The Clarksville Times (Clarksville, Tex.), Vol. 98, No. 46, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 3, 1970 Page: 8 of 12
twelve pages : ill. ; page 22 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
NEWS FROM
very
Mr. and Mrs. RichardHorton
and children, Corpus Chrlstl,
and Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Bryan
of Pina Bluff, Ark., span! the
holiday weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert Medford.
By Mrs. Morris Bassett
Mr. and Mrs. Elam Dean and
spent Sunday In Texarkana
th Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hold-
They and other relatives
lped Mrs. Holder’s father,
J. McDowell, celebrate his
1st blrthdav.
, Beatrice Clark of Mus-
Okla., and Mrs. Electa
r, Texarkana, visited last
with Miss Vallrle Mann.
Iss Mann Joined them In Tex-
kana Thursday for Thanks-
■Tvlng dinner.
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin D.itod-
and son, Ennis, spent the
weekend with Mrs.Val-
Presley and Mrs. Sam Rodr
Others visiting Mrs. Roden
ere Charles Ray Roden, Dal-
i; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rod-
■)n and children, Mr. and Mrs.
ill Jerry Roden, Houston.
Mr. and Mrs. Byron Hubbell
d son, Dallas, spent Thanks-
jvlng with Mrs. Hallle Hard-
nan.
Miss Frances Myers,M)al-
vlslted Mrs. Katie Moore
ind Billy Rhea. They all speht
lanksglvlng In DeKalb with
!rs. June Shaver and children.
Mrs. Naomi Haynes, Mar-
all. Is recuperating at the
nme of her sisters, Mrs. Odes-
Peek and Mrs. Alleen Bas-
_ftt, after being In aiTexar-
hospltal.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert New-
jrk and children, Plano, spent
'leveral days with Mr. and Mrs.
l»b Belt.
spent Thanksgiving with Mr.
and Mrs. Horace Bassett and
T*
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis John-
ston and Bobby Joe, Timmy and
Rhonda Lucas, Oklahoma City,
and Glenn M. Burkett, Parts,
spent Thanksgiving with Mr.
and Mrs. Odls Burkett.
NEWS FROM
By Mr*. Gordon Ailed
Mr. and Mrs. Felton Spencer
hd Mrs."ITT spencer, Paris,
GUESS
WHO?
here's more than one
ay to "drive blind."
your auto insurance
liability limits are too
w, you could be "driv~
i g blind" without
dng it. Jury ver~
s in accident cases
mufch higher *hese
lys. Let us check your
licy today'.
BEADLE
SURA NICE AGENCY
INC.
Beadle Building
Phone 427-2529
OUR BUSINESS IS
’OUR PROTECTION!
Mr. and Mrs. Orville Bear-
den spent the holiday, weekend
In Beaumont with Mr. and Mrs.
Joe R. Armstrong and sons.
Little Miss Amy Audas Is
convalescing at home after
spending some time In Mc-
Culstlon Hospital, Paris.
Mr. and Mrs. Billy Williams,
Midland, spent Monday with
Mrs. Lewis Williams at Live
Oaks Convalescent Center.
Jennings Campbell and Violet
of Idabel, Okla., spent Sunday
with Miss Fannie Bearden, who
Is recuperating at home after
undergoing surgery In Texar-
kana.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Poole and
children, Wichita Falls, spent
several days'with Mr. and Mrs.
Bud Phelps.
•
Jack Henderson and daugh-
ter, Bobble, Irving, visited ov-
er the weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Leon Henderson.
Mr. and Mrs. B. Ford Neville
of Richmond spent the holidays
with Mrs. Tressle Knight and
'•raw relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Holder
and children, Dallas, visited
over the weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Travis Holder.
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie M. Rob-
inson and Tim, Knoxville, Ten-
nessee, visited Mrs. Sallle
Nicholas, Mr. and Mrs.
RoblhSon And other relatives.
Others visiting In the Robinson
home were Mr. and Mrs. Kelly
Robinson and daughters, Fort
Worth.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Duncan
and children, Brownwood, spent
the holidays with Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Chapman and Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Duncan.
Mr. and Mrs. James B. Bain
and children and Mr. and Mrs.
Boyd W. Audas and family,
Dallas, spent the holiday week-
end with Mrs. Gladys Bain.
Mr. and Mrs. Buster Little,
Dallas, visited Sunday with Mrs.
Ike Webb.
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard D.
Webb, Mr. and Mrs. Amos M.
Holder and family, Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Little and baby, Dallas,
visited relatives during thfi hol-
iday weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. James Leo
Webb and family, Arlington,
Mr. and Mrs. Gearl Webb and
children of Garland spent
Thanksgiving with Mr. and Mrs.
Charley Webb.
Gary Warthan and BUI
Reeves, who are attending pre-
med school In Galveston, spent
the weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Hugh Roberts.
Bogata Native,
, Given Foreign
Service Award
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Littleton
spent the weekend In Pioneer,
La., with Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Phillips.
Mr. .and Mrs. J. J. Small-
wood spent Sunday In Fulbrtght
with her sister and family, Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Baker.
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Lang-
ford, Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Lang-
ford Jr., and families of Hous-
ton have been visiting Mrs. T.
R. Langford.
Mrs. Ima Edrlngton has re-
turned from San Antonio where
she visited Mr. and Mrs. Max
Barnett and family. Mr. and
Mrs. Emmet Moore, Houston,
and Mr. and Mrs, Jack Wood
and Martha, Judsonla, Ark.,
visited her over the weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Brose Medford
have returned from Houston,
where they visited Mr. and Mrs.
L. G. Harris and son. They al-
so visited in Beaumont with Mr,
and Mrs. Eustace E. Spears and
family.
Mr. and Mrs. Benton Storey
and family, College Station, vis-
ited with Mrs. Jeff Cox and Mr.
and Mrs. M. T. Storey during
the Thanksgiving holidays.
John M. Howls on, son of Mrs.
W. C. Howlson of Bogata, has
received a 25-year service pin
from the United States diplo-
matic department, at his post In
Africa, at Monrovia, capital of
Liberia.
He has held various foreign
service posts In Kabul, Afghan-
istan; Tehran, Turkey; Tabriz,
Iran, and Rome, Italy. His In-
terest In foreign service was
awakened, he has said, after
five months as a prisoner of
war In Germany in World War
n, having been a first lieuten-
ant In the Army Air Corps.
He had attended Kilgore Jun-
ior College after high school
graduation, before entering
military service and upon his
discharge from the Air Force,
attended Harvard University,
where he received a bachelor of
arts degree.
Passing examination for the
foreign service, he went to
Washington, O. C., July 1, 1947,
for training, and In November,
was assigned to Afghanistan as
third secretary of the embas-
sy.
25, at 2 p.m. In the church of
Christ of Bogata with Albert
. Roach of Paris, former minis-
ter of the Bogata church of
Christ, officiating. Bogata Fu-
neral Home directed burial In
Bogata cemetery.
Nephews served as active
pallbearers.
Mr. Legate was bom at Cross
Roads, Lamar County, May 21,
1904, the son erf Dick and Tael
Chesshlr Legate. He married
Miss Ruby Wright September
17, 1941, at Paris, and she sur-
vives.
Late Additions to Book List
Red River Co. Public Library
Other survivors Include sis-
ters, Mrs. Georgia Ward and
Mrs. Stella Rldens both of Ful-
brlght, and a brother, Roy W.
Legate, Fulbrtght.
S. C. Hudson
Sidney Clark Hudson, a re-
tired painter of Bogata, died In
Red River Haven Nursing Home
November 27 at 8:25 p.m. after
a long Illness. Funeral ser-
Vlsltlng Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Jackson during Thanksgiving
were Mr. and Mrs. Frank Jack-
son Jr. and family, Abilene;
Mr. and Mrs. Jimmie Stinson
of Lubbock and Miss Carolyn
Jackson, Marshall.'*
\
Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Hal-
combe of Galena Park, Mr. and
Mrs. H. B. Hamilton and
Charles, Naples, and Mr. and
Mrs. J. W. Whiteman and fam-
ily spent Thanksgiving with Mr.
and Mrs. W. W. Whiteman.
las; Miss Anna Mazola, Orange,
and Miss Alleen Campbell, Tex-
arkana, visited Mrs. M. J.
Hedgecock during the holiday
weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Gable
have returned from Athens,
where they visited Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Pagett and children.
Visiting Mr. and Mrs. John
Compton and Oleta were Mr.
and Mrs. Travis Presley of
Franklin, La.i Mr. and Mrs.
Truman Griggs, Dallas; Mr.
and Mrs. Robert McDaniel and
sons, Mesquite, and Mrs. Ida
Hall and son, Clarksville.
Mr. and Mrs. Doss Coffman,
Jeanerette, La., visited last
week with Mr. and Mrs. Omer
Coffman.
Mr. and Mrs. Jimmie Stinson
of Lubbock visited during the
holidays with Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Stinson and 'amlly. Mr. and
Mrs. Carlton Kennedy and,phll-
dren, Edmond, Okla., visited
the Stinsons Sunday and Monday.
Onus Kennedy Is In a Texar-
kana hospital, where he under-
went surgery Monday.
vices, November 29 at 2 p.m.,
were held In the Cumberland
Presbyterian Church with the
Rev. A. I. Bond, Baptist pastor,
officiating. Bogata Funeral
Horde directed interment In Bo-
gata cemetery.
Pallbearers were Robert
Williams, Gordon DeBerry,
Paul Williams, Joe Ford, Sam
T. Jones and J. N. Lee.
Mr. Hudson was bom at Bo-
gata Feb. 15, 1901, the son of
Wiley Harrison and Lucy Hum-
phrey Hudson. He had resided
In the county all his life. He
was married to Miss Nina Ward
Chesshlr November 9, 1930, at
Hugo, Okla., and she survives.
Other survivors are sons,
David Lee Hudson, Talco; Sid-
ney Ward Hudson, Mesquite;
brother, Henry Hudson, Bogata,
and five grand children.
Oscar Legate
Oscar R. Legate, a retired
Bogata grocer who was em-
ployed by Buddy's Men’s Wear
In Clarksville, died In Red Riv-
er County Hospital November
24 following a sudden Illness.
Funeral services were con-
ducted Wednesday, November
- — — — — —————— — —-------— —n--u-i_n -|_ri_r
HOMEMAKING TIPS AND TOPICS
By Miss Flossie Jasper
Assistant County Home Demonstration Agent
CATFISH
Eat’N Site - Fingerlings
WHOLESALE FISHING TACKLE
TO LICENSED DEALERS ONLY
LACE YOUR ORDERS AT
AYS FINA STATION
OSSER BAIT
NDERSON
Bait Distributors
HWY. 82 E.
In Clarksville
DeKALB. TEXAS
Hwy. 155 Rt. 1 Box 202
LAKE - OF - PINES
Surprise packages from home
filled with cookies, candles and
other llp-smacklng delights will
arrive fresh and tasty If mailed
with special care.
The first step In sending food
packages Is choosing recipes
that stay fresh for a relatively
long time. If cookies are too
rich, they, will probably crumble
or turn rancid. Moist sheet
cookies cut Into bars and flat,
moist Individual cookies are
the best travel selections.
Cookies flavored with honey
and fruit Improve with age.
Other food Items suitable for
mailing are fruit cakes, can-
dles, pies, cahned meats,
pickles and relishes.
Food Items should be wrapped
with moisture-proof cellophane
and aluminum foil, to prevent
drying out and keep paperboard
cartons from absorbing food
oils.
Before wrapping, allow cook-
ies to cool then wrap several
flat ones together In a piece of
100% NYLON
CARPET
Completely Installed
i" Foam Pad & Labor
D'S FAVORITE
ECLINERS $49.95
LARKSVILLE FURNITU
AND APPLIANCE STORE
cellophane or foil. Bar cook-
ies should be wrapped Individ-
ually.
After wrapping, pack cookies
snugly in a heavy box or tin,
stuffing crumpled tissue or
newspaper Into all corners and
spaces, and separating the lay-
ers with more paper or with
popcorn. If any space remains
between the top layer of cookies
and the box lid, fill with paper
or popcorn.
Fit the box lid down snugly
and seal with cellophane tape
around the edges. Take larger
pieces of moisture-proof cello-
phane and overwrap the entire
carton or tin, sealing the edges
with a warm Iron or with cel-
lophane tape.
Encase the wrapped tin or box
In corrugated paper, then wrap
again In heavy brown wrapping
paper. If sealing the outside
wrapping with tape, parcel post
labels must be Included to In-
dicate the packages may be
opened for postal Inspection If
necessary. Put one label on the
tpp of the package or write the
address directly on the wrap-
ping paper. Print or type the
name and address of both the
receiver and the mailer of the
package.
Tie the package securely with
several rounds of sturdy twine.
Mark "This Side Up” and
"Fragile - on top of the box.
Mall the package as soon as
it Is wrapped. If the food pack-
age Is to be a Christinas gift, ,
mall the first of December for
distant states and by December
11 for local areas.
Mr. and Mrs. Butch Black
and sons, Damon and Allen,
Garland, spent Friday with her
grand mother, Mrs. Luther
Bryson.
Guests Thanksgiving Day of
Mrs. Dave Mauldin were Mrs.
Merle Carr, Deborah and Stan-
ley, Mesquite; Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Wartham and Bobby, Eu-
less; Billy Mauldin and family,
Irving; Mr. and Mrs. Tommie
Mauldin, Dallas; Mr. and Mrs.
Jimmie Mkuldln and family,
Clarksville, and Danny Maul-
din, Bogata.
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin De-
Berry and Mrs. Goldie De-
Berry, San Antonio; Mrs. Kate
DeBerry and Dan DeBerry, Ida-
bel, and Luther DeBerry, Aus-
tin, visited Mrs. Sidney Hud-
sons and sons Saturday after-
noon.
Mr. and Mrs.GarySwalm and
boys, Houston, spent the holi-
days with Mr. and Mrs. Gus
Swalm.
Bud Belcher returned home
Friday from Langly, Wash.,
where he visited several months
with his son, Freeland Belch-
er, and family. He was ac-
companied from Dallas by Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Belcher, who
spent the weekend here.
Mrs. Lucille Morton,Mr.and
Mrs. Pat Smith and Miss Peggy
Carr, all of Dallas, and Dickey
Morton, Fayetteville, Ark.,
were recent guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Johnnie Carr.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Johna
and children, Denison, visited
last weak with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Ole Anderson.
Mr. and Mrs. Sieve Hurt,
David, Margaret and Reagan,
Plalnvlew, spent Thursday to
Saturday with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Gordon Allen here
and his mother, Mrs. W. L.
Rice In Clarksville.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Wood
and children, Saint Jo, spent
Thursday with Mrs. Jessie Bry-
son.
Guests for the Thanksgiving
holidays of Miss Tom Under-
wood and Jimmie Underwood
were Mr. and Mrs. Ed Under-
wood, San Juan, Puerto Rico;
Mr. ant* Mrs. BUI Hoena, El
Paso, and Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Haynes and family, Murchison.
Mr. and Mrs. George Bell,
Burbank, Calif., are visiting
friends and relatives here this
week.
Mrs. L. G. Farris, Gilmer,
and son, Gerald Farris, student
In medical school In Houston,
spent Sunday with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Wilkinson.
Mrs. Henry Lowry spent
Thanksgiving Day with Dr. and
Mrs. James Brunett in Paris.
Other guests were Mr. and
Mrs. Ira Temple and Mrs. Hin-
kle.
Mrs. Paul Griffin honored
her mother, Mrs. H. C. McClu-
er, Sunday afternoon from 3 to
5. The occasion was Mrs. Mc-
Cluer’s birthday. Members of
her family and close friends
called to wish her a happy
birthday.
Mr. and Mrs. FrankBrumley
left Sunday for Little Rock to
attend the funeral services for
their grand son, who lost his
life in Vietnam.
Mr. and Mrs. Nell Resell,
David and Russell, were hosts
Thursday for a family Thanks-
giving dinner. Those present
were Mrs. WUUam Rotell,Mrs.
Paul Griffin, Mr#. W. C. Howl-
son, Mrs. H. C. McCluer, Mrs.
Anne Randolph and children,
Mias Edna Howlson, all of Bo-
gata; Mr. and Mrs. Lee Per-
kins, Clarksville, and Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Bishop and Me-
lanie, Grand Prairie.
Flavor Releasing Foil Is
New For Homemakers
A “flavor-releasing foil” re-
cently developed has flavor
pockets that can be filled with
seastmings and spices carried
1n ■ basting oil or butter.
Gwendolyne Clyatt, Extension
consu rner’msrketlng specialist,
reports that the foil will flavor
meats as it cooks. It may be
used In barbecue peckaging.
Miss Justine Ford and Miss
Janies Foyd, Dallas; Mrs. Way-
land Walker, Janie and Johnnie
of Greenville, visited Mrs. John
Ford and Mr. and Mrs. J6e
Ford.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy dtvldson,
Beaumont spent Friday with his
mother, Mrs. Stalls Davidson.
Mr. and Mrs. Gaylord Mc-
Cluer and sons visit'd last week
In Austin with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. J. O. Lamb.
“Great Lion of God," by
Taylor Caldwell. Taylor Cald-
well recreates with color and
dramatic power the life of St.
Paul In a novel as gigantic as
Its central figure.
Miss Caldwell spoke with
Jewish scholars In Israel and
Catholic scholars In the Vatican
and found that these scholars
held peculiarly similar views
of St. Paul. Yet both were
strangely different from the
tradlUonal picture erf the saint,
and In that difference she dis-
covered the real Paul of whom
she has written.
She sums up^hejr work In this
way: "Many novetf and* books
about St. Paul have told In
marvelous detail what he did
and what he accomplished in
his life and missionary
Journeys. I am concerned with
what he was, a man like our-
selves with our own despairs,
doubts, anxieties and angers
and Intolerances, and 'lusts of
the flesh.’ Many books are
concerned with the apostle, I
am concerned with the man, the
human being, as well as the
dauntless saint.”
So In the pages of this novel
Paul Is pictured as a man of
flesh and blood and strong emo-
tions, the pious and Intellectual
son of a wealthy Jewish family,
both a scholar and a poet. He
Is a man whose entire life was
overshadowed by a sense of sin
and a desire for forgiveness.
His story Is told with compas-
sionate understanding of the
forces that made him a
righteous persecutor of the
early Christians and led him to
discover his destiny--and his
God--on the road to Damascus.
Since "The Wartime Journals
of Charles A. Lindbergh” Is a
volume of 1000 pages, and con-
sists mainly of dally entries
from 1938 to 1945 concerning
the activities of Charles and
Anne Lindbergh, It la doubtful
If It will be read In detail by
anyone not Interested In the
Intimate dally life of this dis-
tinguished couple. It Is well
worth scanning however, as It
records what one American, a
singular and remarkable one,
thought and said during the
seven .years when tens of mil-
lions of people died violently
at the hands of their fellowmen.
Lindbergh did not believe that
we should go to war with Ger-
many and If It had not been for
the despicable character of the
rulers of Germany during this
period he might have been
proven right, as his fear of
Russia and China have Indeed
turned out as he predicted.
Of course, he totally mis-
judged Hitler who did not have
an ounce of humanity In his
makeup and regarded any and
all treaties as "scraps of
paper,” exactly as the Russians
have done since the time of
Stalin. When the United States
entered the war, however, Lind-
bergh served brilliantly In the
air force, both In flying, plan-
ning and designing. He also
collaborated with Dr. Alexis
Carrel, the famous French
heart specialist In heart sur-
gery equipment. Incidentally
how did a certain prominent
Clarksville M.D. get his picture
In this book under the title of
Dr. Alexis Carrel In the Illus-
trations between pages 366 and
367?
"What to Name the Baby,” by
Evelyn Wells. Nothing Is quite
as exciting and Important as
naming a baby. The special
name the parents give the baby
may be a valuable asset or a
draw back throughout his life.
To h«lP find the best pame,
Evelyn Wells has devoted years
of research, compiling a list of
15,000 boys’ and girls’ names.
Each name is fully explalned--
lts origin, historical -back-
ground, and Its meaning In re-
ligion, mythology and litera-
ture.
Some rules are given for t{xe
selection of a name which will
harmonize with the child’s last
name In sound and number of
syllables. Finding a pleasant
Instead of an awkward name Is
a vital part of your decision.
As an added measure there
Is much good advice to help
you choose, plus the legends
and symbolisms of flowers and
Jewels for birth month' and
birthdays.
Emmer Eudy, Martha Smith,
and Mamie Deberry, Bogata;
Bennie Coleman and Den
King, Adhona;
' Johnnie Anderson, Bagwell;
James Fulbrtght and Gladys
Tucker, Deport;
SalUe Forsythe, DeKalb.
Patients Dismissed
Corrf Hodge, Thad Bell, Tray
McLeod, Essie Walker, Julia
Wooten, Betty Murray. Ethel
Elrod, Pamela Smothermon,
Linda Johnson, Clao Doak, O’-
Neal Chiles,-Leigh Monkhouse,
John Wee mas, Eulls Lynch,
George Mercy. William Mc-
Donough, Beulah Stanley, Trulle
Ham, Dorothy Morgen, Bueulce
Forester, Jamee Hooser, Tom-
mie Lynch, Charles Glenn, Dab-
ble Morgan, Jamas Ray and Mi-
chael Roes Jr., Clarksville;
Cora Brooks, Alma Mullins,
Earl Brooks, Joe Wilburn, Eliz-
abeth Holcombe, Harold Gar-
rett, Farris Proctor, Cora Rus-
sell and Naomi Brooks, Avery;
Sarah Arterbury, Peggy Sue
Lee, Claudia Brown and Arvlll
Wilson, DeKalb;
. Gertrude Wooten, Eula Llpe
and Kathy Parker, Annona;
Ethel Monk, Mary Jane Pat-
ton, Lsla Baker and Mack Grant,
Deport;
Aline Jackson and Jessie
Crawford, Bagwell;
Carolyn Smith and Elizabeth
King, Detroit;
Floy Pierce, Bessie House,
Susie Hansborough, Johnnie
Threadglll, Ennis Palmer and
Eula Patton, Bogata;
Ben Taliaferro, Denton;
Lura Garrett, Maud.
Births ^
Mr. and Mrs. David Jackson,
Clarksville, are the parents of
a daughter born November 22
and named Kimberly Elaine.
Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Joe Mor-
gan of Clarksville are the par-
ents of a daughter born Novem-
ber 23 and named Dorthea Lou-
ise.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Smith of
Detroit are the parents of
a daughter born November 24
and named Laurie Ann.
"Mr. and Mrs. jack Lee of
DeKalb are the parents of a
daughter born November 23 and
named Amy Ruth.
Mrs. A. D. GUlin, Great
Falls, Mont., and Mr. and Mrs.
O. L. Franklin, Fort Worth, vis-
ited Mrs. J. A. Cox and Mrs.
Luther Bryson.
Dr. end Mrs. John H. Chil-
ders and daughter, Dallas, spent
Thanksgiving Day with his par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. John Chil-
ders.
Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Oliver
spent Thanksgiving weekend In
Texarkana with their daughter,
Mrs. Jim Glddens, Mr. Glddens
and other relatives.
Mrs. Ada Holmes has moved
from Amity, Ark., to Bogata to
make her home.
Recent guests of Mr. and
Mrs. John Coats were Mrs.
Dick Humphrey, Arlington, and
Mr. and Mrs. John Van Coats,
Hot Springs, Ark.
IIIMIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIItllllllllt
News From
Red River Co.
Hospital
Report from the Red River
County Hospital for the week
of November 24 through 30 is
as follows:
Patients Admitted
May Barton, Hazel Greer,
Francis Latimer, M. L. Brown,
Tonya Clark, Lucille Goff, Lil-
lie Smith, Cleve Doad, Linda
Jackson, Thad Bell, Betty Mor-
gan, Myrtle Parker, Maggie
Ussery, Lillian Geary, Mary
Reeves, Viola Cook, Beverly
Williams, Albert O’Neal, Arch
Scott and Julius Presley,
Clarksville;
James Leroy Bailey, Wil-
liam Kennedy, Nellie Bartlett
and G. W. Strickland, Avery;
THANKSGIVING GUESTS IN
OCIE FAULKNER HOME
Visiting In the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Ocle Faulkner for
Thanksgiving and the weekend
were Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Faulkner and Vicky, Irving; Mr.
and Mrs. Douglas Faulkner,
Donna and Dougie, Austin; Mr.
and Mrs. Tommy Faulkner,
Guy, Kenneth and Kristin, Gar-
land; Mr. and Mrs. Gary Win-
frey, Dee-Lce and Debbie, Car-
rollton; Mr. and Mrs. Buddy
Faulkner and Tammy, C larks-
Mrs. Ovella Huddleston,
Paula and Phyllis, Dim -
Mr. and Mrs. Moody As-
Mr. and Mrs. Haskell
Summers, and their nephew,
Bill Marr, from Florida, where
he Is teaching school.
FOR HOSPITAL, MEDICAL,
CANCER AND POLIO
INSURANCE
BILL COFIELD
Office Main Hotel
Phone 427~3l76
Act Now--TomorrowMay Be
Too Late. No Age Limit If
In Good Health.
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIII
lllllllll
GOOD GROOMING IS
AN ASSET IN TODAYS WORLD.
• r •
THIS CHRISTMAS PLEASE THE MEN
IN YOUR LIFE WITH A GIFT FROM
BUDDY'S.
TO KEEP THIS CHRISTMAS FOREVER
GIVE A GIFT FROM BUDDY'S
•SUITS
•SPORTCOATS
•DRESS SHIRTS
•SPORT SHIRTS
•SLACKS
•BELTS
<3
ALL FAMOUS
NAME BRANDS
•WESTERN HATS
DRESS HATS
•SHOES - BOOTS
•COLOGNES
■GIFT ITEMS
FREE WRAPPING
FOR CHRISTMAS
BUDDY’S MENS WEAR
PLEASINGMEN WITH THEIR FASHIONS IS OUR BUSINESS ‘
/
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Clarksville Times (Clarksville, Tex.), Vol. 98, No. 46, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 3, 1970, newspaper, December 3, 1970; Clarksville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth923445/m1/8/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Red River County Public Library.