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The Paris News from Paris, Texas • Page 3

Publication:
The Paris Newsi
Location:
Paris, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

I TI 0 HOP AN STORMS Hollanders turn out on the beach near the North Sea sumnw resort of Berten Aan Zee to see the Panamanian ship Katinco which driven ashore by the that hit northwestern Europe. BRIEFS AND PERSONALS Dial 4-4323 Firemen blamed an electrical short for a brief fire that damaged the ceiling and wiring in one of Gibraltar Hotel's rooms early Wednesday morning. They answered the alarm at 2:10 a.m. The name of Howerton Motor Company was inadvertantly omitted from the list of official motor vehicle inspection stations in Sunday's issue of The Paris News. Howerton is one of the county's 20 official stations.

Couch Shoe Store, located on the west side of the Plaza in the building that formerly housed the Rex Theatre, will have its formal opening around February 15, C. E. Couch, owner, has announced. A Lamar County Court cast of driving while intoxicated against Lonnie Morris, Paris, has been upheld by the Court of Criminal Appeals in Austin. Morris had been fined $250 and costs and sentenced to six days in jail on the charge.

Personals Carl Siebenthall and John R. Siebenthall of Beaumont are spending a few days with their father. W. L. Siebenthall.

1825 W. Kaufman and other relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Richards, 754 E.

Polk had as weekend guests their sons, Jack Richards of Des Moines, Iowa, and Thomas Richards, Jr. of Wichita Falls. Mr. and Mrs. Grant White.

Paris Inn. left Wednesday for Dallas New Names John Dennis ii the name of the son born January 16 at the Sanitarium of Paris to Mr. and Mrs. John R. Craig, 1230 E.

Hearon. Grandparent is Mrs. Dollic Craig, 2404 Kaufman. Ann is tht name of daughter born January 14 at St. Joseph's Hospital to Mr.

sad Mrs. W. D. Nye, 1571 W. Henderson.

Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. H. L. McCarrcll, 1571 W.

Henderson, and Mrs. Annabelle Nye, Norfolk. Va. Marcus Clark is the name of the son born January 14 at the Sanitarium of Prls to Mr. and Mrs.

Morris Martin, Petty. Grandparents arc Mr. and Mrs, C. J. Clark, Roxton.

snd Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Martin, Petty. MARKETS Fort Worth Livestock FORT WOKTH CmtUe J.WO: food tholrc JO.oo-SVOfl rood led 19.0O-J1.50: mfdlum rood cows 10.00-14.00: rood calvfs U.00-30.00; good medium jtorlttr yturtlnen 14.00-10.00. Hors 450- up 35-SOj choice 100-344 it) 3.

MO. strong to hlrher: choice to prlmr xroolfd club limbs 31.00; (rood tnd choice 30.00; rood unrt choice thorn IB.34-1S.SO; feeder 11.00-10.39. Dallas Spot Middling Spot Cotton: DulUs, 33.45; Galvcston. 33.75; Houston. 33.85; New Orleans, 34.10.

Fort Worth Grain FORT WORTH (AP). -Wheat. No. 1 hard. Corn.

No. 2 white, No. 1 white, Sorghums. No, 2 yellow mllo, $2.6570. Local Grain LOCAL No.

2 oaU, JO per bushel: No. 2 barley, flJO buchel; maize. I2.3S per hundred- welirtit Milk MIT.K.— Federal Milk 43 prevailing Class I price InNo- vember. $3.811 per hundredweight testing 4 butterfst plus 6 per one-tenth of one point over 4 per cent and minus cents per one-tenth of one point under 4 per cent. For manufacturing purposes paid last half of Drrember, S3.35 prr hundredweight tftstlnR 4 per cent butterfat, plus 6 cents per point over 4 per cent fst and per point under 4 per cent fat.

Minimum mlform prtn la November IS.Tt per traildretirtUht ttitlat four rut bntMrfat Poultry, Eqgs 40 cents per A 'POXH-TRV: Hesvy hens, pent? per pfivtnd; light henr. 7 prr pound; 10 cer.t» per pound; commercial Northweat Ark- 25 cents; East Texas, 15 cents; delivered to plant. Paris Robbit Market MsTlwrt It to to attend her Charlie Newell, daughter, who wit Mrs. enter Gaston Hospital there Friday for surgery. Mrs.

Newell is the former Miss Nina Lawrence. HOSPITAJ.S HOSPITAL C. Hodge, 1808 ST. JOSEPH'S Admitted: P. E.

Tony. 10 year old son of Mr. and Mrs. A. O.

Ballard, Pattonville; Wanda Gambill 3503rd SW. Dismissed; Boyd Fain, 7-year- old son of Mr. and Mrs. B. J.

Fain. Direct; Mrs. J. M. Sbaryer, 526-15th SE; Joseph.

4 year-old SOD of Mr. and Mrs. B. B. Bauer, 229-6th NE; Mrs.

Walker Bramlett. 100 W. Oak. SANITARIUM OF Admitted: Mrs. PARIS J.

D. Foster, Ben Franklin; Barbara, 10-year- old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. E.

McDow, Honey Grove; Fulton Fry, Roxton: Mrs. A. B. Burgess, Antlers, Mrs. W.

T. Armstrong; Mt. Yerhon: Mrs. Fred Blassingame, 2566 W. Houston; Bill, 13 year old son of Mr and Mrs.

Dennis Gibson, 1141- 16th NE. Dismissed: Mrs. E. R. Wright, Arthur City; Charles Gurley, 14- year-old son of Mrs.

Nannie Gurley, Blossom; J. A. McNeal, 130 W. Houston; R. S.

Toutchstone, Broken Bow. Garry, 10- year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Archie Gage, Route 4, Paris; Terry, 4-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs.

Marcus King. 511 N. Main. LAMAR GENERAL HOSPITAL Admitted: W. E.

Dennte. 214 Pine Bluff. Dismissed: Kenneth Anderson. 543 10th SE; Mrs. Viola Gillie, 316 Bonham; Mrs.

C. E. Cochrum and infani daughter born January 15, Cooper; Mrs. Bessie McCorrnlck, 1818 Maple: Mrs. Mary Render.

Roxton; Mrs. Cecil Williams and Infant son born January 17, Route 5. Paris. East Delta Wins Pair East Delta swept two games from Enloe in District 53-B basketball Tuesday night. The girls game went to Esst Delta, 75-53, and the boys game 6850.

Patsy Patterson led East Delta's scorers ilv the girls game with 39 points. Deborah Randall scored 26 for Enloe. Leading scorers in the boys game were Jerry Cotton with 26 points for East Delta. Murray Winner with 19 for West Delta plays at East Delta Friday night. Ex-Convict Caught In Girl Slaying TRENTON, N.

J. De Maio, 35-year-old ex-convict, was arrested yesterday, after being picked up by chance, and held for Connecticut authorities on a charge of killing bis Sunday night date, pretty Celia Cienski, 20. De Maio and a friend were arrested separately in New Jersey within hours after the girl's nude and battered body was pulled from the bottom of an icy canal near her home at Windsor Locks, Conn. A New Jersey state trooper, who stopped De Maio on a routine highway check, reported that as he approached the blurted, '1 didn't mean to do it, officer." The trooper said De Maio offered no resistance and indicated he would return voluntarily to Connecticut. A short time friend and fellow construction later, De Maio's worker, Gerald J.

Celette, 34, voluntarily surrendered in Newark, N. J. He told police he had read that he was wanted for question- Youth Choir On Program Tuesday For Dallas Meet Seventy members of the youth choir of First Baptist Church were in Dallas Tuesday night to appear on the program of the Dallas Evangelistic Conference sponsored by the Texas Baptist Convention. Earl Ruble is director of the choir. Accompanying the group, besides Mr.

Ruble, were George Solomon, Mrs. C. R. Cozort, and Mr. and Mrs.

Alfred Fangio. Speakers on the program included the Rev. Warren Hultgren. pastor of the Downtown Bapt i Church in Corpus the Rev. R.

N. Ramsey, pastor of First Baptist Church in Denison. and Dr. R. G.

Lee, pastor of Bellview Baptist Church in Memphis, Tenn. ing. He was formally charged with aiding and abetting in homicide. The men, both of Springfield, are to be turned over to Connecticut authorities after arraignment later today on fugitive charges. On Sunday De Maio and Celetti, a father of two children, had a double date with Celia and her sister Ann, 22.

The older sister had met the pair in a hotel, she told police, and took them home to get Celia. The two couples then visited a number of bars but later separated. At the Hightstown, N. state police barracks, where De Maio was first taken after his arrest, Trooper J. A.

Smith reported that De Maio made a statement in which he told about the double date and bow he later went off alone with Celia. Smith quoted him saying he tried to attack the girl but she fought back, scratching his face sharply. Then she ran into the woods, he said, but he taught up with her and beat her. DEATHS AND FUNERALS THE PARIS NEWS, JAN. 19, 1955 Rev.

Amos Gustin Paris News Service HUGO, The Rev. Amos Gustin, 67, retired Church of the Nazarene minister, died Monday in a Lubbock, hospital. He was a brother of Mrs. Ed Hulen and Mrs. J.

Haltom, Hugo, and of Mrs. Oscar Smartt, Grant. Funeral arrangements were incomplete pending a message from a son in Mr. Gustin lived for a time south of Hugo on Highway 271 and formerly was pastor of the Nazarene church in Antlers. He had been ill since suffering a cerebral hemorrhage last October.

His home was at St. Petersburg, where his wife, also lives. A brother, Jess Gustin, of Gainesville, and several sons and daughters also survive. S. M.

Cunningham Paris News Service HUGO, Okla. Funeral services for S. M. Cunningham were held in Sapulpa Monday. An early day county attorney here, he was county judge.

of Creek Courityvior 16 consecutive years until his designation January 10. Judge Cunningham, who had lived in Sapulpa 24 years, died January 14 of compli- cations'from a hip injury. He was a native of Arkansas, and after fighting in the Spanish- American War with Theodore Roosevelt's Rough he moved to Oklahoma. He practiced law here with the late Judge Tom Hunter. While county attorney here he prosecuted the only man ever sentenced to hang in Choctaw County, fighting the murder case through the criminal court of a a Is, which directed that the court's order to hang -be complied with.

Three times the date for the hanging was set and the scaffold readied at a site about where the Hugo Ice Cream Company now stands. Twice a stay of execution was Man Believed Praying Pound to Be Suicide HOUSTON, Tex. WV-Mrs. Clarence E. McCloskey told Homicide Detective V.

F. ilart she saw her husband kneeling in a bedroom yesterday. She said she thought he was praying, since he frequently did so, 'and tiptoed away. Half an hour later, finding him in the same position, she investigated. He was dead.

A cotton sash cord had been looped around his neck and the top hinge of a door, said her hus- ill health. An inquest verdict of suicide was returned. Mrs. McCloskey band had been in granted at the last minute, and the third time a governor commuted the penalty to a life sentence in the state penitentiary at McAlester. The man still is there.

Judge Cunningham went from Hugo to where he was active in the work of First Methodist Church, tiie Creek County Bar Association, Elks lodge and Veterans of Foreign Wars. He is survived by his wife, Beu- and a daughter, Mrs. Curt Edgerton, both of Sapulpa, and one son, S. M. Cunningham Anchorage, Alaska, and one grandson.

Brose H. Young Paris News HUGO, Okla. Brose H. Young; 78. retired railroad man, died at Memorial Hospital here Monday at 10:45 p.m.

In failing health several years, he entered the hospital about 12 days ago. He was a member of First. Presbyterian Church here and lived at 1006 W. Clayton a number of years. Most immediate survivor is a daughter, Mrs.

Pauline Jacobsbn, of Mangum. Continued From Page Nationalists would flatly reject such an idea. Official quarters refused to talk for'publication, but there was no mistaking their unfavorable reaction. The China News, an independent newspaper with close contacts in high places, declared, "Free China will fight to the very end against such a presumptuous idea as a cease-fire in any form or under any circumstances." There is a general impression here too that Dulles in effect was telling the Communists they needn't worry about the U.S. 7th Fleet intervening if Chiang Kai- shek's island outposts are attacked.

Dulles told a Washington press conference the Tachens were of marginal importance, at best, in the defense of Formosa. The United States is committed to the defense of Formosa and of the Pescadores. A threat to Pishan. a Nationalist island 32 miles southwest of the Tachens, also appeared to be developing. The Nationalist reported the Communists fired 132 shells at Pishan and said Red warships were in the vicinity.

Air Force headquarters reported Nationalist carried out night-long attacks against Com-. munist ships in the Tachens and many Communist craft were destroyed or damaged. Furniture Mart Forecasts Better Business in'55 NEW YORK New York furniture market approached the halfway mark today with many exhibitors forecasting better business in a possible rise in prices. "For some time now, manufacturers have been absorbing increasingly higher costs of production," 'commented Hal Meadoff, president of White Furniture Mebane, N.C. "If this keeps up, it will have to be reflected sooner or later at-the retail level." Showrooms at the week long exhibit buzzed with talk of price increases.

One major manufacturer was rumored to have.made an across-the-board increase of 3 per cent. Some exhibitors said they were- holding-the line now, but might be' "forced" to boost prices litter. Daniel C. Field, sales supervisor of the Englander Co. of Chicago, major manufacturer of mattresses, beds and sofas, said furniture makers have already trimmed prices as much as they can.

"If they haven't actually reduced prices, they're giving more value for the same price," he explained. "Costs are still' going up, and if going to be tough to cut prices i any more. Prices have leveled off pretty well by now and I think the next move will be up, npt down." LAWYER He entered private practice of law. and at the time of his retirement about five years ago, was in partnership with another son, J. Richard Hutchison here.

He served as a special judge of the; 62nd District Court here in 1928. He was a member of the State Bar Association, and served the Lamar County Association as ident in 1937, having been president the year before. He one of the early members of Gordon Country Club. He was a steward and trustee of First Methodist Church many years, and was a director of Liberty National Bank, of which, his youngest son, Philip Hutchison, is executive vice-president. Diphtheria Kills 25 Iran Twenty-five children have died in a diphtheria epidemic in the village of Minabad near the Soviet-Iranian border, the newspaper Keyhari reports.

It said the government is rushing doctors to the area. Peyton A. Ellison At Low 304 1st Nat'l Bank Btdg. Civil Service Dial 4-4488 Continued From and Settle' Denisofl, November 17, 1897, in the Methodist Church Milton. The accompanying picture was made at the time of their golden wedding anniversary.

The couple came to Paris in 1898, Mr. Hutchison having ah interest in the Duncan-Pool-Hutchison Dry Goods Company, then on the north side of the plaza. In 1904, he was named assistant county attorney, and was county attorney from 1908 to 1912, one of his sons, the late John T. Hutchison, later holding the same office. HOMOGENIZED Vitamin HOMOGENIZED VITAMIN 0 MILK Itt The Studebaker-Packard Corporation A medium-priced car for those who desire distinctive individuality! 1955-56 Sample School Texts Being Received Sample textbooks for jiext year for Paris city schools are being rccrived the city school superintendent's office.

Five samples of each subject is sent from the publishers. A textbook committee composed of touch- ers will meet and decide on one of the five. They will then pass their selection on the supcrin- tcadent who will order it. Wife of Ousted Guiana Premier Is Free Again GEORGrTTOWN, British Guiana Janet -TsRan, U. wife of the British Guiana Premier ousted in 1953 on charges of Communist plotting.

Is free again after sen-inn five months in Jail. Mrs. Jagan. general secretary of the Peoples' Progressive party led by her husband Cheddl Jagan. had been convicted of possessing subversive literature and holding a prohibited political meetnig.

Dies to Save Dog CHICAGO An apparent attempt to save his mongrel from his burning basement flat brought death last night to Patrick The body of the man and his net were found in the ruins of the flat. Neighbors aaM Gaha- tan had beev teen mifuMe (tnrtnf the ttrt, but tften disappeared. Young Mother of Five Children Kills Self CORS1CANA WV-A young mother of five small children shot herself fatally yesterday. An inquest verdict of suicide was returned In the death of 22-year-old Mrs. Peggy Kulkendall.

Her husband also survives. Too Late to Classify COMPLETE" TURKEY DINNER 75c THURSDAY ONLY Bill Lewis Cafe 102 Clarksville St. HOUSE FOR RENT clean, unfurnished five rooms and both. Close-In location. Av'allablc Monday.

January 14th. per month. DIMPLE CRAIN DAVIS Sth N.R. at 441707 Dial WH.X TARTY who ftnmd hwwn MVifold al Parts Gym Tuesday night, return billfold with to John Fustcn. 1W8 CxiT- bertarm Street, dial Several keyi on Ttnf, return to Paris News of- I.ARGF.

FOUR ROOM unfurnished house, all mc-dem NJt, mi FORD dttten, DM CONSjTBkLATIOM I4S HOMCPOWtlt Built by Packard Craftsmen CLIPPER IS THE CAR THAT MAKES IT SMART TO rfE DIFFERENT. Here's the car expressly designed to be distinctive in appearance as well as in performance the 1955 Clipper every inch a thoroughbred precision-built by Packard Craftsmen to traditional Packard Standards of quality and good taste. If you hesitate to buy a medium-priced car because six months hence it will be "everybody's car" the 1955 Clipper is for you! For in the Clipper you will find the individuality you seek and to which you are entitled. £25 AND 248 HORSEPOWER ENGINES With the most powerful engines in its field, you will command more responsive power than is available in any other car in the medium-price range. Precision engineering made famous by Packard makes the new Clipper engines compact, quiet, efficient TWO TRANSMISSIONS IN ONE Clipper's new Twin Ultramatic Transmission is actually two transmissions in one puts a choice of starts at your fingertips lightning getaway cruising glide.

Teamed with the new Clipper V-8 engines, it provides outstanding gasoline economy. NEW GRACEFUL STYLING 1955 Clipper styling features distinctive sweeping lines. The luxurious interiors of the Custom, Super and DeLuxe models offer an unlimited choice of harmonious color combinations. The 1955 Clipper is distinguished in its timeless good taste it reflects the inimitable Packard touch! We invite you to come in and drive the 1355 Clipper today. Compare it with any car for appearance, for performance, for outstanding value.

You'll agree that the 1955 Clipper gives you distinctive individuality in the medium-price field! "TV MOCSr-AK-TV TV fw md rtMfea. you to mini 1955 GLASS MOTOR COMPANY UMW.

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About The Paris News Archive

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