Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Paris News from Paris, Texas • Page 6

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

Page 8, THI PARIS NEWS. MONDAY, MARCH 15, 1948 WILLING FOR JAIL Pacifist Widow Pays Only Part of Her Income Taxes waf Demo Convention Not Bound by Pad YELLOW SPRINGS. 0. Mrs. I rest of her tax was earmarked for! DALLAS Beauford Jes- Caroline Urie is a pacifist.

So'military expenses. ter said here he definitely had not she paid only 65.4 per cent of her a Christian. I must hence-1 bound the Texas State Democratic i tav tnrtsiv forth refuse to contribute in any! Convention by signing -e report Briefs About Town Malcolm Read is now employed Mrs. in the shoe department at Sears, 1 woman Roebuck Co. The Rev.

Grafton Smith, pastSr of the Church of the Nazarene, is ill at his home, 831-5th NE. Miss Betty Sulsar, 800-IOth NE, Jack Wooldridge, sales- at the Sherwin-Williams Store here, was away from- worli Monday because of illness. apers I First of Library Demonstrations in Garrison Ordered Withheld Taico March 20 Asks for Troops WASHINGTON iffl President, Truman today ordered federal; Mrs. Bobbie Espy, clerk in the! agencies to turn down any requests Paris Agricultural Conservation from Congress or the courts for Association office, has returned toj secret papers on loyally invesli- Saturday will be D-Day in Taico. The first Library Demonstration sponsored by the State Department of Education and Miss Mattie Ruth Moore, director of school libraries.

1947 federal income tax today. Mrs. Urie. white-haired widow of a career Navy officer, figures the (Continued from Page 1) This was the gift of Mr. way to maintaining the institution o( she wrote President Tru- opposing President Truman's civil rights program.

is now employed at the Southwest-1 work following an appendectomy. I gallons of government employees. will be held there March 20. acorn Bell'Telephone Co. I Otto Lain, manager of thc He instructed agency chiefs 'o cording to invitations being ex- A.

L. Alexander has been i Roebuck Co. store here, was in ire cr any demand, including any tended by J. Lyndall Hughes, su- charged in Lamar County Dallas Monday to attend a sloro subpoena "lo the office of the Pres- perintendent of the Taico schools, ited assault. i managers meeting.

i jdenl for such response as the A program, highlighted with a with aggravated 1 mand and thc Internal Revenue Jester signed the report after It Ross Mitchell, manager of the' Carl Gallagher, with the Farm president may determine to bc in speech by Or Department. was adopted by a committee of Paris Gin, is ill at his home 746-, llomc Administration in Dallas, tne public inlercst in lliu parti-j librarian at. Besides, she added, the atom' southern governors in Washington 8th SE i and Mrs Gallagher spent the cu i ar case makes war a "final criminal! last week. Mrs. Christine Vickers is now i weekend here with Mr.

and Mrs. absurdity." "i couldn't say we (Texas) could employed at the Coffee Shop' A Mayse, 629 S. Church St. Mrs. Urie didn't keep the 34.6 withhold electoral voles' because 11 on Lamar Avenue, She sent the not surc wc wanlcd lo do tnatt i Arthur M.

Snmnley. North Texas Stale Teachers College, has been ar- The order In effect backed up ranged. Others on the program in- elude Miss Moore. Mr. Hughes.

R. granddaughter, had charge of the register, and assisting in serving were Miss Anna Fred McGuyer, bu( Dallas; Miss Jo Nell Chambers, Gladewater; Miss Lola Nell Morgan and Miss Zelda Nance, Cooper, assisted by Ruth and Betty Barn- burg, Casa Grande, Ariz. Eldest son of Mr, and Mrs. C. B.

McGuyer, Thomas Rufus McGuyer per cent "war tax. i money to four pacifist organiza-i nc sa 1CTC un day night. one of them "on. Jcster and SUUj Dcraocralic tax return Ch Robert Calvert, Hills- want to send me to boro st eci hei enroute homc I won't pay the other per cent, that's Southern Democratic revolt would from Washington. i Jester said Texas' role in UlE se sad 0 rwar" have to wait until- after the state I party convention in May.

Threatened Strike Raises Meat Price CHICAGO W) County livestock was ford Mrs TTrip nVsrribe-i herself as I Hc said he planned to make a suppliers cut deliveries sharply t.o- a social rl to lhe le on situa-i day under prospect of a packing- 3 i a pel tj A i i Minr-lrm-c' 1 I brn ii ITI i rt County. coming to Texas with his parents when he was seven years old. and settled ot Moore Springs east of Paris. -10 jo i T3 i i a WUill-Ci, a pciwi.1.^. 18 llJl! I worker and a white-haired widow very aged widow, at that." Arthritis keeps her in bed most of the time now, but years ago she was an associate of Jane Addams He later movefl to Delta County.

and on June 27, 1872, married Miss Hattie Oats of Charleston, who ant i 6'bedience died in 1919. to governmental authority can not Mr. McGuyer has these living nlimited children: Thomas McGuyer and i shortly, either by radio or i house workers' slrike at midnight. through the press. Prices zoomed.

The governor said Sen. Harry Packers accepted no animals on Byrd and former Secretary of rect consignment. Those receiv State James E. Byrnes were fre- ed sale butchers and quently mentioned by southerners eastern buyers were estimated at famed Hull House. i principle that's import- as their choice for the presidential Jim McGuyer, Dallas; Mrs.

Olin (At Wasnin ton the Internal Revenue said the perv ented pub- venu Lyles. Charleston; Alvin McGuyer, discuss i on any individual tax 1 11 Batter. One spokesman, however, Detroit, and Lane McGuyer, with he makes his home. He has also three half-brothers, a half sister, Henry McGuyer, Frank McGuyer, and Mrs. Amos Templeton, all of'Cooper, and Gid McGuyer, Kemp, whose ages range from about 85 to 66.

His relatives present besides those living Cooper, included Mr. and Mrs. W. T. McGuyer, Mr.

and Mrs. J. F. McGuyer, Mr. and Mrs.Gene Croman and three children.

Mr. and Mrs. Jim Elsby, Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe McGuyer, Mr.

and Mrs. Eubanks and baby. Mr. and Mrs. Dugan Fox and children, Jimmie and Sue, all of Dallas; Mr.

and Mrs. Alvin McGuyer, and Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Adams and daughter of Detroit; Mr and Mrs. Elton McGuyer and children, Ruth.

Betty, Carol and Don of Casa Grande, Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Click and daughter. Peggy, Longview; Mr. and Mrs.

W. O. Chambers and daughters, Jo Nell; Mr. and Mrs. Howard Lain McGuyer, Galdewater; Mr.

and Mrs. J. D. McGuyer and Mr. and Mrs.

Faye Stell and Mrs. Lucy Stell, Paris; Mr. and Lanoy Taylor and daughter, of Denison; Mr. and Mrs Opal George and daughter and Mr. and Mrs.

Cas George, Sulphur Springs; Mr. and Mrs. Tom Hargraves. Antlers, Mrs. Jessie Oats and Mr.

and Mrs. Clarence Click Commerce; Mrs.Lillie Hammond and son, Marlowe, Texn nn: ning at 8 o'clock Mrs. Dimple C. Davis has returned to work in the mail order department at Sears, Roebuck Co. following a several weeks illness.

Members of the Winfield F. Brown Post of thc American Legion will he hosts Tuesday evening at 6:30 o'clock to auxiliary in embers in the Lcfiion building. A bingo party has been arranged to follow thc dinner. Mrs. B.

Sapp, executive-secretary of the teachers retirement cattle, 300 calves, i system, Austin, addressed Paris class room teachers this afternoon Czechs in Texas Condemn Red Coup brarian. Mt. Pleasant High School: Miss Alta Hawkes. English teacher at Blossom High School, and Miss Martha Ann Kunkeli, Taico school librarian. The demonstration will be an informal gathering of administrators, teachers and librarians from 25 counties in this section of the state LA GRANGK Friendship to discuss the need for greater with Russia was labeled as library service in schools.

kiss of death of free people" Demonstrations in other sections by top officers of the National of the state will be held later. IT -i 9 nnn r.v,«An 'class room Leacneis ims aner luuu nomination. He said he "couldn't and shee P- 3 30 in the hieh chool i man lirm stand against say" whom he would support if! Last Monday cstimaled ln nil" school were dis-l su ort lhe Mar shs Truman refused to back down on! 000 ho catUe 70 calves i ss ed 'arlv in orderthat teaoh- to sl Communism, his civil rights program. an 2 sheep were on sale. 'L "i i The views of thc Texas i i IT- i i (Vnivi 'ifl 'L alLLJH.it rt Czech Catholics of Tex- They have issued a call for.

united support of President Tru- 'ainst Russia Marshall Plan' commented: Calvert said Virginia, Arkansas, Mississippi and South Carolina had "definitely" revolted. He added i he believed the Texas convention caU1 thc ril was unevenly 25 cents to SI.50 higher with good ce advances ran from 50 cents pounds for Ijve the to I1CC was )0 Paris Kiwanis Club members are cans of Czech Amen- extraction were reminded of the Third Anniversary: mad 0pinrrl statement by the Rev. be held nl the Gibraltar; 1 5 1 oulsc a lan At Hospitals job to collect taxes would send an uninstructed dele- law as gation to the July national convention "in order to meet whatever situation arises." Texas Democrats who want an uninstructed delegation to the tional nighl beginning at 7:30. Sen. G.

E. Morris. Greenville, Maurice Wooley, district chair- steers'topped at $33 the" best price i High School Choral Club will offer on the Chicago market since Feb. president, and former Sen. L.

J. Sulak of La Grange vice pres man of Red River County, has an. dent a conference in i nounced a Scouters Meeting to be be the speaker and the Pans wnieience La held Tuesday Mal ch 16 at the Fil st hnnl nnnral Club offer- nt events jn Czechoslo Baptist Church in Clarksville. start convention will be the: vakia tlle statement said, "amply: ing at 7:30 P.M. All persons con- John OKeefe, veteran agncu frh-ndsh ip with Ked J.s-, "Ccted with Scouting in any instructor at.

I'owdcrly, will fl death for free i padly in Red River County arc bo- lure dieted. He said there would be a "small ST JOSEPH'S HOSPITAL Admitted: Mrs. F. E. White, Antlers, R.

H. Booker, Antlers, Mrs. Myrtle Snow. 749 E. Austin! G.

A. How Mrs. Arnold Ribble, E. Means, 600-6th SE; Witherspoon. Antlers, u.ti_ iJiiiji-i 111-31- j.

i uijioii ui Elizabeth Isom, ther nominee who advocates fed- middle oMhe-road group -at the: vu i ph er ao Di es 'the Powd'crly May convention, Gov. Jester pre-; L. rnengo UI6b i i. i I CVL'illLlf; UL L)U L1ULIY. J.

I1C M1UW VetS Hospital bunday will be sponsored by the Powderly j. i 4i 11 i 11 ivirtrt in 11 vu III 1U1 11 CC KIIV.I i i ii vi. vi i. i slides on Hangs Disease, at peopk Wt (or ullik sup i ing invited to attend this mectinR. the School pm Presidcnt Truman's Woolcy said.

Plans will be made School Thursday evening at 7:30 o'clock. The show Walter Lee Pherigo, about Woman's firm stand and the Marshall Plan for the remainder of 1948. against. Communism. Paris Rt.

Jerry Alice Logan, Mt. Pleasant. Dismissed: Mrs. W. T.

Badgett, Sumner; Lunsford Parchman, 1945 Culbertson; Johnson Davis, Blossom; H. M. Houser, 615 Lamar; Mrs Glen Wooley, Gainesville. LAMAR HOSPITAL Admitted: J. H.

Burnett, 1335 Fairfax. Dismissed: Mrs. B. L. Leavey, Powderly, and her infant son born March 9.

SANITARIUM OF PARIS Admitted: Mrs. Roy Skeen, Cooper; A. M. Carter, Honey Grove; Mrs. Loyd Higgins, Chicota; Miss Agnes Bullard, Detroit; Deatherage, Ladonia; Mrs.

T. A. Taylor, 1623 W. Houston; Mrs. Mary Nichols, Stanley, Mrs.

Betty Bunch. Antlers, Mrs. I Income Tax Deadline minority" fighting for a delegation The body will be sent here for I Pans Junior College for milk pro- Returns for 1947 income must be clucers. All lines relative to this effective protection of all. filed by midnight.

eral civil rights legislation, the governor said. Brown-Roden Funeral Home hav- Jester made these statements! 1 when asked if action of the Young) tlra Democrats Executive Committee at arrival here. industry are to be discussed and Tne dealh of Jan Mas iryk and Thc amo applied to the of arrangements, the should 1 be beneficial to all dairy- sending of thousands of the best filing of estimates on 1948 income. servlce depending onj men, Agent Tiewemphed The Czechs and SSovaks to slave In general these estimates must Tyler Saturday set the probable Survivors include two daughters, pattern for the May presidential I Mrs. Aileen F.

Hatcher, 216V20th convention, i SE, and Mrs. Geneva Pool, Pow- He said he approved of the derly. Young Democrats resolutions ap- proving an uninstructed delegation i Sister-in-LaW of Paris to, the Philadelphia Convention, and voicing resentmentf to the encroach-1 WOfflan ment of federal authority on the! states in tidelands. Barn, 2 7 000 Bales Of Hay Are Burned Matlie Hutchison, i SE, received word of the death of her sister-in-law, Mrs. F.

L. Terry, I about 70, who passed away Satur-j ar Sulphur Bluff; Mrs. Delia Liles and Mr. Liles. Mr.

and Mrs. R. M. Liles and three children, Mr. and Mrs.

Guy Liles and two children; Mr. and Mrs. Jack Liles and three children, Mr. and Mrs. Floj'd Visor and son.

Dismissed: Mrs, E. K. Sails, 414i a bout 2,000 bales of hay on Clyde Church, and her infant son born March H. K. Foster, Cooper; Mrs, Edna Reed, Clayton; Clarence Dale Holcomb, Sulphur, Alvin J.

Morris, Antlers, nrt Mr, Orvme Oats Mr i Mrs, C. M. Clifton, Cooper; Mrs. her and Mrs. Homer Helm, Mr.

and Mrs. A. W. Templeton; Mr. and Mrs.

B. F. McGuyer and two children, Mr. and Mrs. E.

G. Peters and son. Miss Jennie Oats, Mrs. Alpha Aldrich. Marvin Oats, Mr.

and Mrs. Paul Trapp, Mr. and Byron Oats and two children, Mr. and Mrs. Van Worden and three E.

L. Jenkins, Powderly, and her infant daughter born March Mrs. Elmer Clark, Honey Grove, and her infant son born March Mrs, A. N. Todd, Ladonia: Hazel McGuyer, Charleston: Robnett, Antlers, J.

M. Darnell, Paris Rt. Mrs. R. E.

Hickey, Mt. Pleasant. children. Mr. and Mrs.

L. Hemby. Mr. and Mrs. J.

P. Oats, Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Welch and three children. Mr.

and Mrs. Cal Schultz and two children, Mr. and Mrs. Arch Schultz and daughter, Mrs. GRIFFITHS CHILDREN'S HOSPITAL Admitted: Joel Paul, 7, son of Mr.

and Mrs. Paul Colbert, Idabel. Linda Laverne, five-weeks old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. S.

J. King, i day night at home in Plainview. She had been in ill health some time, but death came unexpectedly. A nephew, Maurice Hutchison, left to attend the funeral in Plainview Monday afternoon. Mr.

Terry, and a sister and a brother survive. Edwards Funeral Service At Honey Grove Sunday Carter's place, half a mile west of Sumner. Saturday about 7 p.m. Thc barn, nn unusually large one, was built there by Mr. Carter's father.

64 years ago. Several head of stock in the barn were gotten out. but Mr. Car- I By Paris News Correspondent ter had to cut a fence to get them HONEY GROVE. Funeral awav from the blazing building, i service for Frank Edwards, 55, was The' house at some distance from held Sunday afternoon at: Cooper's the barn and other farm buildings I Funeral Home, with burial made were not damaged.

Monday morning in Oakwood Cause of the fire had not been Cemetery. nf LU uitrsc: ebLmiaics JUUSL school is scheduled to begin at 9.45; the statement be filed by persons with income of a Ve tO 1 8110 thal the Communists stop S5.000 or more or those who expect Eddie Boroughs Lamar County al no crjme Jt is a fatal i acy S100 or more income from whicfl service officer, attended a service I to troal thcm as anoUlcr political I no tax is withheld, officers school Saturday'and Sun-; party is high timc that Ulc Thc treasul expects 55 million day at Mt. 1 leasanl. He says -b, Communists be outlawed as more I returns on 1947 income. Most of the representatives from about 18 dangerous than common crimi-'S20 billion in individual taxes al- counties attended lhe school, ls i ready has been collected through which was directed by Harry Rath-; The a ance a federation of i wage withholding or quarterly pay- Texas Czech Catholic organizations menls on estimates, with a total membership of approx- The fact that Congress is work- imalcly 30,000, on a tax cut has no bearing on the filing of estimates for 1948.

i i Estimates will be based on the cur- None Injured in tax rates. I SHANGHAI Shanghai's mil- lilary garrison today asked for reinforcements to guard the rail- jways to Nanking and Hanchow as Communist guerrillas redoubled i thc savagery of their hit and run warfare. The hunt for Communists inside Shanghai is unceasing. Whole areas frequently are roped off while agents conduct house to house searches. Nearby villages are combed periodically.

i The head of a Communist guer- leader, killed in an underground hideout. SO miles from here March 10, was exhibited to frigh- Icnod villagers. Many of the Ueds are villagers or peasants by day and "aiders by night. Most of the villages live in daily fear of attack or sabotage from both sides in China's civil warfare. In Shanghai, conscription of 6,1000 youths for the government I armies will start March 23.

All persons of draft age will be for- bidden lo leave the city until the end of June, except an legitimate business. Shanghai's 10.000 volunteer po- Jicemen are to be reorganized for more effective action in any crisis. Easter Sale Nets $459 First Week The first week of the 1948 Easter Seal campaign in Paris and Lamar County totaled S495.50, Philip Hutchison, secretary treasurer of the sale, reported Mondav morn' ing. The seals were mailed out fo citizens of the city and county last Monday. The national goal is S5.500.000.

'o be raised from thc country-wide distribution of Enstcr seals in 48 slates. District of Columbia, Alaska and Hawaii. The Rev. J. W.

O'Connell is county chairman for the drive here. HOSPITAL HEARINGS AUSTIN UP! Hearing has been set for April 3 by the State Hospital Advisory Council for towns complaining of not receiving full consideration to share in federal hospital construction funds. The council at a meeting here Saturday instructed Dr. George W. Cox, state health officer, to hold up on further allocations of this year'i federal funds pending the hearings.

in Paris, was a- at the school. firemen answered two' alarms Sunday and one call Mon-' day morning, but little damage was reported at either place. No' damage was reported at the Main Courts, 2300 Main about Collision on 271 12:30 a.m. Sunday morning and determined. only smalt damage resulted from a fire about 7 a.m.

nl West IVovine, occupied by Clyde Silt- Ion. Today's call was at. 225-7Ui SW, occupied by Mrs. Juanita Highway Patrolmen Ross about 11 a.m. with no damage be- and Bob Ashmore.

No one received serious injuries Monday morning about 1:30 a.m. when two cars collided near Arthur City on lhe IhiKi) iiccording ing reported. MARKETS Palestine Tickets Refused by TWA Surviving are Mrs. Edwards, whom he married in 1942; one daughter by a former marriage, Mrs. Marguerite Hooten, 1 Worth, and nine sisters, Mrs.

Cora FORT WORTH LIVESTOCK FORT WORTH Iff) Cattle The officers reported lhat a 1940 Ford, owned by LaVon Boyette but driven by Amos Floyd, both students at Paris Junior College, apparently went dead and lhe driver was pushing il down the highway while holding the left door open and steering at the same time. Official report of the incident in- Four Japs Sentenced In Dallasite's Death YOKOHAMA An American military commission today sent lour Japanese lo prison for contributing lo lhe wartime death of Sgl. Theodore W. Prince, Dallas. The defendants, all former Jap- life.

They were convicted of refusing medical treatment to the injured Prince after he parachuted 100; calves 350; fairly active at dicates that a 1948 Ford, driven by Merrill L. Chappell, in the Navy but home on leave at Sumner, Rt. in the same direction and. dy prices; ail interests joining buying; medium and good nnsspv HarkwillP- 1 i slaughter steers and yearlings S22. 2 Smith Min'nip An i 50 26 few choice club l' earIin Ss as the Ford and was blinded by I Ok l30: common slccrs alld loarli approaching headlights causing the WH Mr, A ul Walter Mr 50 i cowsmosllv 37 21; twn vehicles lo collide I Clara Worden.

Mr and Mis. A. L. misse Sandra, seven-months-1 Airline has refused to accept rescr-! Minnie Nolan, living in iew st oci lhc men staled that Floyd Evans, Mr. and Mrs.

B. Hancock. daue hter of Mr and Mrs i va tions direct to Palestine after Miss Pearl Edwards San Fran ners an 4 cutters bulls lo- jumped in the car he was pushing Mr. and Mrs. L.

S. Worden and pfris Rt 5- Huey one of Ite and Lillv Bivens Mrs 2L25 od and choice fat calvcs ust "efore the collision, and suf. son, Mr. and Mrs. T.

J. Worden Malone. ntin vt 23.50-26.50; common to medium IS fered only a bad cut on the little' 22; culls stocker and feeder calves, yearlings and steers 1825.50; stocker cows 16-21. Hogs mostly steady with 1 Mrs. T.

J. Worden and son, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Bettes I and two sons, and Mr. and Mrs.

J. Oats and daughter, all of Charleston. kTo relieve miser- lies, rub throat, chest and back: comforting C-A-S-H for Easter! To Employed Peoplt No Security No Red Tape Us Today! son of Mr. and Mrs. S.

O. Malone, 645 E. Polk; Margaret Ladon, 8, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M.

L. Smith. Broken Bow, Margie Lee, four-months-old daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Leon Carter, Garvin, Okla. planes had been fired upon near Ella Woodruff and Mrs.

Lola Ivo- Jerusalem. TWA. the only American airline operating into Palestine, reported i Ian, all living in California. the incident It said W. F.

Judd. pilot of a DC-4, cabled from Athens, Greece, that tracer bullets were fired at after it took off from Rites Held at Cooper Church Sunday By Paris News Correspondent To Mr. and Mrs, L. F. Dirks, 2005 Culbertson, on the birth of a daughter, March 15, at St.

Joseph's Hospital. To the Rev. and Mrs. John ler, 948-20th NE, on the birth of a daughter, March 14, at St. Joseph's Hospital.

To Mr. and Mrs. Carl Taylor, Honey Grove, on the birth of a daughter, March 14, at St. Jo- I seph's Hospital. To Mr.

and Mrs. J. D. Robmon, Paris Junior College, on the birth of a daughter, March 13, at St. Joseph's Hospital.

To Mr. and Mrs. M. 0. Ditto, Sumner, on the birth of a son, March 13, at Sanitarium of Paris.

To Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Everett of Houston on the birth of a son Feb.

29. The baby has been named John William Jr. and is the grandson of Mr. and Mrs. G.

E. Everett, 216-23rd SE, and Mrs. O. E. Vatou of Beaumont.

Mrs. Everett attended the birth. Friday top 22.25 paid for good and choice 180-2701b butchers; good and choice 160-1751b 19.50-22: soft and COOPER, Funeral service for i iiy hogs sows 16.50-17; Miss Lillie Carrell who died in i i gs went a 10-17. nn ronnVt nf anv in (Long view Hospital, Sulphur heep killing classes There was no repoit of any in-1 Springs Saturday morning, wasj sLeady medium and wooled 51 Sunday afternoon at First Vnbs 19-21. latter buying some Methodist Church of which she was 1 1061b am bs; choice wooled club an active member.

Interment amns 22; good spring lambs 22; for Palestine here Sunday were told that TWA would take them only as far as Athens or Cairo, Egypt, but would book space for them to continue on another line. made in Oaklawn cemetery by good shorn with No i. pe its Delta Funeral Home. Pallbearers 1 19 few good i aught er ewes 12. finger although the door on the left side was reported smashed.

WALGIA MM Warm Kiss Gets No Kicks Today were Supt. Roy L. Stephenson; Bennett Jeter, principal of high I school; Luther Brown, band mas- Iter; R. C. Elrod and T.

J. Scott, I members of the high school faculty and E. 0. Chapman, principal of Cooper ward schools. Winter planted a warm and moist kiss on this area today.

It may be an early gesture of goodbye. This is its last official week. The temperature was 61 degrees at 10 this month. The sky was overcast. On second thought, the kiss might have come from an early-arriving spring.

Anyway, it was welcome. i-. i i e- OUl Ll '-J Miss Carrell died of injuries suf- 1 100 lbs 3 35.90. FORT WORTH GRAIN FORT WORTH Wheat No, 1 hard, 2.51-59. Oats No.

2 white 3.85-90. Corn No. 2 white 2.93-96. Sorghums No. 2 yellow milo, pet- fered in an automobile accident a week earlier.

She had been a teach- COTTON MARKETS er in Delta County many years, Saturday's quotations based on mid and had served two terms as coun-i dling is-ie inch cotton: Dallas 34.30; i tv superintendent i Galveston Houston 34.20; New I Orleans New York 35.21. ITALIANS New York cotton futures as of Sat urday: March 34.23; May 34.28-30; July 33.47-49. Cottonseed $90 per ton. PARIS PRODUCE MARKET (Continued from Page 1) i Milk: For manufacturing purposes: MECHANIC GRABS PLANE BY TAIL CLEVELAND A 27- year-old mechanic halted a pi- lotless plane at Cleveland airport Sunday after it seriously injured a tool company engineer. He grabbed it by the tail.

Edward Heller. 59, chief engineer of the Ohio Tool received deep cuts in his left side when the four-passenger plane moved forward after he swung thc propeller. Witnesses said he forgot to turn off the ignition. Albert F. Drottar saw the plane hurtling toward a gasoline truck and parked aircraft.

Drotlar grabbed hold of its tail and eventually managed to open the door. Then he cut the ignition. Superintendent Wins First Round of Hearing Port Neches' dis- won swift not be confined to Greece. PARIS FINANCE Solomon Bldg. Upstairs Phone 226 Big Stock Of PLUMBING SUPPLIES Soil Pipti fr Fittings NORTH SIDE DRUG APPLIANCE STORE 624-5th NE PheiM 9551 President to Review St.

Patrick Parade NEW YORK Iff) President Tru-1 The man will review the St. Patrick's Parade here Wednesday. Sponsors of the Fifth Avenue march say it will be the first time in the long history of the parade that a President has been in the reviewing stand. $4.35 per 100 Ibs. testing 4 per cent.

in Other directions in Europe. It is I 10c each point over; minus 8c each the boast of the totalitarian leaders under Grade A sweet S5.90 AUSTIN that democracies are incapable of point rtove'4 per timely and decisive action. I poirl below per "Should we fail to continue our! cream: No. i. 65c; No 2, 62c.

round in the hearing of his appeal efforts, the consequences would be i Eggs: No. 1, 43c dozen; No. 2, 25c before State Superintendent L. A. Woods here today.

Woods ruled that burden of proof; rests with counsel for the Port. I Neches School Board on 10 charges which the board has brought against Yarbrough in connection with his being fired Feb. 21. Yarbrough's attorneys in the hearing had asked for a strict accounting and proof of thc C. C.

SARGENT Owner and Manager GUARANTEED FACTORY TYPE WATCH REPAIRING Sargent's goes them one better. A Written Guarantee with every Watch Repair Job. Not only experienced Watchmakers but 12 years in the same location. DIAMONDS WATCHES JEWELRY SARGENTS Your Home Town Jewelers We Buy Old Gold Phone 260 Paris, Texas How To Relieve Bronchitis Creomulslon relieves promptry cause it goes right to the seat ol trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, inflamed bronchial mucous membranes. Tell your druggist to Bell you a bottle of Creomulsion with, the understanding: you must like tie way it quickly allays the cough or you to have your money bade.

CREOMULSION for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis BEST THEATRE Roxton, Texoi LAST TIMES TODAY HUMPHREY BOGART LAUREN BACALL ii "Dark Passage TUES. ONLY, March 16fh would dozcy, 38c dozen. woulu i paltry: Hens over 22c, un- i der lOc: springs 35c; voost- Sunday and in the House there are indicalions of a disposition to speed Parched ColliOrnia Refreshed by Rains SAN FRANCISCO UP! Weekend aid bill as I rains refreshed California i larges i other aid drought parched lands but: the Morc lhr shortage remained critical. action there. In a session this however, the House Foreign Affairs! Gl ABITTtK INDICTHINT OF CIKLHOOD'S SACRIFICE TO trom lhnn 10Q persons, mostly PorL Neches and vicinity, TAXI SERVICE 181 Committee turned down a move to will speak at consider the European the "Friendly Sons i separate legislation from St.

Patrick in lhe city of New I ram York Wednesday night at the Motel Eleclric Co sajd thc I woods'on" Yarbroutfi'S "ro- 4 ii, fh. foreign aid, both economic and shortage was not solved" by rams, llesl -UUary, in a single bill i totaling an inch or so in much of: Illslead 1he committee stuck lo A spokesman tor the aclhc Gas we cnl roi lhc cnl illK ran PARADISE dential nomination. Dewey was invited to the dinner, but said would not bc able to attend, np i ic 'aicf for" military help electricity for irrigation pumping, FAD A for Greece and Turkey. i he explained. Tin' sliile went on dayllKhl snv- Choil-mnn Eaton (R-NJ) lolfl re- nl nOlnf from i riii'IMii ill'ii NUIA.VH iliK porters nfler a morning session It i Ing timc Sunday lo save power.

The number of U. S. dentists in- is "quite within the possibilities" I The rains, welcomed by agricul- creased from 29,655 in 1900 to that the committee -ill have a bill: turists, were insufficient. They said 000 in 1930 but declined to about I ready for House action by the end at least two inches are needed tlnl Mt 70,601 by 1940. i of this week.

'soak the soil. I 'w Inklnul llltii: IIMI at bloort niflilns Into aRnnliinR pain Knot. it not for a minute Iwt for A lonj; In panidlso. Try SLOAN'S otlur Place Your Savings With First Federal Current Dividend on Your Savings Per Annum FIRST FEDERAL Savings and Loan Assn. Member Federal Home Loan Bank System.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Paris News Archive

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