduction based
on cuts they hope to make in
President Eisenhower's spending
and
serVi
_orprom, 2 -_______
cal; Mrs. Walter E. Leatherwood,
Lewisville. medical; Mrs. William
1heKing andX
Dr. John Bodkin Adams wanim
the rich old lady he is charged
with murdering “wanted to die."
Retective 8upt. Herbert Han-
nam, ( wearing the formal morn-
ing attire that, has won him the
neckname of “The Duke," told
by, who was killed in the accident
involving his truck and a box car
at the intersection of Highway ill
and the rail lino east of Lewis-
ville.
In answering the 60 special is-
sues of the verdict, the 12-man
Jury To Begin
Guaranty Probe
R-EVES DRUG STORE
PRESCRIPTION
HEADQUARTERS
East Side Square
Can C-OM For Prescriptlons
nearest gas production
Drillste scales 467 from the
west High School and Poolville
will be eligible to enter, as well
as Wise County Students, Brown
said.
A Youth Fair queen will be chos-
en at a junior rodeo scheduled at
8 p.m. Thursday at the sheriff's
posse arena.
Light, for instance, "have to pay
money to buy stock."
The federal government loans
BARGAIN PRICES
CHILDREN 20c
commercial use. The proposal is
strongly opposed by several edu-
cational groups, including the Tex-
as State Teachers Assn and the
Texas Commission on Educational
Television.
Alice Morrell:
“Easing the passing of a dying
person isn't all that wicked. She
wanted to die. That can't be mur-
der. It is impossible to accuse a
doctor."
Adams is accused of killing
Wildcat Staked
Near Decatur
DECATUR — Miles Production
Co. and Christie. Mitchell A Mitch-
ell, operating from Dallas, staked
No. 1 L. D. Florida et al, as a
2:-
THEATRE
D"FLWORTM MIGIIWT
LAST TIME TODAY
tor's degree in educational admin-
istration at Peabody.
The TRUE
STORY OF J
JESSE JAMES
:1
Mrs. Crosby was asking for
1150,000 for herself and child in
DAY SHOWING
LAST
BILL
ELLIOH
TELEVISION
. Continued From Page 1
construction of 47 stations. Now
-savonoperatinfhas, TV
in ‘ 1
TmoMy. March N. 1937
Damage Suit
After deliberating two and a
Flow Memorial Hospital
Admitted: Louie Meinen. Pilot
Point, medical: Mrs. Donald
Haun, 107 Blondell, medical; Alex-
Presley Given
‘Worst’ Title
By Lampoon
SEND
FLOWERS
Halyk ,
bomb
i
1
SOPHIA 8
LOREN .EK
Mayor A. P. Miller of Texar-
kana, vice president of the League
of Municipalities, said 19 cities in
northeast Texas oppose the bill
but that the league had taken no
position.
colm Wilkey said yesterday a
federal grand jury will begin
tomorrow the first phase of its
investigation into the defunct U.I,
Trust and Guaranty Co. of Waco.
Records of the firm and of state
the convention. ___"a--
Ceramic work by Jack Steven-
son, NTSC Junior from Dallas, has
been on exhibit for two weeks In
the fifth annual Miami National
Ceramic Exhibition, Coral Gables,
Fla. Stevenson, an education maj-
or minoring in art, entered a white
earthenware bottle with green line
decoration
George McCowan, cast member
of the Canadian Players, will lec-
ture Wednesday afternoon at 4
p.m. in the NTSC Library Audi-
torium. As a part of the NTSC
sixth annual Fine Arts Festival.
MeCowan will talk on “Theater
Problems" The lecture is open
York CVH
means
Cooling- Ventilatig-
Heating, at the single
turn of a switch. Fer full
information, see...
GAY ROOFING
0 Sheet Metal Co.
18th Judicial Court Jury returned
a verdict finding both the plantiff
and defendant negligent in a $150, •
cisIon.
The first round was fought bo-
fore the Senate State Affairs
Committee yesterday. At issue
was Sen. Charles Herring's bill
which would-allow co-ops to serve
ROBERT WAGNt R
ihfrh HUNTER
HOPF LANGE
* English. He was named to the
post at the group’s convention at
Bavlor University in Waco Sat-
UMis Janetta watson of Danae,
editor of Texins Magazine, of the
Texas Instrument Co., will speak
to the NTSC Press Club at 7 p.m.
Wednesday in the Journalism
! Building.” A former news writer
for the Denton Record-Chronicle,
Miss Watson is a journalism grad-
of NTSC.
Carel Stevenson, NTSC fresh
man from Mansfield, was elected
vice-president of the college divis-
ion of the Texas Assn. of Future
Teachers of America at a conven-
tion Saturday at the University of
u Te os /Miss Stevenson was one
| I of 10 NTSC student delegates to
J. Macart. Fort Worth, medical;
Mrs. E. L. Biggerstaff, 908 Aus-
tin, medical..Allyn Sapp, Lake
Dallas, medical; Mrs. J. M. Frady,
Lake Dallas, medical; Miu Edith
Woman Lawyer
Loses Crown
On TV Quiz
NEW YORK Un-Mrs. Vivienne
Nearing lost her new television
quiz show crown to a New York
man last night on NBC’s Twenty-
One.
Hank Bloomgarden. 28-year-old
administrative consultant in med-
ical research, defeated Mrs. Near-
VOTING
Continued From Page 1
ernment experience. He was city
finance director until accepting his
present position of business mana-
ger at TSCW. Ho lives at 3511
Fowler. with his wife and 5-year-
old daughter. He was wounded in
action in Europe during the three
and a half years he spent in the
Army in World War H. While re-
ceiving treatment at the Veteran'!
Hospital to McKinney following
his discharge in 1846, he was ap-
pciniea city SeEreLerYe a pout ne |
held for nine years. In 1955 he
served as finance director. A na-
tive of Denton, he la a member of
the Rotary Chib, and until recent-
ly served as director of the Den-
ton Civil Service Commission.
Orr and Swenson an backed
for the commission posts by the
City Development Assn.
RAY HUNT
Runt. 41. graduate of NTSC,
moved to Denton in IBM. He re-
ceived a Master of Arts degree
from the University of Southern
California in 1941 and served three
years as a Navy pilot during
World War I. He started a whole-
eale agency for the Humble Oil
and Refining Co. here in 1846 and
a loan and investment company In
1864. Married and the father of
two daughters, he lives at 1818 W.
Oak. He is a member of the First
Baptist Church, the Chamber of
Commerce and is a past president
of the Junior Chamber of Com-
yarea An netiva Ki warn an hr
helped organize the Kiwanis Blood
Bank.
sa/MNeo A/B0K
LAMAPATTBNTNEs,
AUSTIN (—Private power and
ras al sissiriftoellea gaep hUar
ests have blated a-new fighting
issue into the Legislature.
They are battling m
may furnish electric service to
customers in suburban areas—a
controversy that started with a
recent state Supreme Court de-
VV,
tailed to place Santa Crux de
Tenerife in the Canary Islands. . _ -
Bloomgardon won $10,500 of the Houston.
ed by Jack Schmitz & Son Funer-
Mr. Boyd, a native of Lewisville, I In Pilot Point
petition for reassignment of educa- ...
Hanai TV Channel 2 at Denton for The test is six miles from the
i “Qur.chdran.climb-thetree.of.
knowledge eagerly, but they can-
not distinguished the rotton
branches. They fall and are
bruised. ~ -
"It is our particular job as phy-
sicians to attempt to patch them
up — but beyond that, as parents
and citizens, it is also up to us
to do something about our distort-
ed all-American sex perspective.
“Young girls today are, as a
group, deeply confused and dis-
turbed."
Children develop bizarre ideas
about sex because of so much
stress upon sex and sex symbols,
he added.
“Many know more about sex
than their parents, but they are
mixed up on it," he declared.
and Anno Baxter as “the worst
supporting actress in the world”
for her performance in "The Ten
Commandments.” ■ ■
Natalie Wood and Tab Hunter
were named as “Iha most cloying
example of adolescence.”
The Lampoon said' Rock Hud-
eon’s recovery in “All That Heavn
en Allows” was “the most thor-
oughly unsatisfying ending of a
movie." T
Anita Ekberg in “War and
Peace" was termed by the maga-
zine as "only smorgasboard."
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
CRESTWOODADDITION
LAROE, 2-Bedroom, tten*kitchen
oombination, 3 te baths, carpet-
ed. douhie garage, lovely lot with
trees. too th beautiful horns be-
for you buy.
BARTON REALTY
°EvofebtLnomy andJ.M.Har-
ris, Austin attorneys, suggested
the bill be rewritten to allow the
co-ops to serve the customers they
now have in annexed areas and
any other customer who cannot
get “reasonable" connections with
the commercial companies.
The bill "goes a long way be-
yond the concept of rural electric
co-ops," Looney said. He added
that members “pay nothing in a
way of investment" while stock-
holders in Dallas Power and
Last Rites Held
For Will C. Boyd,
Denton Attorney
Funeral services were held
Monday afternoon for Will C.
Boyd. 64, Denton lawyer for 43
years who died Sunday following
a long illness.
Services were held in the First
Christian Church and burial was in
Roselawn Memorial Park, direct-
• • , _
money to co-ops for a 50-year
period at 3 per cent interest, with
no payments due for the first
five years. The co-ops are con-
sidered non-profit organizations
* were set up originally to
— Ice outlying areas in* which
half hours Monday afternoon, a commercial companies could not
" ‘iil Ce "---------- afford to extend their lines.
Am the True Vine." The Rev.
A. C. Donsbach, pastor, will pre-
sent a brief children’s talk.
AU children will be honored dur-
ing the service and given a mem-
ento, "The Wordless Book," as a
reminder of their importance to
Christ.
The nursery will continue to be
open in the Student Activities
Building for babies and small
children whose parents prefer to
leave them there.
Lutheran Mission Services will
continue at St. Paul's Church
every night at 8 through Friday.
pi tnl.
A girl Debborah Gaylyn, was
born to Mr. ard Mrs. Elmer La-
von Biggerstati, 908 Austin. at 7:46
p.m. Monday in Flow Memorial
Hospital.
Demo Leaders
Seeking Cut
In Tax Take
WASHINGTON u - Democratic
Linwood Roberson
FLORIST
501 W. Hickory C-2561
tment,all private, 910 per
C 8187 or c-4587.
KIBOino whitetace cowa,
FO4 LeReau, 04386.
EMIBKED or partly furnished,
mm. bath, % block Pt. Worth
M. 644. inttre 888 W. Col-
Mens Wear suit, aime-;
6 Head Maternity suita, size
od condition. Un Bounds,
Staff Special
DECATUR - More than 1,808
Wise County boys and girls are
expected to participate in the fifth
annual Wiao County Youth Fair
here Friday.
Sponsored by the Decatur Cham-
ber of Commerce, the show will
bo housed In a new building at the
Wise County Sheriffs Posse arena.
0. Ray Brown is superintendent.
haannbrenaqlasstgned toMKUHT’ connection with the death of her
Haunrmondenemtimedi. the jury the 58-year-old bachelor
anderCorpron, 206 Eorest, med! doctor spoke thus of Mrs. Edith
radios tar om truck in each com-
munity.
County commissioners Monday ’
agreed to pay half the cost for
one radio in each of the four
towns. Cost to the county has boon
estimated at 8360. The flro depart-
ments of tho towns are to pay tho
remaining 50 per cent but the pay-
ments will be refunded by the
Federal Civil Defense Adminis- -
tration.
The radios will be a put of the '
network handled by tho City of
Denton’'police department for city ,
police, sheriff's department and
highway patrol.
Commissioners said the funds
would be available only to depart-
ments which have state approval
as adequate for their communities.
State regulations require at least
a 500-gallon pumper and 1,000 foot
of hose for the truck, and that tho
city have a water distribution sys-
tem.
Walker, 1616 W. Mulberry,
gery; Mrs. Clarence Beksg,
Lewisville, surgery; Miss Jo Ann
Sopmmanageurtgameegwstherspoom, Royce car from her estate.
1822 W. Oak: Mrs. B Davis, 1301
W. Sycamore; Mrs. Billy Bob
Stimpson, 306 Bradshaw; J. M.
Frady, Lake Dallas: Willlard La-
Grone, Andrews: Mrs. Norman
Blackerby and baby, 1518 Lind-
sey; W. W. Smithers, 701 Ruddell;
Mrs. R. L. Morris, 800 Railroad:
Master Charles Ilams, Lewisville;
ture Farmers of America mom- r n 1 _ NT.
boro will include dairy cattle, poul- J ury Kules INO
try, livestock, swine and sheep. n • .1
Girts1 contests will include sew- Payment For
ing foodsi ond crafts. - ------1— <—*——-— ---:—
Students from Springtown, North-
UMXJM or S-roona apariment, fur-
niahed or unfurnished, Dey phone
2-222. night phone C-2477, Lee
IHEjHW: Brown »nd“whtte Pox
home in South Hadley Falta, Mau.
The regular meeting of the Dea-
ton City Council of Parent Teach-
era Assnfl. will be held Wednesday gr
at 8:30 a.m, in the office of Supt, 19
service was originally
bock they are:
Amarillo, Channel 7 with South-
west States Inc., and Kenya
Brown the competing applicants;
Denton. Channel 17, applied for by
Denton Telecasting Co.: Mona-
hans. Channel I with KMPS Broad-
casting Co. and Tri-Cities Broad-
casting Co. the competing appli-
cants: Victoria, Channel 18, sought
by Alkek Television Co.: and Nac-
ogdoches, Channel 10 for which
East Texas Broadcasting has ap-
’iav Mrs. Morrell, tin with an over-
• ‘ dose of drugs in 1950 to get a chest
|of antique silver and aT
J
topped Columbia University in* ______
structor Charles Van Doren. He—— HOUSTON U—U.S. Atty. Mal-
asittaa tar fuufhor afiaty., . . .
The Supreme Court had ruled
____ in a case from Gilmer that per-
over which sons iving in incorporated areas
are not eligible for service from
rural co-ops. The decision J*
versed a lower court bolding that
a rural co-op could furnish service
in an area that had been 'rural
but which subsequently had been
annexed to a city. •
It bolls down to a new round
in the old fight between private
and public power. A crown of
several hundred was in the Senate
chamber for yesterday’s hearing.
William Brown of Austin, coun-
sel for tho electric co-ops, said
it would be "death by attrition"
If the co-ops were not allowed
to add new members in areas
served which are incorporated.
“They must have some of the
cream to go with the milk," he
said, or the heavy costs for
CAMBRIDGE. Mass. O — The
Harvard University Lampoon col-
lege humor magazine, today lam-
। pooned several movie stars for
their 1866 acting performances.
The Lampoon "cited” Jennifer
j Jones and Gregory Peck for the
h *-worst acting performances in
f ’ "The Man in the Grey Flannel
Suit" and "Mobey Dick," respec-
tively.
It named Elvis Presley "the
Power Co-Ops
( 2 . . -A " * .
Swell Issues
-"2
County in purchase of two-way Ehmdrnpr.Gdrich C. Schauf-
fler, Portland, Ore., gynecologist,
declared today
Ho called on parents, doctors
and other citizens to change "our
m-c-uiWardningbromelNA
stardina IE
k ROBERT I
’TAYLOR I
ies-c
l«E-^
Ateksteroe 1
ElisahethMUELLERII
prayer.
Recent nests of Mr. ata Mrs.
A. A. Crout. Jane and C. H Win:
go were Willam Key of Paris and
Mrs. Minnie Mullins of Madill.
Okla.
Curtis P. Ramsey. Kellogt Re-
search Fellow in Educational Ad-
ministration at George Peabody
College in Nashville, Tenn., and
aon of Mr. and Mrs. V. J. Ram-
sey. 614 Welch, attended the an-
nual convention of the Deportment
of Elementary School Principals of
the National Education Assn, in
Cincinnati, Ohio, thia wook. Ho
Jury found both partita negligent, ina
the accident avoidable and recom- "IK "
mended no financial award to Mrs. eiues•
distorted all-American sex per-
spective.”
Speaking about sex education to
the American Academy of Gener-
al Practice, Dr. Schauffler said:
"Our young girls today, at the
ago of the first perception, are
confronted with the whole tree in-
stead of the tips of tho roots.
"It was not like this in our child-
hood. This is not entirely duo to
the delinquency of parents or edu-
cators, but is the direct result of
our present-day almost insane sax
preoccupation.
7,500-foot wildcat test 10 miles
northeast of here.
:_* Lutheran Church
Youth Night Set
Youth Night will bo observed at
x Church,,72 Streiching tootiyingarms
MEmaeinprttwiduaitonkj would, eventually put the co-ops
budget.
The Democratic plan, said to be
under consideration by Speaker of
the House Raybum (D-Tex) and
I aimed at
to the elec-
nr qartins. Shockey, NTSCTIS completigresearehtorthiedoe
, "—5-------—"
AAA"AAm All Ladies Who Attend
ImV I IVL Tomovrow’s Matinee Attired
in Block or Wearing Levis Admitted FREE.
Six are VHF (very high frequency)
kurpendinu.programn DENTON CHANNEL
jErf Arldc. for Other Texas cities besldes Hous-
current ownion a bill top- allocated VHF channels for
which woula cut back individual eduentlenl une are Amariilo.
income taxes at the beginning of I Channel 3: Dallas, 13: Denton, 3,
next year El Paso, 7: and San Antonio 8.
Individuals might benefit by a Texas cities allocated UHF ehan-
10 per cent cut under such a nels for educational purposes, with
magatmfnsmammzaumdtpom Arthur
A bill now before the Senate 37: Corpus Christi, 16; For Worth,
would extend high corporation and 26i.Galvegton.,“71 I predo, T’’:
excise levies until June 30, 1958. -ubbock,2isanAngeloe2Te
Senate Republicans have talked arkana.18; Waco, 28; and Wichita
hopefully of tax cuts next year. Fal8,16' . . .. cc,t,.
But they have been in generai Pending before the FCC is a
agreement that such reductions
should be voted only after there!
are specific Indications of a aiz-
able Treasury surplus.
Some Republicans who have
heard of the Democratic plan
were understood to be urging El-
senhower to revise his spending
budget to enable the GOP mem-
bars to take advantage of the pub-
lic clamor for governmental econ-
omy. — ‘
PILOT POINT - Mrs Mamie
E. Cashion, 83, a resident of Mus-
tang for 50 years, died Monday in
a Pilot Point clinic.
For the past five years she had
been living with her daughter at
Aubrey. She is survived by three
children, John L. Cashion of Du-
mas, Herman Cashion of Rt. 1,
Pilot Point; Mrs. John B. Taylor
Only six Texas cities are In-
volved in pending applications for
commercial stations. Besides Lub-
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FOR THE perfect famuy home be-
■urs to see this large U-bedroom.
den, bom*. Two tue baths, wall-
to-well carpeting, central heat,
jouble garage. Located in one of
Denton’ newest additions.
BARTON REALTY
HABRY HAT Emory Barton
------ 04,14 _____C-7156
RUFOER Field grown tomato
planta M for 25c, can supply any
ooaamy. Apple Houae.
— EouMd: Female7*Biack and brown
Toy Terrier, brown harnens, C-
WH8M1 or C -9506.-___
ki0Ca*A6oau and bath furnished
Chester 0. Strickland.
' Fred C. Welf Jr., rector of BL
John's Eviscopal Church in Corsi-
cana. wlH speak at evening prayer
at St Dovid's Episcopal Church
tonight at 7:30. A parish meeting
to discuss expansion possibilities
for the church will follow evening
in ™ m " tard Official
1 OWN 1 OPICS Quotes Doctor
During Trial
LONDON u - Scotlandyyard’s
“Both the postal and SEC people
have been working on this thing
for months,” Wilkey said. The
Cracken, 76, Poughkeepsie, N.Y., grand jury, will try to find out
whether operations of the defunct
insurance firm involved mail
southeast and 2,300 from the
northeast lines of the W. M. Sher-
rod survey No. 3, A-742.
MARKETS
FORT WORTH (AP) — Cattle
1300: calves 400; steady; good and
choice steers 18.09-22.50; common
and medium 13.00-18.00; fat cows
12.50-14.80: rood to chotce calves
18.00-21.50; common and medium
14.00-17.00; good to choice stock
steer calves 11.00-11.80 steer year-
lingo 90.00 down
heep 4.100; steady; good and
cholce spring lambs 88.00*86.00;
good and choice shorn old crop
lambs 10.00-22.00; stock woole
lambs 20.00-21,50; sham teeder
lambs 10.28 down; ewes 7.00-9.00.
Alexander Corpron. 306 Forest.
Elm Street Hospital & Clinic
Admitted: Felix Webster, 1103
Broadway, medical.
— i BIRTHS
A girl, Barbara Gale, was born
to Mr. and Mrs. Clark Berton
Mathis. Pilot Point at 8:25 p.m.
Monday in Flow Memorial Hos-
rural area and any area
i was classed as “rural”
Burks, Raymond Austin, W. K.
Baldridge, Dr. A. M. Sampley, Bob
Baldridge and Dr. Harold Farm-
er.
Ministers In charge were the
Rev. James Russell Reed and Bul-
lock Hyder of First Christian
Church, and Dr. W. B. Slack of
First Methodist Church.
JACK SCHMITZ JR.
Schmitz. 38. cornea from a long
line of Dentonites. His family,
county pioneers, moved here from
Ilinois in 1876. He is a graduate
of the Denton public schools, at-
tended NTSC, and served five
years in the U.S. Air Force in the
Pacific Married and the father of
9-yearold daughter, he was in the
floor covering business until he be-
came co-owner of the Denton In-
surance Agency. He Ilves at 637 '
Woodland. 1
, I
i
J__
» ~ |(
Law at Lebanon. Tenn., in 1515.' .... _ . ,
Pallbearers were Frank May- o Aubrey;_ five grandchildren, and
field. Boyd Armstrong, Joe L.
1 : ...
1 to the public.
The Hickory House, Denton’s
newest restaurant, was built by
Brewton Construction Co. The
1 865.060 establishment will hold its
formal opening next week.
Harry V. Dorrington, director of
the John B. Rogers Co. of Fos-
toria, Ohio has moved his fam-
ily to Denton for the duration of
the Centennial celebration The
Dorringtons, who live at 717 Wood-
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 200, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 26, 1957, newspaper, March 26, 1957; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1458778/m1/2/: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.