The Crosbyton Review. (Crosbyton, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 42, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 16, 1952 Page: 3 of 8
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irfnn Review
qf thanks
r -h to express our thanks
deep appreclat'on t0 the
e FVneral Home, the minis-
.nd those in charge of the
' the R. W. Griffins for
2g their home to us, in the
' S our daughter and sister,
i0 Griffin. Also to the
[and neighbors who were
Page 3
so nice to serve the meals, and
to the out of town relatives who
came to be with us. It was Such
a comfort. May God" bless each
of you.
Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Griffin
Mr. and Mrs. Newt Davis
Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Griffin
Hollis, Leonard, Aubrey and
Jaynell Griffin.
NOVEMBER 4
, 1
your
VOTE
is your
voice in
government...
don't r
waste it!
1 El
GENERAL TELEPHONE COMPANY
OF THE. SOUTHWEST
Hargrove-Berry
Vows Read Oct.
1 at the Home
Miss Mary Lou Hargrove, the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. E.
Hargrove" of Crosbyton, and G.
W. Berry, son of Mr. and > Mrs.
Fred Berry of Ralls, were mar-
ried in the home of the bride's
parents Wednesday evening,
Oct. 1. The vows were read by
Rev. Perice.
The ceremony took place be-
fore a table laid with a lace
cloth and decorated with bou-
quets of gladioli backed with
blue lace and blue streamers.
The bride wore a tan suit with
brown accessories. She wore a
corsage of gladioli tied with
blue lace and blue streamers.
She carried a white Bible and a
pale blue handkerchief.
Miss Clara Jo Gossett, niece of
the bride, was maid of honor.
ill Canty nf Ralls W*
man.
Fifty guests were present for
the wedding and reception im-
mediately afterwards.
Following a wedding trip to
Corsicana, the couple will b£ at
home south of Ralls where he
is farming.
Wilma Parsons,
Jamie B. Gage,
WedatClovis
Miss Wilma L. Parsons became
the bride of Jamie B. Gage Fri1
day, 0<^f. 10, in a double ring
ceremony performed at the First
Baptist church"ofclovis, N. Mex.,
at 11 a. m. Rev. Maddov wao tho
officiating minister.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. L. E. Parsons of Brecken-
ridge. The groom is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Belton Gage of
Hale Center.
The bride was attired in a
street length, beige wool jcrsev
dress with three quarter sleeves
and crocheted bodice and brown
accessories. She carried a bou-
quet of gardinias on a white
Bible.
Mr. and Mrs. Belton Gage and
son, Van, were present for the
ceremony. The couple will re-
side in Crosbyton at 605 West
4th street.
Be The
Gome to the lie view
tor v„jr
monngrammea stationery
By
J. M. Rankin
ROAD BUILDING
ro—a
Use Our
LAY-A-WAY
PLAN
To Pay For
Your New
T-V Set
Television is coming to Lubbock and Amarillo in the near future.
You will want to be among the first in Crosbyton to enjoy this
new entertainment for the entire family.
• •• , .
That's why we suggest you use our T-V Lay-A-Way Plan. You
see, television sets are costly, and it will be hard for the average
family to dig upTrmugh cifeh f61i5y^f ~thet^etm<Hh^co&t of-
installation if they wait until television is here before they buy.
ISut by making monthly pfayments now, when T-V comes to our
territory, you can pick your model, have it delivered and not have
to raise so much cash at one time. Come in today and ask usa-
bout the details. * ' - ,
WE WILL HANDLE
Zenith^ and
i i
TELEVISION SETS
MANY MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM!
MMES APPLIANCE
M&M Food Store
MARKET AND LOCKER SYSTEM
'fir
STORES
PHONE 5621
CUSTOM SLAUGHTERING AND CURING
3 POUND
S H U R F I N E
CELERY
CELLO PACK
25c
PET OR CARNATION
Large can sbFLIN
80 COUNT
MILK
15c NAPKINS
TOKAY
GRAPES
FLOOR
- SHURFINE
•: *25 LB. SACK
EVERY SACK GUARANTEED
POUND
10 <
Pork Roast
HOME KILLED
POUND
55«
STANDARD
TOMATOES
PORK CHOPS
POUND I ARM OR CHUCK
65c REEF ROAST
POUND
60c
KILLING
PROCESSING
Wednesday is our HOG KILLING Day and any day is our BEEF KILLING Day. Hogs fully processed ready for your freezer
for 41/2C live weight. Beef cut, wrapped and quick fozen for 3c lb dressed weight. Let us fix your meat for that freezer.
letter from tne District Highway
Engineer;' Commissioners' Court
went to Lubbock for conference
with the .Engineer on 1952 desig-
nations q| Farm-to"-Market roads
in Crosby county. Two 5%-mile
projects were agreed upon for
recommendation by the D. E. to
the Highway Commission. The
most long-sought one is the ex-
tension of No. 651 from the cap-
rock north of Big Four, north-
ward to the Floyd county line.
The other job will be the exten-
sion of 1063, now three miles
feast of Cone, to a junction with
No. 651 in the^ank Smith can-
yon. Jgack in the office that af-1
ternoon, the County Judge was
called by the Resident Engineer
and advised that contracts will
be let on F. M. 1471 from Fair-
view to New Home, and on F. M.
1831 from,No. 82 south 7% miles
on October 21. So if yoi^see rigs
moving utility poles th* week,
you may reasonably suspect that
there's going to be some road
building.
COMMISSIONERS COURT
Commissioners' Court saw a
full day Monday. Authorization
and order were, made for moving
utility poles on F. M. Roads that
are to be let next week. Agree-
ment was arrived at with the
City Commission of Ralls to ap-
point a Constable for J. P. Pre-
THE REVIEW
Published Weekly onThursdays
at Crosbyton, Crosby Co,, Texas.
- " W. H. CUHHT
Editor and Owner
Ruth Snider Advertising
Nelda Cannon Office Manager
Entered as Second Class Mail
Matter on the 14th day ot Janua-
ry, 1909, at the Post Office at
Crosbyton, Texas, under the act
of Congress of March 3, 1879.
NOTICE: Any erroneous reflec-
tion upon the character, stand-
ing or reputation of any indivi-
dual, firm or corporation, which
may appear in the columns of
The Crosbyton Review, will glad-
ly be corrected upon its being
brought to the Attention of the
editor.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
In Crosby County and Crosbyton
Trade Territory ......... .. $2 50
Elsewhere — $3.00
cinct No. 1, if petition be pre-
sented. Appointment was made
of additional election judges so
the opposing parties in the gen-
eral election will have represen-
tation on the election board of
the larger precincts.
TO STAY
Crossing the Post highway this
Tuesday morning on F. M. 1309,
caravan of"
consisting of five passenger cars,
two of which had trailers, and
two trucks loaded with house-
hold appliances for camping out.
Next was a field of barbecued
cotton with a stripper going up
and down the rows. Surprisingly
there was—a fair snpply _ol Jul-
iage left on the stalks, but no
bolls. It's interesting to
after~another
Braceros one harvest
watch
and
everyone different from any you
ever saw before. The Braceros
will doubtless make a lot of mo-
ney, and the cotton stripper is
doubtless a success. And cotton
is doubtless here to stay. y
vi 0 :
The first Christmas sfeal sale
in Tjexas was held in 190S
Texas' first TB Christmas Seal
sale, m 1909, totaled $1300.
The builders of International Trucks
have a background of over 100 years'
experience in building heavy-duty equip-
ment for farmers.
-To this add 45 years' experience in
building hekvy-duty trucks. This com-
bined experience is put t6 good use. The
result is an International Truck engi-
neered to do your hauling more eco-
nomically. -
This is only one of many advantages
you enjoy when you choose an Inter-
national Truck. Why not choose your
next one now?
You can't beat these
International Truck exclusives:
• All-truck engines—built in the world's largest truck
engine plant.
• The "roomiest, most comfortable cab on the road"
— the Comfo-Vision Cab.
• Super-steering system—more positive control, ea .
ier handling and 37° turning angle.
• The same traditional truck toughness that has kept
International first in heavy-duty truck sales for 20
straight years.
• The truck engineered for your job« . . 115 basic
models, from 56-ton pickups to 90,000 lbs. GVW
ratings.
• Largest exclusive truck service organization.
Bunion Proof!
bought
nationals like the one you
are considering. Check with
any or all of them. Find out
how Internationals cut haul-
ing costs on jobs like youi .
International L-160 models offer 190 to 172-ln. wheel bases, GVW ratings
from 14,000 to 16,500 lbs.
For complete Information about any International Track, see—
Crosbyton Implement Co.
CROSBYTON, TEXAS
INTERNATIONAL
PHONE 3081
A A
TRUCKS
Standard of th
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Curry, W. H. The Crosbyton Review. (Crosbyton, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 42, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 16, 1952, newspaper, October 16, 1952; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth256523/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Crosby County Public Library.