The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 111, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 10, 1949 Page: 4 of 8
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i* KDpndinir from LonKino Hospital, where he
is spinning,^ been # medkt, patient
Mrs, T. Lee Miller and daugh-
ter, Janis, spent Mother's Day in'
Dallas with Mrs. Miller’s parents,
f)r. and Mrs. Simpson.
Mis. Jack Qlessup left Tuesday
for Jocksotiville to attend the
markets.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Hicks
of Cooper spent Sunday here
with his mother, Mrs. S. A. Hicks,
424 Church street.
A. L. Hurley is ill in the home
of his' brother, E, M. Hurley,
North Davis street.
Mr*. Jack Maxwell of .Shreve-
port, La., has returned home af-
ter spending Mother’s Day with
her mother, Mrs. Annie Geer.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Bernard of
Greenville were guests of his sis-
ter, Mrs. Harve ■ Cambron, Sun-
day. '
Mias Gvvynne Anderson was
hostess to her bridge club Mon-
day evening in her home on Gar-
rison Avenue.
Mrs. C. A. Jones of Afton is
visiting in the home of her daugh-
ter, Mrs, S. W .Phillips and fam-
ily.
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Riley have
returned to their home In Dallas
after spending the Mother’s Day
week-end here with her mother,
Mrs. C. L, Murrie.
D. Lester Smith, city, under-
went surgery Tuesday morning in
a hospital in Shreveport, La. Mrs.
Smith is in Shreveport with him.
Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Burns of
Ft. Worth announce the birth of
a son Monday evening, May 9, at
the Sulphur Springs Clinic.
Mr. and Mrs. Finley Beeson of
Route Four announce the birth of
a son Monday afternoon, May 9,
at the Sulphur Springs Clinic.
I. L. Frasier of Dallas is a, med-
ical patient at the Sulphur
Springs Clinic.
G. P. Smith has been removed^
to his home at Sulphur Bluff
from McConnell Hospital, where
he has been a medical patient.
Jerry Coker, son of C, F. Cok-
er, has been removed to their
home at Como route one, from
McConnell Hospital, where he
has been a medical patient.
Mr. and Mrs. Hnrold Marts and
children and Miss LaVern Davis
of Roaring Spring, were week-
end guests of their parents, Mr.
and Mrs. S. W. Phillips and other
relatives over the week-end.
Cary Grant, Diana Lynn and
Franchot Tone, in “Every Girl
Should Be Married". Showing at
the Mission Wednesday and
Thursday.
J, W. Inman and Frank Ar-
genbright were in Greenville
Tuesday to attend a Lone Star
Gas Company meeting.
Cub Pack 59
Holds Meeting
Monday Night
Mr, and Mrs. W. P. Lowery
were guests of her sister, Mrs.
Cub Pack 59 held a regular
meeting Monday night at 7 o’clock
W. P. Lanier anil family here over ! the Austin Ward School. Ken-
the week-end.
Mrs. J. S. Bagwell and Mrs. J.
Frank Lewis were in Mt. Vernon
Tuesday afternoon to attend a
Garden Club tea at the First
Methodist Church there.
Paul Lawson has returned to
Mrs. Marvin Davis of this city, j Dallas -where he is employed after
Mrs. Mabel Pharr of Lubbock,1 spending a week’s vacation here
Mrs. Jewel Brown of Lubbock,; with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. VV.
and Mr. and Mrs. Tye Chapman j C. Lawson,
have returned from a visit with
their brothers, Dr. Willie Chap-
man and John Chapman and fam-
ilies at Los Mochis, Mexico.
neth Brown opened the meeting
by leading the Pack in the Cub
oath, followed by a statement by
the members of' the good deeds
performed during the day.
Cubmaster Jimmie Brown is-
sued Cub cards and advancement
badges were awarded to 20 young-
' stem. Many of the parents
I present to pin the badges on
j sons.
| Cubmaster Brown made a
| speech on how a Cub should con*,
i duct himself, and explained Ihe
steps in further advancement in
»ung-,
Wi'lV
(heir
Mr. and Mrs. John Hayns-
worth, Mr. and Mrs. John Hayns-
worth, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Chuck
Mrs. Patti Clendening of Austin j
spent the week-end here with her lalL' , . . . ,
sisters. Miss Mamie Beale. Mrs. , Two add,t.onal youths joined
J. 0. Roots and Mrs. Shade Gaf- *£??***W*B*
Michael Hodjre and Melvin Hoover.
fJttt Aamei+tad Praia)
in many families.
Ucmemlwr that veal Is lean
meat, so you need to add some
fat. Either put atrip* of bacon
over the top of the toast or grease
it well with shortening. Veal
should always he well-done, of
course, and you need to cook it,
like all other meat, at a low-tem-
perature. If you follow these sug-
gestions, you’ll turn not a juicy
tender veal roast that will have
the family asking for seconds.
With (he roast veal on today's
dinner menu suggestion, have
roast potatoes and buttered as-
paragus. On the; side have a sliced
cucumber salad. Small hot bis-
cuits are an added treat. And for
dessert, we suggest' stewed rhu-
barb, served cold.
Summer suits promise to be
fashion leaders, and they are
shown in a fine variety of cool,
practical and pretty fabrics. Ny-
lon and linen are at the top of. the
list.
One budget-priced cult of crink-
ly nylon taffeta made a big hit
at a recent showing. The suit can
be washed and dried overnight
and needs ho ironing. It’s grand
for the busy career girl especially,
and for the woman who travels.
It’s just the type of suit to take
on a summer vacation, too.
Linen is another popular choice
of smart career girls for town or
country wear. One Jeader in the
new collections is a pure Irish
linen suit, trimly tailored. It!
comes in natural and pastel col-j
all fff these two million brides can
comes to buying wedding gowns
and accessories. That's why many
charming wedding gowns in junior
sixes are designed to accommo-
date slim budgets. The junior
gowns also are likely to require
fewer alterations for the average
junior bride—and wedding gown
alterations run high.
And here’s a reminder to brides
and bridegrooms with modest in-
comes. The current vogue is for
plain wedd'n’g rings of gold, plati-
num of palladium.
Incidentally, there seems to 1*
quite a bit of controversy right
now between the East and West
toasts. Brides in the Eastern
states now favor sets of narrow,
simple engagement and wedding
rings. But the Western brides
prefer wide, ornate hands. One
thing they do agree on; at least,
is that the, double ring ceremony
is most popular. So most Eastern
bridegrooms as well as Western
bridegrooms get wedding rings.
A bride who wants to attend
rooking elasses may do so while
on her honeymoon, if the happens
to l>e at a certain (atskill Moun-
tain resort in New York. For at
White Roe Lake, a resort opera-
tor—Mack Weiner—has started \
the classes. And bridegrooms also)
are welcome to attend the cook-
ing classes. Mr. Weiner hints that
it would be a good idea for most;
of them to do so, if their brides j
fB» A aurcMfi Frtir)
* Ae* 1 J I,. 'i 1..L luornn rt 141
sorry, 111 a »»y, ww* »■— - j-
cation at just tliis time, Hhe -*
Marion Bieber, who works for the
British Information Services in
Berlin. And she’s sorry she won't
be in the German city when the
Berlin blockade is lifted, hhe
....
j
TTSDAY, IVfAV 10, 19491
WommToday
she went to Hollywood and
led new routines. Eventually/
had three schools. But IfolhV
attracted her'mote. And ip 195(1,,
she set out to try to make her
film ambitions come true,
Mary Martin studied voice and
elocution. She got jobs singing do
the'radio and ip night clubs—hut
would like to see the rejoicing.; ttu, jo(,„ v weren't—too frequent,
which she is sure is going on m —
Then one night a Broadway pro-
ducer signed her to a long-term
Thirteen-year-old Diane
Berlin over the development.
Miss Bieber has come to the! contr8l,t, with the idea of putting
United States for a visit with her hpr jn a New Vork show And
brother, a chemist in San Francis- Mary m out f<)J. V(,w Wk p,4nH
co. But she is also taking some oi; fw (hat sh()<v nev<J. <)kJ
her time to talk on phases of (,cp through. But Mary Martin ended
many's recovery. She s deltghte<ifiup Jn th|i pro<]Uctic»iir It To
! at the constructive effect on the Me" and became a hit. with her
I Marshall Plan on Germany. rendition of "My Heart Belongs
Bieber was born
Daddy."
above, admitted drowning play-j lin. But as a small child, she went ; g^o was in Hollywood films lat-
mate Charles Johnson, 7, in a
drainage ditch near Joliet, III,
because of an uncontrollable urge
to kill. State's attorney John I.
L’aarce asked for delay of a rec-
ommended grand jury hearing to
subject the girl to psychiatric ex-
amination. (NKA Telephoto).
to England. She was educated in •
London at one of Britain’s few
coeducational schools. She, spent
cr but, as was said before, her
film career was no fabu|ou*uie
C L......... . ■
five years in the Women’s Royal j stage.
cess story. She returned ttr
BROADWAY
By MARK BARRON
Associated Press Writer
(By A WM-.siMt J*r«ssl
New York- Ralph Bellamy had
ors, at pin-money prices.
Shantung suite-in dark colors j £ ££ hu'l
cook the way his wife did when
he married her. He says, "She bis luggage half-packed, had cios-
was a dream girL but she seived e<t bis affairs in the East and
meals that would have made an j prepared to quit Broadway
army m^ss a culinary delight by abd go back to Hollywood for
comparison. At first we joked good when a messenger boy knock-
about her cooking, but after on his door! He handed him the
awhile it was no joke." Mr. Wei-j *«rif*t for Sidney Kingsley's hit
bap-! melodrama, "Detective Story.
Naval services and was commis-
sioned. And she Has Wen in Ger-
many since September, 1945 —
i with the Navy and later the Mili-
tary Government. Mis* Bieber i*
i senior control officer for publici-
ty planning at that British infer*
| mation services.
She feels that Rerltners have
| made it clear that they prefer
. material hardships and real Demo-
cracy to any comfort the Russians
i promise them, She says that when
the airlift began. They could bare-
: ly comprehend that, the people
who bombed their cities were go-
Righ now, she’s the gal who1
washes her hair night-after night
and otherwise makes a hit in the
production "South Pacific.” She
i* not accepting any movie offer*
at the moment. She’* sticking to
Broadway.
Building Permits
Show IncreA
*
l
/By AuorflnI P-..I
, , ,. ..... New York. May Ib.-erBu
■ re to keep them alive denote the rontra(ts ,wiir(1*d ,,st wo
blockade. At first, she says, rhil*
dren who heard the roaring planes
or pastels continue to be favor- i t.n(ling ^cause he'taught Mr's. I Bellamy immediately unpacked
ites. No wonder, when they te so j Weiner how to cook and soon eat-i changed his mind and happily de
smart and so easy to launder. j inj[ al j,om9 became a pleasure. ; tided to stay on BioadWay.
There have been times when it I This summer, the cooking class- Th« tali, blonde, broad-should
seemed almost an impossibility! w newly-weds will be held in •«*! »<•*«* recalled tha?
for an amateur seamstress to make *he Weiners model kitchen. They
smart-looking slipcovers. But that ] will even have some professional
isn’t the rase today-thanks to <'hefs there from lime to time, as
many new, fabrics. One new ma (foest lecturers,
terial is designed with non-diree- Mr. Weiner says that
hi* first
play on Broadway "Town Boy,"
lasted only two performances.
But it brought him movie offers
j which kept him in Hollywood for
he hold* j twelve years to play in more than
! 80 films.
tional, flowing patterns so it can*t*r*nly to the old theory that the
be cut up and down or across, w*y to a man’s heart is through l1 ran Warren, the thumb who
and still look right. You’ll find * h** stomach. So he advises the! "** sung in front of Charlie Bar-
starring
Don levy
“The Lucky Stiff’
McDonald and daughter, MissMu" | Dof UTmour- Bkrie" ; 'I
dred McDonald and James Cross “nd C 81re I‘eT "bowing at the
were in Dallas Sunday afternoon Tuesd*y and "edlies-
to attend the Sport Show at Fair
Park.
Mrs. Geneva Cox and little son,
Anthony, have returned from
Floydada and Roaring Spring
j where they have been visiting
Shrine Minsirel
Al High School
Gym Tonight
The hide-and-seek, tongue-in
eheek tale of a marriage-shy baby
doctor . . . and a misbehavin’,! their sisters and aunts, Mrs. Buck
man-huntin’ Babe! See “Every i Wright and Mrs. Ruby Marts,
Girl Should Be Married", starring _-
Cary Grant, Diana Lynn and Mrs. W. L. West, who has been
Franchot Tone. Showing at the visiting in the home of her sister,
Mission Wednesday and Thurs- Mrs. W. P. Lanier, has returned)
day. > to her home in Cleveland, to be
(with her mother, Mrs. J. B. Banks,
Mrs. W. H. Ward of Cumby. who is seriously ill.
mother of Cecil D. Ward of this!--j—
place, suffered a broken hip in Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Geer of
fall at her home Tuesday. She BaU’'1 Rou*1’- La - h«ve returned
was brought to Longino Hospital
here for treatment and later car-
ried to a hospital in Dallas. Mr.
and Mr*. Ward accompanied her
to Dallgs.
The Moslah Temple Shrine
Chanters will make their only
1949 appearance in Northeast
Texas when they stage their fa-
mous Silver Jubilee Minstrel here
tonight. The show will begin at
8:30 in the Sulphur Springs High
School Gymnasium.
The Chanters are appearing
under the auspices of the Sulphur
Springs Shrine Club.
The time of the Minstrel has
been moved back to 8:30 to avoid
a conflict with the Methodist re-
honie after spending the week-end
and Mother’s Day with their par- J vival now in progress,
enta, Mr*. Annie Geer, and Mr.
and Mrs. Ben Brooks.
• See thrills no camera has cap-
tured until now! See: For the
first time the cannibal fish—the
terible piranha -infesting every j BaV'^ek^nd ‘'^lth h/r 'am,'
spot of jungle water — able to
tear a man’s flesh from his bones
in seconds! See "Urubu”, fear-
lessly filmed by George Break-
aton and Yorke Coplen, Showing
at the Broadway Wednesday and
Thursday.
Mrs, Glenn L. Whittington of
Mesquite spent Tuesday here with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Burt
C. Waits. Her daughter, Marilyn
Mulling, who spent the Mother’s
Mr.
Whittington, returned to her
home here.
B&PW Club
Dinner Meeting
that the small scale patterns are
easier to work with than the large
patterns.
For the average divan or chair,
a 3-inch material cuts to good ad-
vantage(.
bride* to learn to be good cook*, net's and Claude Thornhill's bands,
But to avoid indigestion, he urges has
a low, throaty voice But
the bridegrooms to take cooking I ®ne* hi a while when she gets a
lesson*, too. j song that need* some good, loud
singing she can come through with
cried in their sleep. But soon they
began to think of the roar a*
a godsend.
Mis* Bieber find* In Berliners
some of the humor and philosophy
which she has found in the Eng-
lish cockney. She say* the women
who elear away the rubble in
Berlin seem the most cheerful of
all human* in Germans’. They’d
make* joke* about tb>* weight of
the st/me* they lift—*a>nng the
heavier the atone they lift, the
heavier the meat ration they get
as a reward.
According to Mils Bieber, even
the British—with the privation*
they have suffered......cannot ima-
gine the privations endured by
confine red Germany. Eor instance,
she ha'
orgutiixatinn of the building (n-
dustry, the F. W. Dodge Corpor-
ation. reported a 13 per cent gain
in April over March, However,
the total (of *842.58«,t)0O>, was
four per cent lea* than in April
of 1948.
Plows Up Money
Lost in 1945 ^
IK, A tail laird Prut)
A farmer in Washington. Indi-
ana, plowed up some money to-
day that h« inert in 1IM& Hi* plow
turned up a wallet containing
fl.400 in currency, some war-
known German women to time gasoline ration stamp* and
Now for some helpful hints to
the homemaker:
Don't waste soap when it’s so
easy to use up old
them into chips on a
Save yourself some extra work notes that make the roof quiver,
when hanging curtains in yodr J Whan asked where she had
home. 1 trained herself for such good,
. You can get the tie hacks even Moud warbling, she said: "Why, I
if you have to pull the window started by singing with the high
scraps. Grate ; shade down to the proper place, j school band when I was going to
househid j Then, you won't need to keep ; the James Monroe High School in
get up in the middle of the night hi* draft registration card. The
to do a week’* pressing -in order farmer, Ri bvn Eagle, »«nl the
to make use of the two hours of mouldy curvancy t« the Treasury
are even.
grater. Or put them in water in
a jar, and the result will be a
bottle of liquid soap that will j that the shade iteelf is straight
come in handy for a number of; —..........................
purpose*. Keep perfumed toilet! mam
soap scraps in one container and j
use for shampooing or washing)
lingerie. Then keep the kitchen!
soap scraps in another container
and use for dishes, cleaning and
*o on.
You’d probably tje downright
amazed if you counted the actual
number of steps you take cleaning
house. And a check-up
measuring to see if the tieback* > New York City, And when you
Make sure, however,! have to be heard above a high
school band, you have to be loud-
er than the loudest." '
Health
Department
j Lucy Ralston, the Brooklyn
girl, finally made her debut at
the La Seal* Opera House in Mi-
i lan, Italy, but it wa* a ruugh road, j
i Being a student opera singet and
! also an American, her only t
! chance at the famed La Scaia >
to wait in the wing-, in case'
electricity available out of 24.
And despite the soap shortage,
Berlin women wear whit* cottons
in summer, and keep their chil-
dren in white sorit*. * •*'*<*’*
Mi*a Bieber goes out among
German people and talk* with
them a* often a* ponaibie, in order
to gain their confidence. She
speak* colloquial German She
say* the German* may or may n«t
have a sen** of guilt, but it doe*
no good to try to get result* from-
them by reminding them of R.
Department for redemption,
George Br*ak*t«n and York*
"t rubu”, with all native
cast Showing at the Broadway
Wednesday and Thursday,
wax
Austin, Texas. —The- summer
would j *«a*on always brings an mnea-c
show that many of those steps are [in the incidence of dysentery,
unnecessary. You can cut down diarrhea and enteritis, all of which
one of the legulat Italian start
failed to appear.
Several weeks ago
New York friends that she was
to go on' U-i-ause a mar had sud-
Dancer and singer Mary Martin
is a hit not only with the public,
She’* a hit backstage, too, People
bitkstage say she i* without van-
c* * j ity and temperament—a hard
worker end pleasant and helpful
on the amount of extra walking i are major menaces to the live* ot | d*",f li: But> *>w mmu.
you do just by using a basket to j small children, annually causing!tM curUm ‘‘me the star
in the bargain.
Mary Martin hasn’t always had
*V u small CnUQTfn, Hisnuauv rvthJill** me* tv** U.ianpy
carry around .mail equipment likehe death, of hundreds of Ttww>d iccove.ed enough to giv, hef j OverytWng juM *o. For •nsUncv.
Mr, and Mrs. Truman Hufford
and Gene who have been guests
of Miss Addle Maye Glover and
Mrs. Malverne Glover for several
days, spent the Week-end at the
The Safety Ceb Company now Glover cottage at Lake Dainger-
Kai 24-hoar service. Efficient cab field, guests of Mrs. A. G. Glo-
d8-3»c ver and Mrs. E. T. McCauley of
sorvice. Phone 933.
The regular dinner meeting of
The Business and Professional
Women’s Club will be held this
evening in First Christian church
dining rooms on North Davis
street, at 7:15 o’clock.
Mr*. A. D. Koger will be pre-
sented in vocal selections and Mrs.
Featherstone will present the high
school play “Blue Beads” which
was recently presented at the In-
terscholastie League meet at Aus-
tin.—Reported.
HappyBirthday
Longview.
(Nam* toe daw* from Annus! Birthday
Calendar publish'd bp Bt Philip's Episeo-
, tel Church. Sulphur Springsl.
The Daily News-Telegram ex-
tends greetings
congratula- j Orange,
Mr. and Mrs, Lewis Geer of
Baton Rouge. La., spent the week-
end with Mrs. Bert Brooks in
honor of Mother’s Day. Also with
her were Mr. and Mr*. Roger
Brooks and daughter, Marlena of
Mr. and Mrs. Levi Martin and
Mr*. Harve Cambron will be in
Commerce this evening to attend
the East Texas State Teachers’
College Band Festival.
Kona to the following who ob-
Mrved a birthday today:
Tuesday, May 10, 1949—Mrs.
Leon McClendon, George Adkis-
eon, III.
Nell Brook*
Dallas, Mr. and Mrs. Murrell
Sewell and sons, Sherrell and
David, Mr. and Mrs. Perry Brooks
and daughter, Perry Sue all of
Sulphur Springs.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sesrls
have returned to their home in
Odessa, after spending several
day* here with their mothers, Mrs.
L. E. Gee and Mrs. R. L. Searls.
Mrs. Eric Bagwell and Mrs. W.
P. Barker have returned from
Sanger, where they visited in the
home of their brother, C. L.
Deakins and nephew, Rev. Clar-
ence Deakins, over the week-end.
Their mother, Mrs. F. M. Deakins,
accompanied them home after
several days visit there.
T. Albert Coleman was admit-
ted to Medical Arts Hospital in
Dallas Tuesday, where he will un-
dergo medical observation for
several days. Mr*. Coleman and
her sister, Mrs. Claude Scruggs
of Saltillo, accompanied him tq
Dallas.
Tke Safety Cab Company now
baa 24-hour service. Efficient cab
eorvice. Pbeae 933. d*-3tc
The Safety Cab Company now
hat 24-hour sorvice. Efficient cab
Phene 933. dg-3te
dusteloths, furniture polish, soap j youngsters.
and cleaning powders. We don’t j The State Health Officer, Dr.
mean you should carry a full has- Geo. W. Cox, declares that the
ket all around the house. But it chief causes of these intestinal
is a wise idea to decide what clean-) disease* are contaminated milk,
Kel-
ing materials you’ll need when
you clean a room, and then take
along the required items. You can
save half a dozen trips to the sup
ply closet If you'll fill the small
basket with the bottles, cloths,
sponges and other things you’ll
need on that job.
Many homemakers make it a
point to use fresh cloths to wash
woodwork and clean cloths foi
dusting. Yet they get careless
when it comes to using mops and
cleaning cloths. Most of these
could stand a good scrubbing
themselves. Quite often, special
directions for laundering come
with treated mops. If so, be sure
to follow the manufacturer’s sug-
gestions.
Guard precious eyesight by hav-
ing adequate light everywhere in
your home. Each place where
reading, sewing or any other
close-seeing job it don# should be
illuminated by a good lamp with
the proper size bulb. For instance,
you’ll need plenty of light by an
armchair, by the piano and by
the sewing machine.
water or food; allowing the child
performance so young Mi*
ston was sidetracked again.
A few nigSt* ago she got an-
other chance, *ang the lead in a
Verdi opeia and scored a heart
warming triumph, Agd Mi-- Ral-
ston is the gill whose Brooklyn
the nation’s bridal shops, this i>
a big year for weddings. In fact,
some two million weddings are
expected to take place before the
end of 1949.
As the experts point out, not
to get overheated oi exhau.-ted;: “
infant’* ! neighbor* used to phone for the
excessive sugar in the infant’* , . ,,,
formula, and food* that hate been : " * “'h*nk.‘hte wou!d b**1n Po-
licing her high notes.
Joe Mielziner sailed for Europe
improperly refrigerated.
"AH foods should he clean and
fresh,' and all left-overs should
with a banner bon voyage. He
be refrigerated
spoilage.
so as to avoid;
designed the sets for "Death of
a Salesman" and "South Pacifit,"
The utmost care should!" ---------- — - ..........*•
be used in preparing the infant’. ! Mh t,f whl‘h *’»" /v*r«!
formula which should, of course,
be prescribed by a physician, and
hi* recommendations a* to sani-
tary precautions and correct re-
frigeration should be implicit!)'
followed."
The State Health Officer warn-
ed parents especially of the dan-
prizes as the best
Broadway season
■how* of the
Revival Meeting
Ai Seymore
there were her rrtrk* at a Holly-
wood caraer The film capital
didn't fall on its knee* before her
a* a film actress But it wa* an-
other matter when Mary Martin
player! in the road version of
"Annie Get Your Gun.” Perfor-
mance* were sellouts And big!
names in Hollywood scrambled to!
see the show.
Mary Martin is a Texan, five-
feet-four with light brown hair
and eyes. She wa* born in Weath-1
erford, a town DO miles from Ft.
Worth. Her father, a city judge,
helped her out financially when
she set out to crack Hollywood
When Mary got through school.:
her main interest was singing and
dancing. Later, the opened a
dancing school. In the summers.
INTERNATIONA!
HARVESTER
ARE HERE!
ger of disease transmission by j A reviv,i begin Sunday eve-
fl.es. Children in any home that, ninfr ln th(. Seymore community j
is not free from flies, are in dan- j >nd wi„ rfmtInu# through thisj
ger of conurct.ng dysentery or: k Sorxktli ^ M(J ■„)
othei intestinal diseases which |he Srvmorf, w.hoo| buitdin)f e#fh
may be fatal. )evening at 8:00 p. m. Rev. W..
“If dysentery or diarrhea sym- T wjntm t.0„liuHlng the re-
Ptom* appear in your chiW, caMj , , *
your doctor immediately," fir. ‘.o'. 1
advise*. “His treatment of <<*>”»•-R*^-
Cox advise*. “His
the disease is your best insurance |
against fatal results, since such
- {diseases are really a very serious
Acording to a group of con-1 threat to a child’s life. Don’t dft-i
sultants who keep in touch with) pend on home remedies for diarr-
hea or dysentery; consult a com- j
petent physician and let him in- j
DON’T WAIT!
COME IN TODAY!
Throw Away Your
Lawn Mower!
rtsnt CnUnP Un OrtM iM
l*fl * HtUMal, SmbWiI Uwa.
m niw oasss raosi cams
NXtpa NO MOwnm oa sain t-
CISC WSVEatMO. Or*.. 1.
»*tt—»•« M »h*4«. Da*. b.I «K la
.later, frtnat. ***4 «r.*ta, >t.H
»*• mt* Us l>.nM>i!a|
*mt. *»b4 at aw am Kina lu
parllcalar. aa *•*"» SMI nil w
iw wa *l*al at mm.
TERMITE
and
PEST CONTROL
Free Inspection*
R. L. Smith* Mgr.
OLIVER GOLDSMITH
COMPANY
Serving Texas Since 1930
Phone <311. Collect
1916 East Houston
Tyler, Texes
stitute the safest and best ttest-:
ment which medical science has |
available, for combating these!
wasting diseases."
BiMTnmt
do VOHMS?
AVOID ACCIDENTS!
FREE
NOTICE
Facilities of the S.S. Coun-
try Club are restricted to
use by members of club.
Any other persona usin
the same will be treate
as trespassers.
Wonderful feature* help add
the tyke tad variety to menu*
tb*« mesl planner* prey lot!
For example: lux imaeise the
convenwnce of wfriy nation up
to Jl pound* of froata food in
the freezer lockrr-the roomy
!H "Stowaway-—right in your
gr«t new t-cubir A,, i 40^*.
ereror!
ory^* *
*0.1"
with iff.T.
in your k'*ch,n
R. W. CURRIN, Inc.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Echo Publishing
Company
CHEVROLET CO.
Gilmer St. Ph. 228
Your International*
r Dealer
Harvester
Main St.
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Bagwell, Eric. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 111, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 10, 1949, newspaper, May 10, 1949; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth814913/m1/4/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.