Timpson Weekly Times (Timpson, Tex.), Vol. 74, No. 7, Ed. 1 Friday, February 13, 1959 Page: 2 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 16 x 12 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
CHECK THE ADS — Advertising Benefit* Ton
* ..... ----
- I T '' \
j
TOtnOK IWfcfcKLT TOUR—'Timpaon T«*aa.r«b. U, 196J
MRS. BILL L. PARMER
Miss Patsy Barnes and Billy L. Parmer
Wed in Beautiful Church Ceremony.
of Center and Bellaire.
Silhouetted in candlelight
before the altar at the First
Baptist Church in Center, Miss
Patsy Barnes and Mr. Bill Far-
mer said their wedding vows to
the Dr. J. Carroll Chadwick
on January 17.
The church ornated with
Given in marriage by her
step-father, the bride wore a
formal gown of magnolia-toned
Peau De Soie. The Sabrina
neckline and skirt were defin-
ed in appliqued handrun Alen-
con lace traced in bridal jew-
baskets of white mums and el?' The fe“ ?!*atfd fr°“
(i
gladiolas was a lovely setting
for the songs “Because” and
“The Lord’s Prayer,” sung by
Mr. Richard Smith of Joaquin.
Parents of the bride are Mr.
and Mrs. E. N. Rogers of Cen-
ter. The bridegroom is-the son
of Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Parmer
a long princess bodice to a full
chapel train and her four-tier-
ed veil iflowed from a crown of
seed pearls and Peau De Sole.
Her bouquet was fashioned
from white glamelias and long
English ivy.
Matron of honor was Mrs.
wwwwwuwvw
What a Season Now in the Ground ....
WE HAVE ON HAND
fertilizer
... There’ll be no shortage
Warehouse Chock Full
Also headquarters f or ...
HYBRID
SEED CORN
CEBTIFtB IRK MED WTO SEED
—SEE-
N. H. Jarrett
Phone 55
GARRISON
John D. Windham of Bryan.
Misses Alice Brooks and Mae-
iinde Shepherd of Center and
Mrs. Arthur K. Bourne HI, sis-
ter of the groom of Bellaire,
were bridesmaids.
Mr. G. L. Parmer acted as
his son’s best man and grooms-
men and ushers were Mr. W.
Preston Wood of San Augus-
tine, Mr. H. B. Harris, Jr., Cen-
ter, and Mr. Arthur Keeler
Bourne HI of Bellaire.
Assisting at the reception
following in the church were
Mrs. Dura Martin at the guest
book; Miss Nancy Jane Wood
of San Augustine serving the
punch and Mrs. dice Tal-
m&dge of Pasadena cutting the
large three foot four-tiered
cake centering the attraction of
the reception table also deco-
rated with white moms and
gladiolas. Also assisting were
Mrs. S. L. Yeary, Mrs. Wade
Fox, Mrs. Owen Hayes, Mrs.
Buck Ballard and Mrs. Leon
Lewis.
The couple having postpon-
ed their trip to Mexico City and
Acapulco tfll summer, will re-
side at their lake home.
WOMEN’S SHOES HAVE
HEELS THAT LIGHT UP
St Louis—A St Louis shoe
manufacturer is marketing
women’s high-fashion shoes
with heels that light up as the
wearer walks. The shoes have
translucent plastic heels con-
taining a small electric bulb
and a battery. They glow red,
green, violet, or amber when
the heels hit the ground.
CITIZENS COUNCIL
TO MEET FEBRUARY 12
Regular meeting of the Citi-
zens Council will be held
Thursday night February 12,
7:30 o'clock, in the music room
of Timpson high school, it is
announced by J. D. Snelson,
vice president.
Mr. Snelson states that an ef-
fort is being made to enroll 500
additional members, and that
all Interested are urged to at-
tend the February 12 meeting.
Complete stock of Lumber, MUlwork, Roofing, Doors, Windows,
Nails, Brick. It will pay you to see us for all your building supplies.
F.H.A. Improvement. Lout
Sherwin-Williams end Starting Paints
C. H. Covington & Sons Center, T«xa*
mmnmm
Hake safety a habit—not a
happening.
FREEDON FIRST
“I love America, and 1 don’t
want«to live anywhere else..
I feel so many Americans don’t
appreciate it...
These words were not from
the lips of a person wanting to
make over everybody and ev-
erything; they were spoken by
a beautiful refugee Romanian
girl. Her childhood record in-
cluded starvation, floggings,
three gun wounds while being
used for target practice in pris-
on camps including Dachau.
This girl and her family, In-
cluding a brother in the Air
Force, are not finding it easy to
make a living in thia country,
but they pot the right to be
free ahead of everything else.
We should never forget or
belittle the right every Ameri-
can has to be free. This free-
dom should not be forgotten
when pressure groups, in or
out of government, seek to sub-
merge the individual under
mass regimentation. Infringe-
ment* on individual opportu-
nity can destroy the America
the Romanian girl loves. Hie
right to work, the right to vote,
the right to worship, the right
to speak, are not just trick slo-
gans—they mean liberty.
Among 10 herbicides evalu-
damaged the crop nor reduced
yield, the D. 8. Department of
Agriculture reports. Satisfac-
tory control of pigweed and
watergraaa • Khout damage to
ated for pre-emergence weed crop was obtained by »-™g
control in onions, CDEC gave! 3 pounds of ODBC in 40 gal-
the best results and neither | Iona of water per acre.
uiMUinniniiumimMii
**fl*AUM»»**”t*a<
ONE VISIT SERVICE!
\
e ms IXAMINED
• CONTACT ilNSfS
e outs CS NT1XO
e ARTVICUI ms
1$^
CONSULT OPTOMnmiS ...
Dr. A ScMM Dr. H. L tester
Dr. L A Vats, Sr. Dr. A) SdwM
Or. C L Qreen, Jr. Dr. L A Vasa, Jr.
Ofrxst AT
SOUTHERN OPTICAL CO., i
617 TEXAS STREET
SHUVtTOCT,
"Opticml Serric$ At Ut
WBm
oipiii
r:;r .• Tb-
MiKf?!
Morofrif-Oovy po*«f irntf— mmt wntwy Pts p. Pttgtifcgr^.
Chevy panel steps lively In Florida...runs day
and night, delivers 19.3 miles per gallon!
ThU 'St Chevy panel te on the go, naming, naan and
Mghi; It eaoert at mark at UT mUet a dag .. . ram
to caattantlg that Ut englm ntoer emit ad coat-
gkttly. Tat Mu Clark garkor, the Tonga Tnktmda
clrcwietton manager, re par it that the trank la da-
Uvrrwag ItJ taUet gar ggdStmt
Thia year, thr light-, medium- and heavy-duty
trucks of the 1969 Chevrolet Thek-Feree Dart are
oat to whip anything that comae their way—and
they've got what it takes to do it!
Take the panel pictured above, for example. Pow-
ered by the '69 Thriftmaster S with new tamamy
contoured camshaft, it’s building a aensatioaal econ-
omy record, despite the finding pare of He work.
That’s typical of the way Cirri e. of all alias are
turniag-to oa the meat challenging jobs In Aamrica.
The way they’re made, with teugb-buflt truck cere-
ponente, they make the hardest heals leek aery!
If you have a job that pets a 'ruck on its mottle,
see your Chevrolet dealer!
No job’s too tough for a Chevrolet truck!
See your local authorized Chevrolet dealer
SHELBY MOTOR CO.
Phone CL 4-2363 Thnpgon, Tom
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Molloy, T. J. Timpson Weekly Times (Timpson, Tex.), Vol. 74, No. 7, Ed. 1 Friday, February 13, 1959, newspaper, February 13, 1959; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth813261/m1/2/: accessed May 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Timpson Public Library.