The McKinney Examiner (McKinney, Tex.), Vol. 79, No. 2, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 1, 1964 Page: 7 of 12
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Established
News Coverage
i
M * rammer
October 1886
City 8 County
Q VOL. 79, NO. 2
SECTION TWO
C B Buchanan to J T Denni-
P D Buchanan to John A Da-
Pvt.
engineer missile equipment com-
years and are members of
WALLACE tire SERVICE
W. HWY. 24 at CHURCH
LI 2-3111
“FOR WORRY-FREE DRIVING”
Tires
Batteries
Wholesale
Retail
• Complete Brake Service
• Shock Absorbers
Complete Tire & Battery Service
2
M
1
gsl
22242
€
I
®
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1
MaKINNIY
TEXAS
per serving
r kera
V////A
Mayo Clinic Marks
Its 100th Birthday
BSPW Clubs To
Hold Meeting
At Sherman
ed with an ar;
and bronze n
cake and cake
out the color;
bossed in rose
Gold and H
lee Huffaker Lot Lavon Beach
Estates Inc
JLNCFNTRAL NATIONAL BANK
SUGAR FREE
only
1 calorie
diet-rite,
cola
-$
McKinney, Texas, Thursday, October 1, 1964
I E
used throughout the diningroom.
Receiving with Mr. and Mrs.
Nash were Mrs. W. H. Looney,
Mr. and Mrs. Joe H. Shuler, Miss
Erma Nash and Raymond Nash.
Mrs. Frank Cashon and Miss Bar-
bara Horn met the guests at the
door and Mrs. Robert Furr and
Miss Lura McLeod presided at the
register.
Mrs. Smith Roberts, Mrs. Eula
Scalf, Mrs. Perry Wilson and Mrs.
Ben Hutcheson were at the table
serving cake and punch.
Mr. and Mrs. Nash were mar-
ried September 19, 1914 in Cle-
burne, Johnson County, but lived
in the Foote Community for 25
pga
THESE 4 BEAUTIFUL
CDAras=P
PLACE MATS ARE YOURS
FREE
FOR LOOKING
AND LISTENING
DURING RCA VICTOR WEEK!
i _
7
,,
-----------0-----------
Renew Your Subscription.
----------o----------
Examiner Classifieds Get
Fast Results
-------o------—
Renew your subscription.
* Estate Transfers^
vuk Bfnend BANK
MONkOEfS
APPLIANCES and TV
Your Frigidaire and Motorola Dealer
Charles W McCallub to B B
Owen 110.30 acres Thos Bruce
survey
J/ohnson’s
L A J. W. THOMPSON, OWNER
A “'WHERE QUALITY & BEAUTY COUNT"
structure that still stands in con-
trast to the two Mayo skyscrap-
ers, and serves as a laboratory.
The clinic grew in scope and
reputation. Its first large build-
ing, a 15-story structure of tan
Italian marble, topped by a six-
story bell tower, was completed
in 1939. Two other buildings
have since joined it. Clinic hos-
pital patients are treated chiefly
in two large Rochester hospitals,
separately owned but working
closely with the clinic.
Dr. Will and Dr. Charles died
ponents.
The 21-year-old soldier entered
the Army in November 1963. He
completed basic training at Fort
Polk, La.
Martin is a 1961 graduate of
McKinney High School.
6. Before entering the Army, he
as employed by the Wylie Auto
•Service.
1
J
'll
Wm. H Hunt Trust Estate to
Joe Duncan Lot in Piano 2362.50
Carl Mullins et ux to George
H Jones % Inst 58.801 & Lots H
T Chenowith survey, 20,000.00
Jesse Harris Const Co. Inc to
William N Fangio et ux Lot in
Plano
Jesse Harris Const Co Inc to
Robert Lee Norris Jr Lot in Pia-
no
J V Day to F R Stratton et ux
60 acres James Ellison survey
2000.00
Lyle F White to Robert M An-
derson Lot Holiday Acres Add
1500.00
Centennial Homes of Plano to
Guy Curtis et ux Lot in Plano
Joe Marchman to Dee W Den-
ning et ux Lot in Plano
Joe R Eubanks et ux to Edgar
F Kirby 3.002 S N Rainer survey
7000.00
Cecil J Cox to William W Mos-
es et ux Lot in Plano
South Boston Savings Bank to
Federal Housing Authority Lot
in Wylie
Leroy W Huntington et ux to
Michael P Griffin et ux Lot in
Wylie
Ed Steves & Sons Inc to. Ana-
is
Frank Carter to Earl Osten Co. son et ux Lot Canyon Creek Add
Inc Wm W Bell survey
Vivian Guffey Fox et al to
Hoyt Guffey Lot in Westminster
Robinson Boys
Memorial Fund
Announced
Jimmie and Nickey Lynn Rob-
inson Memorial Fund has been
established. The chairman for the
fund has been announced as Mr.
Herman Robinson, Route 1, Ce-
lina, Texas.
All memorials and contribu-
tions in memory of Jimmy and
Nickey Lynn Robinson should be
sent to Mr. Herman Robinson at
the above address.
------—
Completes Training
new
1200.00
Dahrn & Danielson to Max
Pinkard et ux lot Canyon Creek
Add
Cecil J Cox, Trustee to Dan L
Russell et ux Lot in Plano
Wm H Hunt Trust Est to Joe
Duncan Lot in Piano
let us do the
financing!
A HURRY! Supply Limited
Cyohnson’s
J. W. THOMPSON, OWNER
Ju and uc 0.i0 the < 0
Baptist Church there. Mr. Nash 'Serves in Pacific
So are people with uncommon
troubles — malfunctioning hearts,
rare eye disorders, torn limbs
they hope to save from ampata-
tion.
The clinic takes them all—near-
ly 2,600,000 to date.
While it shuns publicity and
.protects the patients’ privacy, the
clinic is marking its centennial
with more than 50 scientific
meetings.
Wooded hills flank Rochester
and give way to typical farming
country nearby, but there is no
i mistaking that Rochester grew on
and for the clinic.
It all began in 1864 when a
native of Manchester, England,
Dr. William Worrall Mayo, came
to the hamlet of 3,000 and began
practice.
Two sons, William James and
Charles Horace, became doctors
and began to practice with their
father. After he died, Dr. Will
and Dr. Charlie, as they were
known, took on other doctors in
what came to be known inform-
ally as the Mayo Clinic.
By 1914 they had their own
building—a two-story red brick
USS SCAMP—Navy Lieutenant
junior garde Tom R. Murray, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Roy R. Walker of
McKinney, is a crewmember of
the nuclear powered submarine
USS Scamp which recently won
the Battle Efficiency “E” for Pa-
cific Fleet submarines of her
class.
Scamp gained the award by out-
scoring other submarines of her
class in combat readiness tests
held throughout the past year.
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“Since 1958, the number of seri-
ous crimes in the nation has risen
40 per cent. This is five times the
population increase of 8 per cent
in the same period. That is the
frightening report of the Federal
Bureau of Investigation.” —Cor-
vallis, Ore., Gazette-Times.
---------O--
“For the girl looking for stir-
ring passages to read . . . find the
cookbook.” —Bridgeport, Illinois,
Leader.
within a few months of each
other in 1939.
Dr. Charles W. Mayo, son of
Charles H., formally retired from
the clinic and as chairman of its
board last October, at 65.
The Mayo name is carried on
at the clinic by his. son, an intern. |
Dr. Charles H. Mayo II, 33, rep-
resents the fourth generation of
Mayos at the clinic.
The clinic has a professional
staff of 400 doctors, and 600 more,
including 50 from abroad, study-
ing under its fellowship pro- '
gram.
Two Mayo doctors, Edward C. |
Kendall and Philip S. Hench, I
won a Nobel prize in 1950 for '
their work with cortisone.
A special stamp, to go on sales
in Rochester today, will honor
these and other Mayo achieve-
ments in its centennial.
---
Your Newspaper
The average newspaper con-
tains 150,000 words or more of
information — the daily equiva-
lent of two novels . . . The Brit-
ish are the most avid newspaper
readers in the world . . . One copy
of a daily newspaper is printed
for every two Englishmen ... in
West Germany, the comparable
figure is one newspaper for ev-
ery two-and-a-half people ... in
the United States one paper is
printed for every three Ameri-
cans . • . and, one out of every
four Frenchmen has a newspaper
printed for him . . .
lumber. Rochester is built on
doctors.
If you walked the streets of
this southern Minnesota city, and
could count on meeting a cross-
section of its population, every
forty-fifth person would be a phy-
sician.
Rochester is the home of the
Mayo Clinic, which this year will
mark its 100th birthday.
The clinic has become a mag-
net for the famous, and for per-
sons wanting top medical diag-
noses or with ailments that have
baffled their local doctors.
Kings and queens, heads of
state, persons prominent in the
entertainment, sports and busi-
ness worlds are such frequent
Representatives from Business
and Professional Women’s Clubs
in Bonham, Clarksville, Com-
merce, Denison, Greenville, Hon-
ey Grove, McKinney, Paris, Sher-
man and Sulphur Springs will
participate in the annual District
Twelve Conference to be held at
the Grayson Hotel in Sherman on
October 3 and 4.
This is one of a series of con-
ferences being held over the state
this fall to facilitate leadership
training and to familiarize mem-
bers with the various areas in
which they can participate to ele-
vate the status of women engag-
ed in business and in the pro-
fessions.
Registration for the Sherman
meet will begin at noon Satur-
day. A' tea, hosted by the Past
Presidents Club of Sherman and
honoring all presidents of the dis-
treit, will be held in the home of
Mrs. E. A. Haring, 1201 Dundale
Circle at 3:00 Saturday afternoon.
The official conference program
will begin with a Hawaiian Luau
at 7:00 Saturday evening in the
King Cotton Room of the Gray-
son Hotel. Members have been
asked to attend attired in tradi-
tional Hawaiian costume.
Devotional sergices, to be held
in the Oak Room of the Grayson
.County Bank, are scheduled for
8:30 Sunday morning. Following
this, the conference will convene
in general session for workshops
and business. Mrs. Ruth Bell, Di-
rector of District 12, will pre-
side.
Billy R. Martin, son of Mr. and
Mrs. O. L. Martin, 1601 West St.,
McKinney, completed a three-
week engineer missile equipment
course at the Army Engineer
School, Fort Belvoir, Va., Sept.
11.
vis et ux 40 acres W W Roberts
survey 9000.00
' ' 0 _
©23
Mr. And Mrs. Nash
Observe
Anniversary
Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Nash of
1203 North Waddill Street cele-
brated their 50th wedding anni-
versary with a tea on Sunday,
September 20 at the Foote Bap-
tist Church.
Seventy-eight guests attended
from Lake Dallas, Frisco, Fort
Worth, Dallas, Celina, Plano,
Sherman and McKinney and also
from Creston, Iowa and Ruidosa,
New Mexico.
The tea table was covered in
gold net over satin and center-
Whalever kind
ofca your
Thinking of
buying...
-------->---------o-----------------
Trains At San Diego
SAN DIEGO, Calif.—Conley B.
Wendt, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Franklin W. Wemot of Copeville,
began basic training Sept. 9 at
the Recruit Training Command,
Naval Training Center, San Die-
go, Calif.
During his early days of train-
ing he will receive a series of
aptitute examinations to deter-
mine which of the Navy’s 65 spec-
ialty fields he will enter on com-
pletion of recruit training.
Physical fitness training, drill,
naval customs and courtesies,
water survival, first aid, personal
hygiene, marlin-spike seaman
ship and general naval orienta-
tion will highlight the first three
weeks of his transition from civ-
ilian to military life.
The center trains 68,000 sailors
each year in its Recruit Training
and Service School Commands.
=sl
u
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Services For
J. W. Hawthorne
Held Friday
Joe W. Hawthorne, 67, of Fair-
view, passed away Wednesday.
He was a retired carpenter.
Funeral serviceswere held at
2 p.m. Friday in Turrentine-Jack-
son Chapel. Rev. Lonnie Murphy
officiaitng, with interment in
Pecan Grove Cemetery.
He was a native Texan, born
August 6, 1897, the son of Alvin
and Maude Stephens Hawthorne.
He was married to May Murphy
in McKinney, August 17, 1917.
He was a member of the Chris-
tian Church.
Surviving are three sons: Mar-
vin Hawthorne of Garland; Av-
ery and John Murphy of Mc-
Kinney; six daughters, Mrs. Earl
Ritter, Mrs. Morris Golberg, Mrs.
Virginia Monk and Mrs. Gardy.
Rice of Dallas; Mrs. Guy McDon-
ald, Grand Prairie; Mrs. Beatrice
Hill of Garland and a number of
grandchildren and great-grand-
children, two brothers and six sis-
ters.
Funeral Rites Held
For J. Frank Dobie
AUSTIN, Texas—J. Frank Do-
bie, the Texas cowboy-author who
spent a lifetime studying the his-
tory and folkways of the south-
west, was buried Sunday beneath
the branches of a big oak tree.
The 75-year-old writer, who
taught for 20 years at the Uni-
versity of Texas, died Friday of
a heart attack.
Some 700 persons attended the
non-religious services at Hogg
Auditorium on the university
campus. He was buried in the
state cemetery near his longtime
friend, Dr. Walter Prescott Webb.
Remarks at the last rites were
offered by two of Dobie’s friends,
University of Texas Press Direc-
tor Frank H. Wardlaw and Dr.
Edmund Heinsolm, pastor emeri-
tus of the University Methodist
Church.
is a retired farmer.
Mrs. Nash is active in ' the
church, a member of the Walnut
Grove Home Demonstration Club
and Scott Dickson Chapter United
Daughters- of the: Confederacy.
---------
‘Learn to Baby-Sit’
Telecourse Slated
The 1964 Telecourse, “Learn to
Baby Sit,” sponsored by the Dal-
las County Camp Fire Girls, Inc.
in cooperation with KERA-TV,
will begin Oct. 1.
Under the direction of Mrs.
Matthew R. Barcellona, the course
is open to adults and students of
the seventh grade level and a-
bove. Those interested may en-
roll by sending $1.50 to KERA-
TV, 3000 Harry Hines Blvd., in
Dallas.
Each half-hour telecast will run
on Thursdays at 7:30 p.m. and
Mondays at 4:30 p.m. at 4:30, Oct.
1 through Nov. 23.
Students will receive a gener-
al information sheet, a testbook,
guide to children’s books, crea-
tive materials, an American Red
Cross pamphlet and an examina-
tion sheet.
An examination will be given
oyer the air at the last class ses-
sion. Registrants will use their
exam sheet for answering ques-
tions and should mail it to KERA
TV. Those scoring 70 per cent or
above will receive certification.
--------o-------—
Senate Acts
On Districts
WASHINGTON — The Senate
approved Thursday a mild, com-
promise solution to its prolonged
controversy over state legislative
reapportionment.
It adopted, 44-33, a non-bind-
ing “sense of Congress” propo-
sal offered by Democratic Lead-
er Mike Mansfield of Montana as
a substitute for a stronger one he
previously sponsored with Re-
publican Leader Everett M. Dirk-
sen of Illinois.
Final acceptance of the propo-
sal as an amendment to the $3.3
billion foreign aid bill, was still
subject to a motion to table, and
thus kill, the Dirksen amendment
as amended by the new Mans-
field language.
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“The average American would
explode in righteous indignation
if someone told him he didn’t
have the right to vote. The sad
fact is, however, that far too
many who have the privilege are
letting it go to waste. Estimates
are that unless somebody shakes
them out of their apathy and in-
difference, some 40 million eli-
gibles will neglect to cast ballots
in November.” —Brookville, Pa.,
American.
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October 1, 1903—The first
World Series was played between
the Boston Americans and Pitts-
burgh Nationals at Boston. Bos-
ton took the series by five games
to three.
-----------o-----------
Services Held
Friday For
Mrs. Marshall
Mrs. Sudia Esther Marshall, 75,
of 509 Heard Street, died at 2:30
p.m. Wednesday in Collin Mem-
orial Hospital. Funeral services
were held at 2:30 p.m. Friday in
Crouch-Moore Chapel conducted
by Rev. Ross Bourland and Rev.
Arthur Renfro with interment in
Ridgeview Cemetery.
Pallbearers were Floyd Wallen,
R. L. Speck, Milton Mugg, Bailey
Dickerson, Lester Dickerson and
Alonzo Griggs.
She was born September 10,
1889 in DeKalb County, Tenn.,
the daughter of John and Mis-
souri Green Hayes.
Surviving are her husband,
James Oscar Marshall, McKinney;
three sons, Robert, Bill and James
Marshall of McKinney; three
daughters, Mrs. Louise Franklin,
Mrs. Bernice Harper, Dallas; Mrs.
Freida Fisher, Grand Prairie; two
brothers, J. Toy and Tom Hayes,
McKinney; two sisters, Mrs. Lou
Stewart, McKinney and Mrs. Ves-
tia Newsome, Vernon; seven
grandchildren and four great-
grandchildren.
------------o--
“Too, we’ve always said a va-
cation was good for everyone. We
used to get cocky and think,
‘Well, this place just couldn’t get
along without me!’ Then along
comes vacation time, we take off
on a trip, all the while worry-
ing what’s going on back on the
job, and only half enjoying the
vacation for fear of the chaos we
were sure to find when we re-
turned. Then, bingo, we returned
only to find the business ran
right on just the same. Good for
a person.” —Selmer, Tenn., In-
dependent.
“Only 19”
You haven’t heard of the “Only
19” campaign. But you will.
It’s to be conducted in Octo-
ber. And the purpose is to show
the American people that food is
a bargain. The main point to be
emphasized is that the average
American family today spends
only 19 cents of his after-tax dol-
lar for food, as compared with 26
cents just 15 years ago. This sim
ply means that, while food prices
have naturally risen, incomes
have risen .substantially more.
And the percentage-of-income
that we must pay for anything
is the best measurement of value
received.
All types of food retailers —
chains, independents, coopera-
tives—are invited to participate
in telling the industry’s impres-
sive story. A game called “Only
19” has been created for the cam-
paign, and winners will be given
handsome prizes. All in all, the
pending campaign is described as
the “greatest united industry ef-
fort in history.”
Commercial considerations a-
side, this is a matter of gaining
credit where credit is due. The
whole food industry, in this age
of inflation, has done a far bet-
ter job than We generally real-
ize in making the consumer dol-
ROCHESTER, Minn. — Some
towns are built on a mining in-
dustry, some on steel, some on
Ml
Ufa
FORT BELVOIR, Va.—
1
G
angement of gold
Ums. A wedding
quares, carrying
rheme, were em-
uds.
onze mums were
During the course Martin re-
ceived instruction in performing
limited field maintenance on air . . -
conditioning equipment, high, patients at Mayo’s that their pres-
compression equipment and other ’ once creates little stir in this
---•— -- ’ • . town of 45,000.
The very finest in Gas Arehesting is yours when you select a Crest
Series) heater The Crest leads the class, any class, in heating per-
formance, quality of materials, and beauty of design. Offers the famous
Cool Safety Cabinet^ Forwa rd Heat Flow, Hi-Crown Burner, Impel-Air
Blower andbeautiful Coppertone Finish. Several models for any
heating need.
hwStrgiinnen’E
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Emaaanaameeme
CALL COLLECT
* County Wide Service
All Appliances
All Makes and Models
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lar go as far as possible. . -
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(iMAtlxCLASS LEADER
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Thompson, Wofford & Thompson, Wofford, Jr. The McKinney Examiner (McKinney, Tex.), Vol. 79, No. 2, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 1, 1964, newspaper, October 1, 1964; McKinney, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1523679/m1/7/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Collin County Genealogical Society.