The Howe Enterprise (Howe, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 47, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 11, 1970 Page: 2 of 4
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.THE HOWE ENTERPRISE, THURSDAY, JUNE 11, 1970 .
Services Monday
For Rrotiher Of
How Resident
THE HOWE PLAN
continued from page 1
your cities.”
. Following the joint meet-
lng, Howe Chairman H.K. C-
aldwell offered resignation to
the board, due to his forth
coming retirement from the
State Department of Public
Safety” June 22, which is on-
ly two weeks away, or, a
tranter by the department
if he decides against retiri-
ng. Replacement will b& made
at a later date. Members ex-
pressed their appreciation, to
Caldwell for having served
as chairman of the Commi-
ssion during the crucial pl-
anning stages.
HOWE'S THAT
continued from page 1
wenty minutes in Joshua, plus
forty minutes in 2nd Kings
rnake the missing twenty-four
hours the space travelers had
to log in the logbook as be-
ing the missing day in the
universe.
Editorial
ATTENTION, ALL CITIZENS
OVER 60 YEARS OF AGE
The way medical science is
improving you will probably
live to see 85 to 100 bir-
thdays. If in the years to
come, you don’t want to be-
come a candidate for a rest
home or hive to depend on
your children for a home,
if the old home place is be-
coming substandard and you
are not physically or finan-
cially able to keep it in good
repairs and you are consi-
dering selling it or giving
it to the kids to get away
riom tax or insurance pay-
ments, please consider the
following carefully,
lelp yourself and your city
off.ain a number of modern
efficient and easy to keep c-
lean, duplex type apartments.
These will be economical to
warm, easy to cool and will
he close in to the grocery
stores, the post office, the
bank and some of the chur-
ches. These will rent at a
price person depending on d-
lfferent types of retirement
can afford to pay.
If you would be interested in
renting one of these apartme-
nts in the next 2 to 10 years,
go to the bank, or the City
Hall and so indicate your in-
terest in the project by fi-
lling out and signing a short
form letter stating that fact.
This must be done before J-
une 20, 1970.
Services were held at
2:30 p.m. Monday for Char-
les Ray Brown, 44, of 1810
W. College, who died at 8:30
a.m. Sunday at a Sherman
hospital. He was a furniture
salesman for Sears here.
Services were conducted
by Rev. John Faulkner, pas-
tor of the Trinity Baptist G-
hurch, with burial at Cedar-
lawn Memorial Park, under
the direction of Waldo Fun-
eral Home.
Mr. Brown was born S-
ept. 14, 1925 at Leonard, the
son of the late Ernest Brown
and the present Mrs. Mau-
de Brown . He was married
to the former Miss Thelma
Lois Nabors in Sherman in
1946 and had lived here for
more than 25 years. He re-
ceived his schooling in the
Leonard public^ schools and
was a veteran ‘ with the Un-
ited States Navy during Wo-
rld War 1L He was engaged
in the shoe business in Sh-
erman for 20 years before
becoming affiliated with the
furniture department at Sears,
Roebuck and Company about
six years ago.
He was an active mem-
ber of the Trinity Baptist C-
hurch.
Survivors are his wife
of Sherman; his mother, of
Sherman; one daughter, Miss
Lana Jean Brown of Sherman;
one sister, Mrs. C.G. Carter
of Sherman; four brothers,
Elmer Earl Brown of Dallas,
Lee W. Brown of Howe, Bill
Borwn of Sherman and Ernest
Brown of Fort Worth.
Rev. Corzine
Accepts Call To
Ohio Church
Rev. Elwood Corzine, pa-
stor in Oklahoma and Texas
for the past 31 years, has
accepted a call from the R-
iverside Baptist Church in C-
incinnati, Ohio, to, serve as
their pastor. In addition to
his work as a pastor. Rev.
Corzine has maintained a b-
roadcast over the Sherman
radio station for the past 24
years.
Rev. Corzine now can
be heard on Radio Station K
TXO 1500 on the radio dial
j each Sunday morning, 7:30 to
18:00.
Now Open For Business
HOWE
BARBER SHOP
114 Hanning Street
LOCATED in FORMER COMMUNITY INS. BUILDING
Shirley Stephenson, Barber
Hair Cuts and Styling
Additional Low
Income Housing
Units Planned
The Board of Commissioners
of the Housing Authority of
the City of Howe, at the dir-
ection of the Howe City Co-
uncil, has submitted an app-
lication for a program res-
ervation to construct several
additional low-rent housing u-
nits designed specifically for
the elderly to serve the ci-
tizens of Howe and the sur-
rounding community. The im-
portant move must now be
made to determine the num-
ber of dwellings Howe needs.
This determination is made
by the number of applications
made by all citizens age 60
or over who are of the op-
inion that when the apartm-
ents are completed they wo-
uld be interested in renting
one of them.
The application forms may
be obtained from the City H-
all, or the Howe State Bank.
Anyone signing this form is
not obligated to take an ap-
artment-neither is the Hous-
ing Authority obligated to rent
an apartment to an applicant.
Funeral Rites Today
F°r Mrs. Medders
Services for Mrs. Bir-
die May Medders, 66, will
be at 2:30 p.m. Thursday at
the Elmont Baptist Church,
of which she was a member.
She died Tuesday at 3 a.m.
in a McKinney hospitaL
Mrs. Medders was born
in Celina May 12, 1904, the
daughter of the late Mr. and
Mrs. Francis M. Helms.
Rev. Joe Griffin and Rev.
Robert Smith will officiate with
burial in Cottage Hill Ceme-
tery under the direction of F-
lesher Funeral Home.
Survivors are four daugh-
ters, Mrs. Rita Batchelor, M-
rs. Dena Hughes and Mrs.
Pcachie Dodson, all of Van
Alstyne, and Mrs. Barbara
Gentry of Allen; three sons
Milford Lee Medders of Sh-
erman, Vernon Medders of H-
ouston and Bob Medders of Van
Alstyne; 25 grandchildren; f-
our great-grandchildren; thr-
ee sisters, Mrs. Dovie Wil-
lard of Houston, Mrs. Sade
Bilderback of Weston and Mrs.
Sue Flannery of Van Alstyne;
three brothers, Charlie Hel-
ms, of Tulsa , Okla., Ray H-
elms of Dorchester and Cur-
tis Helms of Celina.
Social Security
Social security benefits paid
to residents of Grayson County
totaled $897,000 a month as
1969 ended, Gus Jones, social
security district manager, re-
ported today.
Of the social security be-
neficiaries living in Grayson
County, 7,980 are retired wor-
kers and their dependents. A-
nother 2,764 are receiving be-
nefits as the survivors of w-
orkers who have died, and 1,085
are getting benefits as disabled
workers or the dependents of
disabled workers.
NOW OPEN FOR BUSINESS -
HILLS0N STEEL PRODUCTS
1706 BAKER ROAD - SHERMAN - PH. 893-6504
BARGAIN PRICES ON:
New and Used Tubing, Pipe and
Structural Steel
Prime and Reject Sheets and Plates
sMwNK * *
KNOW where this ph<tn the past was taken? A couple of local historians
think it’s the Luther lace near Sherman. Are they right?
VAN APPLIANCE SERVICE
3jM» 6th Street — Phone 482 62S1
VAN ALSTYNE, TEXAS
JAMES BIDDLE, Manager
Sheriffs Monthly
Report Reveals
Arrest Increase
Alcohol caused around
100 arrests during the month
of May to lead the total of
276 arrests by the Grayson
County Sheriff’s Department,
Sheriff Woody Blanton’s mon-
thly report reveals.
Fifty minors were pro-
cessed by the department for
consuming alcohol, 12 for p-
ossession , and 12 for making
alcohol available to minors.
In addition, 31 adults were a-
rrested for driving while in-
toxicated and an additional 31
for being drunk.
Other arrests are as fol-
lows:
Abusive Language-2
Aggravated assualt-8
Armed robbery-1
Assualt, Simple-5
Burglary-8
Comtempt of Court-2
Desertion From Military-2
Disturbance-5
Identification Only-1
Juveniles-27
Making Alcohol Beverage av-
ailable to a Minor-12
Minor, in possession of Al-
coholic Beverages-12
Minor consuming alcoholic B-
everages-50
Murder-2
Non-support-2
Probation violation-4
Prisoner in transit-6
Rape-1
Robbery by assault-2
Shooting from right-of-way-1
S W C under $50-19
Theft under $50-1
Theft over $50-11
Traffic Offenses-18
Vagrancy-1
?iolation of Liguor Laws-4
Eolation of Narcotic laws-3
Others: Contrib Del Minor-2
viaterial Witness-2
Total arrests-276
amount of (Increase)over pre-
\MILY
\WYER
// Accident
trance
swing in popularity are in-
*e policies that cover the
Ichild in case of an accident,
the idea is relatively new,
iber of legal questions have
notably, as to accidents
lappen somewhere between
:hool and the home,
nsider this case:
schoolboy, starting home-
after school, decided to
a slight detour in order to
ipany a friend on a shop-
errand. During the detour,
oy suffered a painful fall,
due course, his parents tried
Uect on a student accident
r, claiming that it covered
'1
.
...
Chisum One-Stop
Groceries, Dry Goods, Hardware
fLI
Now We Have Fishing Worms
BEST GROUND BEEF
GRADE A FRYERS
FRESH EGGS
b> 59*
■>»
dozen jjjc
JUUUUAMWW
Slacks, Sox, Shirts, Other Gift
Selections for Father's Day Ju. 2l
The minute
you move in
easy living begins
in a total-electric Gold Medallion Home. You
can have convenience everywhere you turn!
You can have work-saving kitchen and
laundry appliances . . . and indoor weather
made-to-order with clean, electric comfort
conditioning! In your new refrigerator or
refrigerator-freezer you’ll have lots of extra
room for those “welcoming” casseroles
neighbors bring . . . and from the electric
water heater, endless gallons of hot water
for moving-day tidy-ups.
Texas Power & Light
recommends the easy life
for you—in a total-electric
Gold Medallion Home!
THE HOWE ENTERPRISE
Bob Walker, Editor
Published each Thursday at 108 Haning Street by
GRAYSON PUBLISHING COMPANY
Howe, Texas 75059 — Mailing Address, Box 488
Second Clqss Postage Paid at Howe, Texas 75059
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Grayson County: $3.00 Per Year Outside: $4.50 Per Year
..........
V
TEXAS POWER & LIGHT COMPANY
A tax-paying, investor-owned electric utility
s i i —ir
tbn while he was travelling
town school. But the insur-
anmpany denied liability.
policy did cover him on
tlv home from school,” the
coy conceded in court, ‘‘but
or he was going ‘directly’
hdere, although he was go-
inme, he was not going
dii Therefore, this accident
is overed by the policy.”
rtheless, the court decided
thopany would have to pay
ofl
deviation was slight,” said
th<e. “A practical and sensi-
blerpretation of ‘directly’
wimit such a deviation. The
coy must have known the
pnity of children not to fol-
loMraight line.”
ie other hand, there are
lilts to how far afield the
chin stray before losing his
pron.
lother case, a youngster
fel of a tree and fractured
his. At the time of the mis-
hahool had been over for
alnn hour. Furthermore, the
bostead of moving toward
hohad actually gone some
dis in the opposite direction.
In* circumstances, a court
ruliat the insurance protec-
ts not stretch that far.
‘urse, the terms of the in-
div policy may make all the
difte. In another case, par-
ents to collect on a school
occ policy when their son
got right at home.
Cusly. the accident had
not to do with school. Yet,
theicy stated in so many
wonat it covered the boy on
a ;ur basis. Following the
plains of the policy, a court
grathe parent’s claim.
A p service feature of the
Anan Bar Association and
thee Bar of Texas. Written
by Bernard.
© American Bar Association
lersea Coal Mines
':oal beds in Nova Sco-
tiaydney field dip be-
nehe Atlantic Ocean and
haieen mined under the
seiore than 3% miles
frdiore.
---4?”
Set Precedent
r Nobel Peace Prize
waven to the Interna-
tio Institute of Law in -
19fetting the precedent of
git the prize to an organ-
izs instead of an indi-
vie
viononth-86 plus.
1 fines, costs and fees
colid were $9,537.00.
>len property during
the nth was valued at $9
957. with $6,402.50 recov-
erec
Tax Reform. Act
Aids Students
The Tax Reform Act of
1969 is helping thousands of
Texas students save time and
trouble on filing an income
tax return this year. This
summer students who will not
owe any income tax for the
year can fill out the new W-
ithholding Exemption Certifi-
cate, Form W-4E. This auth-
orizes their employer to stop
withholding tax and they won’t
have to file an income tax
return next January 1 to get
their money back. The same
rule applies to some retired
persons and part-time wor-
kers. For 1970, a single per-
son who makes less than $L
725 owes no tax. Tliis is bas-
ed on the $1,100 low income
allowance and a personal ex-
emption of $§25. A taxpayer
over 65 can earn wages up
to $2,350 without incurring
a tax liability. .; you qual-
ify, talk to your payroll of-
fice, but you will not ordin-
arily qualify if you are mar-
ried, due to the community
property law in Texas.
VACATION
Preparation H Ointment.
Aqua Net Hair Spray_
Sun In Hair Lightener„
Eftntox Cattle Dust_
$1. 29
Regul«t Only
$1. 76
6 lb.
_98e
42.50
Lentox Cattle Spray_
"Close Up”’ Toothpaste__l!i~_49$
Solarcalne Spray:____v.u $1.66
Visine Eyedrops 87$
Athletic Supporters .^k»»uj„-$1.25
6-32 Oz. Re»dy-To-U»eBaby MUk $3.59
Swim CapS udle« & Children, 1^
Biistex-iis--29$
Desenex - JL l^Qlntmentct Powder 79$
42.25
| WOSSKSWCJKKS
Swedish
Tanning
Secret
Reg, 85*
Lo
3lffWrapping GlTY DRUG ‘’FretffWverf
Df Course
BfigSgjjgggMggWIIBBOaBIWWOBWPIMBMIMWIlBMMHWWMIlWMWWMMWWWBWBBMHWi»
SUNDAY
JUNE 21 tt
SPECIAL - FATHER'S DAY
WARDROBE SALE
DURING THIS SALE YOU CAN BUY A COMPLETE OUTFIT
AT A BIG REDUCTION _ . . SURPRISE DAD WITH A BRAND
NEW WARDROBE ON HIS DAY, SUNDAY, JUNE 21it.
CHOOSE THE SET YOU LIKE BEST
GROUP 1
Curlee Suit.............$ 85.00
Dress Shirt.............. 7.95
Wembley Tie........... 4.00
Paris Belt............... 6.00
Total $102.95
Discount 20.59
$ 82.36
GROUP 2
Curlee Suit.............$ 79.95
Dress Shirt............. 7.00
Superba Tie............. 4.00
Paris Belt............... 5.00
Total $ 95.95
Discount 19.19
$ 76.76
GROUP 3
Jaco’s Brand Suit........$ 75.00
* Manhattan Shirt......... 5.50
Superba Tie............ 3.00
Leather Belt............ 4.00
Total $ 87.50
Discount $ 17.50
$ 70.00
GROUP 4
Curlee Sport Coat...........$ 55.00
Curlee Dress Pant........... 22.95
Wembley Tie............... 4.00
Paris Belt.................. 5.00
Total $ 86.95
Discount 17.39
$ 69.56
GROUP 5
Curlee Coat----------------$ 49.95
Dress Pant.......... 15.00
Sport Shirt.......... 6.95
Leather Belt......... 5.00
Total $ 76.90
Discount 15.38
$ 61.52
i
Charge It
On Your Charge Card
t **»/*
Sherman — Denison
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Walker, Bob. The Howe Enterprise (Howe, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 47, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 11, 1970, newspaper, June 11, 1970; Howe, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth714783/m1/2/: accessed June 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .