Grandview Tribune (Grandview, Tex.), Vol. 68, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, November 30, 1962 Page: 3 of 4
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Grendview Tribune, Not. 30, 1962
6
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DOLE
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NOT COLD WEATHER
90us ^4lout 5
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00002
andMs.B.M. Pi
M. and Mes. Louis
Bui les on.
t
a
'old pump
be served at
FRIDAY AND SATUEDAY OKU
4:900
Drive By
Lacy Call
Mz. and
G.
KIMBER'S FEEDS
M. and .Mas.
See Us For -
f
and"
Martin.
yyyy yyy
Ara you aware
that
RERTIRG im in
HUS?
I
PHONU MO.
, \
1
i
a
V
BODILY RESISTANCE
LESSENED BY COLD
we
MAMI ..
AHUM
0ITY..O
4 THAN ANY
OTHER TEXAS
NEWSPAPER!
Lewis, Washi
day visit with
)
/
Lt. and Mrs. James Halbert
arrived Monday from Fort
Chisti last
gh Sunday.
Mk. and Mrs. Bob la
M. Ramsay and Me
of Dallas,
e Williams
4
«
protein should
every treat
Meat. fish, ]
cheese and mi
‘4 GOLD~ES 1
WEEK DAYS . 4 AM TO I p.M.
ai
3-
poultry, eggs,
ilk are sources
. The renter
homeowner,
home, you lose
t*
SUNDAY. 6 A.M. TO 3 P.M.
855
M. and Mrs. C. W. Betrier,
Lynn and Diann, Mk. and Mts.
W. O. Siratt and Mts. Lizzie
Laird spent Thanksgiving
with Mrs. Dave Rogers in
Stephenville.
If you’re not sure, see us for a Tenant’s Security
Check-up!
amsay
m with
Whan you think about gifts
for the Christmas season,
think about Carver Dept.
Store.
TODAY’S
Meditation
Arem
Ite Wers Mat wuel, M
‘ope of
Fairborn, Ohio in thehome of
Bar-B-P Beef
On Ite Bun
J. M. Crownover returned
Satuday from a 4 weeks visit
with his son and family, Mr.
and Mes. Herman Crownover in
Houston. Nkrs. Crownover who
has been a patient in a
Visitors in the Bob Mm*
shall home Sunday were their
chilitea, Mu ami Mes.Louis
Pope and childzen of Fair-
born, Ohio, M. and Mrs. D. L
Kt needy. Laan and Alan of
San Angelo, Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Willis of Waco, Me. and Mes.
Muwel Moran and Enmon of
and Mts. Dan Willas of Lorena
Mt. and Mrs. Donald Storm
and Scotty of Hutchins. Mes,
Marshall's sister, Mrs. Jewel
Gray of Waco and niece, Nk.
and Mm. Earl McFettets of
Dallas.
Mt. and Mm. Roy
visited Sunday aftern
te. and Mm. J. T. Tuner
and Mikecof Albuquerque, New
Mexico spent the Thanksgiv-
ing holidays in the home of
her sister, Mz. and Mrs. David
Tackett and Sheila, and other
relatives in Grandview and
Midlothian.
_ iotf
Repmesenttue Minford Fie Ingurance Csamear,
Member Hartfurg Insurance roup. Harford 5,
ipman
Burleson, Mr.
Ik. and Mes L.J. Dufner
of San Antonio are spending
the week with ter sister, Ik.
aad tea. J. T. Poe and
btothet, Ik. and Iks. Luke
Hadiss and family.
runs much the same risks as the
If fire destroys your rented
clothing, furniture, other per-
1 Can you handle this toes...
A PLEASANT RENTNDER of
you thoughtfulness is a gift
subscription to the Tribune.
What move can you give for so
little?
tonal belongings.
and others like wind damage . burglary or vandalism
... costly lawsuit by someone injured in your apartment?
The place most suited to
as needs thisChistmas is
sever Dept. Store.
A SUBSCRIPTION to ths
Tgbune malms an excellent
Chistmas gift -a gift to enjoy
every week of the year.
GRANDVIEW 060P ASSOCIATION
0. E. Hale, Jr., Manager .
Phone UN6-3370
Ik. and Mrs. Robert Coving-
ton and Susan visited her
brother, Mr. and Mm. Ernest
arshal.
2Pog
Mm. Dalton Harrell end
children of -Midwest City,
Oklahoma spent Thanksgiving
in the home of her mother,
Mis. H. D. Tackett, Sr.
-------- "
Fall Leaves Change
Chemical Processes
o.u.. t
Sul Cut Cheese
If you have a large piece at
cheese n the refngera tor. and
rue off wedges for weekiy use
you can try sealing the cut
sides At bl piece with melt-
ed butter. After the butter
hardens, wrap the cheese tightly.
COLLEGE STATION, Nov 23
fSpl)— The fleeting beauty at
the fall leaves is'not—as some
people suppose.a result of au-
tumn s chin weather'
D. W Fate of the Texas Far
est Service explain that the
change in coloring is caused by
chemical processes which take
place in the tree during its pre-
■ paratine for winter
All during the spring and sum-
mer the leaves have served as
factories where the foods neces-
sary to tree growth have tees
manufactured in the fall ths.
work of the leaves comes to an
end when the various substances
are sent back to the body of the
tree to be stored for use n the
spring
Al’ that remains in the cel
cavities.of the leaves is a watery
substance in which a few nd
globules and.crystals as wed as
a small number of yellow bodies
can he seen These giv the
leaves the yellow coloring so fa-
miliar in the fall
Often there as more sugar in
the leaf than can. readily be
transferred back into' the body
of the tree When this is the
case, the chemical combination
with other substances produces
many color shades, varying
from the billiant red of the dog
wood to the red-browns at the
oaks
While the leaf coftr is chang
-ing.-the tree is making special
preparations for the shedding of
the leaves At the point where
the stem of the leaf is attached
to the tree, a special layer of
cells develops and gradually
> severs the tissues that support
the leaf When the leaf fails
from the tree the place where
it grew on the twig is marked
by a scar.
Through fallen leaves, nature
pros ides for a f e Ft 4 i e -6orest
floor Many mineral substances
with which the walls at the leaf
cells have become impregnated
during the summer months are
retained in the leaves By this
process, many of the elements
which were originally a part of
the soil ar returned to the soiL
These leaves also provide for an
accumulation of water -absorbing
humas material
However, if fires are allowed
to burn through the forest, the
leaves are destroyed and meet
of the valuable fertilizing ele-
ment, are changed by the heat
into gases and escape into the
air The valuable humas is de-
stroyed
daMi^iecl -4ds Pay
1 _____________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________
Flealthful nutrition is
Mr. and Mm. Paul Reuse
and family of Itasca visited
his brother, Mr. and Mrs.
Paris Reese and family
Thanksgiving Day.
•-.TUXAS
\ k
-----
Mr. and Ms. C. E. Webb
and Marie spent Thanks-
giving with his parents, M.
and Mrs. C. E. Webb in Sey-
mots.
Thanksgiving dinner guests
in the Robert Akins home
were Mr. and Mb. Lowell
Akins and Don, Mts. Amy
Ruth Haynie, Bobby and Judy
and Miss Thelma Flanery of
Fort Worth, Me, Jane Ibu
and daughter of Smithfield,
Mr. and Mrs. Kelly Russell,
Mr. and Mm. Leonard White,
Dianne and Carlisle. After-
noon callers were Mb. Marie
Ingle, Mrs. James Rollen and
Iks. Bobby Rockett.
Tires-Antifreeze
—uf ---
; - .»
s SEND you friends and loved
ones the Tribune for a Christ-
ras gift, the gift that keeps
on giving for a whole year.
v?"*a ,
- * "g"
Blue Cheese Dip f
Easy to Prepare
With Sour Cream
Looking far a quck yet des-
ernes, te cheese dip? Heze’s
am that fits the bin
Simpy bland % fl
oumces) at entMad American
Hut cheese % teaspoon sah
and .dash of Worcestershire
sauce with 1 cup daity nr
cream
Serve immedarely, or keep
in a covered dsh a a re
frigeratt until ready to serve
The dtp can be kept in the re
frigerator for severa days.
c-
7)0,3
Ik. and Ite. William Waltets
and daughter, Dari Am of
Clute am Ik. and Mrs. Bill
Davis and children of Waco
spent the Thanksgiving holi-
days with then parents, Mt.
and Ite. Barry Pullin. •
1
•
B. G. Craver of Kilgote
waq visiting with his many
Grandview friends over the
past weekend.
William Bradford, the
governor of the Plymouth
Colony, has beencalled "the
father of American history,""
according to World Book
Encyclopedia. His book.
Of Plimoth Plantation, tells
the story of the Pilgrims
from the time of then per-
secution ui England and is
the chief source of our know-
ledge of the colonists.
Ik. and Ite. H. D. Cas-
stevens, Bucky and Leigh of
Fort Worth, Ik. and Mrs. R. J.
Rentfro, Becky, Anne and Ro-
bin and Miss Pauline Briscoe
of Dallas were the Thanks-
giving visitors of their par-
ents, Ik. and Mrs. C. W. Bris-
coe.
.0
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Pipes
and children of Grandview,
Missouri visited Ik. and Mrs.
Tom Pipes over the Thanks-
giving holidays.
1 •' -n
Mrs. J. W. Hall and daugh-
ter, Ite. Walter Fleece and
nephew, John Dyer visited
Ik. and Mrs. Virgil Adwell in
Arlington, Tuesday.
Buying the right gift, at
the most reasonable price, is a
easy at Carver Dept. Stote.
THE DALLAS MAS HAS THE LARGEST CIRCULATION IS TEXAS
BOTN DAlLY AMD SUNDAY ___________
Ik. and Iks. BiUy Jackson,
Britt and Terri and Ite. Nova
Jackson of Alvarado visited
in the home ofM. and Ika.
Joe Cowan on Sunday, Nov-
ember 25.
F unetal services were
held in the First Methodist
Church in Decatu at 2:00 p.m
Satuzday, November 24 for
Henry M. Buttrill, 74. Ik.
Buttrill was a retired insur-
ance man and a brother of
Rev. C. M. Buttrill of Grand-
view. —2-
Una dFtwoh, Mk, and
Ite. Bill Thrash and son
Scott of Canollton, Mr. and
Mes. A. C. Ingle, Ik. and Ite.
Charlie Ingle and daughter
Charyl of Dallas, Mr. and Mb.
Kennth Wickamo Irving.
were Gulf em
several years at
From the Fort Worth Star-
Telegram (Elston Btooks
nnlums)--" Miss Sandra as-
stevens the Ex Vagabond
Player at Paschal Hi, has
opened as the 12 year old
girl in *1 Remember Mama” at
Odaaea College." Miss Cas-
stevens is the granddaughter
of Ml aad Ite. C. W. Dc&coe
and Mr. and Ika. 3. D. Brown
of Grandview.
For only $1.95 a month (plus 4c tax) subacribe to
he Dallas Alorning w
CALL Wayne Polson UN6-2392
Your Local Dallas News Distributor
--------- our AND MAILkrwis couroN’—------
Chapman and cl
Mr. and Ita. lacl
and daughtet of
and Ite. Floy Finch of
Itasca, sister of Ite. Chap-
man and Mr. and Ite. Albert
__________ son Joe of
Corpus Christi, Ik. and Ite.
Chas. A. Stoker and daugh-
ters, Kimberly and Kathy of
Clebune, Ite. Geo. Baker
and son David of Skidmore,
Mm. E. L. Williams and
CbelgperR66m
C ns un boom wasuviua vencessez
MORE FAMILIES READ
A THE DALLAS
•A MORNING NEWS
d2,N ' _ '
Ma
Ik. and Ite. Ed Jordan and
sons of Lafayette, Louisiana
and Ik. and Ite. Jim Maddox
of Alvarado were guests in
the home of their son and
brother, Ik. and Iks. Rex
Maddox and children last
Tuesday.
*
Famous brand names that
your loved ones will easily
recognize are in bountiful
supply at Carver Dept. Store.
COMPLETE LINE OF
Ik. and Ite. Roy Ramsay
spent the Thanksgiving holi-
days in Fort Worth with her
mother, MrsiS. H. Bullock,
Ite. 1. W. Hall celebrated
a birthday last Sunday and
enjoyed the company of many
friends and relatives.
Thought FOR THE Day
The church offers us opportunities for worship, for
fellowship, and for service
Rhoda H Durkee (Michigan)
■Visitors in the home of Mt.
and Ite. Claud Hill during
the Thanksgiving holidays
were Billy and Marty Aiken
and Johnny Cowan, students
of Centennary College,
Shreveport, Louisiana, Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Hill and son
of Port Lavace (Ik. Hill is
principal of the schools
there), and Ik. and Mrs. Bob-
bie Hill, Randy and Tammy of
Thanksgiving Day visitors
in-the hme of Ik. and Ite.
WA.Gibett were their child-
teh, Ik. and Ite. Golds Ad-
well and son of -Itasca, Ik.
and Mes. Merwyan Tarter and
family of Sanger, Ik. and Ite.
Joe Tillery and children of
Dallas, Mt. and Ite. David
Wiggins and gizls, Ik. and
Ite. Jack Gilbett and family,
Ik. and Ite. Paul Gilbert and
family and Mk. and Ite. Mel-
xenadtbe and Cecil, all of
Mr. and Iks. J. T. Poe
spent Thanksgjving with their
son, Ik. andrs. Johnny Poe
and family in Pasadena,
Texas.
Visitors in the Melvin
Chapman home Sunday were
their children, Mr. and Ite.
Clayton Bodiford and boys of
Fort Worth, Ik. and Iks. Carl
Peppers and children of
Alvarado, Ik. and Ite. LaVon
of high quality protein. Other
sources are cereals, peas, a
bears, and nuts.
A green or yellow vegeta-
ble should be served at
least once a day. These con-
tain essential vitamins and
minerals and are especially
tich in vitamin A.
Because it cannot be
stored in the body, vitamin
C (from citrus fruits, toma-
toes\and certain other fresh
ex processed fruits and vege- j
tables is needed every day.
With the addition of these
to round out meals according
to tastes and appetites, the
well-led family is provided
with the nutrients needed
for health and growth.
Breakfast s probably the
most impoctant meal of the
day because you have gone
without food for such a long
period of time. One-thud of
ou daily diet should be,eat-
en at breakfast.
Breakfast is essential to
1 children. Fruit, meat, eggs,
q other protein rich food
and cereal or bread and but-
tet and milk make a good
breakfast.
Three good nutritious
meals a day will go a long
way toward keening you tit
through fall and, winter all
year lorg.
ton fax a 10-
« parents, Ik.
CUASSIREDS MV
■■ /
On Wednesday night, Nov.
21, Ik. and Iks. Joe Cowan
had as guests in their home
to celebrate Teresa's birth -
day, Ik. and Ite. S, W.
Cowan, Mz. and Ite. N, M.
Gebhard and Karen, Ite. A.
E. Jackson and Ik. and Ite.
O. V. Jackson
Visitors in the home of Ik.
and Iks. Lee Siratt and
Lucinda Thanksgiving were
Iks. Geo. Ingle, Sr. o Hills-
boro, Ik. and Ite. S. O. Ingle
ami Charles, Ik. and Ita. S.
• ’S
k
EN/OY YOUR HOM[ TOWK NEWSPAPE& AMO THE DALLAS NEWS
Mr. sad Mm. Don Prater
aad. soa of Arlington spent
the weekend with Kis parents
Rev. aad Iks, O. B. Prater.
Don has just tetuned after
an righto mi months tour of
duty in Germany.
year round job. But as cooler
weather comes to Texas, it
becomes increasingly impoct-
ant to guard against falling
victim of "winter sscpti-
bility."
There teally isn't any such
terr, but the fact of the sat- - - .
ter is that bodily resistance
may be lessened diming fall
and winter.
For this reason it is smart /
to continue to observe the
rules of good nutrition.
The well-fed family re-
ceives the basic foods in
then daily diet. Food rich in
m A YES: Our heavenly Father, we thank Thee for Thy
Son Jesus who was among us and sacrificed Himself to
radaam all men. We thank Thee that in Him me ted
salvation, end irt His church strength for service, la His
nemo. Amen.
Ik. and Mm. Jack VaaNasa
of Oklahoma City and Mr. and
Mb. T. Frank Davie of
Itemton visited the G. W.
Woodaids and the C. LA
Waters during the Thank-
giving period. (
Me. and Mri. E. J. Berger,
Parti me and Beenda ami lk.
aad Mm. Floyd Kapalski and
Mark of Houston spent from
Water day until Satuzday in
the home of their mother, Ik.
and Me. Slim Roteri. Other
wenrMenf MeD.%. E.R
land Jr. and family and Ite.
J. E. Smith, mother of Mm.
Slim Roland.
A farewell party was given
Tuesday night for John Dyer
of Yucaita, Calif., who has
been visiting his aunt, Ite.
1. W. Hall. Ik. Dyer left for
his home Wednesday morning
after several days visit.
J
Ik. and Ite. W. O. Siratt
ant Ik. and Ite. C. W. Ber-
tier, Lynn and Diann visited
Mr. Betrier's sister Ik. and
Mb. B. C. Hilton in Dallas,
Sunday.
52 GIFTS A YEAR-hat is
what you friends willreceive
when you send them a year's
subscription to the Tribune.
Friday. ^Sevember 30
Read Psalm 96
You are, I know, eager for gifts of the Spirit; then
aspire above all to excel in those which build up the
church. (I Corinthians 14:12. NEB.)
'Whatan uplifting spiritual joy it is to wonhip im
God's house! His abiding presence is known to us as the
Scripture is read and beloved hymns are sung. As the
ritual continues and the gospel is preached by a conse-
crated minister, ur thoughts are elevated heavenward
to God. who fulfills the promise of salvation. His sanctu-
ary has beauty because when we worship there God sup-
plies strength for our living as Christians.
Paul was a devoted apostle and ministered to many
early Christian churches He emphasized reverence and
faithfulness ’to God He preached and enc--ece
Christians to do Christ’s will He stressed
church with devotion and courage.
Paus message gives us an awareness of the presence of
the Holy Spirit We are blessed -in worshiping God and
in giving ourselves in dedication to His purpose.
the
the
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Grandview Tribune (Grandview, Tex.), Vol. 68, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, November 30, 1962, newspaper, November 30, 1962; Grandview, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1473814/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1&rotate=270: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Grandview Public Library.