Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 216, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 12, 1960 Page: 2 of 12
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1
AM 11, 1960
TEE DENTON RECORD.CHRONICLE
PAGE TWO
STARTS TODAY
Of Eisenhower
For Su:
it
, Miles,
mier Nikita, Khrushchev at next
CROWDS!
CROWDS!
I
I
I
M-
School Term
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
”\ I
Is Extended
I
ROADSHOW ADM. 75c
DU2-9730
"526 A Locust
TMOW
2994:
fl
Come Early — Features 7:30 - 10:00 p.m.
TODAY'S CITIZEN
BARROW INSURANCE SALUTES
»
»
I
»
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION
ke mdh
FREE RENT
Dial DU2-9621
THREE BEDROOM
DENTON AREA DEATHS
BRICK HOMES
IN
TAYLOR PARK
AND
SEQUOIA PARK
O.I. or F.H.A.
-t
Get your entry blanks and contest rules at the
RANCHO DRIVE IN THEATRE
Enter nowl You might be a winner.
4
v‘
I
Hill
ea
Demo Tieup
Charged In
Kennedy Race
... AND THEY ARE
AU RAVING ABOUT
"HOME FROM THE HIU*
Allies Begin
Initial Talks
Transfer Due
Today For Pair
Jailed Here
Two of Buddy's puppies are being given away
in Toms at the close of the showing of the picture
"MY DOG BUDDY" which starts at the Rancho Drive
in Theatre, Thursday, April 14.
D. B. BOYD
DU2-2573 DU2-9357 DU2.2949
This Big Double Bill
At Bargain Prices
256-50070c
GILBERT
ROLAND
ELEANOR
PARKER
GEORGE REPPNRO
EVRETTSLONN
GORGE WMILTN
UMM MUM
JEANNE
CRAIN
LAST DAY
“NATURE GIRE
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WHEN YOUR DOCTOR
CALLS IN YOUR
PRESCRIPTION
REQUEST TWAT HI
CALL DU2-9730
speaker. will use as his t
We Believe God"? Specii
Tbs tsiM in the series ef Holy
Week services will be held tonight
at 7:30 at St. Andrew Presbyterian
STUDENT ART
THEATRE
FRESH CUT
FLOUERS
If you have down payment
troubles, see us.
THE MOTHER...
possessive and
unloved’
Briefs-Births-Hospital Notes
PHONE DU2-2551
frohy the
I Hill
i
NAH . th. wo
whehedteeem
hisnamet
While loan is being processed
and closed.
GASSAWAY PHARMACY
We Give SaH oreen Stamps
Flow Memorlal He
Admitted; Mrs. John
DALLAS — Funeral services will
be held in Dallas Wednesday for
the president of a movie house
which owns a Denton theatre.
He was Harold (Buster) Novy,
37. president of Trans-Texas The-
atres, which owns the Fine Arts
Theatre in Denton and 11 other
Texas movies houses.
they will depart for a world tour.
Jan Rives, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Albert Rives. 1804 Scripture,
is at home from Texas Tech in
Lubbock for the Easter holidays.
HOSPITAL NOTES
I
I
I
I
I
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I
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I
gokc
WEEKS
Roadshow Adm.
NOW FOR 2 BIG
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TEEN-AGERS
• the real and
• revealing story Q A
• of today's youth! K95,g
BARROW INSURANCE AGENCY
YOUR HARTFORD AGENT”
CINEMASCOPE
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sons, Orry McMillan of Hollan-
dale. Fla., Chester McMillan of
Clovis, N.M., and J. B. McMillan
of Visalia, Calif.; 11 grandchildren
and 38 great grandchildre-
Services Held
REV. CAMPBELL WILL SPEAK
AT WEDNESDAY NOON RITES
The Rev. Edward H. Campbell, rector of St. David's Episcopal
Church, will speak Wednesday at the Denton,wide Holy Week serv-
ices.
The noon-13:20 services are being held daily in St. Andrew Pres-
byterian, Church, West Oak at Bolivar.
Assisting Wednesday will be the Rev. Donald Y. Swain and the
Rev. F. B. Huey Jr.
"The Day of Silence" will be the Rev. Mr. Campbell’s subject.
"‘ROBERT ELEANOR
..MITCHUMSPARKER
GEORGE PEPPARD GEORGE HAMILTON
EVERETT SLONE- LUANA PATTEN
- TODAY A WEDNESDAY -
-A TEN FILMS
PRESENTATION -
FEATURE STARTS
5:20, 7:25, 9:20
J~hn W. McMillan
_R0ANOKE (Staff) - John W.
McMillan, a retired farmer, died
in his Roanoke home Monday after-
noon after an illness of several
mopths. He was 82.
Funeral services will be held at
3 p.m. Wednesday at the Old Shi-
loh Baptist Church near Lewisville.
The Rev. Tom Adams will of-
ficiate. Burial will be in Old Shiloh
Cemetery under direction of the
Foust Funeral Home of Grapevine.
Mr. McMillan had been a resi-
dent of the Roanoke-and Oki Shi-
loh area for 25 years. He was a
member of the Old Shiloh Baptist
Church.
Survivors include his wife; throe
W. F. DAVIS
OF W.P. DAVIS, REALTOR ...
.. • a member of the Denton Real Estate Board, which
has just completed its celebration of the 1960 Realtor
Week with the theme -Symbol of the Sixties — Home
Ownership.-
Metro Goldwyn-Maya
prerenf
L A SLC SIEGEL
| ROBERT ;
I MITCHUM A
. . . The Story of A Lusty Texas Family . . .
Recommended For Adults And Mature Young
People ...
Roadshow Adm. 75c
Pravanted Rm
WARNunenoS. TECNNICOLO•
G2TVEi
2" :
IIM^
STARTS 8:55-
FIRST SHOWING
ACTION ACTION
ACTION MUS
ALAN
LADD
"Bhd
TuE FATMER
et two KM...
one nameigsa!
Carsages • Pot Plants
COMPLETE SELECTION
Linwood Roberson
FLORIST
DU2-2561 Denton
TaroN ..
MHOW.M
woule not Mm,
*M tethera
totstepst
[9) Home
How would you like to own your very own dog
•Buddy- from the star of "My Dog Buddler
Secretary of State Christian
A. Herter, British Foreign
Minister Maurice Couve de
Murville.
The three AHied foreign golicy
chiefs, meeting in an atmosphere
of low-key optimism, were report-
ed confident they could draft com-
bined proposals their government
chiefs will lay before Soviet Pre-
Houston Told Dhern:ShainShia |
ontaet UNITED FINANCE CO.
for a team to refinance your car or
to consolidate your present bills.
-------------------------.(Adv.)
Church. Dr. J. Hoytt Boles, guest
topie "Do
ial music
FEATURES 7:30 - 10:00
CROWDS!
INTRODUCING
9 f3BSR
A” RMNMO0G
/Vuk In The Story
td That Tore The
EN L Vast Timber
H.VAaA, Country
“Tddeeha Apert!
will include a solo by Mrs. Charles
Oakey. Members of the Women's
Ason, will be guests.
Word has been received of the
death of Mrs. Clara Grant in Sem-
inole, Okla., Monday. She was the
sister of Mrs. Will Yerby of 3013
Bolivar. Mrs. Grant, 79. had been
ill several months. Funeral serv-
ices and burial will be in Minco,
Okla., her former residence.
Jefferson Davis Parent-Teacher
Assn, will meet Wednesday at 3:30
p.m. at the school. A civil defense
program is planned.
Denton Welfare Board will meet
Wednesday at 4 p.m. in the coun-
cil room at the Municipal Build-
ing.
Denton Unit No. 88. Texas Assn,
of American Beauty Culturists will
meet tonight at 8 at 114 Center.
Lee Morris of Fort Worth, national
trophy winner, will be artist.
The First Methodist Sanctuary
Choir, directed by Frank McKin-
ley. will present an Easter can.
tata. Stainer’s Crucifixation, Wed-
nesday at 7:30 p.m. in the church
sanctuary.
Visiting Mrs. Bess Harwell, 138
Forest, were her cousin and wife,
Mr. and Mrs. M. M. Davis and
Mrs. G. O. Davis of Charlotte, Tex.
They were enroute to Dallas where
West German Foreign Minister
Heinrich von Brentano joins them
Wednesday and the Italian and
Canadian foreign ministers will be
brought into the disarmament dis-
cussion later.
In a deliberate move to curb
excessive hope, the State Depart-
ment published a bulky document
recalling how the 1965 summit
meeting at Geneva failed to break
the East-West deadlock. The 478-
page book of documents, nearly
an inch thick, also recalled the
tangle of proposals and counter-
proposals that led to the decision
to have the Big Four leaders try
again in Paris May 16.
With an eye on this second con-
ference, the State Department
said in a summary: "It would be
unrealistic to expect that these
grave issues can be resolved at
one heads-of-government confer-
ence."
Despite the obstacles, however,
it pledged the United States would
persevere in its drive to find area
of agreement with the Communist
bloc.
It foresaw "an imporatnt tan-
gible gain" toward such a goal
in the closer personal contacts
established by President Eisen-
hower and Khrushchev in their
Camp David talks last September.
None of the documents pub-
lished were new. They covered
the five-year period since the last
summit conference.
The caution against over-opti-
mism matched the note that Brit-
ish Secretary Lloyd struck Mon-
day as he arrived from London.
Lloyd, however, added a predic-
tion that a summit parley would
Denton school children will have
to go to school one day longer than
originally planned this year, hut it
will all average out.
Members of the Denton Board of
Education set May 26 — a Thurs-
day — as the final day of the 1959-
60 school year at their monthly
meeting Monday night. The adding
of a day to the original schedule
was to make up for the loss of a
day of school on Feb. 25.
Classes originally were scheduled
to end on May 25 and students were
to return to school for their grades
on May 37. The revised schedule
cals for the May 26 finishing date
and grades on May 28, a Saturday.
The board also set Sept. 6 as the
opening date for the fall semester.
Faculty meetings will be held on
Sept. 1 and registration will be
Sept. 2. Labor Day falls on Sept. 5.
SCHOOLS
(Continuea From Page 1)
delinquent taxes had been collect-
ed during March.
In other business, the board:
1. Heard Supt. Chester Strick-
land report progress at the two
new schools: the piers are in the
ground for the school site at Ma-
lone Street and West University
Drive and workmen have begun
praliminary work on the Woodrow
V ‘Ison school site in Northeast
Denton,
3. Rehired teachers in the dis.
trict.
3. Accepted high bid of $569 on
the sale pf a 1951 Ford truck and
rejected a high bid of 81.038 on a
1958 Chevrolet and voted to keep
the car as to be used for driver
ecncation.
4. Awarded a contract to Public
Construction Co. of Denton on low
bid of 81,000 for asphaltic concrete
on a 120x120 area to be used for
a tennis and basketball court be-
hind Denton High School.
Federal authorities were due in
Denton today to transfer two men
from Denton County Jail to Tyler
on charges of violation of the Dyer
Act.
One of the two is wanted for de-
sertion from the United States Na-
vy, Denton Police Chief Andy An-
derson said.
Edwin Shue and Eddie Drum-
mond. both of whom lived in Den-
ton at the Denton Hotel were
brought back to Denton this week-
end after they were caught by the
Arkansas Highway Patrol driving
a 1955 Ford which police said be-
longs to Mrs. L. D. Knight of 924
Laguna.
The car was stolen Thursday
from the Office of Civil and De-
fense Mobilization narking lot.
Mrs. Knight is an OCDM employe.
Shue, who gave his address as
Chicago had been living in Denton
for about three months. Drummond
had been livi,ng in Denton for six
months. His home town was listed
as Springfield Hi.
The pair was picked up n Cam-
den. Ark., Friday, and was re-
turned to Denton by City Detective
Luther Allen and Deputy Sheriff
Jack Shepherd. They were chang-
ed with violation of the Dyer Act
— transporting stolen property
across a state line — in Federal
District court in Tyler.
Drop Predicted In
Home Building Boom
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)—Home
building will decline in 1960 due
principally to higher interest
rates, says Nathaniel Rogg, chief
economist for the National Assn,
of Home Builders.
Business will be good this year,
but the predicted boom will not
materialize and those who fore-
cast one for 1960 were "overly
optimistic," Rogg told the associa-
tion's regional convention.
I
JACK COX
(Continued From Page 1)
and file of Texans."
"I can promise you there are
no strings attached to Jack Cox
except those linked to the rank
and file. This is a campaign of
principles and I intend to stand on
mine all the way. I’m not fooling
myself that I can be everything
to everyone. I can only stand for
what I believe to be the best for
the state," he said.
The young candidate was ap-
plauded lustily at several points
by the responsive crowd.
Cox dodged nothing in a short
question-answer period following
his talk except a question regard-
ing possible state support for the
University of Houston. He demur-
red on the basis the Commission
on Higher Education was studying
the matter that day and he felt
it would be inappropriate for him
—a member of the commission-to
take a stand at that time.
He called unfair the controversial
auto insurance bill passed by the
last Legislature although he liked
the idea of a merit rating system.
He found fault in the fact a driver
receiving tickets is penalized as
heavily as a person wrecking his
ear. He also called the three-year
retroactive clause illegal.
"Perhaps this bin is undesirable
to me mostly because it seems to
hit me quite often. I drive about
48,006 miles per year and, you
know, I can’t get there at« mijes
d ALL OF THE CHARACTERS
I® OF THE RICH AND
W EARTHY NOVEL... RE-LIVE
THEIR SHAME AND FEAR
V ON IHE SCREEN!
—Not since "Cot on a Hot Tin Roof*
has the Comoro peered so relentlessly
into the secrets of a proud but guilty
family! Great as a book!
Magnificent as a motion
picturel j _
By DOUGLAS B. CORNELL
AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP)-President
Eisenhower today added a one-
day visit to Korea to the itinerary
of his June trip to Russia and
Japan.
Eisenhower will reach Japan
June 19 and interrupt his visit
June 22 to fly to Korea. He will
go back to Japan and finish out
his visit there June 23.
An announcement at the tem-
porary White House said this:
The White House announced to-
day that the President’s visit to
Japan on the occasion of the Jap-
anese-American Centennial would
take place June 19-23. While in
Tokyo, the President will have
conversations with Prime Minis-
ter Kishi and his asociates.
The President will also make a
brief visit to the Republic of Ko-
rea June 33 in response to a long-
standing personal invitation of
President Rhee with whom he will
have an opportunity to discuss
matters of common interest.
NOW THRU WEDNESDAY
STARTS 7:20 A 10:40
IDAMMANORCWS-MEPOWEI
EucHNTD
I qmnmmeue IM pamum. Mear
I EMUMAN• -meparro
“pumaznrovtcay
Embezeller Gets.
25-Year Sentence
LOS ANGELES (AP)—A heat-
ing contractor has been sentenced
to 25 years in prison for an em-
bezzlement termed by prosecutors
“the largest in the nation, if not
in the world.”
John A. Hendrickson, a heating
contractor, was accused of mis-
appropriating $3,714,610 from the
former Long Beach National
Bank. He denied it, was convicted
by a jury, and later admitted his
guik. Sentence was passed Mon-
day. 5
U.S. attorneys said the nation’s
biggest embezzlement came to
light when George Albert Hewlett,
an official of the bank, committed
suicide. In his garage investiga-
tors found 83 checks, ranging
from 815,000 to $25,000 all payable
to Hendriekson.
W.Van(API a month’s Paris summit meeting.
Are Democrats comDining in a
drive to defeat Sen. John F. Ken-
nedy (D-Mass) in West Virginia’s
May 10 primary and thereby hurt
his chances for the Democratic
WASHINGTON (AP) — Allied foreign ministers start a
round of pre-summit talks today with a blunt reminder
that EastWest leaders can’t hope to settle their bitter dis-
putes at a single conference.
“The road to peace is a long and hard one and no one
can now say when the goal will be reached,” the State
Department said in publishing a book of background doc-
uments.
The series of meetings opens this afternoon with a strat-
—---------------------- egy session bringing together
3
For Mixing
HOUSTON (AP) - A district
judge Monday ordered the Hous-
ton School Board to approve a
plan for integration of its schools
by June 1.
The order was given the school
board by Dist. Judge Ben C. Con-
nally.
In his letter to the board Con-
nally said he had no desire to
draft his own desegregation plan.
If the board did not advance a
plan by June 1, Connally said, he
had no alternative “but to grant
the relief which the (Negroes)
sought.”
Connally said his letter was a
clarification of his position stated
during a conference with School
Board Attorney Joe Reynolds and
the Negro’s lawyer Weldon Berry
two weeks ago.
Reynolds told the board it waa
his impression that if they did not
submit a plan for desegregation
by September Connally would or-
der all-out, district-wide integra-
tion.
In 1957 the judge ordered the
school district to desegregate with
all deliberate speed. His letter
did not say when he thought de-
segregation should begin.
Board member Mrs. Frank byer
read the letter at the meeting.
New Superintendent
Appointed At Aubrey
AUBREY (Special) — Ernest I.
Bishop has been named to suc-
ceed W. A. Blanka as superinten-
dent of the Aubrey school system.
Blanks retired April 1.
Bishop had been an employee
of the Durant, Okla., water sys-
tem 28 years prior to moving to
Aubrey seceral years ago.
LLOYD GEYS DUTTON, 49, of
1815 Boyd—Funeral Monday, burial
in Roselawn Memorial Park, Dr.
W. B, Slack. Pallbearers Charles
N. Davis, Tom Davis, Lindon Wil-
son, Grady Matheson, Gude Gris-
som. Lery Brittian.
JUDGE U. B. (BUST) WILSON
72, of Alpine—Funeral today, burial
in Masonic Cemetery, Pilot Point,
the Rev. Willis Anderson and the
Rev. John Marvin. Pallbearers
Claud Sitzes, Glen Beaty, Grady
Ryan, Earl Canity, Lamar Whit-
succeed in reducing European
tension.
Lloyd was reported ready to
soft pedal his proposals for a flex-
ible Berlin settlement, realizing he
was confronted with solid Ger-
man-French opposition as well as
a toughening American attitude
on this issue.
Differences o n disarmament
were described as almost nonex-
istent.
$500 CASH
NO CLOSING COST
Buys 3-bedroom home in new »Mitl«n, on
pavement. Large living and dining conm
combination. Well arranged kitchen with
washer connections. Carport with storaye.
U«n aiready eateblished nt $61.87
month. Shown by appointment only.
S. 1. SELF, 106 W. McKinney
BRICK WAREHOUSE
In good rcondition, over 6000 M. ft. space,
concrete floot, reilroad siding, 213
Slount Street, immediate possession.
THE NEBLETT AGENCY
308 Morris Bldg., Realtor DOT-6524
To whom it moy-concerhat,‘iteroy Barber,
om not affiliated with any oher persona
in business with similar names.
CONCRETE STORM CELLARS
*11 AND 9x13, no money Sown, 3 years to
poy. Guaranteed wafer proof. Can furnish
teferences. Also build swimming pools and
do all types concrete work. Coll DU2-4544,
If M enswer 2-3074. Leroy Barber.___
wu CARE for children in my home or
yours, fenced yard, 1711 W. Hickory,
-DU2-5767._________ .
MAIZE ST.fli CWf, loaded on your truck.
T. J. McFarlin, 2-miles Northwest Sanger,
Blacktop road.
MIN'S J5c HOSE assortment, Me. Jenet'M
' Discount Shep, 1012 ft. Worth Drive.
BEST DEALS on new Bower Mowers, fac-
tory prices. E&M, 307 W. Hickory.
lUNBEAM, 12 speed Mixmaster, regular
$27.95, special thio week, $16.95. E&M
107 W. Hickory.
lot SALE, eportment ewipment^threegei
cook staves, twe refrigerators, other fur-
nishings, 503 Malone, April 15th.
MOSt BOWEMUL, 6-Transistor radtoe, com-
plete, regular $39.95, soecial $24,95 Ihia
week. EAM, 307 W. Hickory.
Wont to bvy BAR.BELIS
Cell DU2 5972______________
fuRNISHEO Barege oparlment, 324 Norm),
eir conditioner, near NTSC. Also unfurn-
Ishad house, 1030 Beek, DU2-4861.
SMALL Aportmenl,' suiiaWe ter mottire ww-
man, turfilihyd or -unfurnished. COT-4652.
EXtM ' NICE furnished end unfurnhhod
apertMtents end duplexes, 107 W. Wolters,
Lewisville, $65 furnished. $45 unfurnished.
per month. Bhone BL2-9284, Irving.
UNUSUALLY NICE, 2-room furnished apart.
ment, private both, atorage. Mature lady
or couple. M3 N. Elm, 0112-2006.__________
?HREE ROOM unfurnished oporfment, prl-
vote both, 815 N. Eim, Phone DU2-6393.
UNFURNISHED tbedroom duplex with-
rege, dote la, on pavement, $35,
S.I. SELF, 106 W. McKinney
UnAmNISHEO 2-bedroom Komewifh shower
on Neff Street, $40.
». 1. SELF, 106 W. McKinney.
ley. W. E Whitley, J. W. Bridges,
Monroe Moses. ________per hour," Cox said.
r
i
i
E...
—A MODERN DAY AMERI-
CAN SETTING FOR DOS-
TOSTOEVSKI'S NOVEL,
"CRIME AND PUNISHMENT"
— Plus —
1959 ACADEMY AWARD
WINNER FOR BEST LIVE-AC-
TION SHORT SUBJECT -
"GRAND
CANYON"
"GRAND CANYON" STARTS
5:00, 6:55, 8:50
Korea Added qp ryn mouswn 10
To Tour Plan I OWN I OPICS To Okay Plan
rCAMPUS
917 South Elm
» — — — ■■ BOB
presidential nomination?
That was ths big political issue
left up in ths air today after Ken-
nedy and his opponent in the pri-
mary, Sen Hubert H. Humphrey
(D-Minn), spent a full day cam-
paigning in southern West Vir-
ginia's 25 votes at the national
convention in Los Angeles.
The question was raised by
Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr. cam-
paigning for Kennedy in Wheeling.
He said Kennedy is “running
against the combined opposition
of Humphrey, Sen. Lyndon B.
Johnson (D-Tex), Sen. Stuart
Symington (D-Mo) and Adhai
Stevenson, although only Hum-
phrey is on the ballot.
Humphrey denied there was any
“ganging up” on Kennedy.
“Poor little Jack," he told a
newsman. “That’s a shame. And
you can quote me on that.
“I wish he would grow up and
stop acting like a boy. What does
he want, all the votes?”
In Washington, Sen. Robert C.
Byrd (D-W.Va) said he supports
Johnson for the nomination and is
therefore backing Humphrey in
West Virginia in an effort to slow
down Kennedy. But he said he
knows of no “Stop Kennedy”
coalition.
Racial and religious issues also
came up as Kennedy flew or
drove to several urban centers
and Humphrey’s chartered bus
lumbered over side roads to the
small mining towns.
In Bluefield, on the Virginia
border, Negro students from Blue-
field State College picketed a
hotel where Humphrey stopped.
They protested the hotel’s refusal
to lodge or serve food to mem-
bers of their race.
The Minnesota senator was un- ,
’ aware of the pickets until news- (
men fold him. “If we had known
that (the hotel does not accom- •
modate Negroes), we wouldn't j
have come to the meeting. That's
been our policy all along," he
sz‘.
Commenting on a published re-
port in a national magazine that
he would consider appointing a
Negro to his cabinet if eheeted,
Humphrey said: "If he were qual-
ifed, yes, sir. There are men
like Ralph Bunche who have prov-
en to be great leaders. There are
many others, some great Negro
educators for instance.”
TONYRANDAUL
"aMMASCoi^ THElMARJTfffi
mmnmsm.zomuvnminum
Lewisville, • medical; Mrs. Robert
L. Long, 1805 Neff, medical; Mrs.
Maggie Harrison, 630 Parkway,
medical; Mrs. J. A. Watson,
Grapevine, surgical; Mrs. Lucy
Ruth Bingham, Dallas, medical;
Melvin Taylor, 616 Rose, accident;
Edward Dollarhide. 1109 E Oak,
surgical; Mrs. C. Loon McDaniel.
2026 W. Hickory, surgical; Mrs.
Claude Raynor, 1001 W. Mulberry,
surgical; Miss Carolyn Sue Sulli-
van, Sanger, accident; Mrs. Julia
Smith, 1101 W. Mulberry, medical;
Mrs. Nell Woods, 411 Bolivar, med-
ical; Edward Taylor, Lewisville,
accident; Baby Debbie Lois Row-
lins, Dallas, medical; Miu Caro-
lyn Noneman, Route 1, medical;'
Mrs. Jessie Davidson, Krum,
medical; Mrs. J. B. Fincher, 1316
Stuart Ln., medical: Charles Eddy
Griggs, 1719 Highland, medical;
Mrs. James A. Erwin, 901 Sierra,
medical, Mrs. Billy Ray Hunter,
515 Crawford, medical; L. A.
Whiteside, 1605 Egan, medical.
Dismissed: Pose Grover Collier,
319 Bonnie Brae; Mrs. Melissa P.
Smith, 908 Gregg; Mrs. J. B. Run-
ion, 437 Ruddell; Mrs. J. D. Har-
grove and baby, Route 3; Billy
Baccus, Garland.
Elm Street Hospital & Clinic
Admitted: Baby Louise Ussery,
305 Dodson, medical.
Dismissed. Mrs. Clara Slay, Dal-
las; Mn. H. C. Calvert. 800 W.
Mulberry.
BIRTHS
A boy to Mr. and Mrs. J. B.
Fincher, 1316 Stuart La., April 11
at 5:07 a.m. at Flow Memorial
Hospital.
A boy to Mr. and Mrs. James A.
Erwin, 901 Sierra, April 11 at
10145 a.m. at Flow Memorial Hos-
pital.
A boy to Mr. and Mrs. Billy Ray
Hunter, 515 Crawford. April 11 at
11:05 a.m. at Flow Memorial Hos-
pital.
HEY KIDS
e
7,:
cBe
ADDED
ATTRACTION
__________________1
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Kirkland, Tom. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 216, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 12, 1960, newspaper, April 12, 1960; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1475511/m1/2/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.