Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 167, Ed. 1 Monday, February 15, 1960 Page: 2 of 10
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Moaday, February IS, 1M
THE DENTON RECORDCHRONICLE
PAGE TWO
Town Topics
PHONE DU2-2551
Briefs-Births-Hospital Notes
son Jr., 916 W. Collins; Mrs, Cora
J. L. Watson and baby, 321 Ed-
JOHN D. KAY
For Commerce
Law
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Student Theatre
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DU2-2561
Denton
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
HOME WANTED
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in 1919
V
Jack
A WARNER BROS. PICTURE
TECHNICOLOR
TODAY'S CITIZEN
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BARROW INSURANCE SALUTES I
MISS MARGARET GRUBB...
WE RENT
• •. of the NTSC School of Music faculty. Mitt Grubb |
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HAND E FLOOR
SANDERS
317 South Him
Dial DU2 9C21
219-W,Hkek
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Bush
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She Was First Woman Named
To Denton Board Of Education
Propeller Blade Kills
Man At Dallas Station
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OkAOOTun
FOR ADULTS AND MATURE YOUNG PEOPLE ONLY
GENERAL ADMISSION 90c; ALL STUDENTS 65c
conducted the fourth of five programs In a piano
workshop Sunday afternoon at the NTSC Main Audi-
torium.
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FRESH CUT
FLOUERS
DON MURRAY
KA MARSHALL
PATRICIA SMITH
Starting Thursday Jack The Ripper
WILL CAUSE OUR
Theatre Bonus Coupons
Given Every Night
. ... It's A Big
Discount for Everyone
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The Novel That Was Hailed . . Denounced—and 5
Million People Read Itl
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CAMPUS THEATRE
PICTURE SCREEN TO SCREAM WITH EXCITEMENT
— ALSO —
May Durham, 621 Frame. medi-
cal; Mrs. D. L. Sampler, Decatur,
medical; Grady Milsap, 924 W.
Prairie, surgical; Mrs. Dottie Lee,
608 N. Bradshaw, medical; D. L.
Bush, 536 N. Mill, Lewisville, med-
ical: Mrs. W. E. Harper, Dallas,
medical; J. B. Wilson, 1303 Broad-
way, medical; Wade Browning,
2421 Robinwood, medical.
Dismissed: Miss Donna Louise
Garner, Fort Worth; Mrs. W. M.
Jagoe, 1801 W. Oak; A. D. Irick,
2103 N. Elm; Mrs. J. J. Bland
and baby, 1205 Mingo; Jim Brown,
Argyle; Master James C. Mathe-
BARROW INSURANCE AGENCY
•YOUR HARTFORD AGENT"
Funeral services will be held in Denton Tuesday for a
longtime woman civic leader who died Saturday.
She was Mrs. C. N. Adkisson, 86, of 1110 Bell. She died
in a Fort Worth hospital after a long illness.
Among a lengthy list of activities, Mrs. Adkisson held
the honor of being the first woman ever to serve on the
Denton Board of Education. She had served 12 years on
the board, four of them as president.
Funeral services will be held at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday in
the Jack Schmitz & Sons Funeral Chapel. Dr. W. B. Slack,
couragement for their good works.
As a member of the Denton
School Board, Mrs. Adkisson par-
ticipated in a debate among board
members as to whether to build an
auditorium at Sam Houston School.
At the time there were only three
schools in Denton — Lee, Stone-
wall Jackson and Sam Houston. A
motion for building the auditorium
was passed when members oppos-
ed to the building missed a meet-
ing. She was also on the board
, when master's degrees for Den-
ton's teachers was first stressed
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Corsage* • Pot Plant*
COMPLETE SELECTION
Linwood Roberson
FLORIST
RENNE-MacARTHUR-MINRODOMUD
-HbentoM-laremewSAT
Rites Set Tuesday
For Mrs. Adkisson,
All Argentina waited for “opera-
tion sinking” to produce some re-m• •* M e
suits after Navy Secretary Gaston I IUI I I Datenge
Clement’s boast Sunday that the “-V-- WIVUOV
The I
Bramble
was a member of the original fac-
ulty of TWU when it opened in
1903. He had taught at old Poly-
technic College (now Texas Wes-
leyan College) in Fort Worth.
Survivors include one daughter,
Mrs. Ruth Hare of Fort Worth;
and two sons, Albert W. Adkisson
of Fort Worth and Charles N.
Adkisson Jr. of McCamey.
The family has requested that
if memorials are made, donations
to the Denton City-County Library
be considered ... .
Diary of a
High,
ekbol
Bjde
Diets At W aco Home
Mrs. Emma Wiebusch, 78, of
Waco, a former Denton resident,
died Sunday at 6:30 p m. in her
home.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday at 10:30 a m In Waco.
Interment will be in Waco under
direction of the Wilkinson-Hatch
Funeral Homa.
BLAU JAMES
BOB HOPESVERA MILES
PAULDOUGLAS
Converting ■ brunette to an "ice- and that you go t an effieient operator
blonde" doesn’t happen with a tinse — — She will im that your hair is kept
First th. hair must h. bleached with a la perfect condition —
hair lightener ta a pale shade, then th* Keep your handbag looking neat inside
hilt la toned with whatever shade you as will at out far a bettar groomed
want — Hair thus treated must ha touch- feeling — Each day remove everything
ad •p every twe weeks ar a* ta keep it from your bag - Shake out tobaceo and
looking right - Don’t let the fear of other loose dirt end wipe out lining
that"brassy". look keep you from getting with a cloth moistened with eleaning
blonde — All that is necessary for a fluid — Keep your cosmetics in e smell
natural, shiny, safe bleach is to he sore bag for neatness and don't lorry unnee-
that a veputable brand at color le used cessary clatter.
CECIL & HELEN'S BEAUTY SALON
Call DU2-2931 for your appointment
today for the best advice on permanent waving
(Corp. 1957 United Features Syndicate)
• ••
-Denton Record-Chronicle
MRS. ADKISSON SEVERAL YEARS AGO
Shown As She Clipped Newspaper Stories
mond McMillan, 38, biology pro-
fessor at the university’s New
Orleans branch.
Mickey has been in jail since
Jan. 14, four days after the body
of Miss McMillan was found near
the Baton Rouge campus.
Mickey denied killing her. Of-
ficers said blood stains of Miss
McMillan’s type were found on hi*
car.
Officer* said she was hit on the
head 13 times with a heavy weap-
on. She was apparently attacked
from behind.
Sheriff Bryan Clemmons indi-
cated his office had uncovered
more evidence but declined to
elaborate except to say it was
“very pertinent” and all the facts
would be presented to the grand
jury.
Miss McMillan carried Mickey’s
picture in her wallet and named
him one of the heirs to her estate,
valued at about $3,000 plus some
minor real estate holdings.
Burton Barbara Rush
Jurors Study
Death Of Prof
5' ■ - -
medical; Mrs. Lillie Green, Fort
Worth, medical: R. E. Caraway, for a loan to refinance your car or
Route 4, Decatur, medical; Mrs. to consolidate your present bill*.
Will Trede ell or part of 40 lots on ilk* .
Dallas for Denton home, $25,000 to *35,- I- . . . . ......
ooo blocket. Call DU2-8309, ! Her husband, who died last year,
LIKE new, )959 Plymouth v-8. Station wa-
pen. Radio, heater, standard shift. Sac-
vifice, $60 down, food terms, DU2-6905.
WANT Ride t Oak Cliff, Dallas vicinity 301
DALLAS (AP)—Aviation Elec-
tronics Mate Walter Kotlowski,
22, of Ripon, Wis., died Sunday
when he walked into the whirling
blades of a propeller of a four-
engine plane.
The Navy man was attempting
to remove the wheel cocks from
a Federal Aviation Agency plane,
ready for take off. He apparently
misjudged his distance.
Bell Eddings, 517 E. Prairie; Mr*, being held in the death of his
_ ’ colleague, Dr. Margaret Rosa-
Walker Funeral Held
At Little Elm Church
LITTLE ELM (Staff» — Funer-
al services for Garrett B. Walk-
er, a retired farmer, were held
Sunday in the Little Elm Church,
of Christ.
James A. Cathey, minister of
the Chapel Hill Church of Christ
in Dallas, officiated. He was as-
sisted by David G. McNeal of Pi-
lot Point. Burial was in Little
Elm Cemetery under direction
of Jack Schmitz & Sone Funeral
Home.
Mr. Walker died Friday in Flow
Memorial Hospital.
Pallbearers were Robert Nich-
olson, Claude Howard, J. M. Har-
ris. Austin Houk, Gordon Hutson
and Ben Witt.
search would reach a climax “in A .
The navy proclaimed Adviser Picked
HE’S READY FOR
GOLFING WEATHER
Even though it’* the middle
of winter there is at least one
person in Denton who is still
interested in golf.
Someone broke into the
TWU golf clubhouse Sunday
night and made off with almost
$300 worth of golf equipment.
Ed Walker, manager of the
golf course, discovered the
burglary when he opened the
shop about 7:30 a.m. today.
Items listed as missing in-
clude six dozen golf balls, a
set of $155 irons, a $5 shirt
and several golfing gloves
worth $4 each.
The U. S. Department of Com-
merce today named John D., Kay
of Washington, D. C. as its region-
al coordinator for emergency plan-
ning at the Region 5 headquarters,
Office of Civil and Defense Mobi-
lization in Denton.
Five other men received similar
appointments to other OCDM re-
gions.
The six men will serve as prin-
cipal advisers to the regional di-
rectors of OCDM on all matters re-
lating to the field functions of the
Departmennt of Commerce and
its constituent bureaus and offices.
They will also serve as depart-
mental representatives on regional
civil defense and defense mobili-
zation boards; provide liaison be-
tween the department and region-
al directors, and with an advi-
sory group drawn from depart-
mental units within each region
will prepare for carrying on de-
partmental functions in the event
of a national emergency.
Kay is a former Air Force colo-
nel and wiH be one of the main
officials at the Region 5 federal
underground center when that fa-
cility is completed at Denton
sometime next year.
He was a special projects offi-
cer at Air Force headquarters in
the Pentagon in 1954, and at the
time of his present appointment,
was assistant to the director of the
U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey.
The coordinator and his wife
have now moved to 819 Green-
wood in Denton.
Kay is not new to Texas. He
took his basic flying training in
San Antonio and then worked for
three years as a photogrphic pi-
lot with Tobin Aerial Surveys of
San Antonio and Houston.
Prior to World War II, Kay was
a cartographic engineer and flight
check observer for the Coast and
Geodetic Survey and logged more
than 10,000 hours of flight time in
making trips back and forth across
the country to check U.S. aero-
nautical maps and charts.
In 1940, Kay was assigned to
the photographic mapping section
of the Air Force and visited virtu-
ally every continent on the globe
while laying out world routes for
the Air Transport Command.
He was later given charge of the
Air Force’s Photographic Division
and worked in the Pentagon for
two years. During the Korean War,
Kay was director of the inteli-
gence and reconnaissance divi-
sion of the Air Research and De-
velopment Command, Baltimore.
Theott tnil
bm.S
pastor of the First Methodist
Church, will officiate. Inter-
ment will be in Roselawn
Memorial Park.
Mrs. Adkisson was born in Law-
rence, Kaufman County, and came
to Denton from Fort Worth in 1903.
She had been a member of the
Roman's Shakespeare Club for
more than 50 years and had served
as its president in 1921-23.
Four years ago Mrs. Adkisson
was named by the Denton Junior
Chamber of Commerce as one of
Denton’s outstanding women.
She had been an active member
of the First Methodist Church since
1904 and was a lifetime member of
the Woman's Society of Christian
Service and had served as its first
president. She was a member of
the Susanna Wesley Class at the
church.
Mrs. Adkisson was a member
of two departments of the Shake-
speare Club, Literature and Elec-
tive Study, and was active in help-
ing found the Denton City-County
Library in 1936.
She was chairman of the Denton
Chapter of the American Red Cross
for nine years and served as pres-
ident of the City Federation of
Women's Clubs. She was an asso-
ciate member of the United Daugh-
ters of the Confederacy and a
member of the County Federation
of Women's Clubs, and had been
active in TWU faculty wives ac-
tivities.
One of Mrs. Adkisson's hobbies
was clipping newspaper items
about people and mailing the clip,
ping to the person mentioned with
a note of congratulation or en-
JomMEt-YOU
■ By Cecil & Helen Minshew un
DVEM THIATU
— Starts 6:45 a 9:55 -
BATON ROUGE, La. (AP—A
grand jury today will study new
evidence involving a college dean
charged with clubbing an attrac-
tive woman professor to death on
a lonely rural lane.
Dr. George H. Mickey, 50-year-
old dean of the Louisiana State
University Graduate School, is
Van , I
■ 1- S :
A
—g~43 !
Funeral Today
For Mrs. Wells
Funeral services for Mrs. J. C.
Wells, 87, of 407 W. Hickory were
to be held today at 2 p.m. in the
Howe Methodist Church at Howe.
The Rev. Martin Thomas, pas-
tor of Denton's First Presbyterian
Church, was to officiate. Inter-
ment was to be in Hall Cemetery
at Howe under direction of Schmitz
-Floyd-Hamlett Funeral Home.
Mrs Weihs died tn her home
Saturday following a heart attack.
She had been a resident of Denton
for two months and was a mem-
ber of the Howe Presbyterian
Church.
Claude Sullivan
Dies At Sanger
SANGER (Staff) — Claude Sul-
livan, a lifetime resident of San-
ger, died at 3:05 a.m. today. He
was 75.
Funeral services will be held at
2:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Sullivan-
Floyd-Hamlett Funeral Chapel in
Sanger. The Rev. E. G. Krueger,
pastor of the First Baptist Church
in Tioga, will officiate, assisted
by the Rev. Bob May. pastor of
the First Methodist Church in San-
ger. Burial will be in the Sanger
Cemetery.
Mr. Sullivan was born in San-
ger Nov. 24, 1884. He was a mem-
ber of the First Methodist Church
of Sanger. He was a retired farm-
er.
Survivors include his wife, a
Son, Claudie B. Sullivan of Dallas:
three daughters, Mrs. Frank K.
Amvx of Sanger, Mrs Joe Vaughn
of Denton, and Mrs Melton New-
ton of San Benko: a sister, Mrs.
Allie Caves of Oklahoma: three
brothers, Dick Sullivan, Jim Sul-
livan, both of Sanger, and Her-
bert Sullivan of Pilot Point; and
10 grandchildren and five great
grandchildren.
. Ke
18
Rndon 1
Argentina’s
Navy Still
Seeking Sub
BUENOS AIRES <AP)-Argen-
tina’s frustrated navy today
pressed its attack on a mystery
submarine with new deep - level
U.S. depth charges, but the quarry
evaded capture.
As the hunt went into its 17th
day, naval officials said their
ships were being harrassed by a
second sub which had slipped
through the guarded entrance to
GoMo Nuevo in an effort to divert
the chase from its apparently
damaged comrade.
C. E. Ellison
Of Aubrey Dies
AUBREY (Staff) — Retired Au-
brey farmer Charlie E. Ellison
died at 9:15 a.m. today in Den-
ton's Flow Memorial Hospital. He
was 56.
Funeral plans had not been
completed this morning at Den-
ton’s Jack Schmitz & Sons Funer-
al Home.
Mr. Ellison was born in Georgia
Aug. 22. 1903. He was a member
of the Baptist Church.
Survivors include three sons,
Charlie W. Ellison, Herbert E. El-
lison and Carl E. Ellison, all of
Denton; four daughters, Mrs. Ber-
nita Swan, Mrs. Rita Hall, Mrs.
Leta Wilson and Miss Evelyn El-
lison, all of Denton; one sister,
Mrs. Lillie Jackson of Orange
Cove, Calif.; four brothers. oy
Ellison of Celina, Marshall Elli-
son of Fort Worth, Garland Elli-
son and Donald Ellison, both of
Aubrey.
“operation sinking” was in effect
after it received the new powerful
depth charges Saturday from the
United States. The U.S. charges
can reach down to 656 feet. Bombs
previously used by the searching
ships were effective down to only
262 feet.
The second sub confused the
chase considerably. Red-faced
officials said it would slip up
close to a warship, then pull away
as the vessel tried to pinpoint it
with underwater sound tracking
equipment.
The navy believes the new sub-
marine is trying to divert attention
from the damage craft which may
be undergoing repairs in hopes of
making a break out of the 40-by-20-
mile gulf on Argentina’s south
coast.
Naval officials believe the first
submarine's propellers have been
damaged by depth charges, but it
is still able to descend quickly to
escape depth bombs.
Several pilots said they have
picked up messages between the
submarines and other friendly
craft waiting somewhere out in
the Atlantic. Some messages were
in code, they said, the rest in
poor Yankee slang.
The United States said it has no
information of any of Its subs in
the area. The British deny the
subs are theirs.
HURRY! LAST 2 DAYS!
AThey’n
40 Live It Up
Tonight!
In Hospital
A Gainesville youth found beat-
en on a roadside Friday night was
still in serious condition in a
Gainesville hospital today, although
hospital officials said he “is doing
a little better.
NTSC football player Frank Rice
has been charged with assault
with intent to murder in connec-
tion with the beating. Rice, 19, is
free on a 12,500 bond.
The beaten youth, Larry Gene
Mauldin, 18, was found by a pass-
ing motorist about 9:30 p.m. Fri-
day. He had a broken leg and se-
veral head injuries doctors said
were caused by a blunt instru-
ment.
Rice, who made a statement to
Denton County Sheriff Wylie
Barnes before being released, said
the fight started in Oklahoma and
was continued on the Texas side
of the Texas-Oklahoma border.
Gainesville authorities said Maul-
din was beaten with a tire tool.
Rice told Barnes he (Rice) used
a similar object in the fight.
Cooke County Atty. L. V. Henry
said he will present the case to a
grand jury within the next three
weeks.
Henry said he has been unable
to fully question Mauldin because
of his injuries, but said Mauldin
identified Rice as the other par-
ticipant in the fight.
Rice, who lives in Breckenridge,
was a starting fullback for the
NTSC freshman football team last
season.
Crawfwd. Ala* d* ironing.__
TlRIUEi H*w, llm* 0*1 Dining tuiti with ,
Buffet, $150, Hollywood bed frame, $5;
Coffee Table, $5. DU2-4060, 1216 Ector. Former Tentnm:
FORSALETMapl Dinette tabie and chairs; former Ventonit
_.258
Ba. 4 J
"-22-53
Haynie Funeral
Set In Roanoke
ROANOKE (Staff) — Funeral
services for Clent W. Haynie,
67, of Roanoke, will be held at
2:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Roanoke
Methodist Church, Burial will be
in Elizabethtown Cemetery near
Roanoke under direction of the
Jack Schmitz & Sons Funeral
Home of Denton.
Mr. Haynie died at 11:15 p.m.
Sunday in the Veteran's Hospital
in McKinney. He was a veteran
of World War I.
Born in Carthage, Tenn. June
20, 1892, Mr. Haynie had been a
Denton County resident for 31
years. He married Miss Mamie
Holloway in Fort Worth Oct.
31, 1928. He was a member of the
Roanoke Methodist Church.
Survivors include his wife; one
son, Bobby R. Haynie of Fort
Worth: one daughter, Mrs. Joe E.
Gay of Fort Worth; four sisters,
Mrs. Clyde Benson of Keller, Mrs.
Harper Sinclair of Denton, Mrs.
Emory Spalding of Firsco and
Mrs. Nettie Cook of Nocona; and
four grandchildren.
e Resident
A Bl I ICT Your Budget for the Next Few Weeks
A MU3I Must Include Money for Some or All of
the Following Big Coming Pictures
ELIZABETH TAYLOR IN SUDDENLY LAST SUMMER
DOROTHY MALONE IN THE LAST VOYAGE
PORGY & BESS 6 THE BIG FISHERMAN
4®"”.
Features 7:00 A 9:00
E a new mon ne
2 suspensu AD
A axciremena!
Jefferson, work 9 to 5130, 002-6232
eft** 7 pro.
LOW*’ $<nell. brewnand whte Terrier dog,
wearing collar, answers to Sandy. 1108
Coit, 002^723.
Lit m* plow your garden. A. $7Reid, Route
2, 0*moo, »U2 97*2___
eHUSSMANN, open top frozen food
diapley case. See *t 221 N. Locust.
Will Give motherly cere to on* family’s
children, enytime, reasonable. 505 N.
Mrs. Wiebusch lived in Denton
from 1951-59 before moving to
Waco.
Survivor* include one son.
George A. Wiebusch of Beaumont;
two daughters, Mrs. Edna W.
Woodside and Mr*. Earl Bryan
both of Waco; and tour grandchil- I
dren. I
DUB 6616—+
Emmett Jay of 1209 W. Mulber-
ry celebrated his seventh birth-
day with a party Saturday. Six-
teen of his friends and classmates
from Sam Houston school attend-
ed.
The Denton Business and Pro-
fessional Women's Club will meet
Tuesday at 6:15 p.m. at the Pat
Boone Country Inn. The program
will be given by the health and
safety committee, Mrs. J. V.
Stark, chairman.
Mrs. Venson Hall, 126 Peach,
will review "The First Easter” by
the late Peter Marshall, edited by
his widow, Mrs. Catherine Mar-
shall, for the Centennial Book
Club of Gainesville tonight. The
club's meetings is slated for 7:30
p.m. in the Gainesville Junior
High School Auditorium.
The Argyle School Parent-Teach-
ers Assn, will hold its regular
monthly meeting Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. in the school gymnasium.
Members of the Great Books
Discussion Club will meet Thurs-
day at 7:30 p.m. in the Denton
City-County Library. Meno by
Plato will be discussed, with Mrs.
Robert Ottman and Dr. Geraldine
Shirley as discussion leaders.
Tickets now are on sale for the
Texas Exes Banquet to be held
March 2 at 6:30 p.m. at NT’s Mar-
quis Hall. Rep. Alonzo Jamison
ot Denton will speak. Tickets are
$1.75 and can be purchased from
Jerry Fowler.
Bennett Rice of 1205 Linden left
today for a business trip to Cal-
gary. Canada. He will return by
private plane Saturday. Rice is a
member of the Petroleum Engin-
eening department of the Republic
National Bank in Dallas.
The Denton Men’s Garden Club
will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. G.
Emery Taylor, 723 Ector. Speaker
will be agricultural agent Al Pet-
ty who will discuss seeds. T. C.
Bowman is program chairman.
The Women’s Society of Chris-
tian Service of Denton’s First Me-
thodist Church will meet at 9
a.m. Tuesday instead of 9:30 a.m.
The time of the meeting was
moved up so members may at-
tend the funeral of Mrs. C. N. Ad-
kisson at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday.
Mrs. Adkisson. who died Sunday,
had been a member of the or-
ganization for 50 years.
Denton’s Ora E. Davis Rebekah
Lodge No. 18 will end its no-bake
sale today. Mrs. Virgil Adams,
921 Sierra, is accepting donations.
A benefit style show and bridge
night will be presented by the Col-
legiate Shoppe Tuesday at 7:30
n.m. in the Woman’s Club Build-
ing in City Park. Some 20 women
from the Immaculate Conception
Catholic Church’s Altar Society
will model dreseses. Tickets are
$1, and will be available at the
door.
HOSPITAL NOTES
Flow Memorial Hospital
Admitted: Mrs. B. B. Collier,
900 Sierra, medical; Art Seely,
1102 Greenwood, medical; Mre.
Una Gibbins, 410 Ponder St., medi-
cal: Mrs. W. J. Sullivan Jr., Pilot
Point, medical; Baby Jackie Lynn
Adams, 2221 Stella, medical: Mrs.
Lucille Taylor, 120514 Johnson,
surgical; Jack Price, Ponder,
% W A »
7 A42e
A A
Ls.
jerry Wald dmm*bu
INLOVEG
NIDWAR,
Robert Wagmner I
Dana Wynter
Jeffvey Hunter
Wope Lango
hand lawnmower. 1505 Highland, DU2-
>930-
Gt. Steam Iron, regular 11795, special
thia wrofc. $11.89. UM, >07 W. Hickory.
hoWllTi, practically naw, $55, 21" TV,
$50, ladar chest, $20 Call DU2-7443.
2-6EDROOMS Furnished apart ment, water
' paid, $5$ month. 1510 MeCormick, DU2-
>4M ar OUMM*. __________
MtthOftM Uniurnithad house, floor fur.
naca, antenne, automatic washer connec-
W>m, lie Aroroa f. 002-4869 _________
704 REMT Bedroom unfurnished house,
near North Texas. Immediate possession
W. F. "Par” Hamilton, Realtor
002-2*00 104 $. Locust _ DU2-7872
NKt Me6ttM vnfurnlthad houw and ga-
laga *45. 1607 *arnar0 Street, 002 2202.
WEwaGedroem,briek trim. Paneled kitch-
an. tlh beth, lots of closets Low down
parmant, 1408 Migw pit*. DU2 601a •>
027521.
i
wards, Lewisville; Mrs. David
Peresz and baby, Route 1, Justin;
Mrs. L. L. Gotcher, Ponder; Baby
Kimberly Bullard, Route 2; E. C.
Gilmore Jr., 511 Malone Miss Mary
Elizabeth Hale, 1099 N. Locust;
Baby David Ashley Wolfe, 415%
Jagoe; Mrs. H. D. Byrd and baby,
1813 W. Chestnut; Mrs. George
Avery, 2109 Robinwood; Mrs. J.
V. Stark, Route 2; Baby Donna
Kay Price, Route 1, Ponder; L.
A. Whiteside, 1605 Egan; Mrs.
Helen Miramontez, 61B Barber;
Mrs. L. D. Wheeler and baby, 1104
Sierra; Mrs. H. L. Harris, Route 2.
Elm Street Hospital A Clinic
Dismissed: Mrs. Lester Yar-
brough, 808 Pacific; M. H. Kellam,
Decatur.
BIRTHS
A boy to Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Parrack, 610 W. Hickory, at 7:39
a.m. Feb. 13 in Flow Memorial
Hospital.
A girl to Mr. and Mrs. B. B.
Collier, 900 Sierra, at 10:57 a.m.
Feb. 13 in Flow Memorial Hos-
pital.
A boy to Mr. and Mrs. T. R.
Clark of 815 Panhandle, at 11:35
a.m. Feb. 13 in Flow Memorial
Hospital.
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Kirkland, Tom. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 167, Ed. 1 Monday, February 15, 1960, newspaper, February 15, 1960; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1468247/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.