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Corsicana Daily Sun from Corsicana, Texas • Page 5

Location:
Corsicana, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

ANNUAL MOTHERS'MARCH SCHEDULED MONDAY NIGHT BY SORORITY MEMBERS The Eta Alpha chapter of Be, fjta Sigma Phi sorority will sponsor the annual Mothers' March of.Dimes Monday evening, with collections being taken beginning at 7 p.m. A house-to-house canvass will be made by the members of the sorority. By contributing to the New March of Dimes, the American people help their own and their neighbors' families through direct patient aid to alleviate and ijajp those afflicted to rebuild 'their lives. The National Foun dation chapters support a grow Ijig network of study and treatment centers to bring dlagnost- te and treatment facilities to America's doorsteps. Flnanlcal Assistance la available to 'ielp offset the devastlng efects of ehronlc disability on victims 4nd their families.

Help Research They help through research fo find the cause and perfect means of preventing other crippling diseases, just as has been done in the fight against ''liollo. March of Dimes funds '-support scientific studies to determine why birth defects and Jirthrltls occur, how they can be Mrs. Gladnev Reviews Book For Thalians "The Believers," a historical novel about the Shaker sect, was the book chosen for the Thallan i Club Thursday afternoon, at Kinsloe House. Mrs. Jim Kerle; hostess, and Mrs.

Richard Cummins, vice president, con 1 ducted the business meeting. Written by Janice Holt Giles I author of other historical nov els about Kentucky, "The Be llevers" tells of a small "fire 1 lit on the Gasper River In thi South-Central part of the state 1 around 1800. "It caught from the passion ate zeal of two brothers, preach 1 era from Tennessee, and qutckl; with the heat, the rapidity am the Intensity of a forest fire, 1 spread over all of the state am V' on into much of the rest of the r-South. It was called The Grea Ilevival," gald the reviewer. Cemetery Unii To Meet Feb.

2 A meeting of the Pattlso: Cemetery association has bee: get for 2 p.m. Friday, Feb. 2 at the Emhouse community cen ter with Mrs. Johnnie Oral Mrs. Ralph Chaney as hosl "teses.

At the last meeting Mrs. W. Kuykendall and Mrs. C. Turner were hostesses and Mrs Mamie Collins, president, pre sented a devotional and presided over a business session Mrs.

Kuykendall gave the op enlng prayer. Mrs. Earl Brown, secretary reported on work that had bee completed at the cemetery an submitted matters for "ration In 1962, Mrs. Maggie Williams con eluded the meeting with praye Refreshments were served I the 11 present. Donor the last resting place 01 your loved one with a rllitlnr.

tin marker. Let ni ansM you In making roar erlertlon. CENTRAL MONUMENT WKS. Hoj Rarrlton Jimmy Ynrbrr W. 2nd TR 4-7806 CALENDAR OF EVENTS revented, and what drugs or her therapy may provide the est hope for cures.

Help Is given through profts- onal education to provide rained minds to develop, and ealing hands to apply, sclentl- advances In medicine. Wlth- ut qualified people to carry hem out, research and patient Id programs would be useless, of Dimes contributions re used to help educate sclon- sts, doctors, nurses, therapists nd other medical specialists esperately neded to guard our atlon'g health. Response Urged The dimes contributed will -lo again. Just as the dimes and ollars contributed by the cltl- ens made It possible to prevent olio, they are now working gainst two more of America's vorst crlpplers, birth defects nd arthritis. Citizens of the community are rged to respond when the so- orlty members call on Monay evening for contributions this vital fund.

Assisting by school districts are the following: Mrs. Don Wylle, Robert E. Lee; Mrs. G. V.

O'Neal, Sam Houston; Mrs. Emory Budal, William B. Tra- 1s; Mrs. A. B.

Dickey, James Fannln; Mrs. Don Pevehouse, Maurice Rosen and Miss Ruby Milton, James Bowie, and Irs. Wyonona Llgglns, Jackon and Lincoln. Mrs. Gene Brown Is general hairman of the drive, List Menus At Catholic School Luncheon menus for the cafeteria of the Immaculate 'onceptlon Parochial school for he coming week have been announced as follows.

Monday: Meat loaf with tomato gravy, creamed potatoes, uttered English peas, hot rolls and butter, cherry cobbler, milk. Tuesday: Baked meat balls, corn pudding, buttered rice, cabbage, cratanToTH FM cabbage, carrot and alsrln salad, chilled peaches, corn bread sticks, milk. Wednesday Barbequed beef on bung, potato salad, buttered spinach, pickled beet slice, irownles, milk. Thursday: Ground beef on noodles, candled carrots, black eyed peas, fruit gelatin, hot rolls and butter, milk. Friday: Grilled cheese sandwiches, pinto beans, tossed green salad, apple pie, milk.

Some Here Know How Caller Felt COLUMBUS, Ohio UP) "How cold Is It?" feminine caller asked the Columbus Dispatch on Thursday. The switchboard operator replied: "It to now two above zero!" "Now," queried the caller, "Is that Inside or outside?" PARADISE TOO COLD PARADISE, Ky, UP! It was too cold Thursday to work In Paradise. Al Weber, general manager of Tennessee Valley Authority Construction, said work at the TVA steam generating plant being built here has been halted until Monday. Weber gald the cold weather was freezing water lines and making work Impossible, Sun Want Adg Bring Your Want Adi to TR4-4764. Saturday, January 18tb 3:00 o'clock F.

Virginia Roberts will be commentator for a Schubert program for the Nevln club at Kinsloe House. Program feati.reg will be given by Mmes. R. R. Range, R.

L. Thlgpln, M. S. Dockum, Dan Roberta and Homer Face. 7:00 o'clock Scale, Corsicana High school counselor, will be speaker for the 4-H Achievement Banquet In the Cactus Rbom, Navarro Hotel.

An awards program will be combined with entertainment. MISSILE ONTINtJED FROM PAOE ONE 1ATO nations will help pay for reducing the missiles when hey become operational. Although officials were re- uctant to pinpoint a target ate. It Is believed the new missile would be combat ready Monday, January 15th 9:30 o'clock I of the CWF, First Christian church, will meet with Mrs. Hylan Davis, 1828 E.

Beverly; Group II of the CWF will meet with Mrs. J. S. Roth, 1423 W. Collln.

3:30 o'clock P. II of the CWF, First Christian church, will meet with Mrs. A. B. Horn, 912 23rd 7:30 o'clock P.

IV of the CWF, First Christian church, will meet with Mrs. Calvin Holloway, 012 N. 23rd; The Christian Guild of the First Christian church will meet with Mrs. E. Dosser, 618 N.

31st St. 3:00 o'clock P. M. -The Ruth circle of the Missionary Baptist Church will meet at the church In regular session. 3:15 o'clock P.

Mothers club of the Immaculate Conception Parochial school will meet In regular session In the science room of the school, with Sister Mary Mechtllde, principal, showing films purchased by the group. Hostesses will be Mmes. Hugh Garland and Theodore Holy, room mothers of Grade VII. 3:30 o'clock P. III of the Christian Women's Fellow ship of the First Christian Church will meet In the home of Mrs.

A. B. Horn, 208 South 18th street. 7:00 o'clock P. Doris Jean and Hayward Adams circle of the night WMS of the First Baptist Church, will meet with Mrs.

Etta Cathcart for Bible study, with Mrs. ohn Davis as teacher. 7:30 o'clock P.M.—The Christian Woman's guild, First Christian Church, will meet In the home of Mrs. E. B.

Dosser, 518 North 31st street, 7:30 o'clock P. IV of the CFW, First Christian Church, will meet with Mrs. Calvin Holloway, 912 N. 23rd. 7:30 o'clock P.

Ladles Auxiliary and Canton M. D. Herring, No. will meet In business and joint Installation at the IOOF hall. Major Hardy and Lady Etta Butler of the Waco Lodge, No.

18, will be Installing officers. Each lady Is asked to bring a salad. Tuesday, January 16th 12:30 o'clock P. Pan American Round Table will meet In luncheon session at Kinsloe House. Mrs.

John H. Owen will present the program on Brazil. Hostesses will Include Mrs. Ben Miller, Mrs. B.

H. Dockery, Mrs. Jerry Roberts, Mrs. A. B.

Horn and Mrs. Roark Montgomery. more Mlnutcmen ruin protected, under laving 'laced ground bases. The Air Force Is to be re- ponslble for development of the new missiles, with the Navy "ielping out In certain aspects, robably those Involving launch- ng the missiles from floating The new mldrange missile iresumably would be made vallablc to a multlnatlon agony under NATO. Nuclear Force West Germany has been push- ng the Idea of creating an ndependent nuclear force for U.S.

Gen. Laurls Nor- tad, supreme Allied comman ler in Europe, supports the are a number of In any auch ar- Wednesday, January 17th 10:00 o'clock A. House board of directors will meet In first session of the New Year. Mrs. J.

C. Roe will preside. 3:30 o'clock P. Psychology Club will meet In regular session at Kinsloe House, with Mrs. John Remonte as reviewer of Gaston Foote's "Life In Four Dimensions" and Mrs, Chas.

Bee as program chairman. 3:46 o'clock P. Study Club will meet at Kinsloe House th Mrs. Ed M. Polk, Jr.

and Mrs. Allen Edens presenting the program on "The City In History: It's Origins, Its Transformations, and Its Prospects." Miss Annie Lee Robbing and Mm. Hubert Braselton will be hostesses. 7:30 o'clock P. Texas Alpha Phi chapter of Alpha Delta Kappa will meet with Mrs.

Oscar Bounds, with Miss Mabe Mabry as co-hostess. The program will be entitled, "Modern Trends In Education." Thursday, January Uth 6:30 o'clock F. annual parish meeting of St. John's Episcopal Church will begin with a covered dish supper in the parish hall. This Is a postponed meeting, due to the Inclement weather.

Parish families are urged to be present for this Important meeting. 7:00 o'clock P. Rho chapter, Delta Kappa Gamma, will hear a program on the subject, "Mastering Languages as a Key to Better International Relations," 7:30 o'clock P. Past Noble Grand club of the Home Rebekah Lodge, No. 128, will meet In the IOOF hall.

Each member will bring a covered dish for the supper to be given for members of the Subordinate Lodge, No. 63, following the close of their meeting. Mrs. Eula Garner will be hostess rol. But there lomplexltles angement.

For one thing, pres ent law requires the United States to retain control of nu of any mld- ange ballistic mlssllea assign- id to NATO. Some method would have to worked to safeguard against lelays In using the atomic war- leads If an emergency arose. INDONESIA CONTINUED PROM PAQE ONB iounced for their evacuation to he Netherlands. The West New Guinea government announced that the New Guinea Advisory Council will meet Jan. 22 to discuss how and vhen self-determination should IB Implemented for the terrl- ory's Papuan population.

The meeting Is certain to draw new 'lasts from the Indonesians, who nalst that Weft New Guinea Is ndoneslan territory and that Dutch talk of lelf-determlnation separatist propaganda. HAMILTON HOUSE INTERIORS Don't Polish Your Silver! merely WASH Tarnish away with HAGERTY SILVER FOAM! So easy, you'll be amazed! Hagerty Silver Foam washes and polishes your fine silver at the same time. Tarnish is floated down the drain no rubbing ever. It's mild, nonabrasive and leaves hands soft too! HAMILTON HOUSE INTERIORS 312 West Fourth Avenue DialTR4-5812 Friday, January 19th 9:45 o'clock A. Better Gardens club will meet at King lop House with Mmes M.

H. Iglehart, Brodle Koontz and C. Roe as hostesses. Mrs. Melville Samuels will speak on th MRS.

REMONTE TO REVIEW GASTON FOOTE BOOK AT PSYCHOLOGY Mrs. Sanders Is Reviewer Le Livre Club "Fate Is The Hunter" by Er- negt Gann was reviewed by Mrs. C. M. Sanderg for the Tuesday meeting of Le Llvre club at Kinsloe House.

Hostesses were Miss Lillian McClure Mrs. R. D. Mertz and Mrs. E.

W. Wllllg, "Out of hlg own experience the world renowned author of such novels as 'The High and the Mighty' and Twilight For The Gods' narrates a series of events that Illustrate his theme. All of them take place In the air, or Jugt before or after a flight. They might as well have happened, however, In the desert on the sea or In a jungle; on a farm or a In business office," the reviewer said, "Ernest Gann regards life a undeclared war against fate, the fate that hunts men down, "One can never know when, where or how fate will strike. Yet sooner or later It does; anc even when It misses Its mark It brings terror, fear or fright to the hearts of men.

It Is at guch times that true courage and cowardice can reveal themselv eg most nakedly and In unfore seen ways." Sun Want Adi Bring COLD FEET? Assorted Wool Rugs Slie IS" 27" Rerutar $1.50 $2.85 Special 98c WITHROW furniture Co. CLUB MEET Mrs. John Remonte will re view "Living in Four Dlmen aions" by Gaston Foots at th regular meeting of the Psy chology Club Wednesday at 3:3 p.m. at Kinsloe House, accordln to announcement by the pro chairman for yea Mrs. Lynne Wortham.

Program chairman for the af tcrnoon, Mrs. Chas. Bee, ha secured Mrs. M. S.

Dockum fo a special musical number tha will precede the review. The wel known organist will play one the favorites, of all time, Schu bert's "Ave Maria." Mrs. W. M. Forester will the presiding officer, Mrs.

Perc Blackburn will give the secretar lal report, Miss Rubye Mllle will report on the financial stal us of the club, and Miss Marth Sullenberger will report on Kinsloe House activities. Book Review Living in Four Dimensions' which will be reviewed by Mrs Remonte the program high light of the afternoon, seeks Interpret the Christian use emotions In a practical and com mon-sense way. It deals wit such topics ag "The Way to Wl Over "How to Tackl Your Troubles," "How to Dea With "How to Make th Most Out of and othe psychological problems that con front everyone. Dr. Foote, firs analyzes the conflict In questio and then offers his reader intelligent, and sensible solu tlons.

The book offers more than th stereotyped make-life-worth while approach. It not onl points the way to more successful living, but It Inspires th reader to travel the way, to ex perlence the more abundan four of life. Th book Is both down-to-earth an up-to-date, and Mrs, Remonte review will be well worth hear Ing. Fort Worth Resident Having held pastorateg I Little Rock, Dayton, and Montgomery, Gasto Foote Ig now minister of Firs Methodist Church in Fort Worth. Each Sunday he preaches to a sanctuary of approximately 1600 persons.

Dr. Foote Is a world traveler, an author of several books, and a lecturer of note. 1965 or 1966. The proposed project has was made very een under discussion for some imc, but the decision to go head with It ecently. At one time the Pentagon tad plans to deploy tllnutemen Intercontinental bal- stlc missiles on trains in the Jnlted States.

But, the Idea was ropped last month In favor of dea. The U.S. position has been hat It Is prepared to consider he possibility of jointly creat- ng a NATO mldrange ballistic orce that would be truly multi- aterlal In ownership and con- TEXAS COLD CONTINUED FROM PAQK ONE been harvested. County agent A. H.

Karcher said It appeared grapegrult still In the orchards was lost. He said the unpicked grapefruit was "frozen hard as a rock." Karcher estimated that 70 per cent of the orange crop had been gathered. Agriculture Commissioner John White rushed his Inspectors to the Rio Grande Valley to survey the situation. About five or six million boxes of fruit were In the field and all of It is frozen," White said. "If we have a quick thaw all will be ruined.

If there if a slow thaw, gome of It may be salvaged." White said the vegetable situation Is bleak. "Our best Information Is that all the vegetables down there are gone," he said. Open gag heaters were blamed for two deaths at Orange. The victims were the Rev. N.

W. White, 78, retired pastor of an Orange Methodist church, and Mrs. Susan Rhodes, 91. In both cases, they backed Into open heaters and their clothes caught fire. Orange had a low reading of 18 degrees Friday morning, Night Better Elsewhere over the state It JAKARTA, Indonesia, Jan.

12 President Sukarno at the ast minute today called off the ormal presentation of a luxury lellcopter given him by President Kennedy. Sukarno's press secretary told newsmen a few minutes before he ceremony was to start It had )een cancelled "because the President has great pressure of work." The military-green aircraft was already on the lawn of Sukar- no's Merdeka Palace, a military band had assembled and some had arrived. U.S. Ambassador Howard P. Jones was to make the presentation.

Sukarno has been busy In weeks with preparations to Invade Dutch-held West New Guinea If the Dutch don't agree hand the territory over to Indonesia, and with entertain Ing Soviet Cosmonaut Gherman Tltov. COLLISION CONTINUED FROM PAOE ONfc peared the men could not be freed until wreckers could arrive to pry apart the trucks, a large frozen food trailer van driven by the fatally Injured driver, and a large grain truck driven by Vos. The funeral home operator said the wreckage Indicated the accident was a near headon collision. At noon, Sgt. J.

F. Scott, head of the Corsicana district highway patrol, returned from the scene, verifying Capps report of the head-on collision. Sgt. Scott said the highway underpass wag expected to be cleared and traffic moving along the route by early Friday afternoon. Patrolman NorcroM notified the Dally Sun Friday at 1:15 p.m.

the underpass was expected to be cleared In another I hour. He gald a paved by-pass I a block from the underpass I allowed Highway 75 traffic to I move through Streetman with no major congestion. was another night of bitter cold with El Paso and Wink again reporting zero weather. Other low temperatures Included Junction 1 degree, Texarkana 4, Midland 6, Lubbock ft, San Antonio 10, San Angelo 11, Dalhart and Brownwood 12, Beaumont, Austin, Waco, Dallas Fort Worth and Abilene 14 and Amarlllo 15. Skies were clear early Friday over the entire state, and the Weather Bureau said a gradual moderation of temperatures will continue through Saturday.

The bureau said, however, another freeze was In prospect for most of the state Friday night. Sunny weather returned as numerous schools remained closed and several cities troubled by reduced natural gas pressure and broken water lines struggled back to normal. GM Line A major break In the Lone Star Gas Co. main near Granbury put five Central Texas towns on reduced gas supplies. The break caused schools to remain closed In Lampasas, Burnet, Frederlcksburg, Marble Falls and Bertram.

Glen Rose, 23 mllea west of was without gas for leatlng purpose because of the jreak. Lone Star Gas said It loped to have gervlce restored during the day to Its 502 Glen Rose customers. Sub-freezing weather blamed Indirectly for the deaths of six children at Houston. One small boy died of frostbite and five other children died of bronchial pneumonia. The county medical examiner said the deaths resulted from lack of proper home heating equipment.

Officials at Fort Worth reported damages running Into thousands of dollars to streets and from the hard freeze. The Fort Worth water system was hard hit by numerous breaks In water lines. Edlnburjf Shivers Edinburg in the lower Rio Grande, a city of 20,000, shiver- cd without natural gas for seven hours Thursday night because a regulator In the main gas line froze. A 100-man work crew turned out to restore service as the mercury hovered In the upper 20s. It was necessary to turn off and then reopen 3,000 meters of Rio Grande Valley Gas Co.

customers. Attendants Issued ton, Texas City anfl othe places and caused some Hous ton schools to close. The dro. was laid to broken water pipe and a practice by many house holders of letting faucets dro to prevent officials in freezing, Houston Hosplta said th water situation was critical fo time. In Dallas a frozen springle system in a downtown S.

Kress Co. store covered th first floor with two Inches water and flooded the base ments. About 100 customers an. employes evacuated the store. Crop losses in the lower Rlc Grande Valley, last hit by a severe freeze in 1051, prom Ised to run Into millions.

Most farmers agreed that th freeze killed light crops young tomatoes and some pop pers still In the fields. At leas some, however, expressed an opinion that the big money crop of cabbage and carrots migh have escaped serious damage. Farm spokesmen said ther likewise might be record crop losses In Bexar oats and flax County, with hardest hit Speaking for truck farmers Henry Van de Wallc said an unusual amount of truck pro ducc was still on the grounc because hitherto mild weather extended the har vest season In northern state, and depressed the market fo Texas produce. SLIDE electric In Edln- Hospltal blankets to patients burg's Grandvlew while the gas wag off. In Dallas, meanwhile, Lone Star Gas Co.

stopped curtailing gas deliveries to big industrial users to keep pressure up for heating homes. A spokesman said forecasts for warmer weather made It possible to lift the restriction. He said there no Interruption of service to home customers In the 465 Texan and southern Oklahoma towns and cities served by the firm. Lose Pressure Water pressure fell dangerously low Thursday In Hous- CONTINUED FROM PAOE ONE ably are dead. Fomento, Peru's developmen ministry, said the dead may reach 2,000.

Other officials' figures wen higher. U. S. Ambassador Jame Loeb, who flew over the deatl valley at 17,000 feet Thursday reported estimates at 4,000 miss ing and presumed dead. He said there had been some panic among the few survivors "It was one of the stranges disasters since there were prac tlcally no survivors," he said "Everybody was killed." Fomento warned of danger new avalanches In the Andean Valley between the White Black ranges.

Only about 50 of the 500 in habitants of the village of Ran rahirca escaped before a thlc! sheet of mud, rock, ice and debris covered 85 per cent of th town. Half of nearby Huarascucho somewhat larger than Ranra hirca, also disappeared unde the avalanche. Some other settlements dls appeared completely. Ambassador Loeb said onl about 20 Injured had been re celved from the disaster are at hospitals at Huaraz, the near est large town, 30 miles to th south. Altogether, officials said, 1 small settlements were destroy ed, nnd no survivors from seve of them had beeen found.

Fomento, after a survey one of its representatives, sat a "glacial tongue of 2.5 mlllio cubic meters (about 3.25 mlllio cubic yards) broke loose i Pumahualn Ravine" and carrle with it a huge mass of mated of every kind from that ravin and Llanguanuco Ravine. After a tremendous rush more than nine miles, the agen cy said, the avalanche final lost Its velocity and deposlte all Its material on an area about 250 acres. The slide, about half a ml long and 600 feet wide, dam mtd the Santa River for a shoj time. The agency named Llanam as one of the settlements com pletely demolished, and Huar scana as aonther partially de 1st NATIONAL BANK In RichlanJ Open Your Checking Xccount With Us Today No Service Charge. Bank By Mail.

Friendly Personal Service. OPEN FRIDAY EVENING P. M. Member F. D.

I. O. Phons FO 2-3253 Coraicana, Daily Sun, Jan. 12, stroyed. Its report said overhanging shelves left by the breakaway cc chunk on the mountain could cause new slides, and therefore an emergency zone vas being declared In the area.

More than 7,000 persons lived the ranching and mining val- cy, 9,000 feet up with the snow- oppcd peaks of the Cordillera Blanca range looking down on hem. Volunteers struggled through quagmires of mud and melting ce to recover bodies that began appear as waters of the ianta River began to recede. The avalanche swept hundreds thousands of tons of debris nto the river, swelling Its wa- ers and sending a torrent rag- ng downstream. Dozens of odles were recovered In Chlm- a port on the Pacific more han 100 miles from Ranrahirca. Many of the bodies recovered vcre mutilated beyond idcntifl- and were buried In a ionimon grave.

The avalanche wag born on eru's highest peak, Ht, Huascaran, and peaks be- ow it forming the canyon of Enormous blocks of ice, melting in the summer un, broke away and collected ons upon tons of rock and snow as they rolled down into the anyon. The avalanche grew steadily is It roared into the valley be- ow to overwhelm the unsuspect- ng Indians just sitting down to cat their evening meal. Starts With Explosion Shocked survivors from Ran- rihrlca the Indian name means "Hill of Stones" said he avalanche began with a 'hellish" sound like that of a dynamite explosion. "In eight minutes Ranrahirca vas wiped off the map," said mayor Alfonso Caballero. The only warning was the roar and i cloud of dust raised over the mrushlng slide as It swept down he canyon.

"It looked like every one In Ranrahirca had been buried by he Ice, rocks and mud," said Dr. Leohclo Guzman, another survivor. The avalanche burled the vll- ge cathedral and Its prized art works, the village mil and the school. A few houses beyond the perimeter of he slide escaped. One report said Air Force helicopters from Chlmbote managed rescue several employes at a lydroelcctrlc plant on the Santa River who had been cut off by the avalanche.

Troopg went, to vork to open roads In response calls for tractorg and bulldozers. Calamity Frequent Peru Is no stranger to natural calamity, and this was one of Its worst. Scarcely a year goes by In this Andean land without an earthquake or avalanche taking a deadly toll. Huaraz, a mountain town only 30 mllcg south of latest disaster, wag struck by a similar avalanche In December 1641 and 4,000 persons were killed. One of history's major earthquakes killed 70,000 In Peru and Ecuador In August 1896.

Another In 1868 killed 25,000 In the same two countries. The worst snowsllde ever killed 9,000 Austro-Hungarlan troops In 1916. THE HAGUE, Netherlands, Jan. 12 W) At the request of the Peruvian Embassy here, Holland's finest trained dog, Roy Roland, who is able to trace people under rubble, ashes or snow, was sent by air today to Lima. The dog will help march out mining persons In the Peruvian avalanche.

The dog la the star of the Amsterdam dog training school. Roy Roland was accompanied to Lima by his trainer, Czech-born Joseph Reddy Toman, 40. SCHOOLS CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONB Buses for the schools operated on schedule Friday. They did not run Thursday because of the hazardous conditions of the roads that day. Navarro Junior College picked up classes Thursday morning after being dlmlssed Tuesday noon for the remainder of that diy and all day Wednesday.

At the college the final day of 'Mead week" was observed. Next week students will undergo final examinations for the 1981 fall semester with the spring semester, 1962, picking up with registration Monday, Jan. 22. Kerens High School, Navarro county's Class A institution, also resumed classes Friday with the advent of clear weather although the temperature remained frigid. Dawson, In the extreme weg- tern edge of this county, was the only Class school to resume classes todny.

Blooming Grove, Frost, Rlchland and Mildred will pick up studies Monday morning. The Class schools were caught In the middle of midterm exama, officials Indicated, but those schools that dismissed for the duration of the Inclement weather will hav tests beginning Monday, In most cases. Rice school Friday. also remained II Say It With Flowers" Herrry'sFlowers Harry Clowe, Jr. Owner.

118 West Collln Street DIAL TB 44870 Is Salvation By Faith Alone? CLAUDE B. HOLCOMB Fifth Avenue Church of Christ The answer to the above question clear and definite the New Testament "Ye gee then how that by works a man Is justified, and NOT by faith only" (James The context of this verse tells us that faith without works Is dead (ygg, 17-26), and a dead faith cannot gave the (See Matt. doctrine of "salvation by faith only" WM conceived by men and incorporated In their creeds of yean after the New Testament was written. The doctrine Is not taught In the Bible, therefore It Is foreign to the teaching of Christ. Man certainly cannot merit or earn salvation through works of hlg own, nor by the works of the law of Moses, nor by Insincere, falthlegg, hypocritical performance of God's commands; but on the other hand, the Bible teacheg that he cannot be saved without obedience to God's commandments, though he may have faith.

"What doth It profit, my brethren, though a man say he hath faith, and have not works? Can faith save him?" (Jas. James' Illustration In the following verses shows that the answer to hlg question Ig positive "No!" Faith alone can no more nave a man than mere words will clothe and feed the destitute. For further scriptural proof of the fact, read also: Jan. 2:17, 19, 26; Heb. I Peter 2 Them, Rom.

Matt, Luke I Cor. 13:2. Faith Ig the baglg of all acceptable obedience, gervlce, and worship unto God. There Is no way to please Him without faith (Heb. But faith lead ug to obedience to what God before It can bring ng any bleagmg (Heb.

Gal. Jag. To gay that faith Ig all that Ig neceggarjr to eliminate repentance, baptVsm, loyalty to Christ the grace of God, love, mercy, and all other of the gospel. God'g system of grace, by which we are saved, every commandment that he get forth, and It Ig a presumptuoug sin for men to get anlde nny one of them. God doen not deal In The man-made doctrine of "salvation by faith only" makes all the rest of God'g requirements of no effect, and does great harm to the doctrine of Christ (Read 2 John Luke Hospital News Memorial There were 111 patients Friday noon.

Admitted: O. D. Mullins, Kerens; Ann Holland; Mrs. Mary Jana Ferguson; Mrs. Sammy Frazler; Deborah Dawson; Mrs.

Opal Davidson, Rlchland; Mrs. Imogene Ray, Rlchland; Mrs. Mary Lee Green; Mrs. Hazel Grant; R. M.

Rash; Mrs. Dorothy Parr; Vernon Calvin McCarter; Mrs. Sadie Roloff; Mrs. Betty Clemmer; Mrs. Delia Danford, Buffalo.

Dismissed: Cindy Lou Hair; Mike O. Sancheg; O. D. Mullins, Kerens; Willie Wllllg; Mrs. Martha Booker and Infant son; H.

C. Dyer, Frost; ITjlvllle Samuels; Mrs. Edith Bryant. Final Clearance Of Fine Shoes SATURDAY LAST DAY WOMEN'S DRESS SHOES DRESS FLATS CASUALS VALUES TO 14.99 Now- 5 9O VALUES TO 12.99 Now- 3 99 TABLE OF ODD LOTS Ladies' and WARN HOUSE SHOES Complete Optical Service VALUES TO 14.99 HERMAN E. RHOADS "SINCE 1044" Now- 1 9O REGULAR 3.99 Now- 1 9O COOPER'S every thing in line shoes 214 North Beaton St..

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About Corsicana Daily Sun Archive

Pages Available:
271,914
Years Available:
1909-1981