The McKinney Examiner (McKinney, Tex.), Vol. 77, No. 48, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 22, 1963 Page: 4 of 12
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The McKinney Examiner and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Collin County Genealogical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
PAGE FOUR
THE EXAMINER, McKINNEY, TEXAS, AUGUST 22, 1963
Or
Melissa News
*
55
(
S
0
FOREMOST
FOLGER’S
Mellorine
Coffee
]
2 300100
Q cans * •
It
s
2349$
21a 23*
12ga1.254
POUND
Lh.
0
Lb.
Selected Frying Pieces.
A.F. Bacon
McKinney Teachers To
.1b.
.lb.
I
lb.
Attend Workshop
Ib.
C
P
I
SLri/t
€
.0C
IC
))
e5
50
FREE
50
Libby’s Sweet Peas
E
HHkiHkNW
15
Kaiser Foil
15
gsee=
All Thrif-Tee Stores Give S&H Green Stamps
(a
Auditorium,
Grades 7-12,
e
8
3-
0
)
Al Horton, Ginn and
42e
%
Grades 7-12,
4
A
8:30-9:30—Second General Ses- here.
2
i
n
Westminster Schools
To Open August 30
Cut-up Fryers
Fryers Halves
69*
59*
49*
49*
WHOLE
ONLY
Pulley Bones
Breast................
Thighs................
Drumsticks.....
Banquet Frozen
Cherry Pie
31
336
ematics".
Company
Pe
pu
Ne
*
Cl
36
A]
Te
4 P.M. to 11 P-M.
AUG. 24,1963
U. S. D. A.
Grade A
Department Pln-
S & H GREEN STAMPS
With The Purchase Of
Any Beef Roast
AH Flavors
Hi-C Drinks
French
Black Pepper
Affiliated Food Stores
5th ANNUAL
Bame
Peanut Butter
A
(
$
2
Pet Instant
Dry Milk
French
Mustard
Tomato Juice
Shurfine
Pork & Beans ..
Shurfine Cut All Green
Asparagus.........
Arrow
Pinto Beans ..
Cleanser
Energy Bleach
Libby's Vienna
Sausage..............
2
Banquet Frozen
Apple — Peach
Coconut — Custard
Pies
A.F. Brand
3, I • Ice Cream
Roger D. Holland
ssigned To Carswell
I
(
I
(
1
1
I
(
f
(
I
s
Sliced Cheese American.
506
6ag
g Vegela
Foremost
v Gal. 594 Popsicles
19
12894
ning Period
THURSDAY, AUGUST 29
Morning Meetings
Salad Dressing Shurfine
OREEN
.STAMPS
FNectafites
1839$
.10
15
.....1
4 29$
50 FREE 50
S&H GREEN STAMPS
With The Purchase Of
4—10-Oz. Shurfine
Frozen Strawberries
d Pks1
“Hadishes.........
X2T
6
“H:
15a
wallon
Prunes
---------0---------
The U. S. exports of all types
of cotton totaled 2,926,000 run-
ning bales from August 1962 to
May 1963, compared with 4,024,-
000 bales shipped in the same
ten months a year earlier.
LB. 49"
S15*
3 1-2 CAL PKG.895 4
EaK
Pr
4221$
.can 4a
Onions.......
Vettuce
12299*
Cake Mix • White • Yellow • Devils Food 3
Grades 1-6, Room 127 “Mathe-
matics”, Al Horton, Ginn and
Company
Rya
,5*e,DM4Rf
72X. "
9,esl 3ruib
Noan 596
Ajax Cleanser LT
Q'a 5
C~. /
6-Pak one
.Pkg, 43
/EMBEP
000/
Shurfine
Tomato Catsup .....2 "Atx: 35*
I.
100
Pkgs. 1 •
ed to the Westminster faculty
this year. She is Mrs. Cynthia
Hughes of Farmersville who is
an East Texas State College
graduate and who will teach the
third and fourth grades in ele-
mentary school.
The complete Westminster fac-
ulty list reads as follows:
HIGH SCHOOL
B. L. Corley, superintendent
and business
Miss Virgie Cappieman, Eng-
lish
R. J. Smitn, sciences
Arthur Fowler Jones, history
and social studies
Mrs. Orilla B. Corley, seventh
and eighth grades and depart-
mental work in high school bus-
iness and mathematics.
ELEMENTARY
Mrs. Corine Milton, first and
second grades
Mrs. Cynthia Hughes, third
and fourth grades
Mrs. Edith Alexander, fifth
and sixth grades.
The Westminster Trojans will
play their first home football
game of the current season on
Friday night, September 13,
when they meet thhe Commun-
ity Braves.
Golden Corn «ST.
Jimmie and Jack Jones of
Garland and David Mullican of
Anna have been visiting their
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. W.
H. Mullican.
Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Dee Me-
Kenny and children of Mechan-
icsburg, Penn., have been visit-
ing Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Grif-
fin and son, Don, and Mr. and
Mrs. Nale Hileman during last
week end.
Mr. and Mrs. Houghston Mc-
Hone of Fredricksburg visited
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Van Bevers
and Mrs. Nettie McHone.
Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Charlie George was their daugh-
ter of Dallas.
Mrs. Bobbie Moore and son,
Dan, of Garland andIrs. Judy
Kinder of Dallas has bee visit-
ing Mr. and Mrs. Bill Clark.
Recent guests of Mrs. Minnie
Hood was Mr. and Mrs. Claud
Blackburn of Lozbuddie.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dan
Hill were Mrs. Hill’s sister and
brother-in-law of Angleton, Mr.
and Mrs. Charlie Abshire and
children.
Mr. and Mrs. L. S. Settle have
returned from visiting in Hous-
ton with relatives.
Gary Don Boone of Odessa has
been visiting with his grandpar-
ents here, Mr. and Mrs. Oliver
Boone.
Billy Clark spent the week
end with his sister and brother-
in-law of McKinney, Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Noles. Mrs. Judy
Kinder of Dallas and Mrs. Bob-
bie Moore and son, Dan, of Gar-
land, visited Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Clark and children Sunday.
-------o-------
LOST ARE FOUND
INDIANAPOLIS — The “case
of the missing church members”
has been solved by the Christian
Churches (Disciples of Christ).
Yearbook editor Howard E.
Dentler discovered that a record-
ed drophof '56,000 in membership
was 1,786,561, rather than the
1,749,539 reported, a drop of only
14,989. “Thousands who were
lost were found,” an announce-
ment said.
Instant Coffee L™
A 303
U Cans
Beg0e 8
az- 48
/ 7
X
. es2gav9
"-A
swoKENa
*59*
“ dr
E reg, f 08
• cans • •
| on
Although local school students
won’t report for classes until
Tuesday, September 3, McKin-
ney teachers get back to work
on Wednesday of next week,
August 28, when a faculty meet-
ing at 9:00 a.m. kicks-off three
days of activity prior to the of-
ficial opening of the fall semes-
ter.
On Friday morning, from 8:30
to 12:00 noon, elementary pupils
will register at the schools they
will attend.
The complete schedule of pre-
school meetings and workshops,
as announced by Supt. Joe Harp-
er, is as follows:
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28
Morning Meetings
9:00—First General Session,
McKinney High School Auditor-
ium; Superintendent Joe Harp-
er presiding
Special Music—Woody Schob-
er, Gary Losh
Address—Dr. Jack Latham
(Business Psychologist, NTSU)
Status of Self-E valuation
Study—Superintendent Harper
Meetinf of New Teachers —
Auditorium
Coffee—Cafeteria (Sponsored
by McKinney C.T.A.
Afternoon Meetings
1:00-2:05
EVAPORATED
Carnation
Milk
8 TALL CANS $100
McCoy and sons, Mark and Dav-
id, of Los Angeles, California,
visited Misses Eula and Kather-
ine Barker recently and they all
visited Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Lee
Hendricks and family.
Masters Andy and Jeff Rob-
ertson from McKinney spent a
few days last week with their
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. W.
W. Mangum.
Mr. B. C. Bowden of Gaines-
ville visited his daughter and
son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. John
Mays, a few days last week. Mr.
Bowden has not been too well,
but was able to attend services
at the Baptist Church here on
Sunday night.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Madden and
children, Laura, Donna and Dan-
iel of St. Louis, Missouri, are
here visiting his brother and
family, Mr. and Mrs. George
Madden.
Mrs. J. C. Caudell is in Dal-
las at this time visiting her
daughter, Mrs. Charlsie Mitchell,
and her granddaughter and hus-
band, Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Hul-
sey.
Mr. Jim Wysong has accepted
a position as manager and treas-
urer of The Producers Compress
Inc., a newly organized coopera-
tive association, at McKinney,
after sixteen years of faithful
service here as manager of the
Farmers Cooperative Gin Assoc-
iation.
Pink Salmon Pahr
“Communication Skills in All
Subjects”, Dr. Frank Stallings,
Arlington State College
2:05-2:20 — Coffee, Cafeteria,
Sponsored by Office Force
2:20-3:30
Grades 1-6 an all other Lan-
guage Arts teachers 7-12, Aud-
itorium, “The Teaching of Read-
ing”, Hazel Horn Carroll, SMU
Grades 7-12, Room 127, "Math-
Mr. and Mrs. Arvil L. Walden
and family are vacationing at
this time.
Jan Whitworth attended the
Presbyterian Camp at Pottsboro
last week.
Our sympathy is extended to
Mrs. Glen Craft on the passing
of her uncle, Mr. Tom McGuire
of Stillwater, Oklahoma.
Mrs. Fred Graves was honored
with a birthday dinner at the
home of her sister and brother-
in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Mil-
rany, on Sunday, August 18. She
received many birthday wishes
from her family and friends, and
a long distance call from her
son, Buddy, in Carlisle, Pa.
Mrs. Charles A. Medcalf cele-
brated her birthday also on Sun-
day, August 18, with a birthday
dinner cooked by her husband. (
Mr. Medcalf is on vacation at
this time.
Our deepest sympathy is ex-
tended to Mr. Dwight C. Brown-
ing on the passing of his wife,
Mrs. Lillian Browning, Sunday
night. August 18, and to the
children, Miss Wilma Browning,
Mrs. Mattie Lee Hammond, Mrs.
Elaine Dillon and Mrs. Velma
Alexander^ and all the grand-
children, and other relatives.
Funeral services were held on
Tuesday at the Baptist Church
here.
Mrs. Loraine Cassidy is a pa-
tient in the hospital at this time.
Mrs. Anna Hardy, Mrs. Leia
Hackney and Mrs. Mabel Dicken-
son attended Homecoming of the
Parker Presbyterian Church re-
cently and heard Dr. Glenn
Sneed of Dallas preach the ser-
mon.* He was a former pastor of
the Presbyterian Church here
and is retired now.
Mrs., Minnie Lowrey has re-
turned home following a week’s
visit with her sister, Mrs. L. C.
Frair in Tulsa, Okla., last week.
Misses Mary Lou and Ruth
Graves, Misses Eula and Kather-
ine Barker, and Rev. and Mrs.
Clyde Boyd attended Workers
Conference at Shiloh Baptist
Church last Monday night.
Miss Sondra Jenkins was Mis-
sion Teacher at the Day Camp
for 8-year-old Sunbeams held at
Lavon Baptist Encampment last
Thursday, August 15. Sally Air-
hart and Ann Wysong also at-
tended this Day Camp as 8-year-
old Sunbeams from the Baptist
Church here, accompaning Son-
dra there.
Mrs. I. H. Caudell is happy to
report a .new grandson, born to
her son and daughter-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Dwaine Jenkins of Mt.
Pleasant. The new baby boy has
been named Barry Lynn, and his
brother, Kevin, welcomes his ar-
rival.
Mrs. Irene Barker of McKin-
ney and her daughter and son-
in-law, Mr. and Mrs. George
Miss Pearl Bellew has return-
ed home following a visit with
her sister and brother-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Claycomb, in
Tulsa, Okla. She accompanied
her brother and sister-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Bellew of
Dallas.
Mr. and Mrs. Nugent Hall and
daughter from Illinois are here
visiting his mother, Mrs. Ada
Hall, and other relatives.
Thursday night visitors of Mr.
and Mrs. O. E. I elty were her
nephew and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Brazeal and son, Dav-
id, of Quanah, and Mr. and Mrs.
Floyd Phillips of Dallas.
The Community Club House
on the old Telephone Road was
destroyed by fire early Sunday
morning.
On Thursday night, August 15,
the L. T. Dysart Garden was the
scene for the beautiful wedding
of Miss Linda Lee, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Lee of
Bloomdale community, and Mr.
Mike Taylor, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Wilson Taylor of Melissa. Rev.
Clyde Boyd, pastor of the Bap-
tist Church, performed the cere-
mony and Teresa Airhart played
the wedding music. A reception
was held in the garden with Bar-
bara and Karen Lee, sisters of
the bride, and Anna Kimberlin
and Jo Ann Carroll serving. The
couple will make their home in
McKinney.
Mr. and Mrs. Winford Ander-
son and family from San An-
tonio are here visiting bis par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Anderson.
Mrs. James Nichols and familv
and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C.
E. Huff of Blue Ridge, and Mrs.
Ben Bridgefarmer and son of
Dallas, and Mrs. Velma Holley
of Trenton spent week end be-
fore last in Norman, Arkansas,
visiting Mrs. Huff’s sisters, Mrs.
Bob Jeffrey and Mrs. Amelia
Willis.
The Intermediate R.A.’s of the
Baptist Church recently went on
a swimming trip to* Sandy Lake
at Carrollton. James T. Mangum
and John Edward Madden were
counsellors who accompanied
the eight boys.
Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Stiles of
Fort Worth visited her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Graves
and David recently.
Ronnie Jenkins and Steve
Boyd attended the Junior R.A.
District 13 Baptist Encampment
at Lake Lavon last Monday
through Wednesday. John Ed-
ward Madden accompanied them
as their counsellor, and stayed
the remainder of the week at-
tending the Intermediate R.A.
Encampment.
* 59*
3 46-02 89*
FAMILY SIZE 7100
---0----------
Jehovah’s Witnesses
To Attend Convention
In California
Members of the McKinney con-
gregation of Jehovah’s Witnesses
will experience something new
in conventions this year. Ac-
cording to Doyle Hendricks, pre-
siding minister, “never before
has there been a convention like
the Around-the-World Assembly
of Jehovah’s Witnesses.”
According to Hendrick, there
will be three conventions in the
United States. “Instead of bring-
ing delegates from all around the
globe to one point in the United
States, there will be three in the
United States and 21 around the
world. What makes this assem-
bly different is that it actually
moves around the world and
stops at twenty-four different
cities in just ten weeks. Not on-
ly do some of the main speakers
travel with the assembly around
the world but so also do a large
body of delegates,” Hendrick
said. “These delegates, almost
six hundred in number, will also
share in the assembly activities
as they circle the globe, begin-
ning at Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on
to New York, London, Europe,
the Near East, Asia, Australia
and culminating at Pasadena,
California.”
Thirty-five members of the
McKinney congregation will
meet these delegates at the Pasa-
dena Rose Bowl, September 1-8.
Sponsored by the Watchtower Bi-
ble & Tract Society the eight-day
gathering is expected to draw
70,0000 delegates to the West
Coast alone
$0
I
•H
4
LACKLAND AFB, Tex.—Air-
man Roger D. Holland, son. of
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Winkles of
208 S. Kentucky, McKinney, is
being reassigned to Carswell 4
AFB, Tex., for training and duty 433
as a printing specialist.
Airman Holland recently com- a
pleted United States Air Force
basic military training here.
The airman is a former student
at McKinney High School.
----------o---------
Westminster
sion—High School Auditorium
Superintendent Harper presid-
ing
Special Music—Woody Schob-
er, Gary Losh
Visual Aids—Bob Brown, En-
cyclopaedia Britannica
9:30-10:00—Coffee, Cafeteria
10:00-12:00 Sectional Meetings
on Visual Aids—Rooms Assign-
ed by Mr. Faubion
Afternoon Meetings
1:00-3:30
Grades 1-6 Building Meetings
with Principals
Grades 7-8 Meet by Depart-
ments. Pre-view and Evaluate
Films
FRIDAY, AUGUST 30
Morning Meetings
8:30-12:00
Elementary Schools: Registra-
tion of Students
Junior-Senior High Schools:
Building Meetings with Princi-
pals
Afternoon Meetings
1:00-3:30
All Schools: Building Meetings
with Principals
----------o----------
Ann Minton Injured
In Auto Collision
Miss Ann Minton, daughter of
Dr. and Mrs. M. S. Minton of 903
North Waddill, was taken to Col-
lin Memorial Hospital here for
examination and treatment
Friday morning after the car in
which she was riding with her
mother and grandmother, Mrs. T.
P. Dooley, was in collision with
another automobile at the corner
of Kentucky and Heard Streets.
Miss Minton suffered a back
in-jury and numerous bruises but
was not thought to be seriously
hurt. Her mother and grand-
mother was not injured.
--o-------_
VANCOUVER, British Colum-
bia—bhree pulp plant workers
died Tuesday, bringing to seven
the death toll from Sunday’s ex-
plosion which wrecked a mill at
Woodfibre, 20 miles north of
AAH—N=A2
(GKN
==
P‛•esa
1 ‛vo.
The faculty of the Westminster
Schools will get down to busi-
ness early this year with a meet-
ing to be held at the school at
1:30 p.m. on Friday, August 23,
according to an announcement
by Supt. B. L. Corley. Plans for
the coming school term will be
made at this meeting, Mr. Cor-
ley said.
Students will register on
Thursday, August 29. Busses will
make their regular runs to trans-
port students to and from the
school for registration and will
leave the school at approximate-
ly 7:20 a.m. that morning, arriv-
ing at the school at about 8:30.
Regular class work will begin
at 8:20 a.m. on Friday, August
30, on which day busses will
start their regular schedules.
School will be dismissed at 3:30
p.m. on opening day.
Monday, September 2 (Labor
Day) will be observed as a holi-
day and the regular schedule
will be resumed the following
day, Mr. Corley announced.
One new teacher has been add-
E 303 00
1., V Cans I •
50 FREE 50 i
S&H GREEN STAMPS
With The Purchase Of
One Whole
Watermelon
G
w
: re
• ©:
5 Fi
---
INVESTMENT IN GINNING
MEXICO CITY—The newspa-
per Excelsior said Anderson,
Clayton and Company of Houston
would invest 9,700,000 pesos
($796,000) in a cotton ginning
plant at Ciudad Jimenez, in Chi-
huahua state.
--o---------
Consideration of a few items
will help insure a good stand of
fall-seeded legumes and grasses.
Prepare seedbed early, sample
your soil, buy good seed, and
plant during the last part of Aug-
ust or the early part of Septem-
ber.
Sliced Beef Liver.........». 39*
» TiN"-""
s
---
Ah
i (.
'9
' 6
A
_a
ROGER D. HOLLAND
Skinless Franks........3 Is. 1°0
Shurfine
Chunk-Style Tuna 4 10
Libby’s
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.
Matching Search Results
View four places within this issue that match your search.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.
Thompson, Wofford & Thompson, Wofford, Jr. The McKinney Examiner (McKinney, Tex.), Vol. 77, No. 48, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 22, 1963, newspaper, August 22, 1963; McKinney, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1521980/m1/4/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Collin County Genealogical Society.