The Canadian Record (Canadian, Tex.), Vol. 66, No. 9, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 3, 1955 Page: 3 of 10
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IPS
Hemphill County, Texu
• Fot Sede
For Sale: About 25 tons good
prairie hay. Call Earl Black-
more. 9-tfc
ELECTRIC COKE Box. Vending
type with coin changer. Cost
$275. Let's dicker on this one.
Six-O Grill. 6-tfc
Low Cost *
STORAGE FILE
DRAWERS
FOR CHECKS AND
BANK STATEMENTS
Heavy corrugated board
file drawers with steel
frames and fittings.
$3.15
Per Drawer
—Other Sizes Available—
THE CANADIAN
RECORD
Office Supplies
GAS FOR LESS. Fraser Grain
Company. 15-tfe
• CtOSSlfUd AdTMttMBMBtl Oil
trading or buying small item* or serrlCM. Yf
by paying cash with your ad. Ratoi 3c par word tint Insertion.
2c por word each additional insertion. Minimum charge for
ten words. 20c fee on first insertion of charged classified
war of
rfu save
r<j first ii
"Brother Benedict worries me.... He's a dock watcher!"
• Special Services
ALLISON NEWS:
Leon Boydston
Birthday Guest
Thursday Night
By MRS. LESTER LEVITT
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Dukes of
Fort Supply, Oklahoma visited
in Allison Monday, and his
mother, Mrs. M. T. Richerson,
returned with them for a week's
visit.
John and Charley Trayler, W.
S. Farmer and Sid Rosser were
dinner guests Sunday in the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Will Frye.
A. L. Townsley and family of
Crawford, Oklahoma were Sun-
day guests in the Bruce Harrison
home.
Zeland Rainey and family of
Sunray, Kenneth Hamon and
family of Pampa, Floyd Rainey
and family of Reydon, Oklaho-
ma, Coley Parker and family of
Briscoe and Bob Markham and
family were dinner guests in the
home of Mr. and Mrs. George
Parker Sunday.
Les Pruitt and family of Ama-
rillo and Bus Dormán and fam-
ily of Wheeler visited in the
Glen Elmore home Sunday.
Jack Evans and family of Le-
fors, Forace Evans and family,
Mr. and Mrs. George Bradstreet
and Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Evans
visited in the A. B. Evans home
Sunday.
Timmy Jones, young son of
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Jones,
and Mrs. Agnes Hall were pa-
tients in the General Hospital in
Shamrock over the week-end.
Mr. and Mrs. Archie Dillon and
Kelley Miller motored to Weil'
ington Sunday and visited rela-
tives-. They also enjoyed the
"Quizdown" program from Ama.
rillo in which their grandson,
Michael Dillon, participated and
answered his three questions
correctly. Wellington Won the
contest.
Leon Boydston and family, D.
C. Chandler and famliy and Ken-
neth Chandler and family at-
tended a birthday supper for
Leon at the Frank Chandler
home Thursday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Taylor and
daughter, Beverly, and a girl
friend from Stephenville spent
&6te/u6too{¿
JET GLASS
, FOUNTAIN DESK PEN SET
: New beauty, new con-
k venience for your desk.
L Luxurious jet glass base
\and an Esterbrook
L Fountain Pen with
^your favorite^
i point.
Washing and ironing. Pick-up
and delivery. Phone 588-J. Mrs.
Bert Wood. 8-2p
Kirby Vacuum Cleaner Sales and
Service. For free showing in
your home call 24, J. B. Wallis,
Authorized Dealer. 8-4p
WE BUY JUNK iron, batteries,
and metal. Quality Body Shop.
49-tfc
FURNITURE RE-FINISHING or
repair. See or call Oley Wil-
son. Phone 361-J. 41-tfc
Sand & Gravel. Driveway gravel
and local hauling. K. L. Mar-
tin, Phone 778. 8-tic
• For Bent
PRACTICALLY NEW 2-Bedroom
House, Garage, floor furnace.
Close to school. Inquire at Cat's
Paw. 8-2c
APARTMENT for rent. Mrs. Tom
Hext, Phone 340-J. 7-tfc
TWO BEDROOM Modern house.
Garage. 900 Hobart. Inquire
next door, or write J. C. Adams,
Box 843, Panhandle. 6-4p
For Rent: 3 rooms and bath.
Furnished. Call 267-W. 2-tfc
with round
ovil, ar
iquirt
if*
Only $5.501
Mill solidjl
butKTOIIM
tíc¡
¿Km40 *• rfchpato
idian Record
-J
the week-end in the Clifton Tay-
lor home.
Mr. and Mrs. Jess Bessire of
Canadian and Mrs. Mildred
Hamilton and children of Wheel-
er visited in the Carl Levitt home
Sunday.
Kay Jones and Bill Donaldson
spent the week-end at Lubbock
with Mr. and Mrs. Troy Dean
Jones.
Mrs. Stella Megee visited John
Megee and family Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Zack Miller vis-
ited in the Rex Miller home
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Dupont
are the proud parents of a baby
boy, Jerry Allen, born Friday at
the General Hospital in Sham-
rock. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Black
are the grandparents.
J. T. Wise and family visited
his mother, Mrs. G. A. Wise, Sat-
urday.
Oral and Jim Helton were call-
ed to Amarillo last week because
of the serious illness of their
mother, Mrs. Chan Helton.
Mrs. J. E. Johns Is in Mobeetie
at the bedside of her daughter,
Mr?. Frank Risner, who is ser-
iously ill.
Mrs. Emily Richardson, Mrs.
Myra Finch and Tommy Levitt
are patients in the Wheeler hos-
pital. Mrs. Ellen Lee Huff is
substituting at the school for
Mrs. Finch.
Rev. Leroy Patterson and fam-
ily were dinner guests in the K.
Morse home Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Levitt
spent the week-end in Borger
with the Roy Langfords.
Mrs. Lee Kiker is in Shamrock
to care for Wes Hill who is a
patient in the General Hospital
after suffering a heart attack.
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Peterman
were Sunday guests in the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Brown and
Mary Ann.
Rev. and Mrs. Cupit and Har-
vey Morse of Dumas visited in
the Roy Morse home Sunday.
Leroy Price and family of Gla-
zier visited in the Nick Weibe
home recently.
Mrs. Tom Muse of Gageby was
in Allison last week on business.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Curlee
and Peggy Curlee were in Pampa
and Canadian over the week-end
on business and visiting rela-
tives.
Willie Boydston and family
and Ira Fish and family visited
in the C. D. Brown home Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. O. F. Jones re-
turned Tuesday after several
months stay with relatives In
Arizona.
Lee Kiker and son, Richard,
are attending the Fat Stock show
in Amarillo this week.
Furnished Apartment for rent:
Large living room with roll-a-
way bed, bed room, kitchen with
dinette, full bath, spacious clos-
ets. All bills paid except lights.
Tipps Apartments. 46-tfc
Two apartments for rent. Mrs.
John Q. Davidson, Phone 273-J.
45-tfc
For rent: 1 bedroom furnished
apartment Inquire next door
at L. B. Cook's. 1323 S. Main.
41-tfc
C C. B. S. IS COMINO SOON!
We finance complete new
kitchens, cabinets, walls, floors,
ceilings, stoves, disposals, dish
washers, stove hoods. No down
payment — 37 months to pay.
Lumber Co. 2-tfc
• Legal Notice
NOTICE TO CREDITORS OF
THE ESTATE OF
LAURA A. DETRIXHE
NO. 786
Notice to Creditors of the Estate
of Laura A. Detrixhe, Deceased
Notice is hereby given that
original letters of executors upon
the estate of Laura A. Detrixhe,
deceased, were granted to me,
the. undersigned, on the 7th day
of February,-1955, by the county
court of Hemphill County. All
persons having claims against
said estate are hereby required
to present the same to me within
the time prescribed by law. My
residence and post office address
are Higgins, county of Lipscomb,
state of Texas.
GEO. DETRIXHE
Executor of Estate of
Laura A. Detrixhe,
Deceased. 6-4c
• Card of Thanhs
To all our friends who have
helped us so much, for the food,
floral offerings and other ex-
pressions of sympathy extended
to us at the time of our bereave-
ment, we thank each and every
one of you.
Mrs. John Eller, Mrs. J. F.
McDonald, Marion F. Eller,
Mrs. Zullah Eller and our
families.
• Help Wanted
WANTED: Man or woman in
Hemphill and adjoining coun-
ties for rural sales work. Liberal
earnings, car allowance and bo-
nus. For interview write Louis
Allen, Box 8, Pampa, Texas.
8-3p
• Special Events
PRE-OLYMPIC WORKOUT—A workaday application of muscle
skill is displayed at Melbourne, Australia, where workmen de-
molish portion of a stadium grandstand at Melbourne Cricket
Ground in preparation for the 1956 Olympic Games. New grand-
stand will seat 43,000 and total spectator capacity of the grounds
will be 104,000.
<r :': .
i lili' ! !!
35 ;^T-rrr^
State CAPITOL
RUMMAGE SALE
Sponsored by
E. S. A. Sorority
In Rich Studio
Building
Saturday, March 5
8:30 a. m. - 6:30 p. m.
9-lc
If You Have a
Maid . . . You'll
Want This Book
Social security information, as
it applies to many more house-
hold employers since January 1,
is given in the new booklet, "Do
You Have a Maid?" just issued
under the joint sponsorship of
the Internal Revenue Service and
the Social Security Administra-
tion. It describes the first step to
be taken by every employer of
domestic help who pays an em-
ployee $50 or more cash wages
in a calendar quarter of the
year for work in a private house,
hold.
Copies of the booklet may be
obtained by contacting the near-
est Social Security Office or In-
ternal Revenue Office, it was
announced todav by John R.
Sanderson, District Manager of
the Social Security Administra-
tion.
Because of the broadened cov-
erage of domestic workers, many
more household employers are
now required to report the cash
wages paid their employees. It
is no longer necessary that a do-
mestic employee work on 24 or
more days in a calendar quarter
for a single household employer
in order to get social security
credit for the cash wages paid.
The new booklet, officially
designated as OASI-21, contains
a cut-out post card which the
household employer should use
to obtain the form on which the
cash wages of domestic workers
are reported to the District Di-
rector of Internal Revenue.
PanTech Ending
5th Year of Gain
Tests for Cattle
At PanTech Farms, Route 2,
Panhandle, Texas, the test of
ability to gain in beef cattle is
nearing the last lap of the fifth
consecutive year of such tests.
In these tests purebred bull
calves, owned by beef cattle
breeders of Northwest Texas, are
self-fed a growing ration for 140
days to determine the Inherent
ability to gain rapidly. These
breeders, In co-operation with
Texas Technological College,
Texas Agricultural Experiment
Station and the U. S. D. A. make
the test possible.
Large differences in gain be-
tween individual bulls as well
as between sire groups has been
found. On the gain ability test
at PanTech this year are 105
bulls representing 19 different
herds throughout Northwest
Texas. The bulls were officially
placed on test November 15, 1954
and to date the entire group has
averaged 2.G2 pounds per day
gain. The top ten sire group av-
eraged 2.91.
After the 140 day feeding per-
iod a Field Day and auction will
be held. The sale order will be
determined on ability to gain
coupled with conformation
grade.
This Field Day and sale will
be held at PanTech Farms, on
April 14, 1955.
Hobart McMordie, stationed in
San Diego on the USS Oak Hill,
arrived in Amarillo Wednesday
morning and was met by Mr.
and Mrs. Frank McMordie.
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Fatheree
and daughter, Susan, of Pampa,
are visiting in the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Chambers, Mrs.
Fatheree's parents.
The word veto means "I for-
bid."
By VERN SANFORD
Texas Press Association
AUSTIN—Insurance bills have
lagged. Water conservation mea-
sures are embroiled in dispute.
And virtually no start has been
made on a taxing program in
the legislature.
As a result, lawmakers are
eyeing a possible special session.
Theoretical date for such a
session is May 11. On that date
the legislators' pay for the reg-
ular session stops.
It has been suggested that
Governor Shivers may have fore-
seen a bog-down in the regular
session, and therefore has not
pushed his administration pro-
gram. During a special session,
he would have full control of
subject matter which may be
introduced.
Tax Bill
Rep. Jerry Sadler of Percilla
introduced the biggest tax bill
of all.
Promising a lot of controversy,
the bill would levy a one-cent
per gallon processing tax on all
gasoline and distillates produced
in Texas. It would: Raise an es-
timated $160,000,000 a year, re-
peal the present four-cent gas
sales tax, and head off the ad-
ministration's two-cent gasoline
tax increase.
Sadler said its effect would be
to reduce the price of gasoline
to Texans three cents a gallon.
Sixty per cent of the gasoline is
exported, tax-free, he said.
Meantime. Rep. Charles Mur-
phy explained he hadn't yet ask-
ed for committee hearing on the
administration's two - cent gas
tax bill, wanting sentiment to
jell.
Some Fared Better
Passed by the House were bills
outlawing sale of and de-
praved comic books; permitting
women to serve on juries; and
regulating leasing for uranium
and hard metals.
Amendments to the women's
jliry service bill narrowed con-
siderably, the list of those who
may be called to serve.
Furiously debated, the uran-
ium bill was attacked as a "g.ive
away." Rep. Walling of Wichita
Falls added two amendments.
One will limit each lease to 80
acres to prevent one minor de-
velopment from freezing explor-
ation on large tracts. Another
PAGETO*
David Rathjen b
New PKA Member
LUBBOCK, March 1—Pi Kappe
Alpha, men's national social fra-
ternity at Texas Tech, initiated
four new members and two
alumni in ceremonies this week.
New members include Richard
Adams, Pampa; David Rathjen,
Canadian; Ben Reed, Woodson;
and Harold Womble, Odessa.
Alumni initiated were BillBeh.
rends, Dimmitt; and H. A. Tuck
jr., Dumas.
Mrs. Walter Burnett, Mrs. John
Q. Davidson and Mrs. George
Carver were in Dallas last week
where Mrs. Burnett received
medical treatment.
Mrs. Rebecca Wise of Amarillo
visited in the Abe Haddox home
last week-end.
limits the primary term of leases
to five years.
Interest was heightened by re-
ports of a real uranium ore strike
in Karnes County.
Rep. Maury Maverick's bill to
prohibit cross filing of candi
dates by two political parties
won a favorable report to the
House.
Also favorably reported was
Rep. Tom Joseph's bill to bring
trust companies under supervis-
ion of the State Banking Depart
ment.
Not Faring So Well
Stymied in a House committee
was a bill to increase the filing
fee of candidates for the Legis-
lature to $300.
Killed by a Senate committee
was Sen. Crawford C. Martin's
omnibus water conservation bill.
It embraced nine subjects car-
ried in the series of administra-
tion bills offered by Chairman D.
B. Hardeman of the water re-
sources committee.
Martin warned that unless the
Senate reconsidered and kept his
bill alive, all others would be
subject to being knocked out on
a constitutional point of order.
Grand Juries Take Over
Meanwhile, three Grand Juries
have stepped in on the veterans'
land investigations.
Bexar County's grand jury was
quickest on the draw, with two
felony indictments. Then the De-
Witt County grand jury at Cuero
fired a double-barrel broadside
of 195 indictments against six
persons. DeWitt County Attorney
Wiley Cheatham started the
whole land inquiry.
Travis County grand jury, with
venue in every veterans' land
transaction, had piles of ammu-
nition and District Attorney Les
Procter h.-ul hi* thumb on the
hammer.
Grand Juries in 10 other coun-
ties have had some contact with
the question.
Work by the Senate investi-
gating committee had dribbled
down to a schedule of sessions
only every other Thursday.
In intensive hearings each
week-end. the House committee
approached the question of ad-
ministration and operations in
the Land Office and Veterans
Land Board.
Attorney General Shepperd pre-
dicted there will be "hundreds
of indictments," and indicated
more civil suits were in prospect.
Education
UT President Logan Wilson
told the legislative finance and
appropriations committee the
university must have more mon-
ey, or face the problem of halt-
ing its growth or lowering stand-
ards.
Requested, for two years for
its main establishment, was $9,-
700,000. The governor's budget
recommendation cut this by $2,-
400,000.
University and college stu-
dents were to gather in protest
of a bill by Senator Ottis Lock.
Hearing was set for March 2. The
bill would authorize a compul-
sory $20 per semester student ac-
tivities fee.
Fair and Calmer
Austin's weather bureau has
been in a tizzy answering the
many telephone calls from wea-
ther-wary Austinites. To calm
the atmosphere in the tower at
Municipal Airport, a mechanical
telephone answering device has
been installed.
Callers now are told, "Your
call is being answered automat-
ically because the forecaster is
busy." A complete weather re-
port follows.
New Highway Maps
Issued by the Highway De-
partment are 500,000 state high-
way maps for 1955, with a new
and simpler fold.
D. C. Greer, State Highway En-
gineer, pointed out that the old
wheeze about needing another
map as a guide for refolding an
opened travel map, is no longer
true.
Auto license purchasers can
obtain a special card for use in
requesting a copy of the new
map.
QUICK
SERVICE.
READY MADE
MADE TO ORDER
We supply rubber stamps to
! fit every need, either ready
made or specially prepared.
All "cushion-mounted" on hea-
vy sponge rubber. Rapid ser-
vice. Order today!
CANADIAN RECORD
PEGGY
VOUV START P0-
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Ezzell, Ben. The Canadian Record (Canadian, Tex.), Vol. 66, No. 9, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 3, 1955, newspaper, March 3, 1955; Canadian, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth183740/m1/3/?q=%22Lockhart%20Publishing%20Company%22: accessed May 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hemphill County Library.