The Aransas Pass Progress (Aransas Pass, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 14, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 10, 1954 Page: 6 of 17
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THE ARANSAS PASS PROGRESS
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Ingleside Items
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rs. Manship Slates
11 Day Meeting
For HD Club
Plans were made for an all
day meeting to be held on June
17th at the home of Mrs. Merrill
Manship at the regular meeting
of the Ingleside Home Demonstra-
tion Club Thursday afternoon.
Mrs. Sam Carley, president, pre-
sided at the business session. The
Sinton HD Club will be guest of
the local club at the all day
meeting.
Mrs J. H Northam and Mrs.
Carley gave a demonstration on
setting in sleeves at the meeting
Thursday.
An announcement was made
that a 4H dress revue is sched-
uled to be held at the Lone Star
Park Building in Aransas Pass
on June 14.
Refreshments of cookies and
drinks were served from a table
centered with an arrangement of
mixeo cut flowers. The hostesses
wore Mrs. R. C. Attaway and
Mrs. A C Pruitt. Eleven mem-
bers and one guest, Mrs. Glen
Dahman, were present.
Afternoon Tea For
Miss Nancy Rolls
A tea was given at the home
of Mrs. R. L. Capeheart Sunday
afternoon honoring Miss Nancy
Rolls of Aransas Pass. Miss Rolls
is the bride-elect of Ray Reid
of Ingleside. Hostesses for the
tea were Mrs. Capeheart and Mrs.
W. W. Perkins of Aransas Pass
MRS. ZELMA SHRIDER ON
TEN DAY VACATION
Mrs. Zelma Shrider left Wed-
nesday on i ten day vacation trip
to the Big Bend National Park,
the Davis Mountains, and other
West Texas points. Mrs. Shrider
is accompanying her brother,
O. W Maley and Mrs. Maley of
Sinton on the trip.
They will also visit in San An-
gelo with an aunt. Mrs. Ora Og-
den, and other relatives there be-
fore returning home.
Registering the guests was Miss
Sandra Reid and other members
ol the house party were Miss Betty
Burl Bowden, Miss Wysonda Lee
and Miss Laverne Smith.
Reception rooms of the large
country home were decorated with
cut flowers and ferns. The lace
laid dining table was centered
with an arrangement of pink,
gladioli on a large blue mirror
circled with fern. Punch, open-
face sandwiches, nuts, mints and
cookies were served.
LILLA HUTCHINSON
STUDENT UNION OFFICER
Lilia Hutchinson of Ingleside
was elected social vice-president
of the Baptist Student Union for
the two summer terms at South-
west Texas State Teachers Col-
lege.
All officers will serve on the
BSU Council. They will be in
charge of vespers each evening,
socials and mission work.
Miss Hutchinson is the daugh-
ter of Mr. and Mrs. H. H.
Hutchinson.
BAYTOWN GUESTS
Guests in the home of Mr. and
Mrs. C. V. Reid for the week end
were Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Middle-
ton and their daughter, Sonia, of
Baytown.
VISITS DAUGHTER
LOCALS ATTEND
GRADUATION OF
TRAVIS B. PHELPS
Mrs. Annie G. Blaschke, Mr.
and Mrs. Cleve Blaschke and sons,
Jerry and David, Mrs. D. Verban
and Yvonne, all of Ingleside, Mr
and Mrs. M. E. Naylor and daugh-
ter, Eldagene, of Aransas Pass,
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Gass, Mr.
and Mrs. Edgar Phelps, and Ed-
gar Lee and Grady Phelps, all
of Corpus Christi, attended the
sixty-fourth annual commence-1
merit exercises of the University i
of Texas Medical Branch in Gal-
veston June 14th.
Travis Blaschke Phelps, son of l
Mrs. C. L. Witt and grand-
daughter, Peggy Witt, of San Be-
nito arrived Sunday for a visit
with Mrs. Witt’s daughter, Mrs.
Norris Maley and family.
WEEKEND GUESTS
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Moss and
children, Jackie, Mary Louise
and Laverne, of the Los Tejanes
Ranch near Laredo were the week
end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Maley and other relatives here.
VISITORS RETURNS HOME
SNACKTfME—Thl« modest (1J display of chicken, Tarn*; rice, and uncounted side dWies recently
was served in the home of the Emir of Hofuf, in Arabia. The mammoth table of delicacies was set
in honor of visiting Saudi Arabian newsmen, who journeyed to Hofuf with Finance Minister
Sheikh Abdulla Suleiman, and the meal was considered in no way extravagant by princely standards.
Warnings By Texas Highway Patrolmen
Outnumber Arrests, Chief Elliott $ays
-0°r
Mrs. Cliff Thompson of Conroe
returned to her home there Mon-
day after a visit with her sister.
Mrs. Johnnie Bilton, and Mrs.
Henry Duelm.
VISIT MOTHER
SEE
OUR NEW
Maytag: Ranges
WE WILL
Give a $47.55
ELECTRIC BLANKET
With Each Range Purchased
ORME’S
THE GENERAL
STORE
Texas
Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Monse
visited in Orange Grove, Sun-
Mr'and M rsEd gar P he 1 ps "and 1 day *’lth Mf- Monse’s mother, who
grandson of Mis. Annie G. Bias- j has been lU for some time-
chke. was one of the 133 gradu-! WEEK END AT RANCH
Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Dean spent
ates having medical degrees con-
ferred upon them at the exercises.
H. W. RICHARSON
ON VACATION
Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Richardson
and sons, Douglas and Bobby,
left Monday on a vacation trip
which will take them to Buna
for a visit with Mr. Richardson’s
parents. While on vacation they
will also visit with Rev. and Mrs.
A. M. Roos and family in Gar-
wood, and with Mr. and Mrs. V. A.
Kirkpatrick in Baytown.
Orme't
for less.
at Ingleside have it
the week end at Rocky Ledge a
ranch near Uvalde. Karen Dean
and Mary Inez Orme returned
home with them after a visit there
for the past week.
MRS. KOPPERL
VISITS PARENTS
Mrs. William T. Kopperl and
son of Mobile, Alabama are vis-
iting with Mrs. Kopperl’s parents,
Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Carrington.
Take your prescription to Slew-
art's Pharmacy for prompt, ac-
curate service.
If you were stopped by a Texas
highway patrolman during the
month of April for an infraction
of the traffic laws—you had a lot
of company. As a matter of fact
you had exactly 34,686 other folks
L
MRS. STEWART ATTENDS
FAMILY REUNION
Mrs. O. R. Stewart attended a
family reunion last week end at
the home of her parents. Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Sassman in Austin,
in the same boat with you.
You could have been “lucky”,
though. You might have been one
of nearly half of the total who
got a warning ticket instead of
an arrest ticket. And you might
not have been involved in one
of the 13,496 accidents during the
month. Better than that . . . you
might not have been one of the
6,840 persons injured in traffic
accidents in April. And one thing
is sure ... if you’re reading this
you’re really fortunate because
hours
duty.
were turned in on night
FORMER TEACHER HERE
DIES OF AUTO INJURIES
Word was received here this
week of the death of Mias Eliza-
beth Kuykendall, a former teacher
in Ingleside schools for about -six
years. Mias Kuykendall died of
Ived in an ai
injuries received in ad automhile
accident earlier. Funeral services
were held Sunday jt Cherokee,
Texas.
GRANDDAUGHTERS VISIT
Patsy and Cythnia Manning of
Baytown are visiting in the home
of their grandmother, Mrs. Win-
nie Wooten. Mrs- Wooten’s sister,
Lela, is also a guest in her home.
MRS. .BILL NELSON
VISITS MOTHER
Mrs. Bill Nelson and Jier daugh-
ter, Lou Ann, of Corpus Christi
were week-end guests of Mrs. Nel-
son’s mother, Mrs. S. E. Nixon.
action on his license
“Our men always give two or
three times as many warnings as
they do arrest tickets,” Elliott ex-
plained. “But sometimes we won-
der if we’re really doing the mo-
torist a favor when he is released
with merly a warning. W always
The 444 patrolmen operated in hope the warning will work; that
317 cars for the incredible dis-
tance of 1,082,617 miles. It wasn’t
is, that it will keep thefdriver
from repeating his error, bur many
an riaing ana wnung xicxeis, times a patrolman is canea io m-
however. Accident investigations vestigate a traffic accident and
took up 3,555 hours of the time;
another 2,151 hours were devoted
to safety work other than en-
forcement; and the ipen spent
3,612 hours on court duty.
According to Chief Elliott’s
figures, 8,544 of the arrests made
were for hazardous traffic viola-
tions'— the sort that cause acci-
the driver of one of the cars is a
fellow to whom he gave a warn-
ing a couple of hours earlier.
Maybe an arrest would have saved
a life. Maybe. I don’t know.”
-o-
Destroyer escorts are named in
honor of personnel of Navy, Ma-
rine Corps, and Coast Guard killed
dents. Speeding, as usual, led thef in enemy action in World War II.
field with 4,803. Next in order was.
“Improper Passing” with 801; and;
On Monday, Mr. Stewart meU yOU weren’t among the 168 killed id^k dnvi"g accounted for 554
Mrs. Stewart In Bay City, where. m Texas traffic during the thirty! °f the dPPrehenslons-
r
they attended the funeral of Mrs. j day period.
Stewart’s aunt, Mrs. F. W. Ver-
ser. They returned home Monday
night.
CARD OF THANKS
We desire to express to our kind
neighbors and thoughtful friends ] men, comprising the sixteen Tex-
our heartfelt thanks for their
Walter J. Elliott, chief of the
Texas highway patrol, hgs just
released a comprehensive break-
down of the activities of 444 pa-
trolmen who were on duty dur-
ing the month. It shows that the
many expressions of sympathy
at the loss of our mother, Mrs.
J. E. Morrow. The beautiful floral
offerings were especially appre-
ciated.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Smith
and daughters.
as highway patrol districts,
worked a total of 108,922 hours
during April at duties running
the gamut from giving road in-
formation to tourists to making
11,850 arrests and passing out
16.926 warning tickets. Thirty-
seven per cent, or 40,239, of those
Speeding was also the leader
in the “Warning Tickets” cate-
gory, with 7,438. The nearly
17,000 motorists who received
warnings, however, didn’t get off
entirely “free.” A copy of the
warning ticket was filed in their
permanent driving record at the
headquarters of the driver’s li-
cense division of the Texas de-
partment of public safety where
enough of them, just like a small
collection of arrest notation or
accident experiences, will auto-
matically bring the errant driver
up for suspension or revocation
v.
Making plant for tk* tutor* it
fina. Lif• inturonct it iht only ’
•aty and iur* way to guaran-
tor thtir fulfillment. Atk your
Groat Southerner to help you
1 guarantee your plant.
Lloyd Dean
P. O. Box 566
Phones:
Bus. 59 Res. 124w
Ingleside. Texas
Only FORD gives you
features now which
other low-priced cars may
— offer tomorrow! —
□ LEDGERS
□ TYPEWRITER
PADS
□ CARBON PAPER
□ TYPEWRITER
RIBBONS
□ INDEXES
□ FLEXO-COIL
BINDERS
□ PAPER CLIPS
□ LIST FINDERS
□ TYPEWRITER
BRUSHES
□ CARTER'S STAMP
PADS
□ PEERLESS LETTER
TRAYS
□ CARTER’S INK
□ OFFICE
CLASSIFIERS
□ PENCILS
□ ERASERS
□ TYPE CLEANER
□ ADDRESS BOOKS
□ MOISTENERS
□ PRONTO FILES
□ LE PAGE’S GLUE
□ EXPANDING
ENVELOPES
Ford gives you:
V-8 POWER
Only Ford of the low-priced cars offers V-8 power—
the type of power more and more ear makers are
adopting. And Ford’s new 130-h.p. Y-block V-8 is the
most modem V-8 in any car regardless of price!
BALL-JOINT SUSPENSION
For ride and handling ease that no other low-priced car
can match. Ford brings you new Ball-Joint Front Suspension.
It s another Ford exclusive in the low-price field.
TREND-SETTING STYLING
Pord styling has set a new standard for the American
Road. It is modem, forward-looking styling that
will keep your Ford out front in appearance, not only
this year but in the years ahead.
□ LETTER OPENERS
□ CORRECTION
FLUID
SO WHEN IT COMES
TIME TO TRADE ...
□ DESK PADS
□ FINGERTIPS
Ford’s value will be higher. It’s an
established fact that Ford returns more
©•# Your Supplies Now at
of its original cost than any other low-priced car!
Come mi/ Get the best deal for year dollars!
* **- .......
__
Mrs. McGn
To B&PW
Clean-Up I
A rfeport pf the
up drive now
given by Mrs. F
the Business a
Women's Glub
at the regular r
port was given
Vetteis, city ma
will continue thi
The next regul
club will be held
Park Building.,ol
members are ur|
bring a member.
MR. AND MRS.
ENTERTAIN IN
Guests In the
Mrs. Murl Smith
Mr. and Mrs. 1
and their daugl
Mrs. Homer G
Groves. Mrs. Fro
Smith are sister
A barbecue wi
night honoring th
ing the entertalr
the guests were-B
Ellis, ‘ Mr. and
Chisum and Mr.
The visitors lei
nesday morning.
BARBECUE HO
JOE FRANDOL
Mr. and Mrs.
and employees
and Market gavi
becue and party
at the home o
Fellers, Tuesday
Frandolig is 1
20 for ROTC Tr
Georgia.
GEORGIA VISI'
Guests in the
Mrs. F. L. Selle
Richard Sellers,
their two childre
The visitors are
vaeat icn.
F. L. Sellers i
week vacation fr
where he is Lino
TR;
Drive-In
Hove
WEST HK
Aransas P
Two Sho^
Commencii
Thurs.,
!&£■£
wM
2 Colour
Fri.-Sat., .
DOUBLE
%
Men ol
STAR
Robert S
Broderick
PL
Corvetti
STAR
Robert Mi
Randoli
2 Colour
Sun.-Mon.,
TW
REDH
TRjoMSE
RHONDA FLEMING
GENE BARRY*
AGNES MOOREHEAD
A femme
2 Colour
and !
T ues.-Wed.
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The Aransas Pass Progress (Aransas Pass, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 14, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 10, 1954, newspaper, June 10, 1954; Aransas Pass, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth896951/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Ed & Hazel Richmond Public Library.