Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 256, Ed. 1 Monday, May 28, 1956 Page: 1 of 10
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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'ENTON
J
I3KD YhAR OF DAILY SERVICE—. NO. 2M
Tornadoes Car
I
/; o
-oj
£
16 Funnels
I
. k
i
Troop Train Is
West Texas
I '
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Seven Wrecks
Are Reported
Services Slated
tive duty.
*5
The
ool which hadn’t been
ment Tuesday night. .
WORLD
limits.
and Mrs. Estrada Ochoa, drowned
MG
Cleanup Day
be given by A. 0. (Prof) Calhoun.
mst ttective way to tell their
story to the public.
with a pi
Missouri’s votes
Services for Capell are pending
for child desertion.
Debate Proposal
lot’s degrees, 41 for master’s do-
te
education degree.
iA-
I
Wk
murvmt
Baccalaureate Challenge Is
Given NT Graduating Class
will be held in the NTSC Main
Auditorium because of the large
number of graduates and others
city
day
FLORIDA’S
VOTE BID
IN WINDUP
word from relatives, officials at
Schmitz - Floyd - Hamlett Funeral
39, the Austin
s Robert Phil.
Violence Kills
23 In Texas
Memorial Toll
Predicted At 110
of troops being recalled. Commit-
tees for “A Peaceful Solution in
Mother Held in
Dallas Jail On
Desertion Count
ACTION! ACTION! YES,
WANT ADS GET QUICK
RESULTS. DIAL c2551
Schools’ Transfer
Deadline Is Near
i. Webster investigated an-
car that turned over Sunday
Sanger Reports
First Wheat
Speclal - Sweet Peas Ne Bunch.
Selby ’s Flower Shop.
school choir.
Supt Chester
House this fall
ADS ADVISED FOR
OPTOMETRISTS
DALLAS M_The Texas Opto-
trie Assn, was told Sunday that
institutional advertising in news-
Mi nm*
A Growing Newspaper For A Growing Area
DENTON. TEXAS, MONDAY AFTERNOON, MAY SS, 1956
Wednesday is
I
opened for the season, was sur-
rounded by 7-foot hurricane fence.
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (ft -
Missouri Democrats hoped to
touch off a presidential boom to-
day for Sen. Stuart Symington (D.
Mot and Symington said he would
accept the nomination.
He said he is not a candidate.
He said he would not campaign
for the nomination. He was asked
if he would refuse it, and said:
merly were from Oklahoma City.
The children wore placed in fos-
ter homes and officers said the
Man Found Dead
In Gift Shop
Edgar Buck Capell, 51, a resi-
dent of Denton for a short time,
was found dead this morning in
the Colinial Drive-In Gift Shop by
Mrs. Joe Franklin, owner of the
theatre and gift shop.
Capell, who was found at 10 a.m.
today, was employed at the drive-
in and slept in the gift shop.
Justice Z. D. Lewis ruled death
present diplomas _ _
and special awards and honors will
SWISS CLIMBERS
SCALE EVEREST
KATMANDU, Nepal, May 28 i
A Swiss mountaineering expedi-
tion has made two climbs to the
top of Mt. Everest, the worlds
highest peak, and also conquered
the neighboring mountain, Lhotse-
1, a Nepalese government spoke-
sman announced today.
GOVENOR SWORN
IN FOR PANAMA
WASHINGTON O —Maj. Gen.
William E. Potter was sworn in
today as governor of the Panama
Canal Zone, and Secretary of the
Army Brucker told him “you go
with the administration solidly be-
hind you."
ONE KILLED IN
CYPRUS AMBUSH
NICOSIA, Cyprus IB — A Turk-
ish Cypriot constable was killed
end two other members of the Cy-
pros security forces were wound-
ed by shots fired from ambush at
a convoy Sunday night near Pa-
phos.
• i ,1
‘3
now than a year ago.
Butler did not name any spe-
cific Democralic candidates in
challenging Eiienhower to a tele-
vision debate. He said Eisenhower
started at 6 p.m. Friday and end-
ed Sunday at midnight.
■ Late deaths included:
Don Wells, 17, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Luther Wells of Valley Mills,
killed Sunday when an auto left
the highway and overturned three
miles from Valley Mills.
Police reported Mrs. Juana Her-
nandez de Rosa was killed by a
hit-and-run driver in San Antonio
Sunday.
John Ed Reeves, 18, of Golinda,
in Central Texas, was killed Sat-
urday when his motorcycle left
the highway and plunged into a
ditch.
Tommie Worley, 7, son of Mrs.
Tom Drummond of Midland,
drowned in the municipal swim-
garbage trucks will run all •
- throughout the city and will
pick up an garbage and trash -
Seven Denton County accidents
took- a heavy toll of automobiles
and Injuries over the weekend, the
Texas Highway Patrol. said this
morning.
The accidents started Saturday
afternoon and occurred at inter-
DALLAS w—A 21-year-old ex-
pectant mother who told officers
"I don’t love them. I can’t take
care of them.' as her two young
sons clung to her skirts, was held
in jail today.
The attractive woman called
juvenile authorities Saturday and
said she planned to abandon the
boys, ages one and two.
Dot. A. M Andrews and Police-
man B. Rondeau found the mother
and boys in an ill-kept, three-room
apartment.. 1
She told them the father was
arrested for disturbing the peace
Thursday and disappeared after
being let out of jail on bail. She
told of harsh treatment at his
hands and officers' quoted her as
saying she had no idea where the
to the White
_______ g . an overwhelm-
ing majority. Butler said there is
greater demand for "a change”
practical principles that will re-
sult in a major degree of suc-
patrolmen MB radar Sun.
light near Gainesville on
I N. The officers stopped
so,drivers and filed on 10
"Where there is no vision, the
people perish," graduation candi-
dates at North Texas State Col-
lege were told in baccalaureate
services in the main auditorium
n,
* ■ •'
when he fell into a canal near
Santa Rosa, west of Harlingen.
Sunday.
John L. Danielson, 5, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Leonard A. Danielson.
Corpus Christi. was fatally injured
there Sunday in a car-truck acci-
dent.
Charles E. Johnson, Sherman,
was accidentally shot to death on
a nearby farm Sunday while hunt-
ing turtles with his brother. Offi-
cers said he was struck by a .22
caliber bullet. -
A man killed by gunfire 18 miles
northeast of Lamesa Sunday night
was tentatively identified as Mar-
culino Caudillo Jr., 21. An older
man was held for questioning.
remained on the ground Monday
morning. At nearby Haskell about
2 inches of rain fell. There was
some damage to young wheat in
the Haskell area from hail.
INJURY REPORT FALSE
A report of an injury at Judd, a
small Haskell County community,
turned out to be false. Sheriff H.
T. Melton of Knox County report-
ed. He said a tornado hit the
ground a short distance from
Judd but that a search showed
Symington
Gets Boost
Wednesdays the day to clean up
that trash and garbage.
This reminder came this morn-
ing from Raymond King, chair-
man of the Chamber of Com-
merce’s civic committee, which is
sponsoring an all-day. city-wide
cleanup campaign for Denton
Wednesday.
Mayor Jack Bryson has pro-
claimed Wednesday as Cleanup
Day in Denton.
King reminded residents that
LOST SKIER FOUND
Lynn Wittier, who was lost for two days in the snow-
fields Of Mt. Hood, Portland, Ore., is transferred to
a litter by Jim Lyne, left, a forest ranger, and Bob
Wachsmuth. right, a ski patrolman, who found Miss
Wattier wandering into a timbered area. (AP Wire-
photo)
-
-
Stormed By Mob
The all dear signal was sounded
in Abilene at 12:10 a.m.
HEAVY RAIN, HAIL
Heavy rain and hail spotted
parts of the tornado plagued area.
On the M. M. Cobb ranch near
Pjzn
"You have a short memory,
Paul," Hah retorted. He said the
Series Of Alerts
EVENTS
A Streamlined Report
Of lmportant News
it won’t be accepted." He added,
“Did Roosevelt or Truman ever
accept such a challenge?"
Hall’s general theme was a vig-
orous defense of administration
policies in national defense, the
federal budget and taxation, civil
rights and economic prosperity.
Butler accused Eisenhower of
failing to follow through on a
great number of campaign prom-
ises he said were made in 1952.
He cited reduction of taxes and
the national debt and balancing
the hng^gat as instances.
"Why don’t you be honest with
the American people?" Hall re-
plied. "You know the budget's bal-
-------------------------------
Butler said the armed forces are
them.
Kefauver, in effect, accused
Stevenson supporters of speaking
with one face in Florida and an-
other in Californiaa.
im j
GOP Chief Shuns
that is placed on the curb.
.The chamber is sponsoring the
campaign to beautify the city, im-
prove fire safety and improve
health conditions, King said.
King said city tracks will be-
gin making rounds of the city at
7 a.m. Wednesday and will con-
tinue all day. He said trucks
would pick up all types of gar-
bage and trash, provided it is
placed in a container at the curb.
- 1 -w $
office had received requests for
transfer of approximately 95 per-
cent of the students who will be
attending schools in districts other
than in which they live.
However, he emphasized that
the June 1 deadline is necessary
in order that the students may
be placed on rolls of the new dis-
trict prior to the start of the
1956-57 term.
WHEAT OVERFLOW
Spilling out of the Harlin Mills Grain Co. elevators at
Burkburnett are some 75,000 bushels of new wheat
worth $144,750. When his elevators filled. Mills
chopped holes in the walls and allowed the grain to
pour onto the ground. Wheat in the area is averaging
from 10 to 40 bushels per acre. Mills called it "the
best I've ever seen.” (AP Wirephoto).
expected to attend. The program
will begin at 8 p.m.
In the graduation address Munn
hopes “to offer the challenge of
"thinking big’ and ’dreaming great-
Record - Chronicle
Church activities and has worked
with Key Clubs, Giri Scouts, Boy
Scouts, Red Cross and Community
Chest.
The Rev. Ferman Weedon of the
Grace Temple Baptist Church will
Adlai, Estes Close
Out Chilly Rangle
For Parley Backing
MIAMI, Fla, M_In an atmo-
sphere of chilly ill will, Adlai E.
Stevenson and Sen. Estes Kefauv-
er close their Florida presidential
primary battle today with final
pitches for 28 important national
convention votes.
The iU will evidently to going
to splash over into the oncoming
primary in California, where Ke-
fauver intends to raise the Issues
he has used over and over in
Florida.
Kefauver will be on the go until
nearly midnight, in Miami and
nine nearby communities in popu-
lous, strategic Dade County, grab-
bing hands and making speeches.
The Democratic rivals stage the
campaign finale in successive half
hours on TV here tonight, Steven-
son in film at 10 p.m. and Ke-
fauver'in person at 10:30.
VOTING TUESDAY
President Eisenhower has only
taken opposition in the Republican
primary.
Voting Tuesday to expected to
be ligH—in keeping with the in:
terest.
Newsmen and most Florida po-
litical observers seem to feel that
Stevenson will come out of the
primary with the. larger share of
the 28 national convention votes.
Stevenson himself said over the
weekend he thinks he has a good
chance of winning.
Kefauver told a news conference
Sunday: “I expect that my dele-
gates and I will carry Florida on
Tuesday.
“We have come a long way
from behind. I feel that we now
are ahead. There has been a con-
siderable change during this last
week."
CALIFORNIA NEXT
Looking beyond, toward the Cali-
fornia primary and N national
convention votes. Kefauver ex-
pressed belief he has slipped a
bit
He said he had thought he was
even with Stevenson but now has
dropped behind because Mrs.
for Stevenson.
for speeding.
Saturday night they operated at
Decatur on Highway 81 and stop-
ped around N drivers and filed
on 18 .
Weekend violence
killed at least 23 pert
The Associated 1
CHICAGO m—The National
Safety Council estimates Memor-
ial Day traffic accidents will claim
no lives.
The normal average of, motor
vehicle deaths on a nonholiday
Wednesday at this time of year
to 70. • <
The council challenged the mo-
toring public to hold tie Memorial
Day death toll to 70.
member.
Commencement services will be
held at 8 p.m. Friday at Fouts
wta1A AAmliNaFIAMA haua b-—esv
EMeAe APPAcaElonS nave Deen
made by 494 students for bache-
Melvin T. Munn of Dallas, pub-
lic relations director of Blue Cross
and Blue Shield of Texas, will
speak on “Making Visions Work”
at the Denton High commence-
ST. NAZAIRE, France M—A
mob of about 1,500 men stormed
through police line- today and car-
ried home in triumph a group of
reservists who were scheduled to
be cast for Symington as a “favor-
ite son” candidate, with delegates
pledged to stick with him as long
as there to any chance he might
win.
Symington already has picked
up scattered backing as a dark
horse candidate in the event the
Chicago convention goes into a
deadlock.
Missouri Democratic leaders
hope to crystallize it with their
convention endorsement and then
set out to rally Symington votes
in other states.
Symington indicated he cannot
actively campaign for the presi-
dential nomination because he
currently to heading a special
Senate inquiry into the effective-
ness of the nation's air power.
“I am knee deep in the prob-
lem of our Air Force against the
rising strength of the Commu-
nists,” he said. “The problem has
now increased because the inquiry
will Include the naval air arm.”
Jack LouisW
Eleanor Roosevelt to plumping
Sharp punches from the rival
political camps served Sunday -------
to build up the ill feeling between ly‘ with firm application to proven,
nnz
Press count
Gross. Mary Margaret MeBryde
and David Flyr will participate’on
the program. The high school
band will play and special num-
bers will be presented by the high
visionary,” he urged. ’’they say
we build our castles in the air.
That is exactly where they be-
long. But we put firm foundations
underneath."
Too many dreams are flat, the
speaker declared, lacking the
height to bring a man to fulfill his
destiny. Behind the great works
of architecture, art, literature, and
MB
",
papers, radio and television is the land. was taken to a local hospital
___1 . *: *1“ m3 with a knee injury after her car
went out of control and smashed
__________ ) morning on U.S. Highway 77
tended the opening of south of Denton but reported no
violation of traffic laws.
no injuries or damage.
Several people were killed at
Judd by a tornado in 1953.
Tornadoes also were reported
near Knox City, near Stamford,
near Jayton in Kent County, and
10 miles west of Rochester in
King County.
Heavy rains were reported in
the South Plains.
The Abilene Reporter-News said
police and civil defense radios
were blocked for emergency mes-
sages and that officers "have been
tracking tornadioes all night.”
A Weather Bureau forecast for
scattered severe thunderstorms
with locally damaging winds in an
area from Sherman, Tex., to Cole-
man. Tex., to Clairemont, Okla,
to Lindsey, Okla., ended at 8 a.m.
A hailstorm was reported late
Sunday along a 15-mile strip be-
tween Stamford and Hamlin. A
tornado was reported sighted
about five miles north of Stam-
ford. but it didn't strike the
ground.
DEPOT BURNS
Lightning struck the Santa Fe
depot at Amherst, about 50 miles
northwest of Lubbock, and it
burned down.
Lubbock Avalanche-Journal re-
ports of rainfall included: Lone
Star community in Floyd County,
2 inches; Olton 2. Baker commu-
nity south of Floydada 1.30: Plain-
view 2; Amherst 1.26; Spur .10
and Hale Center .40.
The West Texas weather warn-
ing system said the first of three
tornadoes was sighted northeast
of Jayton at 4:80 p.m.
and only slight property damage
was found. Most of the funnels
darted out of low-hanging clouds,
then lifted before their destructive
force was felt.
Particular credit was given to
the West Texas Weather Warning
System, an organization of about
700 volunteers in 22 counties who
sight and transmit warnings of
tornadoes.
The tornado sightings ranged
from Abilene to Aspermont and
east to Breckenridge.
The alert was sounded in Abi-
lene at 11:15 p.m. Many residents
attempted to leave the city, jam-
ming highways on the south and
east. Shortly afterwards a twister
was sighted near the Abilene
Christian College campus in the
northeast part of the city, but
veered away at the last minute.
Another funnel was reported near
Hawley, and a third near Hodges,
rises Tuesday at i
poor. .
Denton County
this month: 3J6.
appearing in a “stage show” with
“Robert Montgomery of Holly-
"ada“iruettnoned Butler’s sincer-
ity in making the proposal and
said, "As far as I‘m concerned
Strickland w 111Stamford, due north of Abilene,
to 171 graduates from 3 to 4 inches of rain fell plus
3 inches of hail. Some of the hail
The graduation exercises. for- give the invocation at the com- ----- _ ----
merly held in Denton churches, mencement. Robert Clark, presi- both just north of the Abilene city
........ " dent of the senior class, Beverly limits.
« • ' , ■
‘ -
in Texas
Eleazar Ochoa, 5. son of Mr. effort to force the government to
negotiate a settlement with the na-
tionalist rebels.
woman technically was being held Home said shortly before noon to-
day.
Sunday morning.
The speaker was the Rev. John
______________Marvin, pastor of the First Presby-
promise to end such bicker- terian Church. U J. A.
"Be dreamers o‘ dreams — be
______ _____ .. same fight* occurred in previous
should defend himself instead of J administrations and the important
father was. . __- .
Policemen said both parents for- by natural causes.
IKE, AIDES HOLD
SECURITY CHAT
WASHINGTON unPresident Ei-
senhower met today with key
diplomatic, intelligence and mili-
tary officials for a discussion of
what the White House termed
"security matters.”
The President conferred with
Herbert Hoover Jr., undersecre-
tary of state; Allan Dulles, chief
of the Central Intelligence Agen-
cy; Adm. Arthur W. Radford,
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, and .Gen. Nathan F. Twin-
ing, Air Force chief of staff.
SANGER - (Special) - Kim-
bell Milling Co. received the sea-
son’s first load of wheat Saturday
afternoon The load was brought
in by Clarence E. Anderson of
Tioga.
Officials at the mill said the
first load showed a good grade
with a test of 60 pounds.
The harvest is expected to get
into swing in this area during the
week.
DHS Graduation
A- “ Sv ! z" : ' . . - ■ • ■ . ' . V
into the pole and overturned in the
middle of the street. She was re-
leased after emergency treat-
ment.
Officers reported a car, truck
and a pickup bailer were involved
in an accident on Highway 121
west of Lewisville Sunday evening.
Jack Perry, Sanger, was pulling a
pickup bailer with a truck when
Norbert Warren Boudreau. An Ar-
bor. Mich., driving a 1952 Interna-
tional Pickup Truck, came from be-
hind to pass. But another car driv-
en by Leonard Dale K n i p e ap-
proached from the opposite direc-
tion. Boudreau tried to swing bacK
in behind Perry but ran into the
bailer and Knipe, apparently think-
ing he had made it, drove into the
truck that was locked onto the
bailer.
Highway Patrolman Don Black
said there was no injuries but he
filed on Boudreau for improper
passing.
Don Terry Stone, 26, Route 1.
Celina, received cuts on his face
and hands Saturday evening when
his car turned over on a curve
on Highway 24 east of the Lake
Dallas dam. After receiving emer-
gency treatment at a local hos-
pital, he was released Sunday.-
TEACHER HURT
A University of Texas professor
and another driver were in-
volved in an accident at 6:81 p.m.
Saturday on Highway 377 near the
Texas Drive-Inn. Cars driven by
This was the latest of a series
ming pool at Soto. Commanauvers.
• wT 9 R
r -
16
; •
texnme
MO SEE TEXOMA SX “obstexCddngon JU
music, he said, you will find a
man’s dream that became reality.
Mr. Marvin asked the graduates
two questions: "Do you have
dreams big enough to be worth
living for and, if necessary, worth
dying for? What kind of founda-
tiong have you out under vour
vve• sows v • J VM FM% ma* • J VM4
lives with which to face eternity?
Baccalaureate music was a vo-
cal solo by Mise Willa Stewart,
NTSC School of Music faculty
cess.”
Because of his experience, abi:
lity and a “way with people.”
Munn has become one of the most
widely sought-after speakers in the
southwest and a civic leader of
Dallas. He is president of the Kiw-
anis Club of Dallas and takes an
active part in civic affairs of all
types — ranging from the Dallas
Health Museum to the Dallas
Chamber of Commerce.
A native of Ennis and a grad-
uate of Mertens High School,
Munn was formerly director of re-
ligious education at the First Meth-
odist Church in Longview. He has
been active in the Methodist
lips, 50 . 520 Fort Worth Drive,
collided head-on. Patrolman Felix
Webster and Blankenship said
that Phillips’ car was a total loss
and both men were taken to a lo-
cal hospital for examination, but
released upon arrival. The oficers
said they filed on Phillips for driv-
ing on the wrong side of the road
when not passing
Webster said there were two
other Sunday accidents in which
cats turned over. Early Sunday
morning James Melvin Jenkins,
20, Dallas, tried to turn in at
Duck Inn, also on Highway 24, but
turned over when he hit the
LODGE DEDICATED
DURANT, Okla., U_Some 600
persons attend* *: . _ *
of the plus new Lake Texoma
Lodge Sunday.
Gov. Raymond Gary was prin-
cipal speaker at ceremonies open-
ing the two-million dollar state
lodge at the west end of the Roose-
volt Memorial Bridge on U.S. 70.
(Experiment Station Report)
High ....................... 90
— Low ......... 70
m."
If No
"" - S w
■
2
% (
A 1
thing is whether we have a "good
defense."
"When you (Democrats) were In
control we didn’t have anything
to fight with when we got into
trouble la Korea," Hall continued.
vals until 5:36 a.m. this morning,
patrolmen reported.
The latest injury occurred this
morning on Highway 114 one mile
west of Roanoke when a track side-
swipped a car driven by James G.
HiU Jr., 45. of Bridgeport. Hill had
his arm leaning on the window
when the track hit him. There was
no metal contact in the accident,
officers said. Hill told officers he
didn’t think the truck driver even
knew he had struck his arm.
HUI drove into Roanoke to try
and call an ambulance but
couldn’t get the operator. He drove
into a filling station there and L.
D. Head took him to the Grape-
vine Hospital where physicians
said his arm would have to be
amputated. He was later transfer-
red to a Bridgeport Hospital.
A 19-year old Denton girl was
injured when her car overturned
on Highland Street and struck a
telephone pole at 6:26 p.m. Sun-
day.
CRASHES POLE
Barbara Jones Knight, 803 High-
The period covered by the ad-
_________________vance estimate is from 6 p.m. do-
gree, and one for the doctor of cal time) Tuesday to midnight
aAnoatine daeee Wednesday.
.i. ' /
* - ,, oe
, Ho -em2K (daa
_______ h. AE03-828228*8888
-- ue0c..m0s8ew0/mi—185825k
By THE ASSOCIATED PREM
Central West Texans had
their narrowest escape of the
tornado season Sunday night
and early Monday when a
total of at least 16 funnels
were sighted in the area
surrounding Abilene.
Abilene itself was placed under
a "take cover" and emergency
evacuation basis for a brief period
near midnight as three twisters
flirted about the countryside, one
dipping to within % mile of the
city limits.
DAMAGE SLIGHT
Despite the unusual barrage of
funnels no injuries were reported
While the fighting was in prof- !
ruse, the reservists left the rail-
road station to go home. Demon-
strators picked them up and car-
ried them on their shoulders.
leave by train for service in. Al-
geria
A force of about 1,666 mobile 1
guards and special riot police,
swinging gunbutts and clubs was
unable to check the demonstra-
tors’ march on the railway station
in this heavily Communist seaport
and shipbuilding town. Tear”gas-----4
and practice grenades also wer
used in vain. A « * f.
The mob threw anything within •
reach at the police—stones, iron l
bars and heavy bolts. Several per-
sons were injured
About 300 reservists were on the 1 I
train, due to leave for the Medi-
terranean at noon.
The protest started off with
about 800 persons swarming over
the railroad tracks and around the
station, and swelled rapidly as
workers left their jobs in metal
plants and in the construction in-
dustry at the call of the Commu-
nist-dominated General Federa-
tion of Labor.
The non-Com m unist unions did
not order their men to join in the
walkout, but expressed sympathy
with the reservists recalled to ac-
High year age ............ a
Low year ago ....... -a *
Sun sets today at 7:30 p.miz, -
“Of course not. No citizen ;
should."
Symington and about 1,600 dele-
gates were here for the Demo-
cratic State Convention, which will
pick 76 delegates with half a vote j
each at the party's nominating
convention in Chicago Aug. 13. .
The state committee was ready
Mm3
. . - -j
★ ★ ★ * ★
engaged in an interservice squab-
ble which he said violates a cam-
County Supt. H. O. Harris to-
day reminded parents that June 1
is the deadline for transferring
students from one district to an-
other for the coming 1956-57 school
year.
Most of the instances which call
for transfer of students from one
district to another are those
where the student will be in a
grade not taught in their district,
he said. Some high school grades
at Lake Dallas, Double Oak, Little
Elm, Aubrey and. Argyle are in-
cluded in that classification. .
Transfer of a student is made
subject to the approval of the
county superintendent and the
superintendents of the two dis-
tricts concerned, he said. Request
for ■ the transfer must initiate
through the county superintend-
ent’s office.
Harris said that thus far, his
WASHINGTON ( - Democrat-
ic National Chairman Paul Butler
said Sunday it is "the duty"
of President Eisenhower to meet
the Democratic presidential nom-
inee in a television debate. GOP
Chairman Leonard Hall quickly
rejected the idea and challenged
the "sincerity of the proposal.
The two party leaders tangled
in an NBC-TV debate in which
they promised their campaigns
will be free of “mudslinging."
Each then accused the other of
countenancing scandals in the Tru-
man and Eisenhower administra-
tions.
Hall predicted Eisenhower
..... " ,2 2221.2850
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16 PAGES PRICE HVI
-........
WEATHER
...........
Central Texaa: Local thunder-
storms mostly in northwest por-
tion. otherwise partly cloudy
with scattered thundershowers t
this afternoon, tonight and Tues-
day. Not much change in tens-
peratures.
TEMPERATURES
73 pemmogggge a omeegomsgyrxpsegpmeggggggga
■ . 1
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FRENCH RESERVISTS RESCUED
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 256, Ed. 1 Monday, May 28, 1956, newspaper, May 28, 1956; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1453141/m1/1/?q=music: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.