Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 74, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 24, 1953 Page: 6 of 12
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Here Is Real Spanish Rice
Tues., Nov. 24, 1953
6—Gainesville (Texas) Daily Register
OIL NEWS
The News in Brief
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SPANISH RICE . . . make it with pre-cooked rice and tuna,
anxiously. The child
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Gibson City, III., hospital
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8.00-
Classified Ads Bring Results.
CITY BRIEFS
Promp, efficient service.
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Phone 2592
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TAPPAN'S
PUBLIC FORUM
FINE DIAMONDS
MAKE THE IDEAL CHRISTMAS GIFT
WIDE SCREEN.
Beautiful
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Wednesday
for
00
$■
daughter of Mr.
00
$
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$■
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Man's diamond warch. 33 diamonds in the case and
00
$
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$■
CHIEF
Starts THURSDAY!
50
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Last Day
$
50
(8)
CALL 2866
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"SALOME
for Lower Cost Insurance on
TAPPANS
Wednesday-Thursday
§
THE MOB"
JACK HOWARD INS. AGENCY
Phone 2592
Phone 2866
108 W. Broadway
i
Personal
To Women With
Nagging Backache
Wants to Do
Your Watch
and Jewelry
Repair Work
Broderick
Crawford
595
299
139
189
choice
18.00;
299
595
399
RITA HAYWORTH
STEWART GRANGER
leaves
Hood,
former
"SEVEN
SINNERS"
John Wayne
Marlene
Dietrich
A SLIGHT CASE
OF LARCENY
Diamond
Watches
With Fine
Rory Calhoun
"POWDER RIVER"
►
Wayne
Bloodworth
38-Diamond Lady Elgin Movement.
Special.............................
60 Diamonds. 17-Jewel Hamilton
movement. Special....................
26-Diamond platinum case. Fine 17-Jewel
Hamilton movement....................
J
Gregory PECK
THE GUNFIGHTER"
DALE LEE WINEGEART
Funeral services for Dale Lee
Kay Kimbell No. 4 Fee, San-
dusky field, northwest Grayson
county, total depth 7179 feet, wait-
ing on cement; set 51 ft. of eas-
ing at 7033 feet, cements with
200 sacks common cement.
Sinclair Oil & Gas Co. No. 1
J. G. Huff, C. H. Harwood sur-
vey, abstract 492, Grayson coun-
ty, is drilling at 5036 feet in shale
and sand.
Tonite Only
CAR NIGHT
60c Per Car Load
A. P. MILLER,
736 Ritchey street.
VAN JOHNSON
JANET LEIGH
boro.
Corp, and Mrs. J. B. Faulk-
§
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YOU CAN BUY WITH CONFIDENCE AT
TAPPAN'S
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SPECIAL
5125000
Tax Included
1.78 Carat perfect diamond. Mounted in beautiful
platinum mounting with one diamond on each side.
Largest selection of diamond watches in this area!
"YOUR CREDIT JEWELERS
116 N. Commerce Street
Kay Kimbell No. 1 Ware-Theo-
bald unit, Woodbine pool, is drill-
ing at 4008 feet in shale.
Kay Kimbell No. 1 McElreath-
Varley, two miles south of Ma-
comb field, Grayson county, took
drillstem test from 3579-86 feet;
open one hour, recovered 20 feet
oil-cut mud; botom hole pressure
0, flowing pressure 0, hydra-pres-
sure 1850 feet.
Sinclair Oil & Gas Co. No. 4
J. E. Barnes, Wm. Allen survey,
Grayson county, has location
graded.
garden Turner hotel.
Thursday
Optimists club, 12 noon, Curt-
wood restaurant.
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Two soldiers of the Gainesville
area recently began 16 weeks of
basic training in the anti-aircraft
artillery replacement training
center at Fort Bliss, Texas. They
are Pvt. Elroy Neu, son of Mr.
and Mrs. W. J. Neu, route 6,
Gainesville, and Pvt. Richard W.
Well Out of Use
For Construction
Of Highway Link
City Manager Homer Bly re-
ported today that city water well
No. 6 near the Hillcrest addition
of northeast Gainesville will be
out of use for the next several
days to shift several lines in pre-
paration for highway construc-
tion work near the site.
The state highway department
is preparing to build a short con-
necting link between highway 82
northwest several hundred feet
to farm road 372 (formerly high-
way 77). The cutoff will provide
improved service for motorists
going from Oklahoma toward,
Sherman and vice versa.
Bly said he anticipated no low
pressure areas due to cutting out
the well as other wells can easily
serve the city’s needs during cool
weather.
1
Kay Kimbell No. 1 Murphy,
FCSL survey, abstract 1248,
northeast Cooke county, total
depth 3860 feet, running pipe.
PLAZ.A
TODAY and WEDNESDAY
then serve it on golden-brown
supper dish.
By CECILY BROWNSTONE
Associated Press Food Editor
Cooking secrets are fun — to
give away. Want to know the
secret of preparing real Spanish
Rice? It lies in one simple proc-
ess; lightly browning the rice in
fat before you ever add the to-
mato sauce. It’s this little trans-
action with the saucepan or skil-
let that gives the nutty flavor
connoisseurs of Spanish Rice hold
in such esteem.
So many ways you can vary
this good rice dish, so thrifty for
family meals. Make it with that
fine product—pre - cooked rice—
and deck it with tuna and egg-
plant so it will be a hearty sup-
per dish.
One of the most beautiful diamond watches you have
ever seen! 158 diamonds in case and band. $7 Ag
17-Jewel Hamilton movement. Special..... I •VV
day evening at the Grayson
hotel for dinner celebrating Mr.
Faulkner’s birthday. He is just
back from
aaaaaaanaaaananaaaaaaaas
Sinclair Oil & Gas Co. No. 3
J. E. Anderson, J. M. Hill survey,
west Grayson county, is drilling
at 5272 feet in shale.
38888
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Camp
is the
338
$3
Fred J. Schonwald and Allie P.
Reynolds No. 1 W. P. Lewter,
will be drilled 330 feet from
north and 660 feet from east
lines of Thomas Tinsley survey,
abstract 1453, 21 miles south-
west of Dexter, and 112 miles
northeast of production. This will
be a 8,000-ft. wildcat test.
‘‘
►
►
to Chicago after officials at a
was hurriedly driven about 100 miles
fl
aLOUIS CALHERNaN
.q
BARRY POLLY 555
SULUVAH BaGEN
-T inimrnrrrionflrr—Turnna—-|_
Wednesday-Thursday
He is a brother of Ethel Rosen-
berg, who was executed with her
husband. Julius, in the Sing Sing
prison electric chair for stealing
atom bomb secrets for Russia.
Greenglass is serving a 15 year
term for his part in the atom spy
plot. He had testified against his
sister and brother-in-law.
Greenglass, who had been sta-
tioned at the Los Alamos, N. M.,
atomic energy project as an
Army sergeant, said he learned
more about the activities of the
Rosenberg ring after he left the
Army.
Ele declared that “after 1947”
while he and Rosenberg were in
business together in New York,
Rosenberg “told me certain
things about the secrets and the
material they stole for Russia.”
Asked if he had learned wheth-
er there was espionage in the
Army Signal Corps, Greenglass
replied:
“Yes ... I learned that the
Rosenberg ring took and obtained
secrets from the Army Signal
Corps and transmitted them to
Russia .... Rosenberg also told
me that he gave all the (elec-
Sinclair Oil & Gas Co. No. 5
J. E. Barnes, Wm. Allen survey,
Grayson county, is drilling at
6677 feet in sand and shale.
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George Roland of
She is a sister of
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sana
dial. 17-Jewei Hamilton
movement. Special.....................
30 Diamonds in the case and band.
17-Jewel Hamilton movement...........
4-Diamond 17-Jewel Hamilton movement.
Special .............................
18 Diamonds. 17-Jewel Hamilton
movement. Special....................
CHILD IN COMA SPED TO CHICAGO HOSPITAL—Little
Richard Hornickel, 21/2 years old, who lapsed into a mys-
terious coma at his home in Melvin, III., is examined at
Michael Reese hospital in Chicago, III., by Dr. M. J. Kaplan
while the child’s mother, Mrs. Robert Hornickel, looks on
Police Would
Query Kidnapers
About Money Again
ST. LOUIS, Nov. 24 (P)— St.
Louis police officials want to
question the doomed kidnap-slay-
ers of little Bobby Greenlease
about conflicting reports on the
missing $300,000 ransom money.
Chief of Police Jeremiah O’-
Connell yesterday asked federal
permission to question Carl Aus-
tin Hall and Bonnie Brown Heady
about statements in Hall’s con-
fession which conflict with testi-
mony heard by a police board in-
vestigating Hall’s arrest.
Spanish Rice With Tuna
and Eggplant
Ingredients: % cup bacon drip-
pings or butter or margarine, %2
cup thinly sliced onion (1 medi-
um-size), % cup diced green pep-
per (12 medium-size), 1% cups
packaged pre-cooked rice, 1%
cups hot water, two 8-ounce cans
tomato sauce, 1 teaspoon salt,
pepper, one 7-ounce can solid
Hogs 350; steady to 50-75
higher; choice 190-265 lb 22.75.
Sheep 2,100; strong to 50 high-
er; utility to choice wooled
slaughter lambs 18.00-19.50;
choice shorn 17.75-18.25; good
slaughter ewes 7.00.
Gainesville Produce
Prices paid by Gainesville
wholesalers to farmers and other
producers:
Butterfat: No. 1, 53 cents.
Hens: Fat, 23 cents; light, 13
cents; No. 2, 12 cents; roosters,
10 cents.
Eggs: No. 1, 55 cents; No. 2, 25
cents.
Green cowhides: 6 cents.
Pecans: 16 cents.
8333383888888 ’
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S
ARLIE JAMES WHARTON
Arlie James Wharton, 2-day-old
son of Mr. and Mrs. James W.
Wharton, route 1, Pilot Point,
passed away in a local hospital
at 10 a.m. today. He was born
November 22.
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday, 3 p.m., at the Witt
cemetery under the direction of
Geo. J. Carroll and Son Funeral
home. J. H. Chism, Church of
Christ minister, will officiate.
The baby’s mother is the for-
mer Joyce Ann Witt. His ma-
ternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Billie Witt, route 1, Gaines-
ville; and paternal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Wharton,
route 1, Pilot Point.
Court Adjusts Tax,
Okays Car Expense
In a special session Monday,
the Cooke County Commissioners
court- adjusted the tax evalua-
tion on a Gainesville residential
lot and approved operational ex-
penses for an automobile for the
constable of Precinct 1.
The evaluation of lot 2 in
block 5 of the Bugg addition,
owned by Mr. and Mrs. W. Keller,
was set at $100 for 1953 taxing
purposes. Though a new resi-
dence has since been constructed
on the tract, the lot was vacant
at the time the taxes were ren-
dered last January.
The court agreed to pay Con-
stable Bill Fletcher six cents per
mile expenses while using his
automobile for county business.
derwent a tonsillectomy yester-
day.
Mrs. Ellis Thomas, 708 Lind-
say street, has been dismissed
following surgery.
Mrs. Ernest Martin and infant
daughter have returned to their
home on route 1, city.
Mrs. Willie Shaver, 1405 Doty
street, who underwent surgery,
has been dismissed.
The Agriculture department
has found that humus is most
valuable to growing plants while
it is breaking down.
APPRECIATES WORK OF
COUNTY OFFICIALS
Editor, The Register:
First I want to thank our pres-
ent sheriff, O. E. Whisnand, for
his relentless catching of local
bootleggers. Also the help from
offices of the county judge and
justice of the peace.
It has been so long since we
have had men in the offices who
made an effort to catch, fine and
prosecute bootleggers. I can’t re-
member when we did. (I think
it was Undersheriff Elliott).
The people of Cooke county
vote local option, then seem to
think as far as the sale of liquor
is concerned, they have done
their duty. That is only a short
step to stopping the sale and
continued flow of liquor.
Conditions here over a long
period of years, proves how bad-
ly they have erred.
The laws of crime, large and
small, are in the people’s hands
and it is up to every good citizen
to know who he is voting for.
Then stay on the job to back him
up.
Korea and
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Sinclair Oil & Gas Co. No. 3
J. F. Godwin, W. O. Caruthers
survey, abstract 209, Grayson
county, is drilling at 10,118 feet
in sand and shale.
10.00-13.50; stocker cows
12.50.
T +(■ -6- -fj- r V>— -6—.
G. W. Roland, Jr., and Mrs.
A. J. Morrow, 1105 North Mor-
ris street. Upon his release
from service the Faulkners plan
to make their home in Midland,
where Mr. Faulkner will be em-
ployed by Red Smith, former
Gainesville resident.
Box Office Closes 9:00
MabketA
FT. WORTH LIVESTOCK
FORT WORTH, Nov. 24 (AP)—
Cattle 5,200; steady to 25-50;
good and choice slaughter steers
and yearlings 18.00-23.50; com-
mon and medium 11.00-16.00;
fat cows 10.00-12.50; good and
Mrs. Faulkner
Jane Roland, (
starring MICKEY EDDIE
ROONEY • BRACKEN
ELAINE STEWART
m 000 N- eon on wo oo na eco o ema coo Pes 6 =
— PLUS —
SPECIAL
Feature in Color by
TECHNICOLOR
"GONE FISHIN' "
— Also —
PETE SMITH
Lewisville.
Survivors are his wife; three
sons, John of Little Elm, C. B.
of Roanoke and Raymond Sha-
fer of San Antonio; four daugh-
ters, Mrs. Lois Smelley of Tioga,
Mrs. Elsie F e e z e l of Dallas,
Mrs. Monnie Jean Cantrell of
Smithville and Mrs. Imogene
Coker of Oklahoma City; a sis-
ter, Mrs. Rosie Moore of Grand
Prairie, 22 grandchildren and
seven great-grandchildren. •
Shafer farmed for 47 years
in the Little Elm community of
Denton county before moving
to Tioga a year ago.
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and Mrs.
Whitesboro.
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Winegeart, 18, who died here Randolph, son of Mr. and Mrs.'
Monday at the home of his par- Lee Randolph, route 1, Whites-
ents, were held at 3 p.m. Tuesday "
pack tuna (drained and flaked),
1 medium eggplant (about 1
pound), 1 egg (well beaten), 1
tablespoon water, fine cracker
crumbs, shortening, parsley.
Method: Melt fat in saucepan
or skillet. Add onion, green pep-
per and rice; cook and stir over
high heat until lightly browned.
Add water, tomato sauce, salt and
pepper. Mix well. Bring quickly
to a boil. Cover tightly and sim-
mer 10 minutes. Add tuna , fish
and heat thoroughly. Meanwhile,
wash and peel eggplant. Cut into
slices about %2 inch thick. Sprin-
kle with salt and pepper to taste.
Mix egg and water. Dip eggplant
slices into egg mixture, then into
cracker crumbs. Brown both sides
in shortening over medium heat.
Drain on absorbent paper. Ar-
range eggplant on platter and
top each slice with a mound of
the rice. Garnish with parsley.
Makes 4 servings.
Here are easy-do variations on
this recipe that you might like to
try:
Prepare the Spanish rice as
directed above, simmering for 10
minutes. Then instead of adding
the tuna and serving with egg-
plant, add a half cup of grated
sharp Cheddar cheese; mix well
and heat thoroughly. Turn into
a serving dish and sprinkle with
another half cup of grated sharp
Cheddar cheese.
Or simply serve the rice with
its tomato sauce “as is,” and
sprinkle with Parmesan cheese.
Or add a cup of cooked diced
lobster to the rice and tomato
sauce and reheat.
Or add several diced canned
pimientos to the rice and tomato
sauce.
Or add one and a half cups of
diced ham or canned luncheon
meat to the rice and tomato
sauce.
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nounced for 2 p.m. Wednesday
at the First Baptist church of
Whitesboro with the Rev. W. D.
Craig, pastor of Whaley Memori-
al Methodist church; and the
Rev. J. W. Epting of Sherman
officiating. Interment will be in
Whitesboro cemetery under di-
rection of Vernie Keel Funeral
home.
Mrs. Cox, widow of George F.
Cox, died at her home shortly
after noon Monday after a
lengthy illness. She was a former
Whitesboro resident.
Survivors are two daughters,
Mrs. A. B. Garvin of Gaines-
ville and Mrs. Nancy Iona Hum-
mer of Bellflower, Calif.; three
brothers, John Smallwood of
Walters, Okla., A. E. Smallwood
of Whitesboro and Amos D.
Smallwood of Duncan, Okla.;
five sisters, Mmes. A. T. Hart
and Grover Russell of Whites-
boro, Elizabeth Dryden of El
Paso, Nancy Blommell of Dallas
and Vera Pratt of Mentone,
Calif.; three grandchildren, Mrs.
William A. Claunch of Gaines-
ville, Mrs. C. E. McWilliams of
Bay City and George C. Hum-
mer of Nowalk, Calif.; and six
great-grandchildren.
Hot Check Charge
Filed Here Today
Charges of defrauding by ob-
taining things of value with a
worthless check were filed in
Cooke County court today
against Tony Haze, who is said
to be employed near Valley View.
The complaint was filed by Jacob
Pagel of Muenster, who charges
that the defendant gave him a
hot check for $10.13 last May.
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slaughter calves 14.00-
common and medium
Nagging backache, loss of pep and energy,
headaches and dizziness may be due to slow-
down of kidney function. Doctors say good
kidney function is very important to good
health. When some everyday condition, such
as stress and strain, causes this important
function to slow down, many folks suffer nag-
ging backache— feel miserable. Minor blad-
der irritations due to cold or wrong diet may
cause getting up nights or frequent passages.
Don’t neglect your kidneys if these condi-
tions bother you. Try Doan’s Pills—a mild
diuretic. Used successfully by millions for
over 50 years. It’s amazing how many times
Doan’s give happy relief from these discom-
forts—help the 15 miles of kidney tubes and fil-
ters flush out waste. Get Doan’s Pills today!
'53 Cotton Harvest
Near End in County,
5,448 Bales Ginned
With only a rew hunare bales
remaining to be harvested, the
Cooke county cotton crop for
1953 seems certain to be the
largest in several years.
A check Tuesday morning with
the four gins operating in the
county this year revealed that a
total of 5,448 bales of cotton have
been ginned. However, several
hundred bales of this total were
not produced in the county.
McWilliams gin of Gainesville,
with a large assist from Love
county, Okla., cotton farmers,
continues to lead in ginnings
with 1,943.
Era gin reported 1,500 bales,
Lois has ginned 1,190 to date and
Valley View has turned out 815
bales.
Only 2,313 bales were ginned
in the county during 1952 though
acreage was greater than in the
current year.
Ginners report that recent
rains, heavy dews and frosts in
recent weeks have lowered the
grade of the cotton considerably,
but the majority of the crop was
harvested before that time.
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WILLIAM BENTON REED
WHITESBORO—Funeral serv-
ices for William Benton Reed,
81. retired barber who died Mon-
day morning in a Sherman hos-
pital, were held at 2 p. m Tues-
day at Richards - Beck chapel.
John Brand, pastor of the Meth-
odist church, officiated and bur-
ial was in Collinsville cemetery.
A native of Guntersville, Ala.,
Mr. Reed came to Texas in 1891
and had been a barber in
Whitesboro and Collinsville 57
years before retiring. He was a
member of the M e t h o d i st
church.
Survivors include his wife;
four sons, Virgil Reed of Dal-
las, James Reed of Blackwell,
Okla., Olin Reed of McKinney
and Maurice Reed of Gaines-
ville; two daughter, Mrs. J. E.
Burgin and Mrs. Shelby Sharp,
both of Whitesboro; a brother,
John Reed of Collinsville; a sis-
ter, Mrs. Lon Northcott of Ok-
lahoma, nine grandchildlren and
three great-grandchildren.
JOHN W. SHAFER
WHITESBORO—Funeral serv-
ices for John William Shafer,
74, who died Saturday at his
home in Tioga, were conducted
at 2:30 p. m Monday in Stew-
art Creek Baptist church at
Lewisville. The Rev. T. F.
- , , Shultz and the Rev. Miles A.
tronic) tube manuals he could Walsworth officiated and burial
get his hands on to Russia, some was in Old Hale cemetery at
of which were classified top se- - • —
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at Grand Avenue Baptist church,
with the Rev. D. S. Pettijohn,
supply minister, officiating. In-
terment was in Fairview ceme-
tery under direction of Vernie
Keel Funeral home.
Survivors are the parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Mitchell Winegeart of
614 North Morris street; a broth-
er, Mitchell Elmer Winegeart of
the same address, and several
uncles and aunts.
MRS. GEORGE F. COX
Funeral services for Minnie
Belle Cox, 76, of 821 East Cali-
fornia street, have been an-
ner, former residents, were
guests of Mr. and Mrs. G. W.
Roland, Jr., of Gordonville Sun-
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Because of our purchasing power and the fact that we have our own wholesale
house, we can sell you fine diamonds for less. Here are some examples:
; 4
Greenglass Says
Espionage Likely
Still Going On
NEW YORK, Nov. 24 (A) —
David Greenglass, confessed atom
spy, testified in writing today a
radar spy ring headed by exe-
cuted Julius Rosenberg “could
very possibly be continuing to
this very day.”
A sworn deposition made by
Greenglass at the federal peni-
tentiary at Lewisburg, Pa., was
read into the record at an open
hearing conducted by Sen. Joseph
R. McCarthy (R-Wis), chairman
of the senate permanent subcom-
mittee on investigations.
McCarthy called the hearing os-
tensibly to support his charges
that an espionage ring operated
at the Army Signal Corps radar
laboratory at Ft. Monmouth, N.J.
Greenglass said that, so far as
he knew, the Rosenberg radar
spy ring activities “never
stopped.”
eggplant slices for a hearty
Tell your merchant you saw his
advertisement in The Register.
TODAY and WEDNESDAY
*--- M-G-M present ------
ELROY NEU RANDOLPH
2-p
c.2m
^beaUiA
ROBERT LEE COX
COLLINSVILLE — Final rites
for Robert Lee Cox, 69, of route
1, Collinsville, were held at 3
p. m. Tuesday in Mount Zion
Baptist church with the Rev.
J. E. King of Sherman conduct-
ing. He was assisted by the
Rev. F. L. Branch of Gaines-
ville. Burial was in Collinsville
cemetery directed by Richards-
Beck Funeral home of Whites-
boro.
Cox was a native of Cooke
county and a member of the
Baptist church. His late wife
was the former Miss Maude
Cason.
Survivors include two sons,
Alfred Cox of Ardmore, Okla.,
and Abie Cox of Collinsville;
two daughters, Mrs. Olin Pelton
of Abilene and Miss Fannie Cox
of Collinsville and three grand-
childlren.
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O’Connell also indicated the St.
Louis police board will again
question Louis Shoulders, police
lieutenant who arrested Hall here
, Oct. 6 and later resigned during
■ the investigation into reported
discrepancies in police handling
of the arrest and recovery of half
the $600,000 ransom money.
Shoulders had no comment on
whether he would reappear vol-
untarily.
Hall and Mrs. Heady are sched-
uled to die in the gas chamber at
the Missouri State penitentiary
in Jefferson City Dec. 18.
O’Connell also said Patrolman
Elmer Dolan, who accompanied
Shoulders when Hall was arrest-
ed, and taxi driver John Hager,
who tipped Shoulders to Hall’s
presence here, probably will be
recalled by the board.
Hall said in his statement that
he had about $592,000 of the
money with him when arrested
in St. Louis by Shoulders and
Dolan. The two officers have said
they found no more than the ac-
counted for $296,280.
Hall, in a letter to Robert
Greenlease, asked the boy’s fa-,
ther for forgiveness and told him
he does not know where the
missing money is.
were unable to diagnose the illness. Officials at Michael
Reese hospital were not able to make an immediate diag-
nosis. (AP Wirephoto)
g
Meetings
Wednesday
Rotary club, 12 noon,
28-Diamond set in fishtail mounting. $4500
17-Jewel Hamilton movement.. .Special 2~
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WANTED.
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Personals
Floyd Starr of Albion, Michi-
gan, is visiting in the home of his
brother, Dr. and Mrs. P. P. Starr,
1001 Lindsav street.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Watts, 216
West Pecan street, will spend
Thanksgiving with Dr. and Mrs.
Bentley Watts, Denton.
Mrs. Cecil McGehee, 207 North
Red River street, has returned
from a visit with her daughter
and family, Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Lawson, Rickey and Charlotte, |
Dallas. The Lawsons had moved
into a new home.
Mrs. Lois Helvey spent last
weekend in Waco where she vis-
ited friends and attended the
Baylor-SMU football game. Her
daughters, Judy and Lu Ann, vis-
ited their grandparents in Sher-
man.
Mrs. Cecil Murphy and chil-
dren, Michael and Martha, will
spend Thanksgiving with her par-
ents, Judge and Mrs. George S.
Matthews, Austin.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Chapman,
410 South Grand avenue, left this
afternoon to visit Mr. and Mrs.
Phil Teague and family in Min-
eral Wells and then to spend
Thanksgiving with Mr. Chap-
man’s sister and family, Mrs.
A. O. Hickman, Colorado City.
Mrs. G. W. Hand and children,
Dorothy, Jimmy and Bill of Chico
were visiting in the home of her
mother, Mrs. Viola Youngblood,
120 South Howeth street, over
the weekend. She also visited her
sister, Miss Elaine Youngblood,
who has been very sick at M&S
hospital with pneumonia)
Mrs. Pearl Feltz of Mexia is
visiting her mother, Mrs. W. W.
' Jones, 414 East Elm street.
Mrs. Carl Cook, 1024 East Cali-
fornia street, will leave Wed-
nesday for Lake Charles, La., to
spend Thanksgiving with her
daughter, Mrs. George Cutsing-
er and family. Mr. Cutsinger,
who has been ill, is improving
satisfacorily.
Hospital News
Medical & Surgical
Mrs. B. E. Music of Whites-
boro was admitted yesterday
for medical care.
. Surgery was performed Mon-
day on Johnny Coble, 10, son of
Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Coble, Ma-
rietta, Okla.
Jack Howe, route 6, city, is a
medical patient.
An appendectomy was per-
formed Monday on Barbara Mc-
Daniel, 13, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Carl McDaniel, Rubottom,
Okla.
Tip McCain, 317 Ritchey
street, has been dismissed after
medical treatment.
Gainesville Sanitarium
Mrs. W. F. Weatherbee of
Boerne was admitted Monday as
a medical patient.
Mrs. Nova Dunn, 719 South
Weaver street, was admitted
Sunday for surgery.
Bobbie Louise Pent o n, 7,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. L.
Penton, 112 McClain street, un-
Judge Thomason
To Receive Degree
Federal Judge Robert Ewing
Thomason of El Paso will re-
ceive the LL.D, degree at the
spring commencement exercises
of Southwestern university at
Georgetown.
Conferring of the degree was
approved at a recent meeting of
the board of trustees attended
by Dr. Earl J. Patton, pastor of
First Methodist church.
Judge Thomason is a former
well known Gainesville citizen
and county attorney of Cooke
county. He has since served
with distinction in the state leg-
islature and in congress, prior
to his appointment to the
bench
2888888885
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17-Jewel Movement
"YOUR CREDIT JEWELERS
116 N. Commerce
Home - Auto - Business ,
(
Eonfidentially
—--Conniev |
%. STARRING S |
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 74, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 24, 1953, newspaper, November 24, 1953; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1579548/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.