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The Paris News from Paris, Texas • Page 7

Publication:
The Paris Newsi
Location:
Paris, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

i MARGARET CHASE SMITH INGRID BERGMAN ALTHEA GIBSON QUEEN ELIZABETH LUCILLE BALL MRS. L. C. BATES omen 6 flew A MRS. RALPH W.

MARTIN Dewey Crofford Ralph W.Martin Wed in Roxlon ROXTON, Miss Dewey Jean Crofford. 0 daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dewey W. Crofford, and Ralph Wayne Martin, son of Herbert Martin and the late Mrs.

Martin? were married Saturday at the home of the Rev. Ben Smith. The Rev. Martin, pastorof the Roxton Baptist Church, performed the double-ring ceremony. Members of the immediate families attended.

Attendants were Mr. Mrs. Golden. After a brief wedding East Texas the couple in Dallas. Mrs.

Martina a graduate of Roxton High School, attended Pas's Junior College and East Texas State College, and is now employed by Sternbcrg-Martin Dallas. The groom is a graduate of Roxton High School and is a senior student at East Texas State College in Commerce. trip in reside Rehearsal Dinner Held In 4 very Paris News Services AVERY Wedding rehearsal dinner for Miss Sor.ja Miller and John Oce Williams of Clarksville, was given at the home of Mr Mrs. J. E.

Michie here. Mrs. Herbert Medford and Mrs. John Medford, aunt and grandmother, respectively, of the bridegroom, were co-hostesses. The dining table held an ar rangement of white carnations, wedding bells and foliage, and white tapers in blue candelabra.

Smaller tables held blue candles in while taffeta and net ruffles tied with blue. Guests besides fhe honorees were Mr. and Mrs. Jarvis Miller, Clarksville; Mr. and Mrs.

Williams, Mr and Mrs. Don Black, Dallas; Mr. and Mrs Byron Witmer, College Station; Mr. and Mrs. Richard Horton, Den ton; Miss Rosemary Miller, Jacksonville; Mrs.

Leroy Fricke, Miss Betty Sue Reeda Miss Mary Payne, Miss Marguerite Bland Murray Browder Giles, all of Clarksville, and Charles David Michie, Avery. Broadway Honors Are Shared by Actresses HELEN HAYES MARY URE In Paris This Week Family Dinner Given By Honey Grove Couple Paris News Service HONEY GROVE dinner, an annual Christmas-season custom of Mr. and Mrs. Staley Scale, was served Sunday noon at their home to these relatives: Mrs. F.

4 Scale of Windom, hrre for a visit, and Mrs. R. M. Thompson, mothers of the couple: Mr. and Mrs.

Jeff Dillard and daughter Amy; Mr. and Mrs. Homer Herriage and children, and Donald; Mr. and Mrs-. Earl Cobb, and Mr.

and Mrs. Bill Scale and son Kenneth, all of Bonham, and Wayne Scale here. Owner Discovers Dogs Are Selfish CLINTON, Okla. T. Bruce found out that "dogs are as selfish as humtfns.

When his grandson came to visit he brought along his beagle puppy. The neighbor's cocker saw the beagle promptly gathered up his playthings including two rubber balls, two rubber mice and a leather watch band, and laid down on top of them. THURSDAY 2:30 p.m. The Past Matrons and Past Patrons, Order of the Eastern Star, will meet with Mrs. Dorothy Bflney, 361- 14th NE.

1:30 p.m. Graham School Parent-Teachers Associat i Study Group wil! meet at tht home of Mrs. Virginia Newberry, 522-3rd NW. 7:30 p.m. Zeta Mu Chapter of Beta Sigma Sorority will meet at the home of Mrs.

Joe Skidmore, 80548th SE. 7:30 p.rrf. Xi Alpha Iota Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will meet at the home AL DUNNING Glass and Metal Shop A if PLATE GLASS WINDOW GLASS STORE FRONTS if GLASS BLOCKS if rURNITURE TOP 124-2nd S.W. SU 4-8247 of Mrs. Mark Roden, 805-18th SE.

FRIDAY 3 p.m. Lydia Bible Club will meet at the home of Mrs. Bob Mallory, 834 Graham. AP Newsfeatures The first lady of the American stage shared honors with a winsome newcomer on Broadway this year. Helen Hayes, who celebrated her golden anniversary as a star "in 1955, continued as top luminary in the theatrical heavens in 1957 with her triumphant in a gay and sentimental play, i Remembered." But shining with almost equal magnitude was youthful May We, making her New York stage debut in the leading role of the hit play, "Look Back in "Anger." Miss Ure, 24.

is a Scottish born actress who started as a teacher in training, then took to the footlights when she was offered a scholarship by the Brit isli Broadcasting Corp. She won a reputation as a promising young star in London, before coming to New York. Her most successful Pole there was that of Ophelia in "Hamlet." Mary plays the role of A 1 i on 15 the current Broadway hit, whcih was writteOoby her husband, John Osborne. author of Sie.play. Other top performances of the yeai; by women on Broadway were principally by veterans of the "'stage.

Florence Eldridge has scored a triumph in Eu O'Neill's tragedy, "Long Cay's Journey Into Night." Thelma Ritter toek Kie town with her hilarious- role in the musical "New Girl in Town," in which she anticipated the current rage for the sack silhouette by wearing 'baggy sweaters to the knees. Rosalind Russell as the quixotic and unpredictable spirit of the Too Late to Classify TWO KOOMS furnished. Dial SU4-4917. Couple. THREE ROOM DUPLEX, tile bath and sink.

17th S.E. SU4-3832. ALL WINTER LONG MONUMENTS And Markers Guaranteed Top Quality SAVINGS ON ANY STONE Easy Terms Exclusive Dealer For Rock Of Ages Georgia Marble DEWEESE MONUMENT CO. (SEAT LAMPS CHEATING CABLES WMffJJT prevent FRHIWPS Livestock and poultry require plenty of no matter low the temperature. To insure a constant supply of water even below zero use heat lamp to provide running water.

Between the pump and the outlets use a modern, economical heating cable. Farm Service Advisors will be happy to assist you with these installations in order that you will have plenty of'running water during winter montr ths. Texas Light Power Company THE PARIS NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JAN. 1, 1958 Queen Elizabeth II Tops 1957 News Poll in U.S. flapper agu fulfilled all expectations in the title role of "Auntie Mame," the musical version of the best-selling novel which had most of the country laughing in a nostalgic key.

By DOROTHY ROE Associated Press Women's Editor For the third time in a decade, Queen? Elizabeth II is Woman of the Year in American headlines. Women's editors of Associated Press newspapers throughout the country voted her the news personality of the year is their annual poll, following the tri umphant visit of Britain's royal couple to the "United States and Canada, Ivhich enough news stories to fill a library. Previously Elizabeth was voted Woman of the Year in 1947. when she married Philip Moyntbatten, now Duke of Edinburgh, and again in the year of her coronation, 1953. Other women voted outstanding in their fields for 1057 are as follows SPORTS: Althea Gibson, the 30-1 year old tennis player from Harlem, who this year won practically every major championship in the world of international tennis.

The lanky, smiling, dark skinned Althea climaxed an 18 tournament winning streak by taking the women's singles championship at Wimbledon in July, Batter which she won the National Women's gsingles title at Forest Hills in September. LITERATURE: Grace Metali- ous, the New Hampshire housewife whose first novel, "Peyton Place," became an unexpected runaway best seller, with present sales figures topping the three million mark. The sensational story of life a New England village so shocked some academic circles that her husband, George Metalious, lost his job as principal of the Gilmanton, N. public schools, and now teaching in Stowe, Mass. Mrs.

Metalious is the mother of three children. ENTERTAINMENT: I i Bergman, winner of an Academy Award for in the motion operatic debut in Athens at 15 and became a top operatic star of Europe before her American debut. EDUCATION: Mrs. L. C.

Bates, of Little Rock, who made headlines in September during the integration crisis in the schools of that city. She is president of the Arkansas chapter of the National gave up career and family for her I controversial romance with Italian movie director Roberto Rosselini. I made news, also with her personal life this year, when her marriage to her "one true love" ended in a legaj separation, with divorce in the offing. She is now in England, at work on a new movie. BUSINESS: Lucille Ball, one- half of the fantastically successful husband and wife team of Lucille and Desi Arnaz, who not only star in their own top- rated show, but also produce a number of other television attractions.

The apparently lightheaded "Lucy" of the TV screen turns out to have a very solid business' head on her flippant shoulders, and at present probably is one of the richest Women in Hollywood. MUSIC: Maria Callas, the American operatic soprano with the "voice of an" who has zoomed to the top rank of stars since her debut at the Metropolitan last fall. Maria, now 34, was born in New York of Greek parents and says "She was the ugly duckling of the family fat. awkward and shy. She started studying music at the age of 8, went to Athens at 13 to study at the Royal Conservatory, made her! her home that the nine Negro students stayed while federal troops guarded their right to attend the previously all white high school.

POLITICS: Margaret Chase Smith, the Republican Senator from Maine, the country's only woman senator, and the first to be elected to that office on her own record, not as an appointee to fill a vacancy. Mrs. Smith was a congresswoman for eight years before being elected to the Senate in 1948. PUBLIC SERVICE: Eleanor Roosevelt, widow of the late president, still writing a syndicated newspaper column and still making news wherever she goes. Her latest adventure was a 25-day tour of the Soviet Unian.

New York's Empire State Building, tallest in the world, is 1,472 feet tall. It has 102 stories. AT LAMAR WED, THURS. Girl ROY ROGERS "Man from Oklahoma' PPYN YEAR FROM INTERSTATE GET MORE OUT OF LIFE-GO- OUT TO A MOVIE THURSDAY TQ.NITE THURSDAY DOUBLE FEATURE WIILUM HMTm CAMPBELL-SCOTT-WEBSTER A iiruiuc PLUS Robert TAYLOR Stewart GRANGER WUK Osbra PISfl fr.t-n CO 1 OR NOW SHOWING AN INTERSTATE THEATRE NOW SHOWING Here conies pals! Celebrate the story of Joey (the hod!) and his bosom companions! One rich (the one poor (the mouse!) yr pal Joey caught in the middle-of the niftiest parlay of the year! To quote Joey: "It's a gaeeerr IT JOHN O'HARA PAL JOF.Y off ABBOTT ADMISSION ALSO Ill AND BORED CHILDREN 2SC ROAD RICHARD ROOtf RS LORENZ HART AND RUNNER CARTOON LATEST NEWS.

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About The Paris News Archive

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