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The Paris News from Paris, Texas • Page 6

Publication:
The Paris Newsi
Location:
Paris, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE PARfS KEWS, SUNDAY, NOV. 28, 1965 Holiday Traffic Deaths Increase By THE ASSOCLATED PRESS days has ranged in The traffic death toll rose at! 1968 10 554 in Jailbreakers Captured After Week's Search McCfure Service Last rites for Mrs. C. R. (Eos- coe) McChire of High were conducted Saturday afternoon at Fry Gibbs chape! here, in- MO.

(A?) tKrnf nt homer msrte in Fftrret Funeral Home of Brownsville. Survivors include his widow, Mrs. Emily Floyd. 4S01 East 14th Brownsville; one son, Frank M. Floyd.

New Orleans. i terment being made in Forest Soxicn: Joe Thurman. uston two sisters. Mrs. Jeanette Bak- amson.

James A. Hickman, er. Fort Worth, and Mrs. Catb- James M. Caviness.

Decton. and ds iEtilines a day. Tse bulk of the deaths on the streets and bjghwsys there "Ken a thread of nml- one of the latest, 2. two-car were I died be held Sunday at Among the volunteers who the fugitives from the house was Greene Coaatv Sher- iiff Mickey Owes, of Sprin- 2:30 p.m- at Weslev 5 £re her husband, surviv- Tse the Doyle Dipboye aad a former pastor, the Rev. Jurdor Easton field.

former catcher for i 5. Boswefl, i 1 i officiate. Mackey, Rowland; Mrs. Ophelia Booce. Paris, and Mrs.

Hattie Wagner, Dallas, and a brother, Lesos Cooper, Lub- Parisian's Kin Dies in Wreck Mrs. Charles L. Jones, 23, of Montgomery, the former Virginia Ann Graves, kflled in an automobile accident Nov. 25, in Alabama, was a granddaughter of Mrs. E.

C. Graves, 255- 4ih NW. and the late Mr. Graves here. She was born at Longview, June 5, 1942, daughter of Gabriel Craft Graves and the former Earline Lowry, now Mrs.

ISe Metcalf of Jackson, Miss. Northeast Hit By Gale Winds By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. Kentucky when lier trailv was Gate winds on the tail of a overturned, major storm lashed the North-! In Chicago, toe winds tore a east Saturday after dumping scaffold loose 3p stones above heaw snow near the north-central "border and loosing tornadoes in the Midwest. The airport at Buffalo, N.Y., ThVTrSes Friday missed m.p.h., and power failures hit South Buffalo and Lackawanna as well as other portions of the She was married in Jackson, Sept. 4, to Charles Leroy Jones, then of Prativiite, Ala.

Surviving besides her father, living at Daingerfield, and her mother, are a brother, Jimmy Earl Graves of Orange, and! three grandp a s. free the 7.000-ton British tanker state, Forty and 50-mile winds in the Watertown, N.Y.. area tipped over a house trailer, and felled Lake Shore Drive, and police rerouted traffic white workmen labored to pin the structure back k.place on a new apart- population concentrations. They occurred along a squail line which developed as wintry winds chased 60 and 70-degree weather and ushered in much colder climate. Temperature extremes for 24 hours at Okla- Graves here and Mr.

and Mrs. Beacon which had Earl Lowrey, Fort Worth; an been aground since Tuesday in CAUldJiVO AWA --t trees and limbs, snapping utfluy homa Cit and Fort Worth were lines. The winds also helped to y. egr ees. 4-i.

nnn -u the cold front moved 3- tires, Charles Heard, 23, of St. i Louis, suffered serious leg m- i fury during the flight iroirT the i I Jefferson Countv Jail. LOCAL U. S. Weather Bar-j The fugitives told Buerser 1 vvr.ere.

bat much of the country i ean infonnatioa for the 24-hour they had been able to reniain bed clear weather. period ending a.jx>. Satur-) free by hiding in tie dense i war to a relative maerai. Ssow was on the ground in sections of Minnesota, Wiscon- az-d Mlcsgan. There were I scar.ered nrsas of rsia Mrs.

Rawanson was tae of aunt, Mrs. Eddie Bill Gregory, Daingerfield, and an uncle, Billy J. Graves, Sarasota, Fla, The funeral will be held in Daingerfield, Sunday at 2 p.m. at the Nail Funeral burial to be made in the Dain-1 1 gerfield Cemetery. the St.

Lawrence Waterway. The storm, 1,000 miles in diameter, was centered in eastern As southeast, there was rain in the Appalachians and in some East arid Northeast sections. Ahead of the cold, Atlanta and Miami enjoyed clear weather in SOUTHWEST BOOKS Humphrey Paris News Service CLABKSVUUE- Luther years, the tally of cay. courtesy of Observer W.J. woods of this hU2y area.

25 mSes i Humphrey. SO. a retired farm-1 traffic deaths caring the Thomas. Eigh temperature S4. west of St.

Louis" since their es-1 Clarksville, died of a sud-! period all four I Lew and overnight low S6. cape last Stsidav. den illness at home. Saturday I perauire at a.m_ 40. They were found in a about 7 Total rainfall to occupied by Charles Richard-i Jolley's Funeral Eome has! Free Thinking Medic Interesting Subject Canada.

northeast. the 70s range. It left an Arctic picture in In the West the weather was northern Minnesota and upper mostly fair and cool. A eld Michigan were heavy snow front In the Southwest kicked up drifted, and snuffed out lights and power in a number of com- dust in southeastern New Mexico with 40-mile gusts behind a munities as ice-coated uti'itv storm which loosed rain and lines parted. One-day snowfall snow in the mountains.

Cold ranged up to one and one half i following the disturbance in- feet. eluded a low of 13 degrees at date this year inches. lO-json. who told the sheriff he had! charge I tal rainfall 10 this date last been held hostage since noon ments. 01 service arranse- i By ROBERT E.

FORD Associated Press Writer GIDEON UNCECUM. Bv Lois ans. He also was a follower of Darwin, still railed against in! some circles. There were 27 inches of snow on the ground at Hibbing. and more than two feet I covered much of Minnesota.

The storm brought Grants, N.M. Southern California weather was a pleasant contrast to the recent protracted heavy rain. One aftermath was a mudslide Surviving are Mr Humph-1 Wood Burkhalter (University of i 1S.2 inches of snow to Superior. I which Friday night closed Topanga Canyon Road in tne Malibu area. Actually, what Lincecum was.

Icy wind, that dropped the and contra- helped make Tes- about ev-1 erythidg. He insisted on proof age when almost everv- icr trimming tneir own budgets rests with them, not the cent. Schaltze is Johnson espects wars with the budget director in eJTTnTTistTTip eVcTT nunppfe'sSs'ry liem and to work out a priority! system of essential, less essen-j Four Runs Here iioents remained, barricaded in Frank Flovd their homes with weapons with- added 1 i to taken oa faith nas aaciea an sparse. rtfv: rhprarrpr Since he had no faith and i two sisters. Mrs.

Ophelia Jones a wide cot reach out and touch a i Lincecum, who cut God athiest, and this was one of the! a former ew consistencies in his life. (Continued From Page One) tion sendee this afternoon. The meeting will open with the 1 in immediate reach. Special to The News newspaperwoman and wife of; Lincecum educated himself; Harry Burkhalter of the San An- and became an articulate man. Paris Firemen logged four: runs Saturday.

One house was gutted by fire I pares with the January estimate in a 1 pjn. blaze, and the'other of S99.7 billion. The new income i alarms were minor. tial and sot essentiaL The new spending estimate of bIQion to S1Q7 billion com- Drag Store BROWNSVILLE Frank H. ton io" Light, stumbled on some 1 He became a doctor a botan- I Floyd, 66.

a native of Paris and! of his correspondence and could- i doctor, he called himself founder of Pan American Foods n't stop looking for more until i as fiercely attacked other doc- ia Brownsville, died Thursday at she exhausted the subject. She claiming they administered 7:15 p.m. at South Padre Is- is curator of the Marion Koog- poison, not medicine. land. ler McXav Art Institute in San I He earned a great deal of Bora April 4.

1899, in Paris, i Antonio. money as a doctor but grew StSa'eTT'tofi I Mffion Open fr 8 ajn had been a rksTdent of! fame in the early! disco-oraged because he couldn't Thenrstwas at noon, a grass to Si-sfl p.m. i Brmvnsvflle since 1943. He dav came, among manv other more for the ailmg. It was.

Olrr.T UllUOn. -nr -L ct Hmo TOT- mcfonrxi pares with SM.4 bOlion. Except for stepped up spending on the war in Viet Nam and other items nsral experts caH HncontrQflables. federal spend- fire at 937 Pine Bluff. At 1 PJTL a fire which was started fay a defective flue on a wood-burning stove, gutted the residence of Gradv Alexander at ing is estimated at S-50Q million 1045 The fire had when Sirs.

Eldca Preas. 821 W. founded Pan American Foods, BrarTre, bag returned from Lubbock after attending the funeral of her aunt, Mrs. William Mc- Crumrnen. a processing plant for seafoods and vegetables and served as to arouse the ire of early Tex- the Srnrs president until 10 years ago when he sold the busi- (Continued From Page One) na Sea.

Both remained docked at Subic Bay. Philippines, 750 reasons, because he was a free i a or instance, when no i miles east of Viet Nam. thinker, a dirty word sufficient I one understood yellow fever and U.S. planes bombed shipping mercury to 17 below at Havre, i plunged south into the Midwest and lower Mississippi valley, dropping temperatures as much as 50 degrees and churning tornadoes 'i Illinois. Indiana.

Arkansas and Missouri Fridav night. The racing air streams first worship service in the new pushed freezing temperatures i church at 10:45 ajn. today, into the South and raked much McCoy is to serve as evangel- of the Midwest with damaging for the gospel meeting. Tne winds. One woman was killed in i se ries will continue nightly at 7 o'clock through Friday, Dec.

3. Bible classes this morning axe to be at 9:45. The new structure contains 4,600 sqare feet of floor space with an auditorium that will Mr. and Sirs. Joe Hndgms ness made strong and daughter.

Kathy. of Hous- i Sillce tnat time he had been engaged in the lumber business and also was owner of mote 1 s' ton, have been visiting in the -f and virtually everv room was home of Mr. Hudgins' grand' Construction Shows Hike Congress, at vf I damaged to some extent along! mother. Mrs. W.

L. Wilson at apartments furnishiSES I Arabia and othpr rpipfivpq i Padre Island. cooKseemng year. 2: oa pjn. tne renort 01 Johnson's re- the Truman Garrison residence at S63-17th SE sent fire units to that address but the fire, which was a towel in a water heater laundromat where an electrical quest added S1.7 bfliion for Viet Nam and more money win be asked in another supplemental appropriation in January.

Other it ems contributing largely to the higher spending: pay for civilian workers and for military servicemen, the increases in both cases being wen above John- i snort one OI the son's recommendations. causing a small fire. outlays by the Com-1 modity Credit Corp. in the farm-! rice-support program. interest rates to fi-j nance the national debt.

Johnson was pictured as concerned by the upturn in interest rates. something afire in a house at Giri Scouts of Paris High on A other relatives. 1 rams island. I 7UH- Nov. 29, the Senior Funeral services were con-! His contradictions were many.

Re married early, then com-- plained that he wasted 35 years raising children although he was i very fond of his brood. He advocated selective breed-' I ing of the human race, making i sterile all but the best. Presum- ablv he considered himself and communications of North Viet Nam in campaign on the 9-month-old which Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara has said "increasing emphasis 7 may be expected. seat 200 persons.

Folding doors will increase the seating capacity to 300. Also included in the new- brick veneer building, constructed with laminated arches, are 11 classrooms and a minister's study. Parking facilities provide space for 100 cars. M. L.

Pirtle of Lubbock. builder of Churches of Christ School will present a program to the girls of the high school who are interested in joining the Scouts. This program will begin ducted Saturday afternoon in Brownsville at" the Church of the Advent, Episcopal. Burial was made in Roseiawn Memorial among the fit, for he had 61 AUSTIN The Universi- the time he was Increased emphasis might be across the countrv. was con- lent by Guam-based B52 jet tractor for the building.

Con- bombers of the Strategic Air! struction began in September, engine craft that so far have; Temporary minister of the been used solely south of the church is Charlie Allen of Party of Texas Bureau of Busines 7-5 vears old. Research said Saturday Texas i Today's doctors would ap- nf nir border. B52s used then: saturation closet, was almost out. at 4 p.m. in the auditorium, At 3 p.m.

one truck was dis- Albert Lee Moore, a senior patched to a North Main Street student at Texas Tech in ROXTON per cent from October 1954. T. J. Smith and W. W.

pleton are present elders and bombing tactics at noon on sus- members of the building com- pected Communist targets in! mittee. the general area of the Michelin The Emberson Church of bock, returns today after spend- Paris News was ing the holidays with his par- ents. Mr. and Mrs. Tfimsn Moore.

325 Church He is a mu-j IS or ixOXt durmg die Uon 33 per cent. PrinrsHnn mainr at Thanksgiving Holidays irOIH sic educanon major at werg Tne bureau Jr. and children. Jimmy andjripnpq- thr. A rhmne- (Contuiued From Page One) i jpfferv of -r vl L- Winna.

ui nirUiion are spena-: Dorothy Frv with Mrs. of negotiators on the side with the holidays with Mrs. P. Fulton Fry: Viet Nam, 77 said Socialist Thompson Sr. at Blossom, Also the Joel Webbs and Ar i mans and daughter Lida and Mr.

and airs. Frank Tippen Mr wd airs Tommv Adams and Tippen took his son, Jim- daughters, Lezlie and Wendv, my. and hew, Jackie i besides Bobby Kirkman from In January, it was estimated Leader Norman Thomas. it would cost S11.6 billion to pay -j; got the interest on the federal debt far except we both that i Tfaoni on, deer hunting on his Arlington College, with the Lee The estimate now is up to S12 we were sincere," 3ease near Huntsvffle. Kirkhams.

billion or more. spock, chairman of the protest, All official board members I Residential construction was ived to S1 worked until dov.Ti 11 per cent from last Oc- De WES so tober to S55 mfllion. Nonreaden- that sets a art rial construction totaled S54 mil- man i earl Texans was that he was articulate with a pen, and letters and articles flowed copiously from his hand. He preserved most of his cor-j respondence. plantation.

Smaller planes, including F5 Freedom Fighters, Christ was founded over 70 years ago. about 1S95. Early 1965 construction has remained close to traditional patterns, although strafed and bombed in direct elders of the church were J. T. support of the Vietnamese Gambill.

Bob Gambffl and Dave troops. Hanes. Elder Carrington was Five million rubber trees dot the church's first minister, the plantation, which the i Other ministers of the church Frenclj management abandoned; were Charley Taylor, Tom weeks ago because of Ccm- Walker. Elder Denton, Elder residential buDdiag this vear Kis curiosity "has been showing markedly i man i' thin less vigor, comparld to non- munist harassment and huge extended to! taxes demanded by Viet Cong agents. Pilots at times found the canopy of foliage a handicap.

particularly zwlogy. residential building Lincecum wrote articles for sci- The piantaaon has been the entific magazines and kept spec-; largest rubber producer in While most of the flowing to eastern col-! South Viet Nam. Newsmen were ing industry in Texas has shown leagues. The climb in the rate on short-; reported term barravrings has been most! -Thomas sharp. Since 1961 the average tow rate on three-month bills has OJ and adult leaders of the Red! nss EVELYN ODEN from gone up 72 per cent, from 2.27 to 4.35 per cent in the week of Nov.

13. In the same period the average cost of long-term borrow- River Valley Girl Scout Council interested persons are re- a halt itf the bombing of North minded of the annual meeting marcners East Texas State CoDege, Commerce, was home with Mrs. Roy trends similar to those seen nationwide, apartment construction in Texas has had a bigger boom during 1961-63 than the national increase. The result' He was among a small group that wanted Texas to secede from both the South and the products as the Civil war ap- shoes. told that each of the trees annually produced 550 worth of latex, raw material for such the Civil war into the war.

as tires and tennis Hardin and F. L. Young. Hubert Roach, now minister of the Bonham Street Church of Christ here. A.

L. Rhodes and Johnnie Goddwin also served the church. The late Leonard Coker of Paris, who served as minister for seven years, began the building program and campaign to move the church to Paris. ings has increased from 3.90 per cent to 4.35 per cent. Viet Nam.

a presidential bid for scheduled for Nov. 30 at a cease-fire agreement, and ad-1 beL at Ray's Steak JS yj a House. The meeting begins at a Front-! 7 EJ was IJUliiC JCVUV iiiv-i ttioii. ilio Itcuil I Oden; with Mr. and Mrs.

Otha has been a sharper cutback dur- JS' tho infr 1.QM-S5 denlv decided his wife needed; jl AUA.A o. i Jones were the Charles Quis-! ing enbem-s and children. Melaniej Cong be reore-1 The trash ic knp scfceduk for i by Denton D. Jones and family. Johnson was described also as! ff LnTan ne iation concerned over the upward lh 1 1 5 trend in interest rates on Ul Ol ie: am free state and iocal bonds.

He!" through October was him three days after he joined Confederate Army, and left service. 43 It is understandable that with per cent compared to the first his temperament he thoroughly feels, officials said, that this! GotUeft and femarch spon-; d3 2 on e.5.-. will make it more difficult to I sors dia uieir oest kee i for the Sanare 7:30 a.m.-5:15 0 si demonstraion 1 ate ui tone, even suggesting au-! dna a rn i p.m. about S5.6 bfliion" this vear. up! The wer altogether suc-jf i tnrday morning.

Par- 2500 million from January. This cessM. One cluster of about 30 i'? poLce resulted from contractors and Mr Rhoades, hated the carpetbaggers Reconstruction Era and partic- I ularly Texans who dealt with Even if xas apartment i he called them traitors, building for the year retains the' He became so incensed that through the first' he country, setting up a arrested one for i I his sister and brother. Mrs. I ized in I960.

ing schedules more promptly i- imS rtme chput Drunkenness. A burglarv at the erce meet- marchers along chant-. Maness and wife. i Ideal Laundry, 105-I9th NE was than before. Cabinet memebers and cj- heads are being told by i today?" Hey.

hey, LBJ 'How many ads have you Schultze to absorb in their next year's budgets as much as A handful of Negroes walked carrying signs which pro- sib-e of the cost of the civilian I claimed them members of the pay raise. They are being I Deacons, a militant Negro de- in the building. County officers reported a quiet evening Fri-J day. ged among other things lojfense organization. '-Klan I i costs through better man- i ware.

Deacons here," one of i Communism, one of their signs i and family of New Home were I them read. said J. F. the F. E.

Fra-i Mrs. I children of Lubbock and Mrs. Harold farming enterprise in Tuxp'an, i VTTCC 243 61 cent above the value of Mexico. He stayed there until. rt IS i apartment construction author- the end of span, when Settle, came 10 visu ncn jhis longmg to see his children brought him back to Texas.

Unexpected company for supper? That creamed vegetable you made for the family will be party-style if you top it with heated crisp French- fried onion rings. As you probably know, the onion rings come in cans and are handy to keep on the pantryshelf. EVERGREEN CEMETERY ASSOCIATION (A NON-PROFIT ASSOCIATION) Burial Spaces, with Perpetual Care, $100.00 each. Payment Plan for purchase prior to need is available. Call Superintendent Wm.

Moomaw, SU4-6750 for (nation. I Mary M. Pierce, and Graham 1 Austin led in rankings by I building dollars per capita, with! i QO i AX under investigation cGlass cn of a tntal. Hourion, which had Someone entered the establish-i f. as 71 hi the largest total construction ment through a window andj robbed drink vending machines law, Mrs.

trnest McGlasson, i and her mother, Holt. Mar CLIFTON ODEN and fam- fly from Coppell visited during October with a S26 million total, had the second-highest per capita building figure, S2S3. Dallas, which reported S12 million in construction in Octo- cut costs through agement. Unless present estimates are lar off the mark, the deficit wffl not be the largest ever in peacetime. In fiscal 1959 the deficit totaled S12.4 biilion.

Trucfcloads of printed signs were on hand for the marchers. "Steps to Peace: Stop the Bombings." they read: "Slop Erodes the Great Society." GENE RODEN SONS WHATEVER WE DO, we do sincerely to serve you. here with the Smith Loangs: Among tnem was a man; With the Jim were wrapped in chains, dragging a ames Fowler and wooden hammer and sickle. "Bomb Hanoi," read his sign, topped by a small U.S. flag.

Gainesville, and Mrs. family, i Fowler and daughter Katlry of Grand Prairie. NOTICE! We will not knowingly undersold. We guarantee you. OFF ANY PRICE QUOTED ELSEWHERE.

Deweese Monument Co. 448 Lamar Ave, Pirii Ota) SU 4-7200 Pine Mill SU4-4945 Excellent selection of shrubs, plants, fruit, pecan and shade trees. We can help you with your ideas, or share ours with you. Largest nursery in N.E. Texas S.E.

Oklahoma with the most complete service. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK Vz mile off Loop 286 on Pine Mill Texas S. Mill Rd. Hwy W. N.

GOSPEL MEETING AT WESTWOOD Church of Christ (Formerly The Emerson Church of Christ! 32nd at Graham NOV. 28 THRU DEC. 3 JOHN McCOY, Evangelist of Corpus Texas SERVICES Each Night, 7 p.m. Sunday Worship 10:45 a.m. and 7 p.m.

EVERYBODY WELCOME.

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About The Paris News Archive

Pages Available:
395,105
Years Available:
1933-1999