Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 174, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 23, 1960 Page: 2 of 10
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Monday. February 22, IMO
PAGE TW
Town Topics
Fears Poison Gases
GEORGIA INDUSTRIALIST
Fay
with
a new name
MARKETS
and Endress, another consulting
sr
to
cow 116.1
MP®64 HkAn*
•*
In Fort Worth
was
cost
ither-
.m.
city
"Invettigatihg
Cleve Sihgleton
and Rid
"-e
E’RENT
’1
nnm
each
» *•
6:30p.m., 2-3394.
--1
1526 N. Locust
QU2-9730
8
V
Fred G. Hout Mrs. Maie kable
77
52
H-mppwreree,
JACK'S PLACE
I
3113 Menafiele Hw}
Ft. Worth, Tex.
Ilf South Eli " "
"Rlal PV2.962!
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9
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a
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/
di
' He
is
-3
Drug Firms Deny
Undue Profiteering
Ingrid’s Eldest
Girl Weds Scion
• • t “ * h •
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I
the cost of developing nd mr-
kting a new medicine— or sellins
HURB*
LASTHTE
“7 TWEyjS*
I those
itel owner
PHONE DU24551
Briefs-Births-Hospital Motes
12
0
"ORETTMNLSE
YVOMEUME
Mrs. Lillie Green
Qf anger Is SM
GASSAWA¥ PHARMACY
We Giv S&H Orton Stomps
-A MAJOR WORK OF
ART-FROM INDIA-
*- DIRECTED BY '
$AtYAjit RAY-
A TEN FILMS
PRESENTATION
if ■
" -ALSO STARTS 8:25-
CKWEBB
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Gurriulum Meeting
Scheduled Wednesday
Principals of five area high,
sghoolssengaged in a pilot study of
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mdmeb—e
STUDEMITART
THIATRE
-NOW THR THURSDAY-
Performances At
5:00; 7:00; & 9:00
"FATHER
PANCHALE
1
1
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Oklahoma Educators
See Denton Program
Three public school superinten-
dents from Grant County, Okla.,
visited Denton Monday to study
th’cunty’s cooperative ‘counseling
Becausogfthe
Very Intimat
Ffi2n,
WiuBs soldr
• Walkers
vv FPt‘
CHICKEN FRIED
STEAK
machines pad most of the enter-
tainment machines in the pity.
Cities are empowered by Texas
statute to impose the oacupational
taxes. But the last Texas Legisla-
tuje exempted cigarette machines
from the tax, as well as some
other coin machines.
Lewisville.
Elm Street Hospital A Clinic
Admitted: Mrs. J. C. Holder,
Sanger, surgical; M. A. Niemier,
Dallas, surgical; Mrs. Pearl Hay-
nes, 811 Alien. medical.
BIRTHS
A girl to Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Kerby, Box 502, Sanger, Feb. 22
at 5:22 a.m. at Flow Memorial
Hospital.
A boy to Mr. and Mrs. W. A.
Sewalt, 1015 Hillcrest. Feb. 22 at
9:59 p.m. at Flow Memirial Hos-
pital.
A boy, John Warren Thomas IV,
to Mr. and Mrs, John Thomas.
Oil Edgewood, Feb. 22 at 19:1i
p.m. at Flow Memorial Hospital.
BARROW INURANSE AGENeY
EVOUR HARTFORD AGENT”
ing eastward -to -Elko, which is
500 mite from ‘San Francisco' and
200 mjley frw Salt akeSity
where Jenny’s father, Dr. Peter
Aron Lindstrom, practiees neuro-
surgery? ” '
Justice of pie Peace Ted Luns-
ford performed the ceremony. The
•ST
9
Ji
they frightened Adolf Hitler.
The new hallucination-producing
drugs take effect whether swal-
lowed, brath or injected. They
can be prepared in aerosols which
will penetrate closed rooms in the
same way as fuel gas.
They caused visions, depression,
senseless elation or apathy lasting
12 to 24 hours, Dr. Coggins re-
am 'A ■ ■ ; f a ■ ।
fined $150
‛n W
ir“Sti ‘
millionaire Georgia planter-indus-
trialjst.'In his application for mar-
riag license he listed 9 1958 di-
vorce ip Juarez,
Coming Feb. 26-27
Jimmy Reed & Al Smith
and His Orhesta
VIEKETS NOW QNSAU
$4.00 couple = Call JE5-9305
BAPTISMAL SBRFIEE
There was to be private bap-
The groom’s mother, Mrs. Ful-
ler CaMaway Jr. wife of a ba
»88a
delighted.
The goom is a egrgi Teh
and Harvard gradpate and the
nepbew of Cao J. Callaway,
and the Soviet Union has 30 mil-
lion men trained and equipped for
defense against chemical and bio-
logical attack. Dr. Coggin? said.
McKINNEY (Special) — Mrs.
GrAT Mdton’ IK,' wife df a
prominent Collin County farmer,
was pronounced dead on arrival
at ComihMerhoril Hospital’her
shortly after noon Monday follow-
ing a two - car collision.
WASHINGTON (API — Organ-
ized drug manufacturers denied
vigorously today their industry is
piotiteering against the sick. 9r
dealing in monopolistic practices.
He said drug Rrises rose three
per cent in the last 10 years while
• average wholesale pHce of In
—lustrial products "went dp 22 per
cent. * ..... * *
policemen
fafd Hof-
SANGER (Special)—Mrs. Lillie
Gren,"a lofipme"rsident"of
igr, died "tsmernirgFFlow
eHtarftospital MDemtor. ••
-Fera Iplahswin Be’ announced
by Sumtarmyd Hamlet Funeral
school program.
The group included George Mc-
Cufehan of Pond Creek, J. D.
G4dings f Wahita, and M. M.
Marin of Medford, all towns in
Grant County. Okla., ‘Khich is lo-
oted near "me Kansas state line.
They' visited Denton County on
cjl fonfis one inch to 1,000 feet.
Other phtographs, * showing
much more detail, are enlarged to
REPRIEVE
(Continued From Page 1)
held their annual banquet at the
Southern. But this year it’s sched-
uled at NTSC’s Marquis Hall. This
is pelieved to be the first outside
group accepted for dinner at NTSC
sic the Southern was remodeled
and enlarged several years ago.
DOUBLED
Dog Tax
Goes Up;
Now 50c
Denton's City Council thinks dogs
—or rather the dog owners — have
been getting off too lightly when
it comes time to pay a license fee.
So the council today passed ah
ordinance raising the dog license
fee from 25 cents a year to 50
cents a year.
The dog licenses are issued by
the city secretary? To'get one, a
dog owner must bring a certificate
signed by a veterinarian praying
the dog has been vaccinated
against rabies.
If the dog is impounded it, will
cost the owner $2 plus 50 cents a
day to free him.
But if the dog a license the
city will notify the owner that the
dog has been impounded. If there
is no license, there will be no way
ol knowing who owns the dog.
‘The council reduced the annual
license fees for bowling aleys
from $30 4 year to $15 a year.
City Manager Homer Bly told
councilmen the city offers bowling
alleys no more services thap it
does movie houses. And the movie
houses pay only $15 a year. "
City Ally. Lee Holt said the
original $50 a year licnse w
passed many years ago when how-
ing alleys were considered ni-
thing of a detriment to a com-
munity.
Another ordinance will impose
an annual occupation tax of $2.50
a year on each coin operated ma-
chine in the city requiring five
cents or more for operation. This
Jan Franiso
College classes
! StreeUwar
iday at 1:10 p
GEI YOURS FROM ANY KIWANIAN
TOP PROFESSIONAL ACTS
"Guinness adds
art to uproar— ana
leaves viewers
laughter-happy, with
a howling d
disrespect for E
the respectable
—Uff Magatina 402
At least one large convention or-
ignally scheduled for Denton
waj moyed to Fort Worth after the
second announcement that the ho-
tej would be closed today.
The Southern originally was to
be sloed i December, but a last-
minute request by TWU President
in the $20,000 overall Master Plan
bsIt was pA^red by Cakwen
“I Caldwefl.'constdflnfe engmeers,
connection with Freese, Nichols
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SAN FANCISCO (AP) — In-
grid Bergman's apple-cheeked eld-
est daughter * commuted across
19 her ‘Mills
Master Plan .
Maps Arrive
Denton got the first honest - to-
goodnss fangibfe part of ift Ms-
Sam Belz, 37,
Dies in Sanger
SANGER (Special)—Sam Belz, a
resident of Sanger for 13 years,
died Monday at the Chapman Clin-
ic in Sanger following a brief ill-
ness. "He would have been 38 on
Thursday. --- - -- “
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at 2 p.m. in the Seventh
Day Adventist Church in the Val-
ley View-Sanger vicinity.
The Rev. Robert Rider, pastor,
assisted by the Rev. Ronnie Mal-
low of the Sanger First Baptist
Church, will officiate.
Burial will be in Bolivar Ceme-
tery under direction of Sullivan-
Floyd - Hamlett Funeral Home of
Sanger.
Mr. Belz was born Feb. 25, 1922,
in Fort Worth. He was the son
of Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Belz of
Sanger. He married the former
Miss Beulah Denison in Dallas
Jan. 31, 1947.
He is survived by his parents;
his wife, a daughter, Sanda Jill
Belz, all of Sanger; three sis-
ters, Mrs. Martha Blunt and Mrs.
Esta Williams, both of California,
and Mrs. Suzie Peonitz of Fort
Worth.
Also surviving are five brothers,
Ivine Belz and Bennie Belz, both
of Sanger; Arbit Belz of Dallas,
Charlie Belz of California and Hen-
ry Zelz of Fort Worth.
Mr. Belz was a member of the
Seventh Day Adventist Church. He
was employed by the Ben Harvey
Seed Co. of Sanger.
cafd
____ _________ _____,
th-recommendatoh of Oklahoma
yny‛ jai Mndy afterh
pfeaded guilty m*Cdrint^ Court W
a charge f diving whil ihtox-
Mrs. Beulah Stover. a former
resident of Dentop, died Monday
afternbon in a Fort Worth Hospit-
al. Funeral servies are to behed
l
F
THE DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLE
• *
near Mrs. Melton’s home Mrs.
Melton lived in the Foncine Com-
munit.' z
Mrs. Melton’s car and a gravel
truck driven by C. W.'Copeland of
McKinney collided. Copeland was
uninjured. " ‛1
Mrs. Melton was born March 10.
1893, at Rockwll, and Uis' ’mar-
ried in 1915 to Grady A. Melton.
She was a member of the Baptist
Church, the Woodmen Circle and
th Walnut Grove Home Demon-
stration Club.
funeral services will be held
Wednesday at 11 a.m. in the Tur-
rentine - Jackson Funeral Home
Chapel in McKinney. Burial will
be in the Rowlett Cemetery.
Survivors include her husband; a
daaghtet, Mrs: Wayne Haralson of
Beaumont; three sons, Killis "Mel-
ton of McKinney, Grady Melton
Jr.- of Longview and Whitt Melton
of Heuston; three sisters, Mrs. Al-
ma Quisenberry of McKinney,
M<s. Mattie McJunkin of Pampa
and Vrs. Clyde Cummings of Lub-
bock;' and six grandchildren.
DU2-2362 -
TMREE ROOM apartment, everytiymhg fur.
w uuw
fw BEDROOM ome, pavement boy eguity,
take up Dan, t. L "MENabb; 'phone
owetss________________
$300 DOWN - ’
%
xy Moneet. Phone Sin 0U2608, nigtn
•Q 7521 * RiOu’zo.
pimmmgSeslop?WMM.CSoper of
NTSC aniT'Dt*.''Mary Le Rabke of
TWIT Sme cbordimting’the • pil
study m this area." •
---------Ito , aDn---m 1......... - .........- ■
25- J-W L UR...
• •. of Dr. I has keen gemad prsidspt gf
the Danton County unit o the Apesisgp Cager $9-
cjoty for 1940
which we are expected to protest
the public against weapgps which
are unknwn to us, cannot be al-
lowed to optinue," Rr.Cggis
said’. "We ms"ecom informed
ofthe facts’" * ’ •* -
. Dr." Coggins said gases caused
1.3 million-* &asltis"In Voftd
Wr f andbecams deadly that
STARTS
FMOW
Dr. Austin Smith of Washington,
president of the Pharmeutica
Manufacturers Assn., contended
instead that drugs and medicines
are "the real bargain" for the
buying public today. His testimony
was prepared for renewed hear-
ings by the Senate Antitrust and
Monopoly subcommittee.
At earlier hearings, the subcom-
mittee has heard testimony that
some big" mhufaretirefs hve "re-
ceived mafkups Ms' big as several
thousand per cent on medcmes
sold'to patients for up to"so cents
4 dose. " "" " "
MAD:42/:DRIV-IN
K9«W FEAFRE
•eposzwpysnpee
-swvinidi
Features 7:00-9:20
AMES SIDYART
LEE RE MICK
BEN GAZZARA
ARTHUR O'COWELL
EVE ARDEN
KATHRYN GRANT
Meredith of Deaton, Mrs. Roy
Tillman of Midland and Mrs. E.
M. Smith of Dallas: six gjandchil-
|reii; andotie gea grandchild.
Ms. Stover was a «pemhes Q qpat Syoqmore
the First Baptis Church of Cake fin Avenue nda;
Worth. ‛ "Invetigatifig ।
ter Plan Monday. - • *• • ••
It's a huge aerial map of Denton'
and surrounding oyntsysde that
Covers most of ope wal[Ithe Den-
ton “City Council chamber. '
The ‛map"shows *114 square
Chemical War Expert Collin Woman
- Dies in trash
State Uhiverstty tdobtain ideas for
setting up a' cooperative counsel-
ing program in* their own county:
Ther 'visit included a study of
the adininsaffvrprah bf the Den-
ton program ‘the’outy supertn-
tedent* olfide.^YM^lfoup' also
Smith contended that singling
out th price dT one out of many
products of f fim" could mislead
yigqawsly dtading mediiype Ex-Resident Dies
prices ns reasnable, he said:
‘.‘Americans would be paying a
billion dollars a year more for
drugs if the price of medicine in
the past few years had gon up
only as much as th total cost of
living."
1
Ek
»■■ ■■
■ I A A MDI IC T0DAY thru wed
1 I VMIHrUw Bargain Ptices 25-50-70c
J."Newtn Razof of Houston Said
he "Wotd cbnfime to operate the
hotel’as lohg"as Dr. ‘Guinn ahd
t Ire Texas Woman’s University
Foundation‘shows an interest in
its ‘operatfom" * •
The TWU Foundation and Ray-
zofhave been negotiating on a
plan to continue the operation of
the hotel to benefit the foundation,
which aids the university in pro-
grams Wt supported by the sate.
Dr. Guinn could not be reached
for comment today.
Prior to the TWU negotiations,
Rayzor had leased the hotel to the
First Baptist Church of Denton
with the stipulation that it be op-
erated as a home for the aged.
HoWver, when’ the' church failed
to find an agency to operate the
proposed home, officials 'cancelled
the lease.
Sinc then, the hotel parking lot
across Sycamore from the Locust
Street hotel has been lesed to
Chester Morris Chevrolet Co.,
which now has its used car lot
there.
-------------------
a proposed general safety educa-
tion curriculum will meet at
NTSC Wednesday.
Their, kork is part of a general
cyrriclum reyisjon tudy being,
cpdue by fhe Txs Education j
Ageng. - I
"Meeting frpm ? a.m. to 5 p.m.,
in tne NTSC Physics - Malhema-
tics Building will ke Jgbn Guyer,
Panon; barles Whites-
and Faxm R. Curtis, Wether-
frd.*2"* • "
ridgpor Man
free On Bond
"2--,
assault wia Wil t miirdej- in
connection with the shotgu shoot-
ing of his son-in-law, herf updax:
is free on $759 bond.
MeQuinp allegedly fired at Rox
Boatwright r., 41. alspf Fridge-
port. Sqpday between 5 a nJ 5 p.m:
in front of the moel-trailer court
where they liye. Wise County
lawmen Agave no reason for the
shooting.
‘Boatwright. in Bridgeport Hos-
pital. is M good condition today.
He- receivd several pellets from
the 3410-shotgun allegedly fired by
McQuinnt Boatwright is himself
awaitirg transportation to the pen-
itenttary alter being convieted of
assault with intent to murder in
rtMh^ction’Wifo a guhfightin Fort
Wort atly last- year
"A’Frt Worth er-convict was
slain and his daughter was wound-
Usa Our Theatre
Bonus Coupons.. I H's a
Discount for Everyohe"
... Not just 0
Favored Group
ton said the 1956 Ford driven by
Mfs.4vrtymn- nWW pued
onto the wrong side of'Sycamore
Sretr-it utrndr eadon ne 1905
Ohevrolet driven by--Mrs. Opal
bonds of Acor "Egam Neither ve-
hicle was speeding -
MTs. Meftymen-received emer-
gency treathieni at Elowr Memor-
ial Hospital -dnd' war released.
DRIYE-I3 TMEAURJ
NOWYRtU WEDNESDAY
—SARIS 7:00 & 1Q:00-
H Ef;ho1AGy 1
ROS 'Ail, ffef lie real estate note, $4115 ! an established one
at • peneent, ■ wil dincoum. Ceu efter * *7*7* 77"
MaN
"m2
7 20* "
a 632
gheJ09.
TECHNICOLOR From the novel by Joyce Cary)-
Etimnn9 9 Itous arui " V/ “
Ta T220agqe"umweN
today - Mrs. Suller F. Callaway
The former Jenny Ann Lind-
strom, 21, eloped Sunday with
Callwa, scion’of a Georgia in-
dustrial family. Callaway, 28, is
business manager of the Watkins
Johnson Electronics Ch. in subur-
ban Palo Alto, ht lives in s
Franciscd. ‘ " " "T "B"
""NO SURPRISE
Jenny Ann’s faculty and student
friends’ expressed no "great sr-
prise when news of the wedding
at Elko, Nev., reached them Mon-
gay.
"They met her two years 989
when Jenny Ann ransfersed from
hUniverity“fclord," bM
aMills spokesman.’ "She’s a good
student and a lovely, Iovely girl.”
He told the subcommittee that
the industry is ing "" gd "fb
uhder the free enterprise’ system.
Smith" said he spake" for 188
manufacturers of prescription
199 LAT TO FHSSIF!
4bOoRSEOAN,beviffe‛cafifac,-yedlowqrid
white. Late 1959 model, mileage 600
mitet, ell exftas, Contect ownef, 66-3584,
vute Wow, keaas.
1953 PLYMOUTH, 4-door sedap, idgal segond
CM, priced for quick sale. 910 Panhafidie,
OUR-UOk
LOST Seturday, 21 jewel yellow gold ham-
ilto veeksf wateh and them wi dime
ettached. Reward. 0U2-4077.
S4*S 12 aa Mucoduuaey attar .TV setwice
-S’n.TWfe"e e9 P,
K ' • 7
. Far from aay monpoly; Smith
said, the United States leads the
wovid in the discover and devel-
' opment of new medical prepara-
- because of intense competi-
tion among the 1,300 firms which
manufacture prescription drugs in
the Uniteg States.
Smith gave a step by step ac.
court ^f Wht"h"aige into
I
larold O. Crlton, education
lnt Vf the"AmericanAuto-
..ioWl^*<A.s^1.,”WaslTffigtfl?i, D.C.,
wi Arye'S s ctFatt in ‛tH
wil affect many of the cld drink WArtare Service.
The potentialities of shemisal
and biolggica! warfare remain
widely unknown, even among phy-
sicians who would*bi failed upon
to fight the deadly-' effects. "Dr.
Coggins said.
MThis dangerous situation in
Mrs. tgver. is survived by her
mother, Mr: .W; H. Lynn of Den-
ton; three dauhtia. Mu. Qan
Taulmi,}g: ’Georgs wi and
Mrs. W? B. Simpson, all of Fort
Worth; thFee"sisters, MFs:s:E.
ported. A man breathing this
stuff could not fire a gun, fly a
plane or pefform any useful task
goet sides t the Iron Curtain i The.coll isionoceurredratthe in-
are working oh ases-of this kind tersection of.two unpaved roads
TheQRS
[ Demton viemtre tngamement
p---eppmpez
Funeral Services Held
EaF on Of Huis Houts
Funeral services for Mark Hout,
infant sn* Mr. d‛is. ufi
Hout of 503 Fre;‛ vete fim
hnda htthe GoenPunerarHOmfie
Caapel.
The Rev. Don Wattsrsn,
9 Grac Temnle RDtisi
officated. Interment was i
‛yood cemlery. ""
The child w born Saturday and
died Sunday at 3:30 AW-‛i Floy
Memorial Hospital.
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The coupl said -they were going
to Squaw Vallex t attng the-n-e
winter Olympics, but just kept go-
tismal service Sunday night
e the Ffst Christian Church.
Every! fiTtig- apprntly was
arranged for the service, but
when the principals gathered
a hith dexeloped.
, The shurch, xater pump had
frozen and it XM ipipossible
toftekptpel’st
( /
ctech ..
Mrs. Lois Ann Perryman of 530 “Hard
Schmitz wes charged yijh the yi9- cdHstit
lation following a two-car collision moDie
drugs and medicines * who are
members of his association.
,2856808118957298 09 " *59’
tantie s0d, catves 400; steady, med-
goqd we and xeatlipos $2024
i $16.56-18, good to choice alvs
624-26; lower qrades $16-23; mediuaf"t
gos’stock ste ealve, $-28) heiter
_
By RENNIS TAYLOR
Associated Press Science "Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A top
authority on chemical warfare to-
dy urged that the nation’s dok-
tors be given the fctsabou some
of the newer poison gases which
he said were more terrible than
nuclehr bombs.
There are gases that will kill
tens of thousands in a matter of
minutes; gases that will make
lunalicS out of whole metropolitan
populations; gases that will para-
lyze but not kill to liberate cities
from military occupation.
‘ This "country has a whole array
of these gases and the Soviet
Union, which apparently had 4
six-year start on developing things
of this kind, presumably ‘ has had
all these and may have more, the
expert said.
He said the Soviet Union has
50,000 tohs of tabun, a nrve gas,
enough tq, wipe out the populations
of 1,000 cities the size of San
Brancisco.
The organism that causes Q
fver; a disMling but seldom fatal
disease, can be made so effective
that ope-thirteth"of aft ounce of
it wif infect 500,000 people, he
/added.
This rundown yas presented be-
fore the California Medical Assn,
by Dr. Cecil M. ^lgfaf of the
California Disaster Office, Sacra-
mento. Dr. Coggins formerly was
assclatd wit’the Army Chemical
Eheicouphs Ffurd to
attend jases Monday and for her
huhand to get kak to 5i j9k.
At Callaways apartment ip the
Marina district they refued to
talk to reporters.
WILL FINISH YEAR
At Mills, faculty advisers said
Jermy Am Wbttid finish the year
and get her bachelor of arts de-
gree, ‘as "a history major.- "
Dr. ‘Lindstrof, WhO" was di-
vorced from Jenny’s atress
mther iw"1959,“,ade no dim-
wkrmus"tcoLD SNAP STOPS
FW "U11- c*" DU25554 " ""C "" " "
WICELYfurisbeg4room duplex, furnce
heat. geruze. Me boy, 604 Denfor;
visited NoFlhwest High"School to
confer with Supt. James Malone the
anj pprni. ipal-Trultt WilsorJ. Inid
to" dternzine how the program
functions In the schools. A-slmilar
cheek was made with Supt. Ben
b.Shith it PiTot Pomt. ‘
Mr. Grace Parr. Denton Coupty
cooperative" unselr, td‛ aS
leader for the visitriig ybufo
miles of Benton County, ineluding
Denton, Lake Dallas, Argyle and
rme ""3- tan *7,
The price of the map is included
Survivors inelade the parents, Grel
Iwo sistepe, Linda Hout qgfomney szingt
Heut; tyo brothers, Luis Hout J. Memi
and Gene Hout; and grandparcriu, *
Dr. Theodore Ullmann, former
faculty piano teacher of the Biar-
ritz American University in France
and the Juilliard School of Music
in New York City, will be present-
ed in a recital Wednesday by the
NTSC School of Music. The pro-
gram at 10 a.m. In the Main Audi-
torium is open to the public.
The Wednesday Bible Class of
First Baptist Church will have a
food shower for the Leroy Starnes
family of 1407 Oakwood at the 1
p.m. meeting this week. The class
will meet at the home of Mrs. Bud-
die Henderson, 512 W. Sycamore.
The Starnes’ daughter, Carol, is in
Dallas where she was scheduled to
undergo brain surgery this week.
HOSPITAL NOTES
Flow Memorial Hospital
Admitted: Francis Bridges Sr.,
Pilot Point, medical; Miss Marg-
aret Beauchamp, 1000 Laguna,
medical: Charles Riney, 1001 W.
Mulberry, medical; Mrs. Eva Mae
Dodd, 1015 Kendall, medical;
Doyce Johnson, Pilot Point, med-
ical; Mrs. Robert Neal, Lewis-
ville, surgical: Mra. John F. Rob-
erts. Pilot Point, surgical; Mrs.
Zula Blakely, Sanger, medical;
Mrs. Linnie Arnold, 607 Wain-
wright. medical; Mrs. W. A. Se-
walt, 1015 Hillcrest, medical; Mrs.
Arvi Morris, Lewisville, merical;
Mrs. Margaret M. Willis, Lewis-
ville, medical; William B. Clark.
1619 McCormick, medical; Carl
P. Rowe, Heflin, Ala., medical;
Miss Mattie Lee Lacey, 1306 N.
Locust, medical; Mrs. John Tho-
mas. 921 Edgewood, medical: Ba-
by Weldon Macey Aired, 1503 Mi-
ch Ial. medical.
Dismissed- Baby Tammie Lynn
Hurt. 2410 W. Prairie: Miss Eli-
zabeth McCallum, Lake Dallas:
, Olvey Bellah. Lewisville: Jack
, Proffer, 901 Crescent; Miss Do-
wanne Huggins, 1300 N. Locust;
Miss Charlan Sue Christian, Lake
Dallas; Mrs. K. W. Carter. Lew-
। iovile: Mri Vernon R. •. Hayes,
CeLLEGE PEAN
(Continued From Page 1)
> usion between policemen • and
burglars.
Wilon will be named actipg po-
lice commissioner Marct 2 at the
same time Daley proposes to sub-
mit to the City Council a ordin-
ance revising thg set-up of the
i polk" depiranefi.
enginerg company. "7*
"he maps"acttal aerial photo- ...... ...
graphs, were made by the Sah’Ap- John a. Guinn changed
tonio firm of V. L. Beavers Co. plars. " At"ENat tiMe"hot
The scale ‘of the map in the coun- ‘
Date Set For
City’s Voting
April 5 will be the day Denton
voters elect two new city council-
men.
Denton’s City Council this morn-
ing set the date of the election in
compliance with Denton’s city
charter. The charter says the
municipal election will be on the
first Tuesday in April, so the
April 5 date.
Although five councilmen actual-
ly "step’down from office in April,
only two will be refeTecte drYe-
placed,
The charter — which went into
effect in April of "1959; Imits 'the
Denton City Council to a member-
ship of five. But three men were
already serving elected terms
when the charter went iptg effect.
So they stayed on as oldover
councilmen.
That means Mayor Frank Bar-
row and Councilmen Tom Noel and
aymond Pitts will step down in
pril.
Of the five men elected last
April, Tom Laney and Dr. Walter
Miller drew one-year terms. That
means they must either be re-
elected or replaced this year.
March 5, which is 30 days before
the election, is the deadlne for
filing for ope of (he two posts on
the five man ouncil. Candidates
must file with City Secretary W.
D. Buttrill. There is no filing fee.
65'
Solod
Potato
Garlic Bread
HICKORY HOUSE
HWY. 24 AT BOLYAR
TODA!S S!FEN__
rcmorumeeepe”temnnepei,virmna
BARROW INSURANCE SALUTES
BRING ALL THE FAMILY
TO THE 34th
A-e KIWANIS
T MINSTREL
mefA-ec a HI-SCHOOL AUDITORIUM
V“AeE 8:00 P.M.
E Thurs. - Fri. Nights
EM TICKETS ONLY
FRESH CUT
fLOUERS,
itkettak
Linwood Roberson
---FLORIST -
2-2501 "Depton
Minister's Rites
Held in Denton
Funeral services for the Rev.
J. W. Dodd of 1015 Kendolph, farm-
er minister of Denton's Evangeli-
cal Methodist Church, were held
Monday in the Goen Funeral
Home Chapel.
The Rev. Frank Weedon of the
state evangelistic board of tne
Southern Baptist Convention olf-
dated. He was assisted by Virgil
Griffin of Denton. Burial was ■»
Denton’s IOOF Cemetery.
The Rev. Mr. Dodd died Satur-
day night in Flow Memorial Hos-
pital after a year's Illness. Ho
had been a minister for 52 year
and was instrumental in organizing 7
Denton’s Evangelical Methodist
Church in 1958.
Pallbearers were Marvin Cal-
vert, Curtis Brockett, Hugh Broc-
kett, Weldon Tipps, Dennis Welch
and Charles Brockett.
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Kirkland, Tom. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 174, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 23, 1960, newspaper, February 23, 1960; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1468266/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.