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The Paris News from Paris, Texas • Page 10

Publication:
The Paris Newsi
Location:
Paris, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
10
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PARIS NEWS, THURSDAY, JAN. 6, 1955 BRIEFS AND PERSONALS DM4.4323 Herbert Ordway, of Ordwayl Court meeting 'tor Mt for Furniture Company, is in Chicago a Monday in the Commis- this week for furniture market. regular Cotnissionert MARKETS Fort Worth Livestock TORT WORTH 1.000:" 300; cattle active, stetdj- Cmlves to weak. Good choice sUnlbter steers 1S.0043.00: choice 7SO lb 23.SO: lb 24.50- to medium 12.00-17.50: medium and good fed heifers beel cows 10.00-11.00: good and choice tilling calves 15.00-19.00; plain and medium 10.00-H.OO; medium and good stacker steers 13.00-I*:50: medium and good stacker stefr Eogs 2SO; butcher hogs 50-15 lower: Sons steady, choice So 1 and a trades lb butchers 18.25: choice lb butchers n.00-18.00; choice lb butcher 16.00; sows 13.00-16.00. Sheep slaughter and feeder lambs sloners Courtroom at the Court House.

Guests of Mrs. Hill East Texas State Teachers College, Commerce, returned to Bo- fata for practice teaching in the high school after spending the holidays at home with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Morris Ford, 2360 E. Price St.

Mist Lou Tharp, (, and Mrs. Corine Ballard, SU-26th NW, have returned from El Centre, where they attended the Unity were Kenneth Hill, Col. A. C. Barnett and Lt.

Col. Edward Hea, Air Force officers; Mr. and Mrs. O. L.

Maxwell, and Dr. Nelson Alexander, all of Dallas. Paris police are searching for a 1953 Chevrolet reported stolen here Wednesday night from a downtown parking lot. The auto's owner, W. W.

Maroney of 1030 Dickson Avenue, reported the theft. Northeast District Singing Con-j vention will be held Sunday in the East Post Oak community. There will be all day singing and dinner on the ground. The public is invited to attend. A truck jack-knifed at Clarksville and 17th SE here Thursday wedding of Mrs.

Ballard's daughter. Miss Helen Burton, to Rex Helms of Honey Grove. The couple is at home in El Centre. at $100. Police nabbed a pair of suspect- steady; other classes scarce: choice cooled these mclaaed IN 110 lb choice to prime tombs good cbolce shorn dautbter vi SB-IS oo- coll imaftbs musty ta 17.30.

Dallas Spot Middling Spot Cotton: Dallas, 33.50; GalvestorC 33JO; 33.85.* Orleans. 34.05. Fort Worth Grain FORT WORTH. No. 1 hard, S2.59',i-TO4- Com No.

white, 2 white. Sorghums. No. 2 yellow milo, S.70- 75- Local Grain I.OCAL 2 oats, 90 cents per bushel: No. 2 barley, Sl-20 per bushel; maize.

$2-35 per hundredweight Milk Milk Marketing Order 43 prevailing Class I price in November, $5-911 per hundredweight testing 4 per cent butterfat phis 6 per one-tenth of one point over 4 per cent and minus cents per one-tenth of one point under 4 per For manufacturing purposes paid last half of December, $3.35 per Enloe. weight per cent butterfat.i Mrs. Jimmy Sherley. plus cents per point over. cent! yrrf ha onfl c- fat and minus i375 cents per point wt- nas on IO tier 4 per cent fat to join her husband, who PJC President Guest Speaker At PHS Assembly "Each must choose a career in order to provide for his household;" Dr.

J. R. McLemore, president of Paris Junior Collegee, told the student body of Paris High School at their assembly Thursday morn- DEATHS AND FUNERALS Mrs. H. H.

McCloud Paris Neews service ROXTON-Mra. H. H. McCloud. ill at home here the past seven months, died Thursday about 8:45 a.m.

Funeral arrangements awaited arrival of relatives, McDonald Funeral Home of Cooper having charge of arrangements. The service will be held at the Baptis't Church here- and burial made in Restland Cemetery. Mrs. McCloud, the former Miss Fannie Williams, daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs.

Frank Williams, was born January 18. 1880. and had lived all her life in Roxton vicinity. She was married April 3, 1898, at Noble to Mr. Williams, his death occuring iu 1945.

She leaves these children: D. R. morning and received $100 damage when it collided with a 1947 Chevrolet driven by Paul Ray Me- ing in the high school auditorium, Carter of 903 West Cherry Street, usually have to learn to like Police identified the truck driver' as Seth Pickering of Tulsa, Okla. Damage to the Chevrolet was set ed short-change artists here Wednesday night after they attempted to work their act at the Neighborhood Grocery, 20th and Pine Bluff Streets. Sgt.

H. B. Chamberlain spotted the pair on Lamar Avenue minutes later and arrested them. They were identified by police as ex-convicts from Fort Worth, and are being held for vagrancy investigation. and Personals Mr.

and Mrs. L. H. Moore of Tulsa returned home Wednesday after a visit with his parents. Mr, and Mrs.

J. A. Moore tnmdrtdweifbi there with the is now u. stationed Navy. Mrs.

J. W. Wooldridge and Mrs. Thelma Parr, 744-3rd NW, have returned from Scottsdale, nm nifarm price In November. S5.76 per testing per cent Poultry, Eggs cents per dozen, A hens'17-cents per! where they visited Mr.

and Mrs. pound: light hens, 8 cents per pound; i W. B. Wooidridge and familv. roosters, lo cents per pound: conuner-' rial broilers, 20 cents per pound Northwest Arkansas; 21 per pound East Texas: 92 cents per pound Paris plant.

Paris Rabbit Market Parts Rabbit Market: White to pounds. 21 centr. colored fry T.I to pounds. 20 cents: I cents Mary Elizabeth is the name of the daughter born January 5 at St Joseph's Hospital in Kokomo, to Mi and Mrs. John L.

Hollowell. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. John Hollowell, 865 £. Polk St.

Marion H. Ford, student at what we have to do rather than do ouly what we McLemore, the guest speaker at the assembly further pointed out. The speaker stated that a man renders greatest service to mankind by doing his work. As examples he pointed out Henry Ford, Thomas Edison and Franklin D. Roosevelt.

In conclusion, Dr. McLemore gave these three qualities that students are developing now in preparation for a career. These are scholarship and helpfulness to others. The subject of Dr. McLemore's speech was from I Timothy 5:8.

The speaker was introduced by Hampy Hodgei, vice-president of the Student Council. The opening prayer was given by Marilyn Bowden and Billy Trif- Hutto and led the student body in the singing of "Loyal and True." School Cerfsus Begun Paris News Service HONEY GROVS Harry L. Thompson, appointed census trustee for the Honey Grove Independent School District, began i work this week. He plans to complete the census during January. There were about 12.000 students in U.

S. colleges in 1850 and about two million in 1930. Paris Challenged On Scout Meeting Sulphur Springs has issued a challenge to the City of Paris on attendance at the annual Lone Star Area Council, Boy- Scouts of America, meeting scheduled at Paris Boys Club Gym, January 13. "We'll have more people there from Sulphur Springs than you'll have from 1 Ben Dickersou of Sulphur Springs, ticket chair man, challenged Walter Bassano of Paris, incoming Lamar Dis i ct Chairman. E.

B. Germany of Dallas, president of Lone Star Steel, will be principal speaker for the Occasion. The business meeting will begin about 4:30 p. m. with the dinner due to start at 7 p.m.

Tickets. $1.50 each and can be obtained at The Paris News business office. New Names Candi Jane is the name of the daughter born January 2 at St. Joseph's Hospital to Mr. and Mrs.

John Awbrey, 601-14th NE. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. J. M.

Awbrey, Paris, Mrs. Mary O. Doolin. and E. H.

Doolia, Paris. HUGO, Okla Barbara Gayle Is the name given the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry A. Simpson, Antlers, born December 29 in Memorial Hospital here.

Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. John Simpson, Hugo, and Mrs. Earl Logan, Soper. and great-grandparents, Mrs.

John Wright and Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Logan, all of Hugo.

McCloud, SkeUytown; Alvie D. McCloud and Hunter McCIoud, Houston; Mrs. Toriy Gregory, rt Worth; Mrs. Mabel TiUey and Lewis McCloud; San Francisco, Loftin McCloud, El Paso, and Mrs. Jim Baughman.

Roxton; 23 grandchildren, three great- grandchfldreh and a brother, Ed Williams, Paris. Mrs. Jim McDonald Paris Ntws Service HUGO, Okla. Mrs. Jim Donald, 54, Ervm Rt Hugo, tjted in Memorial Hospital here about Tuesday after a lengthy illness which had confined her to bed for many months.

Coffey Funeral Home had charge of arrangements for services. Born September 22, 1900, in Mrs. McDonald was Maudie Rebecca Williams before her marriage to Mr. McDonald here, January 26, 1922. She was a member of St.

Mark's Episcopal Church, having been baptised a few weeks ago. Surviving are her husband and one daughter, Miss Christine McDonald, living at home; a brother, Jim Thomas, east of Grant, and a step-sister, Mrs; Pearl Oakes, Ervin Rt, Hugo. Hugo Dentists Checking Teeth Of Fire Victim Paris News Service HUGO. Okla. Hugo dentists this week were asked to examine an upper bridge-work from the mouth of the still unidentified victim of last October's alleged insurance-murder plot near Davis.

The dental bridge from the badly charred body found in a burned station wagon there, is intact, and served to explode an early identification of the body as that of David Hagler. Fort Worth, later charged with murder in coalition with the case. The State Crime Bureau man who brought the bridgework here, said there is now some reason to believe that the body found was that of a man from this area of the state or who had spent some time here. He explained that he did not expect the bridge to be identified here, but thought that area dentists might have seen similar work in the mouths of local patients, which might help trace its maker. Local dentists who viewed it, expressed the opinion that it might be foreign work or possibly that of a "cut price" dentist.

EARL HOOKER Opens Office Leave for Induction Paris News Service HUGO, Okla. Leaving Hugo for Oklahoma City for induction into the armed forces of the United States were Henry Joe Springfield and Don Arthur Ensey, of Bos well, and Charley Mon Maynard, Nelson. Hooker Opening New Office Here Earl Hooker. Paris real estate man and former secretary qf the First Federal Savings and Loan Association, has announced the opening of his own real estate office. The office will be located at his home at 2152 Simpson Street and will specialize in loans to buy, build, repair and refinance real estate.

Hooker will also carry real estate listings. Hooker is also an outstanding amateur golfer having won all major Paris tournaments and several in other cities. He has been secretary of Paris Golf and Country Club and manager of the Springlake Golf Course. Hooker was born at Fulbright. He Fourth Ward School.

Paris High School and Paris Commercial College. He is a past president of the Junior Chamber of Commerce and a past state director of the Texas Junior Chamber of Commerce. He is married to the former Miss Janice Jones of Paris. They are members of the First Christian Church of Paris. Pattonville Visitors Visiting Mr.

and Mrs. Barney Scott, Pattonville, during the holidays were Capt. James R. Holmes, Fort Hood, and family; Mrs. Opal Newman and daughter of Glendale, Mr.

and Mrs. Daltoh G. Phillips, Waxahachle; Charlie Cason and family and Miss Icie Faye Whirley, Honey Grove; John H. Gray and family, Paris and Mr. and Mrs.

Louie Roberts, Deport. a NIWVJ.IA 01ZIN300WOH "WE KILL THE BEST AND SELL FOR LESS! SIRLOIN STEAK 45' CHUCK STEAK CLUB STEAK lb 39' T-BONE STEAK 55 PORK CHOPS Lb 53 CHUCK ROAST 33' SHORT RIBS lb 21e PORK Sausage 35 GROUND BEEF CALF LIVER u. 33 OPEN SUNDAY MORNING, 8:00 A.M. to 12:00 NOON City Market WHOLESALE RETAIL 329-1st W. Dial 4-9139 ii i The Importance of LOW SHELF PRICES to food shoppers Food "specials" con be deceptive unless regular, everyday shelf prices are low, too.

The plain truth of the matter is: You lose the "savings" that you act when you buy "specials" unless the "other" items on your shopping list are lower in price, too. It is Safeway policy to bring you special buys and the lowest possible prices every day on regular shelf items. Listed in this advertisement are 54 of our hundreds of reduced, regular shelf Items that you buy day in and dcy out week in and week out year in and year out- If you're paying more for these Sterns, then, you're losing considerable sum of money when you consider that there ore 52 shopping weeks in a year. Smart shoppers have learned from experience that it's Safeway for the greatest food savings in PARIS Be sure shop Safeway! l-i Duchex Miracle Whip 'aste ells Whole. American Salad Dressing Safad Dressing Tomato Catsup 7 Sour Pickles Dill Pickles I Cocoanut.

Chocolate Drop. Jane Arden Crackers Crackers Pepto Bismol Mineral Oil Cheese Spread 39c Jar 39c 2 25c Bot 23-Oz. Bot. 23c Busy i Bsker Oven Glo 49c 25c Pkt: 49c 39c Van Zee Krsf Philadelphia Ballard 2 3-Oz. Pitts.

Z3( Cans Biscuits Fish Sticks Desserts Puffin S-Oz. I Pre-cooked. Captain Choice Assorted flavors. Joyette Froien Ctn. Gold Cove Assorted flavors.

Fine. Jell-Well Kitchen Charm Chum Salmon Desserts Wax Paper Facial Tissues Powdered Sugar Pure Cane Sugar Shortening No. 1 Can 2 3-Oz. Pkgs. 100-cnt.

Roll 300-cnt or Brown Mrs. Tucker's Armour Star Admiration Coffee Coffee Coffee Folgers Coffee Lip ton Tea Strawberry 19c 9c Apple Butter 49c Peanut Butter Orange Pekoe Bama Peal Rocit 35c 9c 15c 17c 12c -n Ctn. IDL Ctn. JJL 99c "can 99C "in 99c Can Pkg. 12-Or.

Glass 99c Class 12-Oz. 27c Grapefruit Town House Natural Tells Taste Tells Van Camp White or golden, cream- style. Gardensldc Tomato Juice Pork Beans Pork Beans Corn Niblets Mexicorn Banjo Hominy Sweet Peas Garden 1 Peas Spinach Tomatoes Milk carnatlon Sugar Belle Del Monte Early Pet Evaporated 31 Baby Foods Strained. Tuxedo Tuna 46-Oz. Can 19c Can 300 Cans Cans 19c 300 Cans 12-Oz.

Ca 300 Can No. Ca 21c 7c 303 1-7 Can I 303 Can 303 lUC 25c ins Ta lOc Flour Harvest Blossom Can No. 1 Can 4U-OZ. Cant Can 10-Lb. lOc 25c 19c Peaches Sliced or halvcs.

Highway Sliced or halvcs, yellow Cling. Del Monte Fmlt. Hostess Delight Cocktai! Apple Sauce Sauce Pineapple Juice Lakcmcsd Ocean Spray. "Serve with Can LaLanl No. Can Can No.

2', Can 303 Can 300 Can 46-Oz. Can 24c 27c 33c 19c 15c 27c SAFEWAY.

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About The Paris News Archive

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