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The Paris News from Paris, Texas • Page 2

Publication:
The Paris Newsi
Location:
Paris, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THI PARIS NEWS, TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 1961 Laos Truce Gap Is Eyed (AP)-Top U.S. officials today saw a large gap in the Laos cease-fire plan which could Jet Communist-backed rebels spring another military offensive before the proposed 14-nation peace conference gets under way. They emphasized that this hazard is one of many which will have to be surmounted in the long and uncertain struggle to get an effective international agreement for a neutral, independet Laos. Britain' and the Soviet Union, as co-chairmen of the 1954 Indochina settlement which created Laos. Monday issued their long- awaited peace proposal.

They called for a cease-fire to be Four-Cent Per Gallon Gas lax Due to Stay WASHINGTON federal tax on your gasoline will continue at 4 cents a gallon Congress follows the of the House Ways and Means Committee. And Congress usually does. The committee Monday approved a compromise bill to send an additional million a year into the fund which finances the pay-as-you-go federal superhighway program. Without such a boost, Congress was told, the program might stretch out as much as five years beyond 1972. when the network of superhighways is s-heduled to be finished.

Beside extending the one-cent "temporary" part of the gasoline tax scheduled to expire July 1, the tax-writing committee approved a series of tax increases on truck operations and voted to divert from the general fund to the highway fund the proceeds of haif the excise tax on trucks and buses. At present the two funds divide the 10 per cent tax. Under the committee plan the highway fund would get it all. Passenger automobile- excises would not be affected. Spokesmen for truck management and labor, who complained that -President 'Kennedy's original recommendations would have dealt their industry a cruel blow, checked by a three-nation control commission, then a 14-nation parley on Laos' future to start in Geneva May 12.

The cease-fire gap showed In the text of the proposal as published Monday night. The plan set no specific date for a halt to the fighting, beyond saying it should stop before the Geneva parley begins. U.S. authorities portrayed the Laotian government forces as ready to stop their shooting promptly. But they feared the rebels, backed by mounting Soviet-airlifted supplies, would open a final push to seize additional important parts of the small Southeast Asian kingdom perhaps fighting right up to the eve of the conference.

The bargaining position already has suffered heavily from rebel advances in a drive that since December has captured large areas of Laos ad- i jacent to Communist North Viet I Nam and threatens to split the ecunry at is narrow wais. The Stale Department served notice that 'without a verified cease-fire, the United States will not go to the Geneva meeting. Press officer Lincoln White underlined the military situation, stressing that the cease-firt is up to the rebels. WhDe voicing U.S. "satisfaction" with the British-Soviet plan, he denounced the rebels' week- Special Senate Race Officially Set for May 21 AUSTIN Price Danie! made it official today, setting the special S.

Senate election for Saturday May 27. In a parallel formal action, Secretary of State Frank 'Lake formally certified the candidates to be William A. Blakley of Dallas County and John Tower cf Wichita County. Lake's to county clerks calls attention to the fact that he listed the names in alphabetical order for the special election to fill the unexpired term of Lyndon Johnson. Copies of the 'governor's proclamation of election went to every county judge in the state, directing that it be held ''in every county and in every election precinct thereof." FOR AID TO CONGO U.S.

Methodist Churches To Sound Jungle Drums NEW YORK (AP) The eerie boom boom of jungle, "talking drums" will sound in 39,000 odist churches across the country this Sunday. The message of tl.e drums, Africa's ancient and effective system for relaying news from village to village, is one of distress: "People of God! Give as help;" This plea is part of a crash program to obtain doctors, food and funds to aid the troubled Congo. To dramatize its "Bishop's Appeal For Africa," the Methodist Church has provided recordings to all its congregations, including the drumbeat signals narration by television commentator Walter Cronkite. "The earthquake that is shat- 150 Attend Girl ScoutOpen House More than 150 parents. Girl Scouts and prospective Scouts were present Sunday for the open house at Camp Gambill which was reported the mast successful to date by Scout officials.

Hosting the affair were Xewt Bryson, camp chairman representing the Red River Valley Girl Scout Council board of directors; Dorcy Mackey, campsite chair- ecd advance through strategic man. and Paul Jordan of the es- Viang as an nth-hour offensive toward the capital of Vientiane. The British-Soviet proposal said nothing about the Soviet arms air- tablished camp committee. The -fs were assisted by Miss Lorraine Wagner and Miss Betty Criscoe of the Council staff and numerous Girl Scouts who served lift or" U.S. aid to the Laotian as guides.

government forces. U.S. strate- Visitors, along with a tour of won substantial points in the final could be who is to represent Laos, one of the 14 nations invited. The gists planned to keep American assistance flowing at least until there is a guaranteed halt to the outside Communist aid. Southeast Asia Treaty Organization pians to step in as necessary to keep the Reds from swal- lowir." up the country were said to be in readiness should the Communists try further major actions before or after the Geneva conference geis going.

U.S. officials saw a long, uphill fight in their efforts to salvage Laos from unremitting Communist pressure. After halt to the shooting, a first step would be to get the control commission of members from India, Canada and Poland on the scene to make sure neither side was violating the ceast-fire. At Geneva, an early question compromise, The increased taxes on trucks and the commodities they use add up to about S150 million a year, instead of about $300 inHlion as Kennedy recommended. The motor fuel tax extension is estimated to be worth $600 million a year.

The other $150 million, in effect, comes out of the general treasury as a result of the excise tax switch, and therefore increases the Kennedy administration's budget balancing problems. The administration asked Congress not to make any such move. The committee turned down Kennedy's proposal to step up the tax oa diesel fuel, used by trucks, from to 7 cents a gallon. It voted for these hikes in taxes affecting trucks: Increase from $1.50 to $3 per thousand pounds in the use tax on trucks over 26,000 increase in the tax on tires, now 8 cents a pound, and tubes, now 9 cents a pound, to 10 cents; increase in the tread rubber tax from 3 to 5 cents. Kennedy had recommended boosting the use tax to S5 and the tread rubber tax, along with those on tires and tubes, to 10 cents.

Class To Hear Tech' School Speaker Oklahoma News Bureau HUGO, Okla. Paul England, director of student activities at Oklahoma State Tech College, Okmulgee, will be the principal speaker at the fifteenth annual employer-employe banquet of the diversified occupations class of Hugo High School. The dinner will be held in the dining room of First Methodist Church, Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Dr. F.

White, president of the school board, -will give the invocation; David Bush, president of the Trades and Industries Club, wili be loastmaster; Thomas Herndpn will extend the welcome, to which A. L. Ford will respond for the 'employers. will include a vo- caLsolo by Judy Sanguin and a vocal trio composed of Judy Van Hops Jo wan a Womack and Sharon Wells, accompanied by Mrs. Barrett Fellows, United States recognizes the government of Prince Boun Oum.

The Reds say Souvanna Phouma is premier. All the participants profess to favor an independent Laos which would be "neutral." Washington fears the Communists mean a "neutrality" aligned with Mos- cow-Peiping. The United States wants an effective checking system to police an agreement on Laos' future neutrality, while the Reds have a long record of opposing such controls. If the Communists do agree to peace in Laos, U.S. strategists are concerned over the possibility that they will devote their massive military buildup in that area to an offensive against a richer prize neighboring South Viet Nam which is already under attack from Red guerrillas.

WHO'S NEW A daughter born April 25 ai St; Hospital to Mr. and Mrs. J. Wv Daughlrey, Powderly. A daughter wag born April 25 Hi.

St, Joseph's Hospital to Mr. Mrs. W. H. KIncaid, 603 Pine Lucas Paces U.S.

To Win, Io 81 MOSCOW (AP) The U.S. men's basketball team, unbeaten but thoroughly tested in its first two games with the Russian na- the campsite, got a first look at the new all steel pier ready for the waterfront, a new hot water heater ar.d 10 new tables in Gander Hall. Bryson expressed the belief that HOSPITALS ST. JOSEPH'S HOSPITAL Admitted: Mrs. Willie Davis.

1359 Bonham; Sandra Sue Shelton, Blossom; D. W. Burns, Sulphur Springs; Leta Weiler, 1002- 23nd SE: Robert Lee Freeman, 1005 W. Cherry; Mrs. Rupert Edge, Idabel, Okla.

Dismissed: Billy Fox, 2545 W. Austin; Tommy Ellington, 264- 29th NW; A. V. Dancer, 1421 Lamar; Mr. and Mrs.

T. E. White, 3220 Lamar; Mrs. Carol Wilson, Hugo, Mrs. V.

A. Nicholson, 1750-6th SE; P. Herbert Ciiff- gard, Rafton, N.D. HORROR (Continued From Page One) of Oct. 27, 1938, in Hannover, Germany.

"About 3 o'clock at night," he said, "a policeman came to our home. He told us we were all to come with him, that we should take our passports but nothing else. "He took us to a concert hall. There were about 600 people already there, They kept us for 25 hours until Friday night. "The next the Sabbath took us to the railway station.

The streets were black with people, shouting 'Jews out to Palestine' and 'sign, apparently a reference to the signatures exacted of the Jews on their own deportation warrants. Grynszpan said they were taken by train to a point near the Polish border. Trains were arriving from many other points in Germany, and he estimated about 12,000 Jews finally assembled on the border. tiona! team, left for Kiev today The SS guards allowed each on the second leg of an exhibi- person to keep only 10 reich- tion tour of the Soviet Union. marks.

The U.S. team, Lead by All-j The guards told them: "You didn't bring more than 10 marks when you came into this country, and you can't take any more out." the 1961 camp season would surpass the ailendancc of the past several years and urged all Girl Scouts io make reservations ear- tering liuman values in Africa is a continuing society catastrophe which threatens all Africa," says Bishop Newel) S. Booth, head of Methodist work in the Congo. "We must help Africa's Christians deal with it." The Congo, for 100 years a bastion of African missionary work, has 6 million Christians in a population of 13 million. But chaos attending independence has upset much of the order of church, medical care and sustenance.

"About 200,000 people have been displaced, driven from their homes in the central Congo and forced southward where they have neither homes, nor work nor food," said Bishop Booth. "Hundreds are dying of starvation." Churches are air-lifting food to these stricken groups, but supplies are short, and workers on the scene report starvation rampant. One estimate put deaths from this cause at 200 daily. About 40 Protestant missionary organizations have joined in forming a cooperative "Congo Protestant Relief Agency," which has shipped large quantities of aid to Ihe region. It is recruiting 100 additional doctors, and seeking a half-million dollars to bolster its aid pro- 20 ALREADY ARRESTED More Sought in Bio Swindle INDIANAPOLIS (AP) The FBI hunted seven more persons today after arresting a score of civilians and servicemen on charges of perpetrating a million insurance swindle.

Twenty persons were arrested in six states Monday, and the FBI said about fraudulent authorizations for insurance premium aliotmenis had been discovered at the Army Finance Center here. The center processes payrolls for the entire Army. Insurance companies apparently were the heavy losers, because of commissions paid to salesmen. Allan Gillies, FBI special agent said the forged authorizaiions were slipped past finance officers Circus Press Agent Dies NEW YORK (AP) William America Jerry Lucas of Ohio State, overcame a shouting, jeering crowd of 16,000 and a determined Russian aggregation Monday for an 34-31 overtime victory that concluded the Moscow phase pf. the eight-game series.

was the difference. Rebounding effectively against the tall Russian squad that included 7-3 Jan Kruminsh, the Buckeye standout scored 20 points and wound up his fine performance by scoring the clinching basket. The American women's f.eam was not in the same class with the Russian squad, bowing 55-45 for its second loss in two games. Not Much Traveling UNIVERSITY', Ala. ifl The University of Alabama will leave the slate only three times during the football season.

The Crimson Tide opens against Geo i a at Athens, pdays its third same under lights against Vanderbilt at Nas i J1 and Oct. 28 travels to Houston, Texas to play Houston. The other seven opponents will be met on Alabama fields. Each of the two television cameras placed on the Tiros I weather satellite weighed about two pounds and, was the size of a water The guards marched the Jews about a mile and a half to the border. "They were whipping us," Grynszpjrn went on.

"There wasj blood on the road. "It was the first time I ever saw the wild barbarism of the Germans." Grynszpan said he received a blow in the face and fell into a ditch. One of his sons helped him out ant sail, "Run, father, run, or you'l! die." Fields, the Hillsboro, schoolboy who quit high school to help fight Pancho Villa and later he- came one of the nation's circus press agents, died Monday. He was 62. The tall, thin and quiet Fields was an agent for Ringling Brothers and Barnum Bailey Circus at the time of his death.

Reviewing his years as a press agent. Fields said recently "The times have changed and the circus has changed since I was a small boy in Texas. But people haven't and small boys haven't." He was born Dec. 3, 1898 at Hillsboro, where his father was editor of the local newspaper. When he was 16 he quit high school to enlist in the 2nd Texas Infantry which was engaged in border skirmises with -Villa, the Mexican outlaw.

He was knocked out of action by a hip wound in his first day of combat. He was a sergeant in France with the 36th Infantry Division during World War II. After World War I he studied! at the University of Texas for a year, transferred to Columbia University, and then quit college because of mathematics. He began his circus work with Hagenbeck-Wallace in 1926 after six years as a theatrical publicity agent. Ho joined the Ringiing organization ii.

1931 and for the past five years has been its general press in charge of all promotion. He also handled publicity for the Medison Square Garden Rodeo and last year was elected president of the Association of Theatrical Press Agents and Managers. Survivors include his wife, Camilla; daughter, Jennie; and a son, William. His first wife, Ara McLemore, died in 1945. He had two sons by that marriage, Dale and Wright.

at Ft. Jackson, S.C., and Ft, Dix, The fraud involved forging soldiers' names and serial numbers to an Army form authorizing deduction of allotments for families, insurance premiums and other purposes. It can be initiated at the company level or at the post finance office. In most cases the insurance allotments were not deducted, but why they were not was not explained. The FBI said it "didn't want to give away our case but you can say these forms got into the channel to the finance center by illicit means." Forty-five field offices took part in the investigation, which started after Brig.

Gen. Frederick J. Kendall, finance center commander, reported last October the detection of fraudulent allotment authorizations. Gillies said the government has recovered $70,000 which had been paid to "seven or eight well-established insurance companies" as monthly premiums on insurance with a face value of $14.5 million. Don A.

Tabbert, U.S. attorney, said commissions obtained fraudulently by insurance salesmen "probably exceeded $600,000." Walter J. Schuchman, special assistant to the commanding general of the finance center, said, "I think a more realistic sum would be about gram. Most of the Congo's 700 pre independence doctors have left the country. Only about 225 are still there.

These are largely engaged in private practice. Protestant and Roman Catholic missions combined have flbout 80 doctors now on the scene. The World and National Councils of Churches, and the International Missionary Council are participating in the emergency relief effort, witJi special agency offices set up in London, New York and Leopoldville. American Baptists, the Presbyterian Church in the (Southern), and the Christian Churches (Disciples of Christ), with major missionary interests in the region, also are pushing aid programs. DEATHS AND FUNERALS Cold Front Moves East Over Texas By THE ASSOCIATED PRKSS A cold front slowly moved southeastward across Texas Tuesday raising the possibility oi a few widely scattered thundershowers.

Skies u-ere cloudy ahead of the front and clear in West Texas. The thundershowers were (ore- cast for North Central and Northeast Texas and along the South Central Texas coast. The cold front early Tuesday extended from near Wichita Fails Miss Sallie Crowder Paris News Service COOPER Miss Sallie Crowder, 82, Cooper resident 70 and a longtime music teac her, died Tuesday nt 3:15 n.m. in Jnnes Hospital. She had been a patient there about two weeks.

Funeral services. Wednesday at will be conducted at First Christian Church by the v. Julian Thomas, Methodisi pns- tor, Delia Funeral Home to make burial in Oaklawn Cemetery, Daughter of James and Josephine (Lindley) Crowder, Miss Crowder was born in Hopki County, March 14, 1879. Surviving are two neph Gaston Norman of Mount Version, who, with his wife, had been tanding Miss Crowder; Gerald Joe Crowder, Houston, snd a niece, Mrs. Howard Coglin, Longview, and one great-niece.

Curry Potter Paris News Service DETROIT Mrs. Fred Milam received a message that her uncle, Curry Potter, about 85, had passed away nt N'oconn, where he lived. Hallsville, Raymond Phil, lips and Alfred Phillips, Dallas, and Mrs. Nola 20 other descendants; these brothers and sisters; George Phillips and Willis Phillips, Hugo, and Mrs. Ida Belle Cross, Soper, Henry Phillips of Milierton is a half-brolher.

York Service Oklahoma News Bureau HUGO, Okla. Funeral services for Mrs, Lonnie York, 1009 E. Medlock, were conducted Monday afternoon at Coffcy uncivil Home by the Rev. Jim Lick. Burial was made in Mount Olivet Cemetery.

Mrs. York died Saturday midnight in Memorial Hosptal after illness. The former Miss Nell i Lee Warden of McKinney, born February 10, 1B95, she had lived in Hugo since 1944. She was a member of the Church of God. She leaves her husband and 11 stepchildren, and these brothers and sisters: Mrs.

R. A. Routsong, Dayton, Ohio; Mrs. Dessa Dickerson. Francisco, Mrs.

Ronnie Greenwood, Dallas, Mrs. Milton Drake. Clarence den Henry Warden, McKtn- He survived by a large fam- ney Tex 0 E5. Warden Austin ily of children, grandchildren and Tex F. Warden Clarendon' great-grandchildren.

Lester Warden, Houston! He was reared in Midw a i Tex, and Jack Warden, Wichita and moved to Nocona a number of'Falls, hnlf-brolhcrs are the years ago. Mr. and Mrs. Milam planned to attend the fun a 1, which awaited arrival of relatives. Harry Funeral Oklahoma News Bureau BOSWELL, Okla.

Fune a 1 Rev. Chief Warden, Beaumont, and J. B. Warden, Austin. Murphy Burial Paris News Service CLARKSVILLE The funeral of Mrs.

J. H. Murphy, 69, of Avery, services for Benjamin Harry, ol.JKt. who died Saturday, was held Monday at the Meth i Church at A very, where she was a member. Clarksvillc Fun a 1 were conducted Sunday at.

the Church of Christ by 0. G. Council, burial being made in Rest land Cemetery. Mr. Harry was found dead, ap- fo near Del Rio.

Temperatures parently of natural causes, 'near back of the front were mostly in the 50s and 60s with Dalhart reporting 37 and Amarillo 45. Temperatures elsewhere were in the 70s. The thermometer climbed to 100 degrees at Presidio and San Angelo Monday afternoon. Mosl highs were in the 80s. Although Monday's winds were gusty, no severe weather developed.

people did die, he said. "They died of heart attacks." The Jews were herded across the border into Poland. The Poles put Ihem in a military camp. Two days later, on Sunday, the first food truckload of bread for the. 12,000.

"Some were lucky," Grynszpan said. "They got some bread. Others were not." He said he wrote a letter to his son in Paris. "And this son," assistant attorney general Ya'akov Bar'or said dramatically, "was Hershel Grynszpan?" "Yes," said Ihe father. This was Ihe last question.

Elchmann's lawyer, Dr. Robert Servatlus, did not cross-examine Iht witness. Grimes Named Best Speaker Frank Grimes was named best speaker at the regular Monday meeting of the Paris Toastmasters Club. The best critic award went to Jim Mussetter and Bill Lightfoot won best table topic speaker. During the topic session of the meeting, Randy Luzader gave his district winning speech.

Luzader goes to Santa Fe in June to participate in the Toaslmasters regional speech contest. Toastmaster for the meeting was Wendall Tallant with Dr. Don Riddle serving as topicmasler. Dr. E.

P. Dickson was the program evaluator. Speakers for the meeting were Grimes and Harold Hodges. Mussetter and Lightfoot served as critics. MARKETS Fort Worth Livestock FORT WORTH 800: trade slow and not enough to establish a trading hauls.

Shrep 9.500: opening titles slaughter lambs about steady; good anrl choice jGlUFfcl DIT6S spring to shipper tt 15.00-16.SO, old crop shorn Inmbs 12.00-13.00. Cultlc I100 200: sll slaughter AH riCrS V3lrl about jteidy meept cows fully steady to good and choice ilaufth- Icr steers 2f.M: mostly good Kith Oklnficrna News Bureau low-choice end heifers 23.75: good Awrrirnc m.i.. few low-choice 23.00; ANILfcKS, quarrel- cows a mos utility and commercial some squirrel is being held in ie.2i-i7.so; utility' commercial buiia 1S.OO-20,00: good 24.00-23.00i UKidnoma city tor rawes obscr- ard uii utility is.so-zi.so; vation after biting and choice 22.soji.oo/ Kathy Davis. Daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Alvin Davis, Rt. Antlers, she suffered a wound req'jiri 2 seven stitches. A highway patrol unit took the squirrel to Oklahoma City precautionary tests. BRIEFS Mr. and Mrs.

M. L. England, 611-Uth NE, had as weekend visitors their sons, Charles England, Bossier City, and England, Dallas. and Mrs. F.

L. Frank, 2-1SO Cleveland returned after attending the funeral of his brother, W. B. Frank of Fair a Minn. A resident there a number of years, he was president of the Citizens National Bank at Fairfax.

Charles D. Parnell, engineman first class, husband of Mrs. Hideko Parnell of Paris and son of Mr. and Mrs. R.

J. Parnell. Detroit, Rt. 3, is now stationed at the U. S.

Naval Receiving Station for further transfer to the USS Taconic (A.GC-17). Chuck Golden of Grand Prairie Ls a visitor in ths home of Mrs. Charles Bowden, 648-12th NE. Chuck is visiting with his grandmother while his parents, Mr. and Mrs.

John Harrison Golden Grand Prairie, formerly of Paris, are attending a convention i Washington, D.C. Golden won the trip through the Life and Casualty Insurance Company where he is an employe. He and his wife, while on the trip, are seeing points of interest and taking a vacation. PERSONALS Mr, and Mrs. Jeff Prcs 1131-lst SW, were the weekend guests of their daughter, Mrs.

Johnny Gray, and family, Post, Tex. Visiting over the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. H. H.

Brookston, were Mrs. Reno Rochelle, Ambers and Mrs. Millard Williams, Lubbock. Visiting Mr. and Mrs.

W. W. Freeman at Brookston were Mrs. Alice Freeman and Mr. and Mrs.

Tommy Meville, Greenville, and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Brunson and Miss Wanda Roberts of Ben Franklin. Mr. and Mrs.

Willnrd Lindsay and children, Jane, Sandra and Richard, returned to Houston after a weekend visit to the couple's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed C. Lindsay, 2424 Cherry and Mr. and Mrs.

W. S. Stone, 2039 Walker St. LD HOD6I1 Guthrie Guthrie "Selling Poet "llnd" INSURANCE BONDS REAL ESTATE LOANS oiA s.i» i -SPECIAL- Large Double Monument ISOcOMPLETE Deweese Monument Co, 441 Lanur DUISU4-7200 Bcnnington Thursday. He a working on a fencing job in tiiat area and he and three companions were living in a small house, where one of them found i dead.

He had lived in Boswell most of his life. D. Y. Medford Oklahoma News Bureau FT. TOWSON, Okla.

Funeral services for D. Y. Medford, 79, brother of 0. B. Medford, Ft.

Towson, were held Saturday i Idabel where burial was in Denison Cemetery. Mr. Medford died in McCurtain Memorial Hospital at Idabel after illness. He is survived by his wife, five children and 13 other descendants. Brothers include Mr.

Medfo here and W. A. Medford. Idabel, and Mrs. Scott Wiiiiams, Haworth, is a sister.

Mrs. Sam Gardner Paris News Service HONEY GROVE Mrs. Sam Gardner, daughter-in-law of Mrs. S. H.

Gardner here, was found dead of natural causes, in bed at her home in Waco, early Sunday. The funeral was set Tuesday at 2 p.m. in Waco, burial being arranged there also. Daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs.

Ira Thompson here, s. Gardner leaves her husband; two daughters, Miss Mary Elizabeth Gardner, Waco, and Mrs. Jimmy Watt, San Jose, one grandson, and a brother, Jobe Thompson, Wsco. Marion G. Phillips Oklahoma News Bureau HUGO, Okla.

Marion Grover Phillips, 74, retired farmer living at Speer, northwest of Hugo, died at his home Sunday after illness. Coffey Funeral Home here had charge of burial arrangements. Mr. Phillips, born in Mississippi, February 4, 1887, had lived at Speer 21 years and was a Baptist. Survivors are his wife, Margie; these children: Fred Phillips, Home made burial there.

Officiating were the Rev. Sam Smith. Ihe Rev. Alford Haney and he Rev. Lynn McBride, and bearers were Dee Hopper.

Ed Smith, Lois Carroll, Clifton Audas, Arthur Rosenbaum, Dub Burkett, Charley Webb and Ty Kennedy. Born in Cass County, February 21, 1832, Mrs. Murphy was the former Miss Emma Bell Wilson, and was married to Mr. Murpty at Lydia, December 6, 1908. Sha died here in Red River County Hospital.

Besides her husband, she leaves these children: W. K. Murphy and Mrs. Hattie Lee Ncvill. Houston, and Mrs.

Gladys Mae Rain, Avery; 15 other descendants, and a brother, Barney Wilson, swell, N.M. Ed Washington Ed Washington, longtime Negro resident of Pecan Gap vicinity, died Sunday at p.m. in state hospital at Terrell. Moody Wortham Funeral Home of Paris has charge of burial arrangements. Surviving are these chil en: -Mrs.

Dottie May Edwards, John Davis Washington and Sam I Washington, Pecan Gap; Miss Veola Mae Washington and James Edward Washington, all of Paris; Miss Bettie Jean Washington, Miss Margie D. Washington and Mrs. Alice Jones, all of Dallas; four grandchildren; these sisters and brothers: Mrs. Daisy Davis, Paris; John Washington, Bakersfield, Mrs. Nadine Battle, James Washington, and a a 1 f- brother, Hoscoe Hearn, all Littlefield.

Now Many Wear FALSE TEETH With Little Worry EM, talk, laugh or sneeze without, fear of Insecure false teeth dropping, slipping or wobbling. FASTEETH holds plates firmer and more comfortably. This pleasant powder has no gummy, gooey, pasty taste or feeling. Doesn't cause nausea. It's (non-acid).

Checks "plats odor" (denture Get FASTEETH at drug everywhere. for HE SELECTION of a funeral director is a matter of great importance a matter which should be intelligently decided on the basis of personal knowledge. During the coming weeks, wo hope to increase your knowledge of our tervice. To do this, we will provide you with many facts. We hope the information provided will spark your interest so that of the time of need, yours will be a wise decision.

SUnset A 4-4333.

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About The Paris News Archive

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