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The Times from Shreveport, Louisiana • Page 3

Publication:
The Timesi
Location:
Shreveport, Louisiana
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

TriK Snnr.vrrnnT Timf Momlav. Nov. 10, 19.1ft 2-Car Crash Fatal to 3 at Natchitoches kitchenwate lower floor qgifejlicfe) i i mm. i McowaM (Continued from Pi One) Zwolle and her grandmother, Mrs. Lula Haley of Belmont.

Funeral services for Cox will be held at 2:30 p.m. Monday at the Trinity Baptist Church in Natchitoches with the Rev. Earnest Lil-ley and the Rev. H. B.

Gorum officiating. Burial will be in Memory Lawn Cemetery under direction of Blanchard Funeral Home. He is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lever, Cox of Natchitoches; two brothers.

Bobby Cox lull til fiAi Winiiiitfnnfii'itn iitriir jMiiiiirw-rtffirtiinniiiiw nwmn rininiiffliBtfntteiiM.auiiiffl CAST-IRON rORCKLAINIZEO i introduces Lively Four-color Decorations over Citron Yellow i zrrs- WINNER IN THE RESTAURANT LEGION MEMBERSHIP CONTEST, Sue Gilbert of the Triple XXX Restaurant receives a $35 gift certificate from Clifford Bayer, chairman of the Legion membership committee of the Restaurant Assn. as she serves the 50 members she ob- tained to Calhoun Allen first vice commander of the Lowe-McFarlane Post. Second place winner receiving a $25 gift certificate was Gus Alexander of Murrell's Grill and third place winner with a $15 gift certificate was Thelma Hernandez of Bayer's Charcoal Grill No. 1. nwniHYitffliiriMiiiiilniiiiii ach piece s'gnecf by the artist, Bob Markley Now Descoware is decorator designed! Its bright Citron Yet-low porcelainized finish is covered with artful modern decorations in four lively colors! Yet it's the same reliable cast iron construction underneath to give gentle, even heat and hold in the flavor of foods.

modern concept of old. world artistry! A. W. Kennon, IC Conductor, Dead at 71 A. W.

Kennon, 71, of 3928 Richmond, a Shreveport resident for 52 years, died Sunday at 2:25 a.m. in a local hospital after a lengthy illness. He was a retired conductor for the Illinois Central Railroad of which he was an employe since moving to Shreveport from his native home of Sibley. A veteran of World War he was a member of the American Legion and the Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen. Funeral services will be held in the chapel of Osborn funeral Home Monday at 2 p.m.

with the Rev. W. Meade Brown, rector of St. Paul's Episcopal Church, officiating and' the Rev. James Buckner, assistant rector, assisting.

Burial will be in Forest Park Cemetery. Pallbearers will be J. J. Kucth-bert, G. M.

Mangham, H. L. Clark, J. T. Patton, R.

V. Woodall, R. H. Vining and J. E.

Evans. Mr. Kennon is survived by one daughter, Mrs. R. B.

Sullivan Jr. of Shreveport; three sisters, Mrs. O. T. Slater of Sibley, Mrs.

Agnes Moore of Shreveport and Mrs. C. W. Robertson of Ruston; two brothers, Floyd Kennon of Ontario, and Will Kennon of Sibley, and three grandchildren. STROLLER (Continued from Fate One) ing Center, San Diego, Calif.

After 14 days' leave, he will return there for assignment. Selected A Louisiana Tech alumnus recently selected for membership in Tau Beta Pi, honorary engineering fraternity, is P. B. TOMLINSON, 525 Slattery Blvd. Piano A small Keatchie Sunday School class needs a second-hand piano.

Anyone who would like to help them may write or call Mrs. WOODROW HALL, at 4241 in KEATCHIE. First-Observing her first birthday anniversary tomorrow will be JANET LOUISE CROSSLIN, daughtenof Mr. and Mrs. JAMES E.

CROSSLIN, 1654 Woodrow. Pets-it you've lost a cat, phone 2-5610. The cat found may be yours Six part-Pekingese puppies are available at 6-7230. A female black cocker and two short-haired puppies will be given away by the Caddo-Shreve-port Humane Society, phone 6-7649. Due to export decline, Pakistan's jute industry is going through a severe crisis, Dacca reports.

AT BOOTH'S SEE 5 auart. 12 fnch OVAL OVEN with) elf-basting cover. $16.95 34 quart ROUND OVEN. Tib quart CASSEROLE, 8 inch. Tight fitting cover.

$10.95 quart CAS6ER0LE. $8.50 inch SKILLET. Pfastfcoateo, hardwood handle. $8.50 COVER $5.95 inch SKILLET $5.95 2nd floor FOR DELIVERY 0m DAISY MrCOMlC. dies in wreck.

Man Relates Being Jumped By Monster (Continued from Tate One) his wife and she induced him to phone authorities. "1 kept saying no one would believe a story like this." he said. Sheriff's Sgt. E. R.

Holmes said he though perhaps a large vulture 1 might have flopped on the hood of Wetzel's car "sometimes cars hit them when they're in the road eat-! ing rabbits cars have he said. So he searched the area himself today. "But," said Holmes, "I did-not find a feather." Army Rewards Ex-Shrevcporlcr Miss Bessie J. Brumfield, formerly of Shreveport, has received a superior performance award of $200 for her work as a salary and wage analyst at the Fort Worth General Depot, U.S. Army, Fort Worth, Tex.

Miss Brumfield has been employed at the depot since January of 1955. She previously worked at the Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio, and at Barks-dale Air Force Base. Miss Brumfield's mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Brumfield, sister, Mrs. Pansy B.

Bond, reside at 3504 Lillian St. in Shreveport. Trial for Beck To Open Today TACOMA, Nov. 9 (UPI)-Former Teamster President Dave Beck goes on trial tomorrow in Federal Court here charged with income tax evasion and conspiracy. Beck, whose conviction of grand larceny is on appeal in the Washington State Supreme Court, is accused of cheating the federal government of $184,000 in taxes on $254,000 income tor the years 1951, 1952 and 1333.

COLORED: Pillowcases, each I vr 1V4 Quart COVERED SAUCEPAN. Plasticoated, hardwood handles, gg household linens ALLOW 3 to 4 WEEKS 2 1 11 8 of Alexandria and Luther Cox of Natchitoches; and a sister, Mrs. Funeral arrangements for Odis Miller were incomplete today. A list of his survivors was not immediately available. E.

F. Neild Jr. Dies at 50; Rites Today (Continued from Pate One) emv and St. John's High School. He later attended Georgia Tech and Tulane University, where he received his degree in architecture in 1931.

He began practicing architecture the same year. He was married in October, 1937. Mr. Neild designed the chapel of the First Presbyterian Church, where his final rites will be held. He was a deacon of the church.

He was a member of the Gargoyle Society, which is an honorary arch itectural society, the American In stitute of Architects, Kappa Alpha Fraternity, the Shreveport Club, of which he was a charter member. ant' the Shreveport Country Club. Mr. Neild's father, who was a nationally known architect, died in 1955. Mr.

Neild Sr. was consul tant architect for renovation of the White House, appointed by his friend, former President Harry S. Truman. Mr. Neild Sr.

had practiced ar chitecture from 1908 until his death. His friendship with Mr. Truman led to the firm's commission to do the Truman Library at Indepen dence. Mo. Like his son, Mr.

Neild Sr. had been a native of Shreveport and a graduate of Tulane University. Pallbearers for Mr. Neild Jr. will be A.C.

Monette Dewey A. Som dal, Jack P. Fullilove Edwin A Moore, S. B. Hicks, Harvey Mc Lean, Milton L.

Friend, J. P. Evans of Jackson, R. J. Ogilvie Jr.

and C. Huffman Lewis. Some 700 Methodist ministers preached their first sermons in their new churches all over Britain one recent Sunday, beginning MOVING FILTER distributes detergent evenly through wash no clothes discoioring lumpsi A group of American travel the- Church's Connectional Year-agents has visited Lagos to see i under the Methodist's traveling what Nigeria has to offer. ministers system. THE NEW 1S59 MONOGRAMMED Springcale PERCALE SHEETS Legion Drive Swings Into Final Phase (Continued from Put One) Cars are standing by to rush out to any part of the city to pick up the dues and the membership application or renewal.

The Legion office, room 301 Court House, will remain open from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. today and tomorrow. Under the Legion rules, only memberships which have been actually been paid for, with the money in the Legion office, can be computed in the contest. The Lowe-McFarlane Post was In fifth place nationally during the 1958 membership race.

As of yesterday, Shreveport had already trounced Memphis, Milwaukee and Omaha, leaving Denver as the only opponent in the 1939 race. Rites Planned Tuesday for Marvin Crain Marvin (Jack) Crain, 51. of 3301 Green Terrace, died Sunday at 4:45 a.m. in a local hospital after a brief illness. He was superintendent of the furnace department at the Libbey-Owens-Ford Glass Co.

A native of Winn Parish, he had lived in Shreveport for the past 30 years. Survivors include his widow of Shreveport; two sons, Marvin G. Crain of Shreveport and Ronald D. Crain of the U.S. Army at Baltimore, a daughter, Miss Jac-quelin Crain of Shreveport; two brothers, C.

R. Crain and C. V. Crain, both of Shreveport; six sisters, Mrs. Ottis Puckett of Pine-ville, Mrs.

Myrtis Garr of Dodson, Mrs. Ralph Talbot of Monroe, Mrs. Gladys Monroe of West Monroe, Mrs. Nita Kidd of Minden and Mrs. Billie Byrd of Pine Bluff, two stepsons, Stuart Eason of Fort Worth, and Sgt.

Warren Eason of the U.S. Army at Ft. Sill, and his mother, Mrs. R. W.

Crain of Dodson. Funeral services will be held Tuesday at 10 a.m. in Rose-Neath Chapel. The Rev. A.

S. Howard, pastor of the Summer Grove Baptist Church, will officiate. Burial will be in Forest Park Cemetery. Active pallbearers will be A. F.

Williford, H. P. Merriwethcr. W. C.

Carson, J. P. Hudson, Rudolph Hicks, R. W. Protho, C.

H. Ram-bin and H. S. Crump. Honorary pallbearers will be employes of Libbey-Owens-Ford Glass Company.

TV Station Sabotaged In Alabama MONTGOMERY, Nov. 9 UPi Television station WSFA-TV was knocked off the air tonight shortly before network appearance cf Negro singer Harry Belafonte. Someone placed a small chain across a power cable at the station's transmitter near Mt. Car-mel, 18 miles south of here, to cause the power failure. Transmission was resumed at 8:29 p.m.

(CST) when power company crews reached the remotely located transmitter and removed the chain. The blackout affected only local reception. Television sets faded out at 7:08 p.m. shortly before Belafonte was to sing on the Steve Allen show. Allen already had introduced the IS'ecro ballad singer.

Belafonte was the subject of another incident several months ago at a drive-in theater near We-tumpka. Mobs of shouting segregationists blocked entrances during a showing of "Island in the Sun." The romantic film, co-starring the Negro and Joan Fontaine, finally was canceled. WSFA was cut off the air in October, 1957 when a network telecast featured the story of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. of Montgomery, Negrt.

integration leader. A chain was used that time to block transmission. Pasture lands occupy one-fourth the area of Illinois, a major producer of livestock. AT THIS LOW BARGAIN PRICE OflLY BUTTER MELTER set. $5.95 VA quart TEA KETTLE.

$16.50 LIMITED TIME ONLY $3.29 3.49 79 1., 1 i yiv'J I FABRICS Woven of carefully-combed long-staple cotton fibers with over 180 threads to the square inch. They're smooth and silky to the touch with deep neatly-stitched hems. In "whiter-than-white" or beautiful pastel colors. CL3 NO MONEY DOWN WHITE: $2.79 2.98 3.39 Pillowcases, each .69 And Your Old Washer $2.31 WEEKLY EASY-T0-REM0VE FILTER! Slips on and off tcp of activator easily and quickly! Over 50 more clothes capacity than many automatics! Washes, rinses and damp dries automatically! FiO LIST fi it' "SUNVALLEY" TOWELS the most beautiful towel in the world I' I The beauty of yarn-dyed colors and original styling will iflV nlsFi.ra (. Tkoirfl Aanca zrA FILTER WILL NOT CLOG! No messy traps to clean, no clogged filters to impede water flowl FREE! 1 1 fci tJ Ifcr Dngni 34 super-aDSorDent ana tneir colors will sray Tresn ana after repeated launderings.

JUMBO SIZE, $1.98 GUEST SIZE 98 WASH CLOTH 39 LIMITED TIME ONLY! 6 Months Normal Supply TIDE yfS Ll 801 TEXAS AVENUE FURNITURE CARPET APPLIANCES lr'r 11 A i WITH EACH AUTOMATIC GE WASHER.

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About The Times Archive

Pages Available:
2,338,037
Years Available:
1871-2024