Paris Man Victim of Monday Wreck
H. B. (Huse) Avery, 105 Graham, Dies From Skull Fracture
The ninth death due to traffic accidents in Lamar County this year occurred at 7 a.m. Tuesday when H. B. (Huse) Avery died at St. Joseph's Hospital, having suffered fracture of the skull in an automobile collision two miles north of Hinckley, Monday about 4:30 a.m.
No funeral arrangements had been made Tuesday noon, according to Brown-Roden Funeral Home, where the body was taken.
Highway patrolmen here said investigation of the case, already begun, will be continued.
According to preliminary report made by Raymond Lack, Paris policeman, Avery was driving a 1941 Plymouth coach, headed south, the other car, a 1937 Ford coach, being drive by C. W. Sadel of Dodd City. Names of persons in Avery's car, who escaped injury, were not included in the report.
Avery, 37-year-old foreman at Cummer-Graham Manufacturing Co. plant, lived at 105 Graham St.
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Paris News, December 3, 1941
Avery Funeral Is Set Early Wednesday Afternoon At Chapel
Funeral services for H. B. (Huse) Avery, fatally injured in an automobile collision Monday morning, was arranged for 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at Brown-Roden Funeral Home, conducted by Max Barton, with interment at Honey Grove.
Orbe Fisher, Ira Bryans, Alvie Moran, Harry L. Francis, Lee Richardson and Clifford Wheeler were named pallbearers.
Avery, who lived at 105 Graham, was employed as a foreman at Cummer-Graham Mft. Co., here.
He was born Oct. 4, 1905.
His death at St. Joseph's Hospital resulted from a skull fracture suffered in an automobile collision two miles north of Hinckley early Monday.
He leaves his wife; his father, C. P. Avery of Honey Grove; two brothers, Landon Avery of Paris and L. C. Avery of Elk City, Okla., two sisters, Mrs. Earl Foster of Shreveport, la., and Mrs. John Byerly of Pueblo, Colo.
Paris Man Victim of Monday Wreck
H. B. (Huse) Avery, 105 Graham, Dies From Skull Fracture
The ninth death due to traffic accidents in Lamar County this year occurred at 7 a.m. Tuesday when H. B. (Huse) Avery died at St. Joseph's Hospital, having suffered fracture of the skull in an automobile collision two miles north of Hinckley, Monday about 4:30 a.m.
No funeral arrangements had been made Tuesday noon, according to Brown-Roden Funeral Home, where the body was taken.
Highway patrolmen here said investigation of the case, already begun, will be continued.
According to preliminary report made by Raymond Lack, Paris policeman, Avery was driving a 1941 Plymouth coach, headed south, the other car, a 1937 Ford coach, being drive by C. W. Sadel of Dodd City. Names of persons in Avery's car, who escaped injury, were not included in the report.
Avery, 37-year-old foreman at Cummer-Graham Manufacturing Co. plant, lived at 105 Graham St.
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Paris News, December 3, 1941
Avery Funeral Is Set Early Wednesday Afternoon At Chapel
Funeral services for H. B. (Huse) Avery, fatally injured in an automobile collision Monday morning, was arranged for 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at Brown-Roden Funeral Home, conducted by Max Barton, with interment at Honey Grove.
Orbe Fisher, Ira Bryans, Alvie Moran, Harry L. Francis, Lee Richardson and Clifford Wheeler were named pallbearers.
Avery, who lived at 105 Graham, was employed as a foreman at Cummer-Graham Mft. Co., here.
He was born Oct. 4, 1905.
His death at St. Joseph's Hospital resulted from a skull fracture suffered in an automobile collision two miles north of Hinckley early Monday.
He leaves his wife; his father, C. P. Avery of Honey Grove; two brothers, Landon Avery of Paris and L. C. Avery of Elk City, Okla., two sisters, Mrs. Earl Foster of Shreveport, la., and Mrs. John Byerly of Pueblo, Colo.
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