The McKinney Examiner (McKinney, Tex.), Vol. 78, No. 6, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 31, 1963 Page: 3 of 12
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PAGE THREE
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THE EXAMINER, McKINNEY, TEXAS, OCTOBER 31, 1963
maunzamanauumnnaamsumanmanmnumamanmanuuun
NOBODY BEATS THIS TIRE VALUE
MRS. RUBY HILL
The 4-H Club met at Wesmin-
ster to elect officers recently.
Rita Williams was named presi-
dent of senior girls; Sherry Hood
vice president; Linda Kee secre-
tary; Pat Hunter reporter and
Rozena Alexander council dele-
gate.
Paula Simpson will be presi-
dent of junior girls 4-H Club;
Peggy Geer vice president; Rhon-
da Parker secretary; Joy Hen-
dricks reporter; Mickey Brown
song leader and Eloise Bowers
council delegate.
Bobby Melton is president of
senior boys; Larry Brown vice
president; Tommy Wallis secre-
tary-reporter and Wayne Hall
and Jimmy Bradley council dele-
gates.
Gary Hendricks is president of
junior boys; Johnnie Turner vice
president; Ted Cherry secretary;
James Cowling reporter and Phil-
ip Fortner council delegate.
Mary Elizabeth, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Hill, was
born October 23. Grandparents
are Mrs. Rubye Hill, Westmin-
ster and Mr. and Mrs. Bill Law-
rence of Anna. Great-grandpar-
ents are Mrs. W. O. Griffin, West-
minster and Bill Rhodes of Dun-
canville.
Tony Turner, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Martha Turner and James
Johnson grandson of Mr. and
Mrs. W. E. Miler, enlisted in the
Navy Air Corps and will be sta-
tioned at San Francisco, Calif.
Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie Johnson
2
73
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mrs. jack McCreary
There was a large crowd
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“The rolling tide of public
opinion which will force the fed-
eral government to take a strong
stand.
“And the new determination
of the Negro himself. This is the
most encouraging factor—even
in the rural areas.”
King said also there had been
a good reaction generally from
churches.
King said he believed there
was a chance that racial issues
could be worked out in Birm-1
ingham, Ala.
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MRS. JOYCE KEE
Mrs. Pearl Mills spent two days
with Mr. and Mrs. Joe Sadler
and family in Fort Worth last
week.
Mrs. Minnie Lowrey and Mrs.
aa. C. Caudell enjoyed very much
6e visit of their old friends, Mrs.
“Maude (Wall) Davis, and her
daughter, Mrs. Johnnie Franklin,
E” Backed by Dearborn and by Us........
32
Wall, on Sunday morning from
Dallas.
Mr. and Mrs. Reed Hartley of
Lockney and Mr. and Mrs. Ker-
mit Hartley and grandson of Pam-
pa have been visiting his brother
and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. E. R.
Hartley, the post few days.
The Melissa P-TA is sponsor-
ing a Haloween Carnival on
Thursday night, October 31st, at
the School. Lunches will be served
in the lunchroom beginning at
5:30 PM. The carnival booths will
i Spook will be judged and prizes
awarded. The King and Queen
■ Cornation will be held at 8:30
. PM. The following contestants
are running and there will be a
. King and Queen crowned for
Grade School and one crowned
for High School: Grade School,
First Grade, Vickie Cave and Dan-
ny Thomas; Second, Ricky Nich-
ols and Debbie Hanson; Third,
Danny Gilbert and Penny Hale;
4th, Helen Madden and Buddy
Cole; Fifth, Travis Wright and
Sherry Darland; Sixth, Tommy
Jeffcoat and Debbie Summers;
High School, Seventh, Paula Wal-
den and Billy Strickland; Eighth,
Philip Walden and Peggy Bryant;
Ninth, Billy Carroll and Connie
Hale; Tenth, Donna Garner and
Boyd Strickland; 11th, John Ed-
ward Madden and Jo Ann Car-
roll. Everyone is invited to at-
tend.
Master Trav Ragan of Dallas
spent last weekend with his
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Sam
Ragan.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Mitchell and
Michelle of Terrell visited her
mother, Mrs. Musa Jeanes, over
the weekend.
The Ruth Sunday School Class
of the Baptist Church met at the
home of Mrs. Jane Walden for
their monthly class party on Sat-
unrday night, October 26th. The
members brough their families
and enjoyed a Weiner Roast to-
gether. Mrs. Tommie Burk gave
the devotional and Mrs. Clyde
Boyd, the teacher, lead in pray-
er. Secret pal gifts were exchang-
ed and names revealed.
Rev. and Mrs. Clyde Boyd ac-
companied Misses Mary Lou and
Ruth Graves to Fort Worth on
Friday night, October 25th, where
they attended the State Teachers
T.S.T.A. Meeting. Guy Lombardo
and his Canadians did the enter-
taining.
Miss Pearl Bellew returned
home on Monday after spend-
ing several days in Dallas visit-
ing her sister and brother-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ottwell. On
Saturday, October 26th was Miss
Pearl’s birthday and Sunday. Oc-
tober 27 was her sister, Nellie Fay
Ottwell's birthday and they spent
the day Sunday with their broth-
er, Carl Bellew and family, and
celebrated their birthdays.
Mrs. Joe Gilbert celebrated her
birthday October 22nd by being
taken out to dine by her husband.
Fred Waller and Mrs. L. M.
Hight are patients at this time
in Collin Memorial Hospital Mc-
Kinney.
Mr. and Mrs. Jessie Lee Thom-
as and sons visited her mother,
Mrs. Gower, in Bochita, Okla.,
over the weekend.
Misses Mary Lou and Ruth
Graves were shopping in Sher-
man on Saturday.
Quinlan basketball team came
here last Tuesday night and com-
peted - against our high school
boys and girls in basketball. The
Quinlan girls won 45 to 22, and
our boys won 62 to 52. The Car-
roll girls basketball teams came
then on Thursday night and
played our girls. Our grade school
girls won 19 to 13 and Carroll’s
A team won 33 to 13 and their B
team won 26 to 20. Large crowds
were in attendance each time.
The Melissa 4-H Club meeting
will be postponed from Friday,
November 1st until Saturday, No-
vember 2nd. The meeting wil be-
gin at 7:30 P.M. Saturday. All
members and visitors are urged
to attend.
Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Walker,
Janice, Judy and Glen and Mr.
Manford Cate all of Lorenzo, vi-
sited Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Madden
and Mrs. J. T. Mantooth over the
weekend.
Jim Wysong and daughter, Ann,
attended the Texas-Rice football
game at Austin Saturday night,
Oct. 26 and visited his sister and
brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. J.
B. Phillips.
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Red Kill Stock
For Lack of Feed
MOSCOW—Soviet farmers in
the Kursk area south of Moscow
are slaughtering livestock for
lack of fodder, the newspaper So-
vietakala Rossia (Soviet Russia)
reported Thursday.
“Trucks are lined up at the
entrances to the slaughter cen-
ters in the Kursk district,” the
newspaper said. “These are from
collective farms trying to get rid
of cattle. We have no fodder for
cattle, they complain.”
The newspaper quoted another
collective farmer as saying “we
do not have a single potato to
feed the pigs.”
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On. Rights
HARRISBURG, Pa. — Forme
President Dwight D. Eisenhow-
er said Thursday he favored
piecemeal enactment of civil
rights legislation rather than one
all-inclusive package risking de-
feat.
The general told a news con-
ference the package approach
would lead to what he termed
“the sum of the negatives” in
opposition.
“I don’t think the federal gov-
ernment is pushing too hard on
civil rights legislation,” Eisen-
hower said. “But I am concerned
that they are trying to put into
one bill all of the corrective
measures.”
Eisenhower made a 35-milt
trip from his Gettysburg farm
Thursday to meet with Gov. Wil-
liam W. Scranton to discuss
Pennsylvania industrial develop-
ment. Eisenhower is honorary
chairman of the Governor’s
Committee of 100,000 for Penn-
sylvania Industrial Development.
Eisenhower conceded* with a
flash of his famous grin that he
and Scranton talked “a little pol-
itics.” He refused to discuss the
conversation.
the singing Saturday night at the
church. Several from McKinney,
Garland, Plano, Wylie and Mur-
phy were in attendance. Quar-
tettes, duets, sols and congrega-
tional songs were sung for about
two hours. The singing will con-
tinue once a month and every-
one is invited to come.
Several from this community
attended the revival at the Metho-
dist church at Blythe Chapel last
week.
Sorry to hear of Mrs. Sally
Russell falling and breaking her
hip. She is in a hospital in Mc-
Kinney.
Mr. and Mrs. Dudley Maguire
and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Roberts
of Collinsville visited relatives
here Sunday. They were dinner
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Mc-
Creary. The Maguires reported
over 2 inches of rain had fallen
last week.
Mr. Suther of Ardmore, Olka-
homa, visited Mr. and Mrs. Jack
McCreary recently. He was a ne-
phew of the late Jake Graham,
also a kinsman of the late Mrs’.
Maggie Pearce and Mrs. Sally
■ Hillon. He lived here some 5
, years ago with Mr. and Mrs. Gra-
ham. Their old home place is
’ owned now by Mr. and Mrs. Joe
, Taylor.
Miss Irene Tomberlin visited
; with relatives in McKinney Sat-
urday.
Mrs. Laura Reeder visited her
mother Mrs. Joe Gallop of Plano
recently and attended church at
the First Baptist Church.
Rev. and Mrs. Pippins and their
daughters, Rosa Lee and Julia and
J. R. Ellis, Clarence Hobbs, Mr.
and Mrs. J. C. Tomberlin and
daughter, Irene, from the Baptist
church; Rev. Greenwood, Roy
Lewis, Randall Nicholson, Gene
Biggs, Clint Heifner and LeRoy
Petway of Christian Church; Rev.
Bob Blue of Blythe Chapel Meth-
odist Church are on the commit-
tees appointed to take the re-
ligious census of their churches
soon.
Rev. and Mrs. Pippins and fam-
ily of Garland, Randall Nichol-
son of Allen, Clarence Hobbs and
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Tomberlin and
1 Irene all were visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. J. R. Ellis and family Sun-
day evening.
Glenn Hamilton of Murphy, a
young 13 year old boy, brought
the message at the Baptist Church
here Sunday night. Everyone en-
joyed his talk.
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Slows Negroes
ATLANTA—Dr. Martin Luth-
er King Jr., a leader in the move-
ment against segregation, said
Thursday the summer’s demon-
strations had produced some re-
sentment among white North-
erners and brought a temporary
setback to his movement.
“Demonstrations in such cities
as New York and Chicago arous-
ed the ire of many persons in
the North,” said King.
“But the Negro revolution has
revealed to many persons in the
North that they had more deep-
seated prejudices than they real-
ized. •
“And we can never have
meaningful integration until
these prejudices are realized and
discarded.”
When asked if this negative
reaction outside the South por-
tended the throttling of his
eight-year fight against segrega-
tion, he replied:
“This is a kind of temporary
setback necessary to make the
journey ahead. If it had not
come now, it would have come
at some other time. Our only re-
action is to move steadily for-
ward.”
King said these factors were
working in favor of his efforts:
“The growing industrialization
of the South; and a recognition
by young southern white busi-
ness men of the adverse effect
of bigotry on the economy.
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Thompson, Wofford & Thompson, Wofford, Jr. The McKinney Examiner (McKinney, Tex.), Vol. 78, No. 6, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 31, 1963, newspaper, October 31, 1963; McKinney, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1523619/m1/3/?q=wichita+falls: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Collin County Genealogical Society.