Claude News (Claude, Tex.), Vol. 67, No. 21, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 17, 1957 Page: 5 of 16
sixteen pages : ill. ; page 20 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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ObAUDB
CLAUDE, AMUHROltQ OOOHTT, TEXAS, THOBtt, JAN. 17, 1967.
PAOE P1VB
Of Local Interest
• • •
«f V. L. Watts Is taking his vaca-
tion this week.
• l' ■■
«; Mrs. Estelle Armstrong visited
Mrs. V. L. Watts a while Sunday.
«j V. A. Hatfield and family visited
in Amarillo Sunday.
•j Mr. A. L. Scotts is on vacation
for a month. James May is reliev-
ing him at this time.
m
«J Mr. and Mrs. J. O. Watts, of
Washburn, visited Mr. and Mrs. V.
L. Watts Sunday.
«j Mr. and Mrs. James Watts of
Clarendon, visited his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. V. L. Watts and her aunt,
Mrs. McElroy, Sunday.
«J Mrs. V. L. Watts returned home
Saturday from Adair Hospital in
Clarendon where she was a pat-
ient for a week and a half.
Charlene Hess spent the week
end in Amarillo with her sister
and family, lV^f. and Mrs. Ed Sta-
venhagen and Jeannette.
<J Chub Baker is staying at 1517 W.
13th in Amarillo, with his sister,
Bonnie Beth Baker, while he is
receiving medical treatment.
«j Miss Corinne Hess of Amarillo,
was ill last week with a cold and
an ear infection. She came home
Friday to spend the week end with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Hess
and recuperate from the cold. She
returned to Amarillo Sunday even-
ing.
<| Tony Chauveaux of 809 Lamar,
Amarillo, underwent major surgery
in. Northwest Texas Hospital In
Amarillo last Thursday. He Is re-
ported recovering nicely.
«j Mr. and Mrs. V. Cook and Vain,
Mrs. W. H. Hess, Mrs. Ed Staven-
hagen and Jeannette, of Amarillo,
were Sunday visitors in the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Hess and
Charlene.
«! Mr. and Mrs. G. D. Caldwell of
Claude and Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Barrett and children, Bruce and
Nancy, of Hereford, are spending
two weeks in Gardena, Calif., visit-
ing Mr. and Mrs. Keith Vierson
and children, Sherry and Landy,
and Joe Caldwell.
Merritt-Holybee
Vows Exchanged
Miss Given Merritt, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Pat C. Merritt, 1707
S. Pierce, Amarillo, and A/2c Daryl
J.. Holybee, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Oscar Holybee, of Ponia, Colo., were
united in marriage Friday, Jan. 4,
1956. Mrs. Holybee is a sister of
Mrs. Foy Bunn of Claude.
The couple are making their
home in Limestone, Maine.
Thanks To Friends
I am sincerely grateful to won-
derful friends and neighbors for
their visits, flowers, letters and
cards while I was in the hospital
and since coming home. Your hon-
est concern over friends is a won-
derful thing. May God's blessings
always be with the community of
such fine people.
Thank you,
Wm. J. B. Waggoner.
When you buy insurance • • .
• . • buy from an agent • • •
t
. . . who is as close to you as the nearest
phone, ready to help you on any insurance
problem regardless of the hour or day.
y n*
When you need an immediate answer, you don t want
to write letters and wait days for your answer. This
agency prides itself on its readiness to help you at three
o'clock in the morning as well as three in the after-
noon, on every day of the week, in any kind of weather.
ekai. HJ. jfiriEWAlPT
Hflssa Agent EE
Celebrate Birthday
and Anniversary
Visiting in the W. E. Robinson
home, Sunday, Jan. 13, 1957, were
Mr. and Mrs. Earl DeHart and
Kenneth Ray of Hereford, Mr. and
Mrs. Glen Robinson, Fred, Eugene,
Doris and James.
The group gathered to celebrate
Eugene, Kenneth's, Glen's and
Doris' birthdays and the W. E. Ro-
binson's Wedding Anniversary.
Thanks for the news this week.
.jaXJ
BLOW
YOUR OWN HORN
In The Advertising Columns
OF THIS NEWSPAPER
MITCHELL-GOODWIN
IMPLEMENT COMPANY
Anti-Freeze, Per Gallon
75c
Alcohol Base
Good For Tractors
And Trucks
FOR SALE
1 PANHANDLE
FARM
(Top Half Blown to Old Mexico - Minerals Gone
With Top Soil)
All Fields Suitable to Blow.
37 Gullies, 4 feet to 9 feet deep (due to grow larger)
1 Empty House, doors and windows missing, lean-to,
and a path.
1 Leaning barn, to be moved on account of lack of
storage for manure.
50 Bales of Mixed Grasses, mostly tickle grass.
72 Bales of Poorjoe, Rosin Weeds and Goat Weeds.
4 Mineral deficient Cows. They are gentle, used to
being tailed up in the winter. Guaranteed to have
rickets and no calves.
1-4 mile of fence with plenty of bailing wire for repairs
1 Sow and 2 Pigs, would eat anything.
17 Hens, used to roosting in trees.
43 Acres of Over-grazes Grass, been burned recently.
Other articles too worthless to mention.
Reason for Selling: Owner going to work for a CON-
SERVATION FARMER who has taken care of his
soii.
WILL YOUR FARM EVER BE IN THE SAME
CONDITION AS THE ONE DESCRIBED ABOVE?
WOULD YOU LIKE TO DO SOMETHING TO
STOP THIS DESTRUCTIVE WASTE OF OUR
MOST PRECIOUS NATURAL RESOURCE ....
The SOIL?
JOIN HANDS WITH YOUR
STAKED PLAINS SOIL CONSERVATION
DISTRICT
Conservation Does Not Cost ... It Pays?
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Waggoner, William J. B. & Waggoner, Cecil O. Claude News (Claude, Tex.), Vol. 67, No. 21, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 17, 1957, newspaper, January 17, 1957; Claude, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth355552/m1/5/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Richard S. and Leah Morris Memorial Library.