The McKinney Examiner (McKinney, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 10, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 8, 1955 Page: 6 of 16
sixteen pages : ill. ; page 22 x 16 in. Scanned from physical pages.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
THE EXAMINER, McKINNEY, TEXAS, DECEMBER 8, 1955
semvezamgmmnnzesnnmzansaomzmdmanaasmamnsnsnamagsamsszsameesxzezansaxessazmneneesaamsmsezeneezameeecmamuamgaaumndan
SIX
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
Phone 2-2601
nzeauze
50,
INSURANCE FOR EVERY NEED
(o
Just Received
Car Load of 0-45-0
SUPER-PHOSPHATE
ROY G. ROBERTS INS. AGENCY
7
on
c 4
2
Phone 2-2891
209 N. Kentucky St.
/
HAGGARD FEED AND GRAIN
601 S. Tenn. St.
McKinney
Phone 2-2621
zeEamosasamzazzmEmmemaaaEEEZEEET-TEEAETEA222355
201 S. Wilcox St.
□
IS OUR MOST IMPORTANT PRODUCT
3
G
best recommendation
{
*8
«6
puhrn
aen
/
6es-
ye/"
about Dearborn Area Heat!
WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT BUICK WILL BUILD THEM
OHN M. NELSON B
IC CO.
JOHNSON FURNITURE CO.
Choice McClure
1307 N. Tennessee St.
Phone 2-2732
McKinney, Texas
6
4
7,
The Stamina of
Our Forebears
veg
I
f
J
Want to heat your home better
... at less cost... with greater conven-
ience? Then come in and let us tell you
WE
charge it to advertising
t
Get 4-Season Comfort in your new Buick
with FRIGIDAIRE CONDITIONING
—now at a new low price
V
McKinney, Texas
©
Enjoy cooled, filtered air
for less than you think
with Buick’s
•AIRCONDITIONER
It’s a genuine Frigidaire
AS
a satisfied customer is our
wounds received during the Civil
War and his wife died of typhoid
fever shortly after his early death.
The family was divided among
those of kin, two in California and
three on an old plantation in Ten-
nessee. No bitterness but with cour-
age to carry on in face of the fear
that she may still outlive all of her
family does seem remarkable.
---------o---------
Renew your subscription
Ze the 56Buick.-
€66......
N / SEE JACKIE GLEASON **.
B ON TV •
Every Saturday Evening
• • - _ _ I • •
ACCIDENT and HEALTH
63
T=T=aSeaLadtzc2sc=nfem28322E21=25emnezzme=g
CROUICH-MOORE FUNERAL HOME
» (0a
**9660668 sS & s.,0 L I
ried on. Mrs. Jones kept her inter-
est in the activities at the college,
attended the football games, bask-
etball games, lectures and concer-
ts, attended church where her hus-
band had for many years been an
active elder and Sunday School
teacher, as was Mrs. Jones a Sun-
day School teacher.
Last Fall Mrs. Jones came to
Texas, not having visited here for
fifty years. She and her niece, Miss
Mildred Caraway, of the Sherman
Schools, along with the daughter
from California, Elizabeth Jones,
spent the Christmas holidays in
Mexico City. Mrs. Jones contracted
pneumonia and was flown by her
daughter to El Paso and then to ]
Phoenix. Recently Mrs. Jones and
her married daughter flew to Dal-
las for medical advantage for the
daughter. The daughter soon re-
turned to Portland, her home, and
Mrs. Jones remained at the bed-
side of her sister, Mrs. Jetta Cara-
way, who is quite critically ill.
Two weeks ago, about Nov. 6,
1955, she received news that her
married daughter, Mrs. Margaret
Davis, was critically ill. She said,
On a recent Sunday Byron and
Mildred Caraway took Mrs. Tillie
Browning Jones to Love Field to
take the plane from there to Port-
land. There is nothing remarkable
about a person taking a plane from
Love Field to Portland, but as we
consider this particular case we
are inclined to wonder if this gen-
eration has the stamina as that of
our forebears.
Mrs. Jones does not ciaim any
important place in life. She was
just a mother—mother of two boys
and two girls—a housewife. She
was the youngest daughter of the
four who grew to adulthood of the
early family of William Jackson
Browning and Elizabeth Wallace
Browning, early pioneers of Collin
and Grayson Counties. She did the
cooking in the home as her husband
did experimentation with wheat
while he was head of the Depart-
ment of Chemistry in the Idaho
State Agricultural College. He was
elected to Who’s Who and she
cooked at home, handled the home
finances, looked to the care of the
family, etc. As the father was oc-
cupying the various chairs of
the Masonic Lodges from the Blue
5088839
33333333333 333228/
s <
8333333333- ■ . 4
— ' S: /
. d.acaseGSSSGGXGcG
WE
don’t expect to make any profit in our service
department.
3
e009eow“098880009.203 23
3***3-*3 .388888 .3
38838-8888588
88888888888838
, ' V
Av
■ Enq21
WNTITH all the big excitement of Buick’s 1956 styling
V ’ and power and ride and handling—it’s easy to
overlook this fact:
Gas mileage in the ’56 Buicks takes a big step upward.
One reason, of course, is the new power plant itself.
Every new Buick cradles an advanced 322-cubic-inch
V8 engine with the highest horsepowers, Series for
Series, in all Buick history. Yet every engine delivers
more efficiency, and more usable power to the rear
wheels—because each one has a new double “Y” mani-
folding, and a new high in compression ratio.
gGo
6,)
‘\ 9
Mpggg --
•-y0
Av
-P
al
■ 2*
ITURRENTINE. JACHSON
So now, you merely nudge the pedal to part throttle and
get new breakaway getaway. And since you get this
quicker, safer response in your normal cruising range
—where you don’t use full power—you get plenty more
miles from every tankful of gas.
But when you do need sudden safety-surge for emer-
gencies, you just floor the pedal to switch the pitch.
Instantly, you’re at full-power acceleration—and it’s the
. most thrilling safety measure in the land.
“I’m going home.” Hence the ar-
rival at Love Field. It may not be
remarkable that she at 82 filled
out her accident insurance appli-
cation and signed without using
glasses to see. It does seem a bit
remarkable that she should walk
as erectly from gate 11 to board the
American Airline plane, that she
hemstitched a hadnkerchief, still
without the aid of glasses on the
trip home, that she received with
such composure and assurance the
message from her nephew, after
she had entered the plane, that a
message would be sent to her son-
in-law that she would arrive at
Portland that evening at 6:20.
We wonder if there could have
been some of the stamina trans-
ferred to her from her forebears.
She told how her father, a Texas
Ranger before the Civil War, went
back to their old home in Virginia
and there met a kinsman whom he
admired very much and afterward
served under during the war, a
General Thomas Jackson, later
called “Stonewall” Jackson. Wil-
liam Jackson Browning never real-
ly recovered from the effects of
3385330688588888559888888 >8
BBB
g —g ag
(gc ApzyAemne2e
5’ Q
2 333333332323333333333: 33333333333333 -.
333333333333333333333333333333323323233333333333333323332333333333233.. % .....3338338830 M..
• • 33333233333333323233232323333 5:......... 83322232333388. N,
c 3 Wv- —ha
IT
ge 1
. --
B888888d8S8ssgggaqsg 8 ggg g g 99.9 9 9 gg g
ca
g . -
(5) '
c—a3
•
0818g
-63
os
—
- T
' - i
- .m ■
mC.Eo
a
We Corry Trusses
CRARY DRUG STORE
■
213 East Louisiana St. • McKinney, Texas
J m8-e. e2, 998,378: 3HcMEE5M2r
J. W. Thompson
I_
--
But the major reason for the happy news in gas mileage
—and for the new step-up in safety and thrills—is Buick’s
latest version of Variable Pitch Dynaflow.
In this airplane-principled transmission, you always
had a gas-saving cruising range—and, at a switch of the
pitch, a full-power getaway range.
Now Buick engineers have brought to this cruising range
what they call “double regeneration.” It simply means
a new way to make flowing oil add to its own velocity
to build up driving force.
9 7
W/onhoz.
APPLIANCES — TV
Northeast Corner Square Phone 2-3338
maansaamzssznaaamumsmaemmssauzasanmnm
Lodge to the Shrine, as President
of the American Chemical Society,
lecturer, scientist, extracting nitro-
gen for the United States Govern-
ment during World War I, doing
experimentation, etc., she cared for
the home and encouraged her hus-
band.
The four children were guided
through college and through grad-
uate work, the two sons becoming
airmen in U. S. Air, one in the
Navy and the other in the Army.
She and her husband and family
were saddened with the news that
the youngest son, a captain in the
Navy, was killed at the attack of
Pearl Harbor, and soon afterward
the other son, an instructor, was
killed and burned in a plane crash
in California. The parents were not
embittered but remained tolerant
and continued to live as nearly
normal as they could. One of the
daughters married and the other
became a teacher, teaching home-
making in San Francisco, conduct-
ing an orchestra, and doing flying,
and working as an administrative
officer at the Frisco Flying Field.
The parents would naturally have
some apprehension when the tele-
phone rang at night, as the daugh-
ter was doing instrument flying.
About two years ago Mr. Jones
was sweeping the walk preparatory
to attending church and fell over
dead with an heart attack. The
family was grief stricken but car-
FIRE — CASUALTY — BURGLARY
How about coming in to try the most modern trans-
mission yet?
The absolute smoothness of this new Dynaflow is worth
a visit in itself. So you can be sure you’re in for a wealth
of wonderful surprises—for that’s just the start of the
best Buick yet. Can you make it this week?
*New Advanced Variable Pitch Dynaflow is the only Dynaflow
Buick builds today. It is standard on Roadmaster, Super and
Century—optional at modest extra cost on the Special.
jr
> the thrill
= with Buich^s zew
Vhriahle Biteh Dynaflowv!“
b'
Tele. 2-3452 . . .
4
Protect Baby with o
B. C. Terrell of Higgins Core
munity leaves $1.50 to renew
the Examiner.
--------o--------
Mrs. Checter Davidson of Hous-
ton is a new reader of the Examiner
sent to her by Mrs. G.G. Davidson
of McKinney.
--------o--------
The Lumber Number in McKin-
ney is 2-5511. Grogan Supply Co.,
600 East Louisiana.
. -
■
. TT "TTKGT7
o ■' .e
p
■ \ , • - e
1
i 2 ', ' d
■ cg e-,ha < ' - , "
.-i. 1 v
. ’ 1 ■ ■ - '1 I
pgz. —-u g
.... -.-nerk 0
Em--
4
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Thompson, Anna & Thompson, Wofford. The McKinney Examiner (McKinney, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 10, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 8, 1955, newspaper, December 8, 1955; McKinney, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1457523/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Collin County Genealogical Society.