the Christmas holiday with their usual Christmas dinner, and included as guests members of their families who came from far and wide to |oin in the merriment.The dinner has been a family custom for many years, and Mn. Ivey is eagerly looking forward to many more of them. The family farms some 100 acres near here, where they are growing fruit and pecans, and where the major portion of the work is carried on by W. W. (Tootsie) Ivey.The Iveys, good solid citizens, always keep a home that is open to their friends, and on this occasion they included Mr. and Mrs. Frank Keeney umong their family group.Among those on hand were Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ivey and son, Victor, Mr. and Mrs. W. VV. (Tootsie) Ivey, Mrs. Dule Glenn and daughters, Earl* enc and Punzy; Earl Ivey, E. H. Ivey, and Mr. and Mrs. Ollie Eubanks, ail of Bronte.From Kobert Lee came Mr. and Mrs. Cumbic Ivey and son, Cumbie Junior, Ivey; Mr. and Mrs. Buck Ivey and son, Gerald Ivey; Mr. and Mrs. \V. O. Eubanks. Jr. and children, Jimmy Hay and Dana; and Mr. and Mrs. Homer Ivev.Mr. and Mrs. Jim Eubanks came from Caddo, and Miss Earl Eubanks arrived for the occasion from Del Rio.Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Ivey and Marlene and La Verne were here from California to help make the party complete.It is interesting to note that the O. C. Iveys came here about 44 years ago, having arrived from Lamapasas in 1902.PANAMANIANPOLITICSMost of you have read in the papers recently that Panama has just put down a revolt, in order to understand the pattern of that event, let’s consider something that has gone be-