Cedar Hill Chronicle (Cedar Hill, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 35, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 13, 1966 Page: 4 of 10
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GE FOUR
CEDAR HILL CHRONICLF
FUNERAL SERVICE
INFORMATION
WE HONOR
ALL
BURIAL POLICIES
Rogers
Funeral Chapel
OUNCAMVIUX. TIMS
AX8- 0900
Mrs. Lucille Bailey's little Injured last weekend when she
grandson, Brent Bailey John- lost control of her car between
son, Is seriously ill in Great
Lakes Naval Hospital. He had
been running an extremely
high fever for several days and
doctors were making tests
Monday to try to find the
reason.
Jess Martin entered
Methodist Hospital Sunday
afternoon for tests.
Mrs. Dennis Crecellus and
Mrs. Frank Parker were
guests of honor at a Get
Acquainted Party last week
at the home of Mrs. Wilma
Crenshaw.
Mrs. Rachel Pool
was
For Your Drug
Prescription
And Cosmetic Needs
Remember
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Clearance Sale*
Dresses.......
REG. $6.98 to $14.98
Blouses.......
$3.98 Values
Capri Pants...........,5f9!
$3.98 & $4.98 Values
Marie's Dress Shop
TOWER SHOPPING CENTER
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Living takes a leisurely turn
for the better, too. No more
running through the house
to make or take calls. Be
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lovely, little Princess phone from
the telephone business office or
aak any telephone serviceman.
Southwestern B(
s:
r>
Tommy Martin
'ersonats FHA Hero
TTilrty-slx members and
three mothers attended the
Cedar Hill FHA chapter meet-
ing Monday night at the high
school.
Jerry Bishop gave the devo-
tional.
Tbe members elected
Tommy Martin as FHA Hero
for this year.
Two guests, Mrs. Patsy
Sims and Mrs. Jane Rape,
Ovation cosmetic represen-
tatives, showed a film about
the natural look of Ovation
cosmetics and demonstrated
some of their products. TTiey
also gave each girl free
samples of their cleansing
and beauty lotions.
Tbe new salad cookbooks
are now on sale. Anyone who
Is Interested In buying a cook-
book may contact any FHA
member or Mrs. Mary
Warren, the FHA sponsor.
Tips Require
Income Tax
The new medicare bill
requires employers to with-
hold Social Security and
Federal income taxes from
all tips reported to them by
their employees. TTie employ-
er, however, does not have to
match the employee's Social
Security contribution.
A good tip is to withold on
tips this year.
growth of our cities and towns
the birth of new subdivisions,
the grading of new streets,
the dedication of new parks,
the construction of new
schools, the laying of corner-
stones for a new public build-
ing or a new church; all these
become a part of the hometown
history recorded in printed
form.
The hometown newspaper,
like the famour yellowpages
of a well known directory,
offers a wealth of information
pertaining to the business
it's pages tell us of places
to shop and dine, gas up the
cars, see a movie, or find
trees and shrubs to plant and
even where to buy fertilizer
to make them grow faster. It
would be Impossible to list in
one short article all the ser-
vices the hometown newspaper
makes available to It's
readers, but everyone Is
familiar with the calendar of
forthcoming events, forecast-
ing In a way, the history of
the future.
Copies of our hometown
newspapers are preserved In
libraries for study and
reference thus the events that
make up the history of today
may become the history of the
past someday for youngsters
yet unborn.
Newspapers of today are
recognizing more and more
the Importance of city and
town history, present and past,
and they are endeavoring to
fill In the gaps in the past,
for those periods when news-
papers were not available or
were not preserved In lib-
raries, in order that those
who have gone before will not
be forgotten. Newspapers
often play a vital role In the
records the preservation of historical
places and In the erection of
historical markers which
identify them and call atten-
tion to their role In the growth
of our great state.
We find many articles deal-
ing with early historical
events and happenings in
newspapers like the Austin
American Statesman, the
Waco Times Herald, the
Beaumont Enterprise, and the
Suburban and Chronicle of our
own region. Lately, the news-
papers of Big D have shown an
Increased interest In the his-
tory of the past.
As we begin the new year
It Is natural for us to ponder
on the role which the home-
town paper plays In recording
the Joys and sorrows of history
especially the history of our
own region.
Six Flags Seeks
To Fill Positions
Six Flags over Texas began
personal interviews Tuesday to
fill 1.500 positions on its host and
hostess staff.
The personnel office, located on
the employes’ parking lot by the
east gate, will be open from 9
a.m. until 5 p.m. Tuesday
through Saturday until the park
opens in mid-April.
Applicants must be at least 1C
years old and attend an accred-
ited college or high school.
The costumed hoots and host-
***** ft* entertainment park
operate the rides and are fea-
tured in other perk activitiee.
Florence Hill and Cedar Hill
Road. Her car hit loose gravel
and went into a ditch.
Butch Chauvln spent a few
days In Methodist Hospital last
week.
Chronicle
Subscribers
Mrs. Fred Graham
736 N. Wlnnetka
Dallas 8,
J. H. Sims
Box 242
Cedar Hill
Mrs. Effle Byers
2103 Bowie St.
Vernon
W. F. Williams
Rt. 2
Midlothian
Larry Bray
NTSU Box 12394
Denton, Texas
John Bray
East Texas Station
P.O. Box 4155
Commerce, Texas
L. R. Tacke Jr.
1025 Cedar Trail
Cedar Hill
Miss Sandra Cavender
907 Forty-first Street
Lubbock
David Sutherland
P. O. Box 386
Cedar Hill
Pi ■ ■ ■ w ^
Getting To
Know Texas
Barnard A. Hendricks
Chronicle Special Writer
The deeds of Generals and
armies on the battlefields and
the works and lives of the
statesmen and political
leaders who guide the destines
of our national and state
governments are reviewed on
radio and television and re-
corded iniilstory books which
become available for study by
present and future generations
of our people. Books also re-
cord the feats of our great
atheletes, scientists, actors,
and muslcans and the Inspiring
messages of great clergymen.
They also record great,
natural or man-made disas-
ters, such as floods, hurri-
canes, earthquakes,tornadoes
and fires.
But the happenings affecting
the lives of everyday citizens
would likely go unrecorded
were It not for the unceasing
labors of the hometown news-
paper. The hometown news-
paper deals in history too,
recording events of new born
babies as well as the names
of those who have passed on to
eternal life. It records wed-
dings and the beginnings and
the growth of families as
youngsters are born and grow
to school age, complete in
scholastic events and graduate
from school to a life of work
and endeavor. The hometown
newspaper records names and
dates and often illustrates, in
picture form, events that we
wish to cherish in lifelong
memory.
Jaycees To Sponsor
Gunmanship Program
£18/,
The Cedar Hill Jaycees
announces the adoption of a
shooting education program,
of a national effort by Jay-
cees to teach good gunman-
ship to youngsters acros i .‘ u
nt )•
T- Is co-sponsored by Daisy
Manufacturing Co.
The program Is open to all
boys and girls 6 to 14 years
of age and Instructs In all
phases of good gun usage and
proper gun handling In a 13-
woek B-B gun course. It
concludes with a Jaycee shoot-
ing league in which boys and
girls will participate In regu-
lation team mat ’ll comp?li-
ft on.
Gwen Hlntze, local Jaycee
president, said the program
Is the most comprehensive
Deadline Set
For Poll Tax
If om wants to vote in Texas
during 1966 then he had better
pay his poll tax.
Deadline for obtaining your
poll tax receipt Is January 31.
It is true that the legality
of the Texas poll tax is being
contested in the federal
courts. It Is equally true
that no immediate decision Is
as U. S. congressmen and
U. S. senators-In 1966.
A poll tax receipt will be
a requisite for voting—for
those not otherwise exempt-
in county and state elections.
In other words one needs such
a receipt for voting for any
county or state official from
governor on down to the pre-
cinct level in primaries this
spring and also in city and
school district elections,
likely. Until a verdict Is
announced-and that possibly
will be a case for the U. S.
Supreme Court-you'll need a
poll tax receplt to vote in
Texas state, county, and com-
munity elections unless you
are exempt.
(And poaaibly after the ver-
dict Is announced.)
Many people seem to be of
the opinion that application
for a non-poll will permit
them to vote. It will. But
only for federal officials such
shooting program ever pro-
vided for youngsters.
"All boys and girls," Hlntze
stressed, "are eligible and
go through an extensive, but
Interesting series of lessons
on all phases of careful gund
handling and shooting."
Heading the new project will
be John Sllger whose appoint-
ment as general chairman was
announced by Hlntze. Sllger,
of Belt Line Road, Is employed
by th e E & E Mfg. Co.
The Pre-registration ses-
sion of the new Shooting Edu-
cation program Is scheduled
for 7:30 p.m. Monday, January
17, at the Elementary School
gym. Subsequent lessons will
be held each Tuesday evening.
Boys and girls 6 to 14 years
of age can enroll by using this
registration blank and by
bringing it to the gym next
Monday night.
All parents are urged to
come and learn about this
program. There also will
be a speaker on gun safety.
with a
low cost
WANT AD
The Cedar Hill FIRST BANK and
TRUST would like To express Their
appreciaTion To The CEDAR HILL JAY-
CEES for Their work in CommuniTy
ImprovemenT during This, The NaTional
Jaycees Week, and To wish for The
Jaycees conTinued success in our ciTy.
:,p
*
V \
•*
■
,
RegisTraTion Blank
JAYCEE SHOOTING EDUCATION PROGRAM
1/
wish
To learn more abouT The fun of shooTing Through The knowledge
of good gun manners, safeTy procedures in gun handling and The
fundamenTals of marksmanship. I wish To enroll and will attend
The preview presenTaTion To be given on Monday, January 17 aT
7:30 p.m. in The Cedar Hill ElemenTary School Gym.
Signed
ParenTs SignaTure
Address
Telephone No.
This blank is To be Turned in To John Sliger or any of The Cedar
Hill Jaycees.
1*
0
WISE
SHOPPERS
KNOW...
IT S SMART TO READ
THE ADVERTISEMENTS
OF LOCAL MERCHANTS
IN OUR NEWSPAPER
THE BIGGEST BARGAINS
APPEAR HERE!
Comparative shopping is smart shopping . . . and it’s
easy to compare prices and take advantage of sales,
when you read the advertisements of our locc^ merchants
regularly in this paper. If you're not already a subscriber,
call our circulation department todayl
CUm M tkonick
with
the exception of college
<»•«»** from autsido the state, who
**y *PPfr by moil.
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Brown, Royce & Mobley, Mrs. Howard. Cedar Hill Chronicle (Cedar Hill, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 35, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 13, 1966, newspaper, January 13, 1966; Cedar Hill, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth522925/m1/4/: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Zula B. Wylie Memorial Library.