Timpson Weekly Times (Timpson, Tex.), Vol. 69, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, December 3, 1954 Page: 3 of 12
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TDfPSON
.Y TIMES—Timpsoa, Tsmu, Dec. S, 1964
'.VWM
Corinth, Not. 30.— Visiting
in the home of Mr and Mrs.
Irria Courtney and Ma Court-
ney during- Thanksgiving holi-
days were: Mr. and Mrs. Syl
Roberts of Cleveland on Wed-
nesday night; Thanksgiving
day, Mr. and Mrs. Helon
Courtney and Sandra of Gar-
rison, Hr. and Mrs. M. C.
Courtney and Candace of
Waskom, Howell Glenn Hud-
son and Troy Webb of Thnp-
aon; afternoon visitors, Mr.
and Mrs. Rcy Courtney, Diene
and Roy Wayne of Marshall.
Mr and Mrs. G. W. Church-
man and family spent Thanks-
giving day with the family of
Mrs. Churchman’s brother, Mr.
and Mrs. Hadley Kelsey of
Overton.
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Wedge-
worth of Dickinson spent the
Thanksgiving holidays with
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ern-
est TVedgeworth.
Mary Catherine Stil’ey spent
Friday night with Sherry and
Merle Churchman.
Mary Ann Churchmen spent
the weekend with Helen
Woodfin of Tennessee commu-
nity.
Raven Wedgeworth, who
has been in Psnola General
Hospital with a broken leg, is
at home.
Mr. and Mrs. Payton Sriliey,
Jimmy and Mary Catherine
spent Thanksgiving day whh
her mother, Mrs. Cora Randall
cf Mt. Enterprise.
Mr. and Mrs. Him Stiilcy
spent Thanksgiving day with
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bogue and
family.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bunch of
Dickinson spent several days
last week with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wedge-
worth.
Miss OHie Marie Wedge-
worth spent several days in
Lufkin with her sister. Miss
Clarahell Wedgeworth. She re-
turned home with her Satur-
day for the weekend.
Sherry and Merle Church-
man spent Saturday night with
Mary Catherine Stilley. Gene-
va Wedgeworth spent Sunday
with her.
Walter Martin of Center
Bpent Friday night and Satur-
day with Lenard Milford.
Mr. and Mrs. Deward Mil-
ford of Port Arthur spent the
weekend with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Henry J. Milford.
Aunt Nannie is some better
at this writing.
Mrs. Marcus . Witherspoon,
who has been a patient in
Highland Sanitarium, Shreve-
port, returned home Monday
Cchron Bush and sons, John-
ny and Tommy, of Leggett
spent the Thanksgiving holi-
days with hi* parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Bush.
Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Bush of
Carthage spent Sunday with
Mr. and Mis. Tom Buah.
Mrs. Tommy Jean Hudson,
who has been a patient in Pa-
nola General Hospital, is at
the home of her parents, Mr.
and Mm C. G. Hancock of the
Bose Hill community. We hope
she is restored tc good health
again soon.
Visitors in the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Edd Bakin during the
Thanksgiving holidays were:
Mr. and Hr*. Joe Bakin and
-'amsly and John -Fredrick of
Pasadena, Doyce Eakin of
Dallas, Mr. and Mrs. Bud Es-
seiy and Edd Wayne were din-
ner guests Thanksgiving. They
accompanied Edd Wayne to
Tyler Thursday afternoon
where he took a plane to El
Paso. He ia stationed with the
U.S. Air Force in that city.
Mr. and Mrs. Edd Eakin left
Sunday for Lufkin to 3pend a
few days with the families of
their daughters, Mr. and Mrs.
Mack Ballard and Mr. and
Mis. Buck Huff. Mr. Huff ia ill
at this time.
Rev. Lenard Milford visited
with Rev. Augustas Downing
and his church at Nacogdoches
Sunday morning.
Visitors in the home of Mrs.
Sallie and Lenard Milford
and Mr. and Mrs. Preston Me-
Graw Sunday were: Mr. and
Mrs. Calvin Hendricks, Miss
Eliie Milford of Timpson, Mr.
and Mrs. Henry Milford of
Lufkin and Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd
Ritter and Patricia of Long-
view.
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Milford
of Mt. Enterprise were guests
of his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Hugh Milford Friday night.
Georgia is the largest state
east of the Mississippi river.
Texas Woman Says
Her Job Lonely
Negiey, Tex.—Mrs. Juanita
Westbrook believes she :.as
the lone.icst joe in the wo.iu.
She’s a roiest lire spotter—
guardian of 58,000 acres ir.
northeastern Texas.
Few persons will brave the
126 steps to .-.er lookout tower.
The climb makes them dizzy.
Most of those who start give
■p about hahway of the top.
Mrs. Westbrook traverses
the steps at least three tunes a
day. Her house is just a few
hundred yards away. Since
February, 1-953, when she took
over the tower, she b&s been
off duty only two months.
She has spent so much time
looking at fires that she can
tell the difference at a glance
between a “legal” and an “il-
legal” fire. A “legal” fire is
one set by a rancher to burn
brush.
An ‘Illegal” fire, she ex-
plained, is one set deliberate-
ly or accidentally. This type
is the destructive one, and is
the kind Mrs. Westbrook must
spot early.
Dree* op the home with new ■
I
Furniture at Sale Price* . . .
jut in time for holiday buying.
... Save money on any item in
the store. Griffin's, Center,
Texas.
1 IN
FLAVOR
-AND AWAY YOU OOt
Ladino Is Top Choice
As Pasture for Poultry
mwWW-.
Ladino is top choice of pastures
tor poultry according to Fergus
and Insko of Kentucky. A good
poultry pasture must have ten-
ttor green young plant!, usually
short so the birds can handle
them without difficulty,
la needed mostly for chickens
daring the growing period. With
proper pasture such chickens will
save from 10 to percent of
the total feed
Ladino Is a Ine succulent for-
age, rich ia fie B vitamins and
also in vitamin A. It contributes
a considerable amount of pro-
tale and aanerals but the mash
fled must also be balanced to
take care of toe total protein and
▼itsxnic requirements ol the
chtekisa Lada* clover on a
i 2fl percent or rrore
»iih
meat practices are followed, this
number may be doubled In order
to be successful with a Ladino
pasture, care must be taken as
with other pastures in order not
to (
An acre cf Lada* will usually
b»L
Though a good stand of Ladino
will take care of the pasture
need3 of poultry adequately,
poultry pasture In general should
contain a grass also. If one spe-
cies should fail the other will pro-
vide enough green feed for the
poultry. Also if the surplus pas-
ture is to be used by sheep or
cattle, the grass in the mixture
will greatly reduce danger of
bloating.
It is necessary to have a good
pasture adjoining the laying
houses eo that the birds may be
turned out on sunny days. Ladino
is one of the best pastures that
be used. A saving of as
as 25 percent of the feed is
>le when there is plenty of
L-adino available. When lay-
are run in Ladino or
any other huh green pasture, the
egg yolks are darker colored
which makes them less desirable
for market.
Ladino clover Is easy to grow
and manage. It is best adapted to
loom and heavier soil but cai.
be grown on Lght soft It decs
bestow mcist well-drained soil of
high fortil ty.
feet off the time required to lift a
plane from a runway.
STASS W* *W*“
Thrill o/ t
y&mr is Buiskr
- WHEN BETTES AUTOMOBILES AU Will KMCX WIU MltlD THEM ,
Lunsford Buick Company, Inc.
CORA STREET
DRIVE A BUICK
ITS TEXAS-BUILT
FOR TEXANS
CENTER, TEXAS
TT happens like this. You need
A pickup—and pronto. So you get
it. You get it by pushing the accel-
erator pedal of a 1955 Buick ail the
way to the floor board.
Then—without jerk or lag or lurch
or pause—you get action! You get
action whether you’re just startling
off - or asking for a safety-surge
of power out oo the highway.
There’s nothing like it in past
experience—because there has
never been anything like it in an
automobile before.
This is action that comes from the
principle of variable pitch propel-
lers used on modern planes. Their
propeller blades change “pitch”
for take-off—and cut hundreds of
And the amazing fact is-in a 1955
Buick Dynaflow Drive ihere are
20 little propeller-like blades that
also change their pitch, just like
the propeller blades of a plane.
This is a transmission engineer’s
dream of heaven. A bnild-up of
momentum as smooth as flowing
oil—and almost as quick as light-
ning- plus better
gas mileage in cruis-
ing range. It’s what
the whole automo-
bile industry has
been shooting for
—and Buick has it
So, that means
there’s only one thing for yon to
do. Try out a 1955 Buick, and sooe.
Try it out for' quick action, as
we’ve mentioned. Try it out for
room and comfort and ride. And
by all means, cast an admiring
eye on its style - for it beats the
high-fashion Buicka which set
the pattern ia the successful
year just ended.
We’re waiting and
eager to bear from
. you soon. So drop in
-or give us a call.
We promise you a
thrill that no other
car can deliver.
Snick Power HHs New Psakst
2M HE In *n fcMMAtn*
23* ME is tSc Sure*
23* H? in Ik. CMW
188 HP in Hi. STSC1AL
—end a!i with bettor fe* mihogo
ia bootl
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Molloy, T. J. Timpson Weekly Times (Timpson, Tex.), Vol. 69, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, December 3, 1954, newspaper, December 3, 1954; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth815155/m1/3/: accessed April 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Timpson Public Library.