Sulphur Springs News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 103, No. 113, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 13, 1981 Page: 2 of 12
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I«*-TMI NEWS-TELEGRAM, Sulphur Springs, Toxoa. Wodnosdoy. Me
Mrs. Floy Bennett spent
Wednesday night with Mrs.
Bgutah Mitchell Ponder in
Clarksville. .
Spending Mother’s Day with
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Monroel
were Mr. and Mrs. LC. Knotts
and David, Greenwood; Mr.
and Mrs. Melvin McClung,
hurley; Mrs. Bennie Mud
Dplvin, Mrs. Frankie Lee Lobe,
Roger, Jeremy and Anthony,
Fannersville; and John Wayne
McClung, Mount Vernon.
Mr. and Mrs. Billy Sustaire
and daughter Sherry and
Wayne Henderson of Pleasant
Grove spent Sunday with Mrs.
Bose Webb. They were joined
by Mr. and Mrs. Terry Sustaire,
lisa and Lorrir for dinner
Sunday.
» Recent visitors with Mr. and
Mrs. Les Harris were Mrs.
jdary Pipkins of Hagansport
and Gene Ottinger of Texas
City.
; Mr. and Mrs. Tim Templeton
pf LeSeur, Minn, visited Mr.
gnd Mrs. Aubrey Morris last
peek.
■; Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Wardrup
for Mother’s Day visitors
. Nita Nitsche and son Neal,
s; Max Wardrup, Com-
perce; Mrs. Edna Brooks and
Charlotte Cotten, Paris; Mrs.
Moselle Arthur, Houston; Mrs.
Travis Appleton, Trinity; and
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wardrup,
Amy and Sara of Saltillo, Mrs.
Rille White, Weaver; Mrs.
Norman Flemens and baby
Natalie of New York state, and
Timmie White, Saltillo.
: Mr. and Mrs. James Carter of
Sulphur Springs visited Mrs.
R.M. Arthur and Betty Joyce
Monday afternoon.
: Everyone is invited to attend
the singing at the First Baptist
Church in Saltillo Friday night.
: Mrs. Jan Simmons and
Children Steven, Jeffery and
Michael of Pickton spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Les
Harris.
C Mrs. Ruth Briley spent
Sunday and Sunday night with
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Briley in
Sulphur Springs. They all at-
tended a Mother’s Day dinner
at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Redus Clemmons Sunday.
; Mr. and Mrs. Opie Griffin of
Amarillo are visiting her
mother, Mrs. Thelma Hatchell.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Reemer
Saltillo news
guests of Mr. and Mrs. George
Swain Thursday.
Visiting Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Pierce during the weekend
were Mr. and Mrs. Don Cole
and children Richie, Kristi and
Malissa of Lewisville and Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Shaddox of
McKinney.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Leaper,
Mr. and Mrs. Wesley King, Mr.
and Mrs. Bob King and son
Shanon of Houston were
weekend visitors with Mr. and
Mrs. Bug King.
Mrs. Howard Jumper and
children Carol and Steven of
Alta, Okla., Mrs. Ree Fuller
and son Jeffery of Cypress
Springs and Mrs. Laura Hill of
Mount Vernon spert Mother’s
Day with Mrs. Florene Branom.
Miss Debra Goswick spent
th.- weekend with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Goswick.
Mr. and Mrs. Huel Ham-
monds of Sulphur Springs
visited his aunt, Mrs. Delis
Odom, Sunday afternoon.
Mrs. Waldo Corley and Mrs.
Ernie Mitchell spent Sunday
with relatives in Grand Prairie.
Mr. and Mrs. Alton Dodd of
Sulphur Springs visited Mrs.
Vetera Loving Sunday night.
Mr. and Mrs. Clovis Adair
visited Mr. and Mrs. Willis
Brumley in Winterfield Sunday.
Mrs. J.C. Anderson is a
patient in Franklin County
Hospital.
Mrs. Charles Griffith of
Dallas visited Mrs. R.M. Arthur
and Betty Joyce Sunday night.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Sexton
and family spent the weekend
at their farm here.
Mrs. Dollie Pearl Armstrong
was in Dallas Monday, May 3,
to be with Mrs. Olen Perkins,
who is seriously ill in Baylor
Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Womack of
Hugo, Okla. and Joe Womack of
Arlington visited Mr. and Mrs.
R.B. Bennett Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Knapik
were in Dallas over the
weekend and attended a dinner
at the Dinner Play House in
honor of his sister, Mrs. Marie
Jarog’s birthday.
Mr. and Mrs. AtweU Whitten
of Ore City spent Monday with
Mrs. Dollie Pearl Armstrong.
Mrs. Ona Wesson, Mrs.
Mildred Stroope and Mrs. Mary
Smith attended revival services
and Mrs. AlUe Morgan visited at the Assembly of God Church
$altiHo friends Sunday. in Sulphur Springs Friday
; Mr. and Mrs. Allison McAfee night. *
spent Sunday with Mrs. Marie Mrs. Rex Norris of
McAfee.
‘ Jimmy Smith of Garland and
Gladys Collins of Wylie, Curtis
Smith of Fort Worth, and Nancy
trammel of Irving visited with
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Sparks
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Stan McMahan
bf Jal, N.M. were luncheon
Daingerfieltj spent Sunday with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Conley.
Mbs. Fable Poor and Mrs.
Dollie Pearl Armstrong were in
Dallas last week to have a
medical checkup.
Bill Barnes has returned from
a visit to Wichita Falls.
Mrs. Mozelle Arthur of
Houston and Mrs. Travis Ap-
pleton of Trinity spent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Boyd Wardrup. They visited
Mrs. R.M. Arthur and Mrs.
Velera Loving Monday enroute
home.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Tanton
joined their son, Mr. and Mrs.
>Gene Tanton Jr. of Mesquite,
for a Mother’s Day visit in the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Bert
Barlett in Nelta, Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. George Swain
had lunch with Mr. and Mrs.
Buster Morris in Greenwood
Sunday.
Mother's Day visitors with
Mrs. Mayflower Mays were
Guy Mays, Bras hear; Pauline
Bearden, Brashear; Mrs. Rose
Gafford, Glena and Sherry,
Tyler; Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Sudduth, Dallas; Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Kerr, Houston; Mr. and
Mrs. Nolen Stretcher, Mike
Stretcher, Eustace; Penny a
Stretcher, Commerce; Mr. and
Mrs. Ricky Blackwell, Dallas;
Mrs. . Jimmie Garner and
Allison, Dallas; Janet and
Rusty Mays, Mount Vernon;
Gerald Mays and Jason,
Mesquite; Mrs. Terra Blagg,
Cleburne; and John Mavs,
Saltillo.
Houston PTA
honors Teer
Houston School PTA honored
Principal Richard Teer at its
last meeting of the school year
by presenting him with a Texas
PTA Life Membership. The
presentation was made by
outgoing president Nancy
Rooks, who cited Teer’s IS
years of professional and
personal involvement with
Sulphur Springs children.
An honorary Texas Life
Membership is the highest
honor which can presented to
an individual by the Texas PTA
for outstanding contributions to
the well-being of children and
youth.
New officers for the 1961-82
school year were also in-
troduced. They are Mrs. Mike
Hipp, president; Mrs. Tim Gee,
vice president; Mrs. Tim
Taylor, secretary; Mrs. Steve
Peugh, treasurer; Mrs. Jim
Whiteman, reporter-historian;
and Mrs. Dave Davidson,
parliamentarian.
Utah has more than 80 nat-
ural bridges formed by the
erosion of wind and water
upon sandstone, including 278-
foot-long Rainbow Bridge,
which is a national monu-
ment.
Jobs depend on energy...
let’s keep
on working.
we Americans have always
understood that we can’t get something
for nothing. We’re hard-working
People’
One of the things that has kept
us Working, and kept our standard of
bring climbing here in the Southwest,
has been a ready supply of reasonably
priced electric energy. It makes our
EcsttsssssL
competitive,
At your electric company, we’re
working to keep this area attractive by
supplying the electricity we all need at
reasonable cost. We’re planning ahead
to keep our supply abreast of the need,
so business and industry can plan
confidently for their future here.
Because that means jobs here.
UNEMPLOYMENT
as%of work force
January 1981
l. M 1 l . ..
-
to pour Mid
everywhere
Soon.* I 1
Weapons haul logged
Middle School officers
New officers for the Middle School Pop Squad have been elected
for tho 1911-12 school year. In front are Susan Whitson, Gone
Watson and Wanda Gibbs with Laann Carpenter, Gina Reynolds,
Stacy Bowen and Leslie Stephans in the middle. In back are Tina
Payne, Amy Jennings, Chrissi Poulos, Kim McCasland and
Debbie Green. The group, formed two years ago, performs at
halftime of the Middle School football games, during basketball
games and is often invited to march in parades such as the
recent Dairy Festival Parade. Mrs. Delores Gillean is the
Sponsor. -SUH Photo
HOUSTON (AP) - Customs
agents who stormed a Austrian-
registered Boeing 707 at
Houston’s Intercontinental
Airport arrested six foreign
nationals, seized the jetliner
and confiscated a cache of
more than 2,200 military
weapons bound for South
Africa, authorities said. ^
The weapons, including
automatic rifles and grenade
launchers, were being tran-
sferred from a truck to the
cargo hold of the jetliner when
about two dozen agents rushed
the plane Tuesday, said U.S.
Customs spokesman Charles
Conroy.
He said two men from
England and the four-member
Austrian flight crew were taken
in to custody and will be
charged in federal court early
today with violations of the
Neutrality Act.
Rocky Rothgeb, the local
agent in charge of the Federal
Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms
Bureau said customs officials
have asked his agency to in-
vestigate whether any firearms
violations are involved.
The arrest capped a three-
week investigation and
“represents the biggest seizure
of weapons ever made by the
customs service,” said Conroy,
who estimated the value of the
lethal contraband at $1.2
million.
Conroy said agents had
tracked the the truckload of
American-made arms from
Hartford, Conn.
The cache included 636
automatic M-16 military rifles,
magazine clips, ammunition,
.36-caliber handguns and .357-
caliber pistols, Conroy said.
The weapons, still in wooden
crates, were manufactured by
Colt and purchased in Con-
necticut with a letter of credit
issued by a European bank,
said Conroy.
He said the suspects carried
a false U.S. State Department
license permitting the export of
munitions of war.
The intended use of the
weapons was not immediately
clear, but an investigation may
turn up more details, said
Conroy.
“These are military
weapons, not sporting
weapons,” he said. “I don’t feel
this is completely over yet.
Some details haven’t sur-
faced.”
The UN Security Council
imposed a permanent arms
embargo against South Africa
in 1977.
The suspects, who offered no
resistance when arrested, were
taken to the Harris County
Rehabilitation Center.
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Keys, Clarke. Sulphur Springs News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 103, No. 113, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 13, 1981, newspaper, May 13, 1981; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth816724/m1/2/: accessed June 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.