Stephenville Daily Empire (Stephenville, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 32, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 18, 1950 Page: 6 of 6
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DAILY EMPIRE
Mbs
I WANT ADS I
^, , _ _ ________R
Sr
|\
FOR SALE
1849 CHEVROLET tSKMioor, like
new, and/or 1*60 Dodge Wsy-
ftWi two-door, tike now. Seo
Davis at 18*7 West Jones, or call
1451.
BARGAIN for quick sale, 1940
Chevrolet coupe, looks good, run*
good and has good tires. See at
1020 North Ollie after 6 p.m. week
days and all day Sunday.
FOR RENT
UNFURNISHED duplex apart-
ment, on Mcllhaney Ave., across
from College Auditorium, avail-
able about Nov. 1. See Mrs. East,
1122 W. Sloan, phone 1374.
3-ROOM furnished duplex apart-
ment, private bath. 68.1 So. .Win-
ter.
LATE MARKET REPORTS
3-ROOM furnished apartment, pri-
vate bath, electric refrigerator.
328 W. Collins, phone 100.
FURNISHED apartment with gar-
age. Located 1075 Vanderbilt.
Phone 219 or 207.
ROCK’ house, 214 West Long St.,
2 blocks from square. Recently re
decorated throughout. Five room*., j
bath, hardwood floors. Available j
Oct. 21. Phone 1(523 in Stephenville !
or contact Page Harrel in Dublin.
LARGE 3-rooin duplex, furnished,
private bath, lots of built-ins, elec- !
trie refrigeration. Close in at 258
W. l.ong. Adults only. Mrs. Jennie ;
Moss, 54(5 S. Graham.
LIVESTOCK
Fort Worth, Oct. 18, (IP (USDAJ
—Livestock: .,__
Cattle 1600. Weighty steer* slow wdutV
and weak, other classes active,
steady to strong. Medium slaugh-
ter steers and heifers 24.00-27.60,
few good yearlings 28.00-29.00.
Beef cows mostly 19.00-21.00 in
range of 18.50-22.00, canners and
cutter* 12.00-18.60, canners up to
17.50, bulls 17.00-23.00. Medium
and good stocker steers and year-
ling* 23.60-27.50, few yearlings
to 28.50, heifers 27.60 down, Stock-
er cows 19.00-23.00.
Calves 1200, active, fully steady
at recent advances. Good and
I c hoice slaughter calve* 25.50-28.00,
j few head choice 28.50-29.00, com-
! mon and medium 21.00-25.50, culls
18.00- 20.60. Medium stocker calves
24.00- 28.00, good and choice 28.50-
30.50, several lots mixed steers and
heifers 30.00.
Hogs 800: butcher hogs strong
to .25 higher than Tuesday, sows
.50 higher, feeder pigs strong.
Good and choice 190-270 lbs 21.25
-21.75, good and choice 150-185 lbs
19.00- 21.00. Sows 17.50-19.50. Feed-
er nigs 16.00-18.50.
Sheep 1,000: Mostly steady on
available offerings. Medium to
mostly good wooled slaughter
Iambs 27.00. Good and choice shorn
slaughter lambs No 2 pelts 27.00
Good shorn slaughter lambs and
yearlings 25.50. Cull to good
714 Register in
Texas for Doctor
Dentist Draft
Austin, Oct 18 to—A total of
714 Texas physicians, dentists and
veterinarians registered for the
draft on Monday, state Selective
Service headquarters reported to-
day.
The special registration covered
physicians, dentists and veterina-
rians who had lass than 21 months
in the armed forces
and who also had participated as
students in armed forces special-
ized training. It sjso included per-
sons deferred from service in
World War II so that their profes-
sional training could be completed.
Of the total, 489 were physicians,
160 were dentist* and 120 were
veterinarians. Harris county led
the state with 182 registrations.
Dallas was second with 95. Both
Fort Worth and Galveston had 45.
State Official
Killed When Car
Runs Into Train
Dallas, Oct. 18 (to—A state edu-
cation official was killed last night
when his auto struck the side of
a Dallas-bound freight train, but
the wreckage containing the tom
body of the victim was not dis-
covered for almost an hour.
The victim was James Frank
Kilpatrick, 56, area supervisor of
the State Hoard of Vocational Edu-
cation.
Sheriff Bill Decker said the en-
gineer of the Texas & Pacificc
freight train apparently never
knew his train had been struck. The
^ssasa S'gSfSS
II?72J.XTtSSjT££■**■*- “f*1* "fy}lTt"larTy
MOTHER AND—
(Continue^ from page I)
E. and Lon of 8tophenville, and
Fred of San Antonio; one sister,
Mrs. Nell Amos of Menard.
The Trewitt Funergl Horn* has
charge of the arrangements. ~
Joint services will be held f«t
Mrs. Carter and her son at the
Trewitt Funeral Chapel at 4 p.m.
Thursday, and burial will be at
West End Cemetery.
Survivors of Mrs. Carter include
the parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. K.
Fuller; one .pister, Mrs. Frances
Muir; a brother, Darryl Puller; a
nephew, Boyd Don Muir; grand-
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jess Brooks
and W. S. Fuller, all of Stophep-
ville. The child is survived by the
above and his father, Donald
Carter.
Charges of negligent homicidd
were filed Wednesday against Joe
I Bums, driver of the car in which
Mrs. Carter and her child were
riding. Burns was placed under
custody by county officials.
•err ol Um Uaii
tm Is Atlanta
apt with
ot American
LOST
STEER yearling, pale red, motley
face. Strayed fiom Jim Teague's
place. Notify Boots Teague, phone
2114. Reward.
FOR LEASE
55 ACHES of high river bottom
land tor vetch. Set* R. L. Thompson
WANTED
LADY to care for ch’ldren and do
general housework while mother
works. White oi colored. 814 N.
Paddock. Phone 1209.
lambs 22.00-27.00. Feeder yearlings
22.00.
POULTRY AND EGG
Fort Worth,Oct. 18, to (USDA)
Wholesale dealers egg and poul-
try prices to producers And truck-
ers. delivered Fort Worth:
Egg market about steady. Cand-
led basis: Grade A whites large
13.50-14.40. Grade A mixed 11.40-
12.15. Mediums 9.90-10.50.
Live poiAtry market dull to
slightly weaker. Per !b heavy hens
23-24. Light 18-20. Roosters 12-13.
Fryers loon! best 2(5-27 cents. Ord-
inary quality light weights lower.
Turkeys: toms 25-27, hens 33-36,
mostly around 35 cents.
FREE LESSONS
How to Paint Figurines at
RAY’S GARDEN
^00 Dodge SI. Slfphenvillf ♦
Farms and Ranches
LIST YOURS
vHtk
HEATH & CO.
Telephones: Stephenville till
Fort Worth Pershing 7256
(.RAIN
For* Worth, Oct. 18.
Grain.
Estimated receipts today includ-
ed:
Wheat 44, corn 6. oafs 6 and
sorghum 67. Total 123 is is
The U. S. Department of Agri-
culture's Production and Market-
ing Administration said wheat,
oats und yellow corn strengthed
hut miio is unchanged to lc lower.
White corn and bailey held steady.
No. 1 hard wheat sold at 2.30*-1 -
2.4 fi per bushel, bulk, in earlots,
freight and tax paid to Texas com-
mon points.
No. 2 wheat Moved at l-2c low-
Connie Mack, 87
Steps Down as
Manager of A’s
Philadelphia, Oct. 18 to—Connie I
Mack retired today as manager of
the Philadelphia Athletics, a team
he piloted for 50 year* and guided
to nine pennants and five woild
championships.
At the same ime, Mark, now 87,
announced that Jimmy Dykes, one
of his old star players and his
present assistant, would take over
as manager and that Arthur Ehler.
would become general manager.
Ehlers has been head of the
Athletics' farm club system.
Even so, the baseball patriarch
found it impossible to
gether.
Mack, who was the only man-
ager the As ever had, will con-
tinue as president of the club. He
said he would travel with the team
next year.
No. 2 white corn closed at 1.76*4
-1.81*4.
No. 2 yellow coin 1.59',4-1.63*j.
No 2 barley 1.39-1 44
No. 2 yellow milo realized 2.09-
2.15 per hundred pounds.
No. 2 white oats brought 97*4-
98'vc pci bushel at Galveston, and
91:*i-96*ie at Fort Worth.
U. S. to Impose
Stricter Rules
On Home Loans
for Fort Worth was forced to stop
55 minutes later.
Decker said Kilpatrick's car was
thrown into the outgoing tracks
by the force of the collision. The
state official's body was found in-
side.
Alert Reporter
Causes Capture
2 Bank Robbers
Dallas, Oct. 18 to—Two men who
tried to hqld up the South Dallas
Bank and Trust Co. were captured
shortly afterwards when an alert
newspaper reporter spotted their
| car outside a saloon.
IP1 (USDA) I The men, identified by bank em-
ployes as the bandits, were Bruce
Stephens, 24, and Temple Crosley,
46.
Reporter Charles Murphy of the
Dallas News was en route to the
robbery scene when he saw a car
answering the description of the
bandits’ getaway car. It was park-
ed outaide a tavern several blocks
from the hank.
He telephoned police headquar-
ters and officers captured the men
a few’ minutes later.
Bank teller Lester McCalmant
said the men entered the bank at
4 p.m. yesterday. One waved a
pistol at him and ordered him to
“start digging for money.’’ They
fled, however, when he ducked be-
neath his counter.
HURRICANE—
(Continued Croat page 1)
(AFL) convention hero—offered
their services to Miami And Miami
Beach in restoring the power
supply.
The Red Cross reported that in
Miami alone eight houses were de-
stroyed, 474 badly damaged, 4,590
damaged and 7,700 received super-
ficial damage. A survey had not
been completed in hard-hit Miami
Beach.
The big blow gradually spent its
strength as it rumbled up the pen-
insula. The weather bureau said
it would drop below 75 miles an
hour by the time it reached the
Orlando-Titusviile section this aft-
ernoon but warned that squalls of
60 to 75 miles an hour would ex-
tend northward to the Jacksonville
Ry STANLEY WHITAKER
Ualta4 Fra* Staff CvriunU**
Berlin, Oct. 18, to—I was M un-
invited guest today of the Russian
sector of this divided metropolis.
For two hours without authori-
sation I toamed freely—but nerv-
ously—amid the duaty rat-ridden
ruina for a first-hand look at the
kind of life Communism dishes up.
I wouldn’t want any of it.
I found the Russian sec ter a
bleak and terrifying nether world
where the dock of progress goes
in reverse and a human life seems
worth something less than a plug-
ged pfennig.
.* I felt uneasy undlr the suspi-
cious looks of grim blue-uniform-
ed men and women of the “people’s
Magazine Sponsors
Short Story Contest
Prize* of $590. $300 and $200 will
be awarded by Tomorrow Magazine
to the winners of the Creative Age
Press-sponsored Fifth Annual Coi.
lege Writers’ Short Story Contest.
Winning stories will be published
in the spring and summer editions
I of the magazine. The contestants
I can include both undergraduate
j a,'d graduate college students.
Stories, which must be limited to
no more than 5000 words, should
I be submitted to Tomorrow Maga-
zine, New York. Entries will be ac-
10 Crewmen of
Ship Missing
Havana, Oct. 18, (to—Ten craw
men of the Cuban freighter Oriente
were reported missing today after
the 632-ton ship broke in two and
sank in the hurricane-lashed Carib-
bean.
A Cuban naval vessel which res-
cued other crewmen said the 10
mising men were in a lifeboat
which they believed capsized.
The Oriente was sailing from
Honduras to Guantanamo. She
sank off Cape Crus in Oriente
province of Cuba.
New Tropical
Storm Brewing
Houston, Oct. lS, (to—The Hous-
ton Weather Bureau said today
that a tropical disturbance, with
winds up to 30 miles per hour, has
been found in the Gulf of Mexico
about 200 miles southeast of Gal-
veston.
A. E. Farrell, Houston weather
observer, said so fai the tropical
disturbance was only a 4 “squally
area.” He said it may “develop
into something before night.”
North Korean
Commie Leader
Flees Country
Tokyo,.Oct. 18. to—North Ko-
rean Premier Kim II Sing, who
one week ago called on his armed
forces to “fight to the last,” was
believed today to have fled to
Communist Manchuria or the So-
viet Union.
' He probably took with him all
W$ top advisers. There has been
speculation here that one reason
North Korean troops in the field
have not quit is because there is
no high authority left in Pyong-
yang, the northern capital) to tell
them to surrender.
Officials at Gen. Douglas Mac-
Arthur’s headquarters in Tokyo
said United Nations forces in Ko-
rea have little or no chance of
capturing any high North Korean
government officials.
Some authorities believed Kim
had gone to Manchuria in the
hope of mounting guerrilla raids
into Korea during the winter.
Others thought he might go to
Vladivostok, where the Russians
are still holding the former Japa-
nese puppet emperor of Man-
churia, Henry Pu-Yi.
Among the first troops to arrive
on the scene of the groat San
Francisco earthquake and fire in
1906, were a detachment of Ma-
rines from Yerba Buena Island in
San Francisco Bay and a battalion
of Marines from Mare Island.
police” and again under
Stares of gaunt, ill-clad people
who moved about the endless ruins
like walking dead.
For ms, entering the Russian
•actor from the weet, beside the
broad Brandenburg gate which
straddles once-romantic Unter Dan
Linden, hed en effect like being
hit by a sledge-hammer.
Weet Berlin Different
1 hed found West Berlin rela-
tively bright, gey, clean. The shop
windows were filled with good mer-
chandise end there was brisk trad-
ing. The people looked healthy end
were well-droseed. Car traffic wee
heavy.
Beyond Brandenburg gate —the
partition between the two worlds
— the desolation was total, end-
less. There was virtually no traf-
fic. The few shops I saw—many of
them made of scrounged lumber
— were either erapto or stocked
with junk.
People moved as if they didn’t
care whether they lived or died.
Here and there at a pushcart, a
few people queued up and waited
silently to buy a few potatoes or
a cabbage.
It struck me thst there must be
sn acute shortage of housing in
view of the extent of the destruc-
tion.
“Most of them have places to
live,” said my companion, “but
you’d find them a' bit shocking.
The majority, crowd into flats in
partly bombed-out buildings.”
What Some Live in
We walked to i field, picking
our way past an old bath-tub, a
broken kitchen stove, a twisted
radiator, the bullet-riddled- body of
an old car.
“Look through that hole,” said
my companion.
The hole was at the base of a
pile of debris. I bent forward.
A sickening stench, like that of
ah' unwashed horse, struck my nos-
trils. Below, on the floor, I made
out a ragged mattress with a filthy
pillow at one end, and there was a
wooden box. Atop the box there
was supper for three.
“A lot of them live like that,”
said my companion.
A hundred feet away, along the
top of the shell of a building,
there was a Red sign:
“Our five-year plan will give
you better living conditions.”
An enormous portrait of Josef
Stalin hung at the base of the
building.
Stalin was smiling'. *
Hollywood
Ire oilman (
ad sports promoter Lawrence Rum-
mans in tha cheat when Rumman*
called him a liar, the promoter'*
attorney said today.
McCarthy gave the deposition
for use in a federal court trial of
Rumman*' suit for $210,000 dam-
ages.
Rumman* charged he was hired
by McCarthy to promote an all-
star charity football game in Hous-
ton. The fight came when McCarthy
accused Rumraani of unauthor-
ised^ making a $1,500 bet for the
oilman on the Texas A4M-VU-
lanova game.
Rumman* claimed McCarthy
kicked him in the face, punched
him several times while other men
held him and kept him a “prison-
er” in the Shamrock Hotel two
days.
inve
all loop
and other
be reaching
iata.
Acting
O’Conor, D.,
commerce subcommittee wiH look
into the government’s regulations
for cutting off the flow of war-
potential goods to China’s Reds.
The subcommittee, be said, wants
to find out whether government
export rules can be “circumvented”
by trans-shipping maneuvers. The
group also wants to make sure
that there are no “loopholea” in
the yegulation*, he said.
Use Daily Empire want-ads.
Confesses Adultery
With Father-in-Law
LONDON, Oct. 18 (to—Slim, au-
burn-haired Mrs. Frances Mayhew,
87, testified today that she carried
on a two-year love affair with her
66-year-old father-in-law because
she needed money and didn’t find
adultery “distasteful.”
Her husband, John Mayhew, 41,
is suing for divorce. He also has
a $28,000 damage suit pending
against his father, Sir John May.
hew, a wealthy former member of
Parliament.
Sleep without dreams
popcorn without salt
is lika
Texas stockmen can boast of be-
ing judges of good iivestpek but
as judges of pastures and ranges,
especially grass, they often do not
know what to look for.
Photo by
)
V
—
Don’t Mind
Fall Weather!
Let it rainl Let the wind blow! Just
call us. We’ll do your laundry eXaM-
ly the way you like it. Call for it,
too and then deliver promptiv.
STEPHENVILLE LAUNDRY1
and DRY CLEANERS
239 N. Columbia phone 254
SAVE TIME — SAVE TROUBLE — FIND IT QUICK IN THIS DIRECTORY
WHERE TO FIND IT
HANDY REFERENCE BUSINESS A ND PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY
AMBULANCE SERVICE
Lady Attendant
Prompt Ambulance Service
Day Phone 859—Night 201
Washington, Oct. 18 to—The ifov-
cinmcnt will order at least one-
fifth of the nation's supply of
natural rubber diverted from civil-
ian production to the defense
stockpile, it was learned today. _____ _ __
An order to this effect will he j through January is”
issued later this week by the Com- '
niercc Department's National Pro-
duction Authority, it will be the
department’s second attempt since
quit alto- outbreak of the Korean war to con-
serve natural rubber for military
needs.
Chinese are uncivilized. They in-
vented firecrackers We invented
the atomic bomb.
EVERYBODY READS -
CLASSIFIED ADS
PHONE 198
I
The easiest way to buy, sell, or
trade anything is through the
classified section of the EMPIRE
and EMPIRE-A'RIBUNE. Come in
or phone us a|d we will take care
of your needs. If your ad runs to-
day, you'll get results tomorrow.
STEPHENVILLE
EMPIRE-TRIBUNE
M
BRIEFS
Netvt of Your Neighbor*
and Friend*
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Jordan,
prominent Mason county ranch
people, were in Stephenville Wed-
nesday visiting friends. The Jor-
dans formerly lived here, making
their home on West Long Street
at thst time.
j* ________
Roy R. Largent, of Merkel, Wed-
nesday was elected vice-president
of the American Hereford Associa-
tion at its annual banquet meeting
in Kansas City. Largent has been
judge, on several occasions, at live-
stock shows held in Stephenville.
Love is where the heart is, and
heart disease is ft killer.
SOUTH KOREAN—
(Continued from page 1)
ity of Hwangju, 15 miles south of
■Chunghwa.”
Notably the mileage figures in
the bulletin differed from ths
measurements on field maps. c
In the wake of the 1st Cavalry
and South Korean 1st Division
were the U. S. 24th and South
Korean 6th and 8th Divisions, plus
the British 27th Brigade—an array
of some 60,000 Allied troops closing
in for the kill.
F(pnt reports said Communist
prisoners by the thousands were
being herded into compounds. More
than 5,000 were taken in the last
24 hours. The war-long bag was
estimated at more than 70,000.
Decision Due Soon
On Extradition
Of Ochoa to U. S.
Tiajuana, Mexico, Oct. 18. to—
George Ochoa, scar-faced Laredo
customs broker, was in jail hero to-
day awaiting the decision of a
Mexican federal judge on whether
he must return to Laredo to face a
double murder charge.
Ochoa was flown here yesterday
from the pwiitentiary at Mexico
City as a climax to long efforts of
Texas authorities to have the dap-
per fugitive extradited.
“If they extradite me to the U.
S., it makes no difference to me,1
he said before he climbed on the
plane at 2 p. m.
Stephenville
Funeral Home
Ambulance Service
£88 S. Graham Phone
FURNmiRE—NEW USED
t buy/ i
New and Uood Fmmitur*
See us before you sell or buy
TRADING POST
Phone 8)1
PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS
Hale & Crimmins
Accountants and Auditors
Fodoral sad State Tax Caoaultan
NeMott-Kiag Bldg. Phone 81
Lather P. Hale Carl & Crimmli
CHIROPRACTORS
DR. J. C. WILSON
Chiropractic Office
Next door to W. R. Hickey
Reel Estate
Phone 589 281 W. CoIliWSt
Barbecue at Its BEST—Come Out to
WHITS
oa the Hlco Highway in Stephenville
BARBECUE TO GO.. .pound $1.00
BRING YOUR OWN CON’
BARBECUE PLATES
ALL THE BARBECUE YOU CAN EAT
OWN CONTAINER
••••••a,85c
T. D. Purdom,Jp. C.
Phone 608
Corner Paddock A Pecan Sta.
H. R. Conley, D. C.
257 W. College Phono 158
Ground Floor
Acroaa street from Vaughan
.....Electric . r
Stephenville, Texan
BUTANE GAS DEALERS
Butane and L.P. Gas Service
Steraga Tanka • Accessaries
8ERVEL GAK REFRIGERATORS
Shannon Supply Co.
nehHe High wav Phene 1<
UPHOLSTERY
Merrell Upholstering
'V.. , : and ',
Furniture Repair Shop
Choose from Our Samples of '
Vpholetering Fabric* and Plastic«
295 W. College Phone 728
Wi
■■
iJkt
ELECTRICAL HEP AIRS
- ---------------------—--
POULTRY
Mollard
Poultry Market
Vaughan Electric
“Everything Electrical”
Live end Dressed
wiring—Service
250 W. College Phone 454
Hens, Fryers, Bakers, Tar Keys
*88 N. Floral Phone 188?
FARM SUPPLIES
PHOTOGRAPHERS
I Sake aad Service for
PHOTOGRAPH8
MINNHAPOLI8-MOLIKE
Farm Machinery and
Liverman Peanut Pickers
Shannon Supply Co.
Dublin Highway * Phone 188
D.n’1 kMHal. to caH m tot gamlly tu-
nteu aad *11 Picnic*. W*M*s* aad
•lfc.r —angle*. Baxter stedte fb. Baby
8—ctelfat 8—thw—1 mwt «f — r*.
PfcMM III
BAXLEY’S STUDIO
Stephenville ^
- SEWING MACHINES
a
Tractor and H
Implement Co. V
NEW SINGER SEWING
MACHINES
Fort Worth Highway IvBBR
Phono 850 X&gY
Selea' and Service, Repair*
Goad Used Machines fer Sale
Singer Sewing Center
84T « Mhnan pi—
VETERINARIANS
Dr. Verne A. Scott
8tephenville, Taxaa
RADIO SERVICE
Kelly's Television and Radio
• Service Day and Night
Phone 462
. ,u.r
Repair Service
********11—Mmteld*te^tejrah<* **
I— a* Mot* kerb* • radte «r rlr^bi*
Dr.Ben B.McCollum, Jr
Veterinarian
Fort Worth Highway
Phone 847 or 228 Stephenville
***. W. —■ — t. r—---r
ARVIN TELEVISION SETS
»t W. Itotete. Ft— TM
HEFFLEY RADIO AND
TELEVISION SERVICE
rtebL* .TT, il" "“***■.
FEED STORES
PHILCO PRODUCTS
Yearwood Feed Store
„ A.rr#w„“* Hsmro Feeda
Gratae, Vetch, Fertilizer, Oceo
Minerals
Dairy Feed of Oar Own
Compeattian
141 H Mason Phone 827
W4 B. Waiklsat— rk_ ,«
CASHON Radio SERVICE
LmsM at wan* am* sen
*44 M. Utae Ffc— Ml
V _
Pi|kM ‘ ——A » »- ------« .
nm**wy
INSURANCE
RIP EST ATE______
John Ed Jones
& Son Agency
Better to have end net need,'
Than to need, and net have.
*37 W. Washington Phene 168
GOLDEN RULE REALTY
lit Wuklntt— . Or— 0*«r— Drae
Offte* Phon. N* a—Id— Fk—« TM
fhnM • Kanaka • Rntak . City gr——S
toon* - On* W—k OianstbeM
Bask T. K—i Ins f iniN teeM H
( >.> Wow
a-
LAUNDRY
Helpy-Selfy
lundry -■
Sisson Hel
Lai
SISSON HELPY-SELFY
LAUNDRY
*41 N. Graham Phone 852
Fra# Pickup - Delivery
K
PLUMBERS
City Plumbing Co.
J. E. Looklngbill, Jr„ Owner
Sales-Inatallationa-Repain .
Plumbing and Heating
285 N. Graham Phone ltl
■T
Bell & McGehee
Supplies-Fixturee-Kepaira
“Service with a
176 College
WOOD WORK SHOPS
Hale’s Wood Shop
Located at Higginbotham T.«—
Yard Cen—r
AR Kind* Wood m« Cabinet Wert
Phene 1(80
Cullen Cabinet Shop
Furniture
end
Eetimatae
ie 764
|T, Remodeling
Sek
Given V
Rival*
Moore’* Wood
(femrlr JbUm’i Wood
Mill Work. Cabinet., Vmetiai
to Hr
tee w. Cottar' atTMt
MATTRESS SERVICE
Wo
A NICE, FLUFFY
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Stephenville Daily Empire (Stephenville, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 32, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 18, 1950, newspaper, October 18, 1950; Stephenville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1133413/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Dublin Public Library.