Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 225, Ed. 1 Sunday, May 11, 1952 Page: 1 of 28
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Denton Record-Chronicle and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Denton Public Library.
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UftL.....
May 9, IHt
Ta q
SUNDAY
VOL. XLIX
DENTON, TEXAS SUNDAY MORNING, MAY 11, 1B52
AMociaUd Treat Leased Wire
NO. 225
★
★
ROUND
U.S. Considers Appeal
ABOUT
To Moscow On Truce
TOWN
4
»y
J. (Bob) EDWARDS
c
Y
■>
Authorities Feel
Feud Flares
Over Blood
I
o
*
poisoned Friday
Department,
4
6
Mrs
nt Fraternity General Dodd
Installed Into
or
Freed By Reds
4
Editor Ben R Ezell of the Ca-
mander
later today.
Wardlaw Gets
3-Year Term
Denton Youth
Wins Prize
sentence.
M
f
I. ■
I •
■
1.00
50c
*
<
i. at I
own .
I
I
a
&
*
k*
S
1
waa
cury
Dairy Day Featured By Record Number
Of Entries And 41 Blue Ribbon Winners
Bloodmobile
Due In Denton
Prkt 10e
Par Copy
TWO PETS HERE
ARE VICTIMS
OF POISONING
Inspection Set
For ROTC Unit
NEED VACATION
EQUIPMENT NOW?
have been installed as an honorary
member He could not be present
due to a meeting in Austin and will
Woods spoke to the fraternity, as
did Roberts. J. Frank Martino of
Dallas was toastmaster.
At the same time, another ban-
By WILLIAM C. BARNARD
SEOUL, Korea, Sunday, May 11
UPL—Tough North Korean prisoners
of war last night released Brig.
Gen Francis T Dodd safe and un
east-central Pukhan River sector.
A thick overcast hid Communist
targets from Allied warplanes.
and may have had a part in get-
ting them going again after they
broke down last fall.
J!
Denton Record-Chronicle
a, * J ‘
AMI
yMgr
See DAIRY DAY, Page 1
4 . ’
L ' '
k
.........JW. _ p «m*
IS
Lthrary
I . a. fit- ‘t-ion 9ox 51$?
hint on,
•**B
.. A, ■'
j
m3
perpetuating the gift heifer pro
Ayrshire — North Texas Polly •r*m-
j <■ t 11 lx <1 111 v 11 111 v , ® 11 vf LI 1< 1 U <111 ~
quet was held in the Marquis Hall
{Crystal Room for dates and wives
of guests and fraternity members.
Mrs Woods was toastmistress.
Special guests came to Denton
DALLAS, May 10 <gi—A. I. Ward
law, Tarrant County's ex assistant
district attorney, was sentenced to
three years in prison today after
a federal district court jury con-
victed him of income tax evasion r
admittance
are
SEOUL. Korea. Sunday. May 11
on—Allied patrols raided Commu-
niat fronUine positions Saturday
with one unit chasing the Chinese
Reds in a two-hour clash on the
was
The cat's body was
tarn Wa-aavmg
manufactured;
»» uau» VK *IVVU IV <nu II UUWUVli
by able bodied men aad toflMB at
goad will. That weapon is human
blood.
The supply of blood oo hood la
the armed services is dangerously
low. Reserves are almost i-----‘
See BLOOD MO BILK,
Morin and Hartin repealed their
performances of last year, when
both showed the best animal in
their respective divisions. Ken-
neth's father, C. H. Hartin. main-
tains a large Holstein herd near
Krum.
Dairy heifers were presented to
Champions were named in each | Denton County..boys, in keep
[ officer and civic
groups announced donations would
be taken as scheduled
This alternate plan was cancel-
led after a meeting yesterday at
which hoi words flew between
Txiwyer Rogers Teel is associated
with R B Gambill in law practice i
and Teel is attending to the part-
nership practice while Gambill is
under treatment in the Veterans
Hospital at McKinney
• • • ♦
Bob Riek of Odessa, brother of
George Riek of the Krum com-
3 •
L >.
brated the installation of the group I K°Je Island off Southeast Korea,
as a chapter of Sigma Phi Epsilon. t
national organization ] to ^e here, Dodd said on his ar-
Miss Sue Suddath. NTSC fresh-
indicating a
passed out
The only purple ribbon winner of
the show was a 4-year old Milking
Shorthorn bull shown by Franklin
Cole of the Green Valley com
munity
Awarded blue ribbons, indicative of i
A Class A rating or a score of R5:
to 90 points on the classification!
basis.
Nearly all the show records were I
shattered as the day long event was
conducted Friday at the .fair
grounds. I s
A total of 41 blue ribbons were
■warded, in addition to one purple
ribbon, which means A Class AA
rating—90 points or better. In last
year's event, which waa considered
a highly successful show in itself.
■ total of 19 blue ribbons were
presented. About 5U animals were
shown in 1951.
In addition to the one purple rib-
bon and the 42 blues. 29 ariimals
earned red ribbons with a "good”:
rating, while only 10 white ribbons, i
' county quota.
This will be the fourth trip the
Bloodmobile has made to the
county this year. On January IT
Denton donors gave 155 pints of
blood, on Feb. 27, 2g and 29 North
Texas State students gave 427
pints; also on Feb. 29 Sanger resi-
dents gsve 55 pints; and oo March
11, Lewisvilla residents gave 49
pints
"The total of Me pints of blood
gathered from the county so far
thia year is encouraging,” Mr. and
Mrs. C. E. Hastings, county co-
chairmen state. Beth feel certain
that Dentonltea will rally to the
May 20-21 call.
Seventy-five per cent of the ~H
donors of Jan. 17 were women. In
most other communities the higher
percentage baa been men.
“Man or women,” Mrs. Hasting.
•s' AR we want la to
obligations to U '
Bvery drop < the bleed tom 4
---------------.. ..
west of Denton
Guernsey — Barbara Sue. a 20
month old heifer from L. D. Morin’s
Guernsey Farm, near Pilot Point,
shown by Edwin Morin.
Holstein — Sally, a two-year-old
heifer shown by Kenneth Hartin,
Krum 4-H Club youth.
Jersey — Royal Carnation's
Choice, a 5-year old cow from H.
W Heed's Faultless Jersey Farm
uaar Ponder.
Milking Shorthorn — Patton Hili
Dairy Maid,
shown by wavw zvi man vug V» . —-------- — —- —— —— ——
: Sanger. . - Fira, Casualty Insurance — Jae W. were Downe, Don Neeley. Leslie
I Competing agtinst adults, young i Nichols Ins. Agency. See DAIRY DAY, Page g
test sponsored by the Science Chib
of America and the Science Service
and co-operating news papers. He
won one of four first (Race prises
awarded for various exhibits.
He received iizs ia Bcientnic
equipment and literature of his own
choosiBg./'
Stubblefield's other winnings in-
cluded first place at the Handi-
craft Show an Fort Worth and first
place at the Denton County Science
Fair. His trip to Washington was
sponsored by the Fart Woyth Press
■ nd the Denton Lions Chib.
The first annual federal inspec-
tion of North Texas State College's
Air Force ROTC unit will be made
Monday and Tuesday by a team
of officers from Robbins Air Force
Base, Ga.
The federal inspection, an an-
nual affair for all ROTC units in
the nation, will be conducted by
Col. H. D. Copeland and other of-'
ficers from Robbins.
i resist repatriation
Whether Moscow could exercise
a decisive influence in getting the
, Chinese and North Korean com-
mands to accept the U. N. decision
| about repatriation is an open ques-
tion, but some responsible autbori-
. ties here feel an effort is worth
making in that direction
Russia’s over all strategic inter
est in the question of war or peace
in Korea is also a wide open specu
lation at the moment. Some author-
ities hold the view that the Kremlin
would like to keep American and
Other United Nations forces tied up
in the Far East indefinitely, there-
by preventing a maximum buildup
in Europe.
~ A contrary theory ia that ainee
the Kremlin ia currently following
a "peace” strategy, mixed with
some ssbre rattling, in trying to
split the Western Allies it might
be Interested in getting a Korean
krmistice might ' respond to an
appeal.
The assumption among officials
here is that major Communist pol-
icy decisions for the truce negotia-
tions are at least checked with
Moscow and possibly are made
there. Actually, no one on the
Western side seems to know what
kind of relationship exists between
DAIRY DAY CHAMPIONS—-Beat-of-brewd winners in Um fifth annual Dairy Day
show Friday at the fair grounds are pictured above with the' persona who put them
through their paces for the judges. The winners, from left to right, are Jack Arm-
strong and the champion Milking Shorthorn, Kenneth Ilartin and the winning Hoi-
stein, Mrs. O. C, Smith and the top-rated Ayrshire, Mrs. H. W. Reed and the winning
kJeraey and Edwin Morin and the champ Guernsey. Mrs. Smith waa showing the win-
ning Ayrshire for Raymond Crouch’s Aryahire Farm and Mrs. Rned was leading the
champion Jersey for Reed’s Faultless Jersey Farm. (R<
-
Elton Stubblefield, 16-year-old
Denton High School student, was
awarded a first place prise Satur-
day for bis exhibit in the third
National Science Fair in Waahing-
ton, D.C.
The local junior scientist won hia-I
study entitled: “The Life of the
Three-Spot Gourami.” a study of
a tropical fish Young Stubblefield
was one of 42 junior scientists pick-
ed as regional champions in a con '
' -
, el 5
.11
be honored sometime next week
NTSC Dean of Men William G
munity, ia here to join in a Riek
family reunion at the home of
George and Mrs. Riek Bob Riek |
has a machine shop in Odessa and
people of Krum 45 years ago may
See ROUNDABOUT, Page 2
Taft Picks Up
11 Votes, Ike 2
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Sets' Robert A Taft increased
his delegate strength in the battle
for the Republican presidential
nomination to 343 yesterday by
winning 11 votes — seven in Ne-
vada, two in Missouri and two In
Virginia in GOP conventions
Gen Dwight Eisenhower's count
reached 290 with the addition pf i
four votes—two in Missouri and :
two in Nevada
■
WEATHER '
‘ *■ •
FdrAMMM
’<’'V
being held today at Chinn's Chapel. Betty Baldridge,
one of the early churches and ; Burks, ‘ ,
burial grounds of the coimly, A bemdt, Galveston, and Taraaa Har-
ber, Dallas
The fraternity received its na-
tional charter from Luis Roberts of
California, SPE national preaident,
at a banquet before tha ball in the
Marquis Hall cafeteria. Dr. Ben H.
Wooten of Dallas, chairman of the
NTSC Board of Regents, was to1
one
belonging to
art
»mt >• <
_r dies tar
want of just a ptnt of btoud that
any bnalthy mao or woman be
tween the agea of IB and 99 can
so easily spare.”
The American serviceman baa
the best guaa, tanks, ptanaa and
ammunition that the akiU tt aur
industrial workers can produce.
But the most io
weapon cannot
it must be given to our wounded
touch proparty dai
In the Northern pfftion at the
some cittaa.
Utilities Ums, homes,
derricks and other pro|
the impact of the victaw „, , — .
the Southern states.
Two men wore killed in wtad 1
storms at Spartanburg, S. C. Two 1
otters ifrwwaed ta Lake Denglas to
In addition to South Carolina and J
Tennessee, the weather blows were
fait h North CaxoUaa, Northwest ,
Alabama, Louisiana. Mississippi
and Northwest Georgts.
Itirne host wave Mtowod |
—I
_ eatomos .
m peer's hottest day thus far n
recorded Friday with the mer-
- -JgM
Police officials pointed out
that the penalty for poisoning
pet animals is a fine of >5 to
$100 in Justice court. ... .... i , - —-
---------era held by United Nations forces. I 2) and 400 volunteer donors art
1100.000 have declared they would needed to complete thq two-day
TWENTY-EIGHT PACW
Bs«» ef Breed
Chsmpionx were named in each I nve Denton county, boys, in keep
breed division. The best-of breed ,nB *’’•*’ ,hr Dairy Day plan of
winners were as follows perpetuating the gift heifer pro
Approximately 200 guests from
at least six states joined North
Texas State College students Sat-
urday at the annual Roae Ball
sponsored by Phi Alpha Tau social
I fraternity, which this year cele- I harmed from their compound on
he left here several years brate<1 the installation of the group Ko£ Isl"nd Southeast Korea.
n_er^_S^er.aLyea/S I as a chapter of Smma Phi Eosilon 1 You don't know how glad 1 am
ia at present a guest in the home j
of Mayor and Mrs. Mark Hannah, :
but expects to buy a ranch in this ' man coed, was proclaimed Rose
county as soon as he finds what
he wants. When here before he
was a close friend of the late T H
Hannah and was in the insurance
and cattle business
SHOULDERS, HUP!—It was Junior High School day as students flocked to get chest
X-ray pictures at the Palace theatre. X-ray technician Carl McElroy makes an ad-
justment on Harold Rlankenmeyer prior to snapping his picture. Waiting their turn
are Donald Carlton, Gerald Blankenmeyer, and George Gantt.
Residents ol a Southwest
Denton neighborhiNid are la-
menting the deaths of two pet
animals, apparently the vic
tima of poisoning
Puff, a pet cat belonging to
Brenda Kay Williams, six
year old daughter of Mr and
Mrs. James Williams, 1118 W
Collins,
night
found early Saturday by a
couple of Br'enda's plyamates
Half a block away, a
year-old Collie
Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Jackson
who live on Neff Street, was
also the victim of poisoning
He was found dead in front of
a neighborhood grocery.
_____a
191
5—
Tornadic Winds
Lash 7 Stales;
4 Dead Counted
By THE AMOCIATBD FRBM
Winds of tonudie foreo. aecom-
panted by rata and lighting, la«Md
soven fsirthsru states Satardsy,
leav ing four dead and earning
I
Frank Rayzor, ,
"We may reconsider the sen
tence," said Davidson, “after the
disposition of a similar case (Mont
gomery’s) next week.”
Wardlaw was released on a $7,000
appeal bond, after his attorneys
told the court they intended appeal.
It took the jury three hours to
in the day. initiating reach its verdict after hearing six
teams were on the campus to in-1 days of heated arguments from the
stall the fraternity into the ns- defense and the prosecution, some
tional group. go witnesses and bundles of techm
1 (Picture may be found on Page 7 leal data on Wardlaw’s financial
i of Section 1). operations during 1948 and 1949 1
a 5 year old cow
Jack Armstrong of
Gift Heifers
Receiving gift heifrrs were
Ballard Hopkina of Krum, Stanley
Caddell of Krum and Freddie
Wilson of Argyle, 4-H Club boys;
James Charles, Denton FFA youth,
aad Jimmy Ramsey of the Lewis-
ville FFA chapter.
Four of the heifer calves were
the produce of gift animals present-
ed to county youths two years ago,
while the fifth was purchased this
year by the First State Bank of
Deuton
Donors of the dams of this year’s
gift heifers were Sears, Roebuck A
Blessed is he that considereth
the poor, the Ixird will deliver him
tn time of trouble —Psalm 41-1.
Never in human history has so
much provision been made for the
poor, the sick, the unfortunate, the
unemployed, the aged, the orphan,
and it has not impoverished us
• • • •
Denton and the North Texas
State College, especially the Dem-
onstration Department of the col-
lege, get wonderful and free ad-
vertising in the May issue of Time
Magazine It is such advertising as
cost the American Seating Com-
pany considerable money, but noth i
ing for the college The Seating
.Company carried a full-page ad in
the magazine, showing 20 modern!
desks and children occupying them
of the laboratory school of the '
Demonstration Department, of t
which Dr. Wayne Adams, faculty
member, is director
I The Army said Dodd was
leased at 9 30 p.m , 78 hours and
MUNSAN, Sunday. May 11 —
The Communists today accused the
. Allies of shooting hundreds of pris-
oners of war every month and Vice
Adm C. Turner Joy labeled the
charge a "re statement fit . . .
tedious propaganda which has no
basis in fact.”
Another fruitleas session of the
Cxi. and the Certified Breeders As- Vq
sociation. the Borden Company,
I^wisville Feed Mills and the First
State Bank of Denton. .
In the get of sire competition Kta
(three animals from the same bull),
the Faultless Jersey farm trio
earned a blue ribbon, a Milkiqg
Shorthorn group from Mrs. Max
Hahn's fine herd near Hetxirn was MJ
awarded a blue ribbon, and Ken-
neth Hartin's Holririns gained a
red ribbon
The produce of dam class wa> HR
won by a duo from the Faultless flQ
Jersey Farm. This included two ”
animals out of one cow.
A new event, the showmanship
award for junior showmen, went to
James Downe, son of Mr. and Mrs. “
S. H. Downe of Justin and a mem-
ber of the Northwest FFA Chap-
tor. Young Downe also won high
point honors in the junior judging
contest.
The Northwest teem won tup
honors In the dairy judging cou
teat for the second year in sue-
cession. Metabers of the 1952 team
{off at Panmunjom in 20 minutes.
The delegates agreed to meet
again tomorrow
Joy, chief Allied delegate, told
, the Reds they were unable to face
the truth that a majority of the
Communist prisoners in Allied
hands did not want to be repa-
triated.
. . »
......l. ■ .aa
By ALLEN BOGAN
Rscerd-Chrenicle Staff Writer
The improvement of Denton
County dairy herds has reached an
amazing degree of perfection over
a five year period
Over one half of the record
breaking number of 83 head of
cattle entered in Dhnton County's
fifth annual Dairy Day show were
i Bell, a 3-year old heifer from
Raymond Crouch's Ayshire Farm,
rival today at Seoul
The Reds received various con
cessions—as yet undisclosed—in
exchange for the former com
' r of the island stockade
whom they held captive nearly |
four days.
May 21 Slated
As Clean-Lp
Day In Denton
Msy 21 will be clean-up day in
Denton, as all women a garden
cluba. the civic bureau of the
chamber of commerce, male gar-
deners go to work to clean up me
city, accordtag to W. F. Brooks,
chairman of the eampaign-
Dividmg the city into four sec-
tions representatives of the wom-
en's garden clubs will act as
chairmen for the sections. The
clean-up drive ia endorsed by the
Men's Garden Club, whose mem-
bers will asetot. .
« The drive is sponsored by the
civic bureau of the chamber of
commerce, and Mayor Mark Han-
nah has said that all trash will be
hauled off by city trucks.
Handling publicity for the drive
ia J. P. Harrison, who will reward
all children who help their parents
gather the trash for the city-wide
housecieaning Harrison will admit
youngsters who help in the cam-
paign to a special Saturday mati-
nee at the Campus Theatre fol-
lowing the drive on Wedneaday.
Cleanliness as a prerequisite to
health is being stressed by the
clean-up campaign.
The chamber of commerce has
asked the co-operation of all Den-
ton residents in cleaning up the
city.
Serving on the four committees
for the various sections of the city
will be Mrs. Joe Sharer, repre-
senting the Gay Garden Club;
Mrs. W B King, Garden Culture
Club; Mrs. Colt Carpenter, Hoe and
Hope Club, and Mrs. F. G. Scott,
Denton Garden Club.
Dodd, 52. commander of the is- the national Red Cross by Dr R
— —| tana prison, was seized as ne con- R Pearson of Perryton, head of
When Dodd arrived today at the ■ ferrKj with the prisoners at the [ the Ochiltree County Red Cross,
j gate of Compound 76. He and Lt I Ezell said the national Red Cross
appealed to the Fourth Army head
qutfriers wtagb ordered cmttila-
lion of the prugram here.
The local program was organized
. - , .iby the Army Recruiting Service
*hCre._ hA..i1e.??_l.at^: Asui ■ citizens committee repre-
i .. n u ! renting many local groups, includ-
' «rJevanceaWing the Pampa Red Cross chapter,
permitted him free use of the tele? Sh\mrock CaMdimi .nd other
’’hT’to’fr allowed meals 10 be | communities also had blood donor
| Dodd asked camp authorities to! *** UP-
refrain from using force to free |
Truce Parley Is
Still Deadlocked
Over POW Issue
Donation Plan
PAMPA, May 10 People in
this part of the Texas Panhandle
who had planned to give blood to j
the armed forces next week were
told today they cannot—in Gray1
County, at least
Many who planned to be donors ,
unhappy, the Pampa Daily j
News said, and are singling out
the Red Cross as the object of
their dislike Red Cross has an:
exclusive contract to gather blood
for the armed forces
Original plans were to bring a
Red Cross bloodmobile unit here
Monday through Saturday. Hund
reds of persons here and at nearby
Shamrock and Canadian signed up
to give "blood
But the Red Cross cancelled ap-
pearance of the bloodmobile here
on grounds it was impractical—1
that more blood could be obtained
by use of the unit in more populous
areas.
re Sponsors here then decided to go ]
. ahead on their own M-Sgt. Davis
15 minutes after he was dragged * ,Brown °< ArmX Recru.ling
bodily into a compound of 6,000 S,a,ron «0’ from hia
surly Communist prisoners
Dodd will be flown to Eighth j
Army headquarters fqr a news con-'
ference sometime today. Details of
Dodd's release were not announced
immediately. The Eighth Army , „ j z-
said it came after a meeting of WOkeamen for the Red Cross and
Communist ring leaders of the clv,c group*
compound—a conference attended, Editor Ben R. Ezell of the Ca-
by leaders from other prison com nadian (Tex.) Record said the can-
pounds on the rocky island. celfation resulted from protests to
j Dodd, 52, commander of the is- the national Red Cross by Dr R.
land prison, was seized as lie con R Pearson of Perryton, head of
ttucu .• >.v. iv—, ijerreu wiui the prisoners at ilic me Uchiiuee County Red Cross.
Eighth Army headquarters airstrip j gate of Compound 76. He and Lt I Ezell said the national Red Cross
near Seoul, Army officers would I
not permit him to talk to corre-, were grabbed b;
spondenta but said the genera! but Baven J
would attend a news cwrtferenee (he gfolip
Um Um
It noon
ta—«
4 AAk <»«... «
■rr------
Lmmi «to M
I ^taff Photo) id
“fair” score, were
ILK t 1
The pudgy, red-faced attorney
took the verdict stoically. His at
tractive wife, who sat directly lie
hind him. sobbed silently into a
handkerchief.
from throughout Texas and the I Judg« T- Whitfield Davidson, ini
states of Oklahoma, Arkansas. Vir- Pronouncing sentence, indicated
gima West Virginia and California that Wardlaw's prison term might
i Included were William Hindman of be reduced depending on the out
Richmond. Va., national secretary, * come of the tax evasion trial of
and I^rkin Bailey, past national another Fort Worth official, Sheriff
president. I Sully Montgomery.
New officers introduced during ' Montgomery's trial was reset for
intermission time include Harold Wednesday.
Fuller, president. Tommy Tillie,
i vice president; John Neely, secre-
j tary Garner Klein and Bob Gar-
ner. Inter Fraternity Council repre-
sentatives; Bob Shotola, historian;
Dwight Otto, senior marshal; Joe
Ratcliff, junior marshal, and Ken-
del Banks, guard
Earlier in the day.
Try Worth Making
By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER <the Soviet and Chinese Communist
WASHINGTON. May 10 — regimes but in general the belief
' United States officials are consid- is that the Kremlin at least has a
ering making an appeal to Moscow powerful influence in Peiping.
to help bring about a successful Russia played an important role
conclusion of the deadlocked Ko-; in getting the truce talks started,
rean truce negotiations.
I'he step, if taken, probably
would be the first big diplomatic
move assigned to the new Ameri-
I can ambassador to the Soviet
, Union George F Kennan since he
arrived in Moscow
The truce negotiations have been
tied up for many weeks over I„
question whether prisoners of war Ifl LfCIHOII
I should be forcibly repatriated.
i The United Nations Command, /"k £1/1 CYY
firmly hacked by the American I Ifl Wlni/ /llo / I
and British governments, has told I '-/■I 1TEC1 y J-
the Reds it will not compel prison * "
era to go home. Out of a total of The Red Cross Bloodmobile will
170,000 military and civilian prison-. return to Denton on May 29 and
Seoul, Army officers would Co| Robert Raven of Newton tex. a|
------^.^.bed by the Red leaders. Iq
1 j but Baven foughi his wj£ dto « i tl
! Dodd was held hostage inside the
• I compound, ...B„.._
j with the Reds for settlement of |
permitted him free use of the tele-jcL- k
phone and allowed meals to be.
sent to him. , I ;
Dodd asked camp authorities to | --------
I him until the Communists had
completed listing their demands
The Army said Saturday some
“minor requests" of the Reds had ,
been granted.
Those requests included use ul
a telephone, writing paper and the
of prisoner leaders
from other compounds on the is-
land.
About 80,000 Communists now
are held on the island, including
| most of the 70.000 who have said
they wish to return to Communist
rule Nearly 100,000 other Red mil-
they would forcibly resist being Rorean armisitcc talks was ticked
This is the time of the year
when the sun says it is vaca-
tion time again Mr. Yarbrough
realized it was time to use the
Want Ads
fiOOD 14 FOOT Marine Plywood
host, used very little. .50
c-xxxx_____________
He sold the boat within 24 hours
after the ad appeared, and could
have sold more boats if he haJ
them to sell
Why not fill your vacation needs
by shopping in the classified
section of the Record-Chronicle?
Want Ads will supply you with
most everything
To place your ad—
Dial U-2551
Ask for Classified
Hours 8 to 5 daily
Mr and
itary and civilian internees said'
returned.
of the early churches and Burks,
basket lunch will be served and at I
2 o’clock T B (Bullock) Hyder
will deliver the annual address.
the boys ta Korea
fttoto ssitata MB BB tolto armed
sarrtasa, aad to fau pledged not
to tot tow hoys tom. TH
fighting for ui ltd the k
can <to is sho that no bay .
"r. aiiu lYirs rrariK rtayzoi, ,
southeast of Denton will spend the
next 30 days in Houston and on
Manor Mke. They will be guests
of their son. Jack Rayzor, who is
in charge of the oil department of I
the Petroleum Producers & Trans-
port Co. J. Newton Rayzor. former j
Denton citizen, brother of Fred mt • I I T •
Rayzor, is president of the com I Ulf
pany Mrs Rayzor said. "We ll ■1"<HlUHdl 1111
spend a big part of our time fish
ing in Manor Lake and I’m in
hopes of showing Mr Rayzor up
in fishing as I have done on our I
previous trips there "
• • • •
W E Buck, a former Denton
eitizen but who has been recently |
living in Dallas and other cities
since I
ago, is back to make his home He
of Mayor and Mrs. Mark Hannah, !
man luru, was proclaimed non
Queen from among 12 nominees.
Others included Misses Martha
James of Denton; Barbara Lewis,
Tyler Rose Mary Brau, Dallas;
Jean Pool, Texarkana: Faye Brav-
enec. Mercedes; L’Jon Walker,
The annual all day reunion is I Denton: Betty Lou McGill. Denton:
Denton; Betty
Dallas: Maydell Moellen-
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 225, Ed. 1 Sunday, May 11, 1952, newspaper, May 11, 1952; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1317858/m1/1/?q=%22Board+of+Regents%22+Wooten: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.