Ok the owner and I evaluated it and decided to try to eliminate most of this noise - IOW try to get the amp as quiet as we can. I am going to try 6G6's suggestion now.
6G6 are you talking about the 68K and 1M on the input jacks? Also there is a 100K plate resistor, and the cathode resistors on the imputs.
If the noise level changes when the volume control is manipulated, then
anything before the volume control is a suspect. That might be the tube itself, resistors on the tube stage or input jacks, 100kΩ resistor in the tone stack, etc. It could even be a dirty tube socket or dirty contacts on the jacks.
If you want to make minimal changes and/or know exactly what caused the noise, you could replace resistors one-by-one with metal film while listening after each replacement. If you're gonna be building or working on Fender-style amps in the future, it's probably not a bad idea to have a stock of resistors in each of those values.
Usually, you'd suspect the highest resistance first as being the biggest noise contributor (in fact, self-noise of a tube or stage is sometimes specified in terms of the "equivalent noise resistance"). But your new listening amp is probably very helpful here for places to attack.
Alternatively, you might say the carbon comps are suspect and will be a noise issue now or in the future and replace them all. That's your call. I'm doing a build now where for my own curiosity I'm trying a mix of wirewound (wherever possible) and metal film, as wirewound resistors are the quietest type available. But I have a prior build with almost all metal film that sure seems noise free to me.