Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 75, No. 309, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 12, 1975 Page: 3 of 34
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GREAT BUY!
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CLOTHS .... 47c
LORD'S ACRE
LORD'S HOUR
50-
HHM
3
205 CENTER
1
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19
BUS
SCOV
gUN2P.
> Franklin
of their
ad gotten
puld have
cope just
kind of
Person to person
health insurance
SHOP MON. & TUES.
9:30 a.m. 615:30 p.m.
5
6
perature
Sunset
Monday
It can help pay
soaring hospital
and surgical bills.
Call me.
m kvomn
a paid i
MH Son
3
REA —
udy and
through
it in 60s,
onday in
Eshe said
I anyway
Ek n h
I But the
Ian idea
pt. sc why
lidn’t the
I the door
tgun. So I
I are the
lists? No.
ople too
nd he’s a
,0
1
ree days
to leave
r line to
many of
‘ortugal's
lire, from
I ‘n
esday
— Early
vill meet
i. to 2 p.m
U of First
Riley E.
Banta
N7 A Center Ave.
ZEPHYR UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
COLEMAN QUEEN — Luple Aleala was erewaed Coleman
High School homecoming queen Friday night during halftime
ceremonies at the Colem an-Eastand football game. She is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Zollo Alcala d M E. Walnut,
Coleman.
2 PR. $1
65.97
2/3.00
81.88
3/10.00
$2.00
3
IL PURCHASE!
NIS MAKER
TOWELS
1.47
88'
3/1.44
82,88
’1.60
SALE! REG. TO 7.99
OR UNLINED
E.B.HENLEY
&C0.
ESTABLISHED 1887
ENERAL INSURANCE
BIG VALUE!
WOMENS
WARM
CARDIGA
SWEATE
SHIRTS
mews
PANTS.
conounov
(Bulletin Photo)
Texans'view in How Texas voted
DRAW
DRAPES
TSTANDING VALUE!
ySALE! FAMOUS MAKER
A VELOUR HAND
Dress her warm and tashionable
this season in our easy care
nylon/polyester slack sets Jac-
guard and solid tops, contrasting
trim. Solid flare pants Sizes 2.4
4-6x.
\
)
Added warmth on those
chilly fall/winter mornings
nights. Plain, fancy button
root sweaters. Solids, easy
100% acrylic, avala
ble • sizes S-M-L
uxunousparernsand colors Allcot
Doyelour, slight iregula bam size
WB
CAPS
SWEATSHIRTS
STRETCH P
NYLON PANTYHOSE
BIGSELECTION!"
WOMENS NYLON
KMT TOPS
2.99
Collection of long/ short sleeves, I
Solids and prints Easy care I
nylon, S-M-L J
•) STATE FARM MUTUAL
Automobile insurance Co
» Home Office
J Bloomington fflinois
SUH REG. 5.99
GIRLS NYLON
SLACK
SETS
TERRIFIC VALUE!
3.97
K-8
0
3
es,
TOWELS
670
Thick. thirsty, absorbent slgh
regulars, sods. "
“ N
- $
• TURKEY DINNER
ADULTS $2.OD—CHILDREN UNDER 12 $1.00
THI HOUR: 5:30-7:30 P.M. THE DATE oCT 18
ZEPNYR SCHOOL LUNCHROOM
AUCTION TO FOLLOW
ITEAAS DONATED BY CHURCH MEMBERS
esf
ma
" FAMOUS MAE MES
• CREW SOCKS
CWEwLE
• BEDSPREADS
am sen
• JEANS
• SWEATSHIRTS
Am MEMS DRESS A SPONT
Enhance your windows with
our washable, suntast
drapes Select from an array
of patterns and colors. Fits
windows 46x84.
• CRAWLERS----
MRU
• PANTIES smsssw MUN n LU
• SHIRTS.C
Nude heel, demt-toe. 3 shades “P, O)EDd
One size fits all f PR. % I
0“, ™rat wm REX-A-CARGE, Misra CManEE, BANKAMEMCAO
Levines
BROWNWOOD BULLETIN 4
Sunday. October 12,1975
Nations meet Monday Prisoners captured in
to discuss new relations gunfire police chase
jSL BS mmaadsmrussnass nomu.
tives of industrial and dent follow up the resolution. That meeting broke up in a State!Prisonwieh six hostages, five ocher inmates and the station wagon crashed
oping nations meet Minv t month, it K ** deadlock, but backstage dipio- including the warden and his The inmates, three of them after the local officer shot its
ESS K .
iizzastapanrrzt rmmsresu." “'-“Si'S.** azr.tad Era?.*: pa”
SaeftrmiflHliee
ahieve. .. v ment between rich and poor na- about-face last May and Secre sign post along a city street, daughter also were taken hoe- Shoulders 11 life r, —ond
solve the ibyFraneto re tions, agreed on conciliatory tary of State Henry A. Kliasinger with neither escapees nor hos- tage by the five inmates. Three degree murder George Moon
Sowe.thenenergy.crisis, the resolutions aimed at "redress- agreed to discuss raw materials tages hurt seriously As the other youngsters were left be- M life for rimstagsorgiaon: •
been thtSouth 1 °?^u has ing the economic imbalance in and the other issues si- score of police cruisers con- hind The sixth convict tele- Albert C Walker 44 murderi
raw entarged oinclud other the world, said an official in- multaneously with oil - verged on the disabled car, the Phoned city police headquarters sion of a felony while armed 11
rmwmaterial world financial volvedin preparing the dU- The preparatory meeting is« inmates surrendered and said he was armed and Zganalgorahihtmryedu1
problems and development. The iogue. But he acknowledged it approve a mid-December start The right front tire of the sta- taking hostages 35 riin readrysnsiessup
will be months and even years for the conference, to be known tion wagon used in the escape On St said he and his 36r4rmedrobberyalhynars.
ahddespuissactionweg“iprces concrete results assthenconferenceon In- was shokout by a Michigan cty five companons would take the the prison mvolvtng hostages in
urgent concern m the talU The participants at Monday’s tom at ministerial level. By pesmarecounamnaucan obtain “ e zamzc-a m ats
SuTapT^ "STamehetagm,setcama
nations will be assured contin- discovered they were not the industrialized countries and Weis, 48, received a head injury The three Jenkins, two offi- hostages were released un-
uing access to raw materials speaking the same language 19 from the Third World, in- in the crash, and inmate cers, and six inmates piled into harmed after five hours
including oil at agreed prices, The United Stotes, the u- eluding eight oil producers. Alexander Nagy, 40, was the station wagon and headed
and the poor nations will be-ropean Common Market and Where this procedure leaves slightly injured in the knee by for the gate.
guaranteed an adequate return Japan wanted to concentrate on the urgent oil price duestion is gunfire, prison officials said A female guard in the gate
and a channeling of tech- 01 prices, supplies and financial unclear, officials in Paris said. The prison officials gave this control booth disobeyed prison
nological aid to help them catch problems directly linked to oil. In the French view, the atmos- account: rules by opening a gate for the
up with the rich nations. Algeria, Saudi Arabia, phere of the talks is all-impar- The escape began when an inmates and hostages. The in-
Mondag, 1 2 . Venezuela, Iran, Brazil, Zaire tant. inmate feigned an illness and mates shot at the guard but
Monday’s session brings and India insisted that other "If the two sides that they overpowered two hospital at- missed.
Kether Lpart, cipantsfortwoor raw materials, development can trust each other, something tendants who were carrying Jenkins said prison rules for-
threeaodays,toagree on an and a reform of the inter- may be done to stabilize 0 him fr»m his cell on a stretcher bid the gate to b7 opened fx
agenda for a larger conference national financial system be Prices relatively soon. The inmate forced the attend- escapees, even if they have
malpractice poll WASHINGTON (AP) -Here
.. . - is how Texas congressmen and
AUSTIN, Tex. 1 API — Eighty- senators voted last week:
seven per cent of Texans polled The Senate passed 70-18 a
on medical malpractice suite resolution approving American
say lawyers' fees should be technicians to monitor the la-
limited and the maximum re- raeli-Egyptian peace
covery in any case should be agreemen. Democratic Sen
»00,000, a Belden Associates Loyd Bentsen and Republican
poll shows. Sen. John Tower both voted for
Interviews with 504 Texans passage
from Sept 11 through Sept. 20 The Senate defeated 55-45 an
produced an 80 per cent major- amendment which would con-
ity in favor of immediate legis- tinue for five years price con-
-lation to aid doctors in obtaining trols on oil and natural gas
malpractice insurance. Both Bentsen and Tower voted
Seventy per cent agreed that to defeat the amendment
medical malpractice suits The House approved 341-69 a
should be filed within two years resolution commiting U.S. tech-
. after treatment.” Belden nicians to monitor the Israeli-
mentioned nothing about caaes Egyptian peace agreement,
in which damage caused by xox-indicates not voting. Texas
malpractice becomes-known for Democrats. Brooks yes, Bur-
the first time more than two leson yes, Casey yes, de la Gar-
years after treatment. sa yes’, Eckhardt yes, Gonzalez
Eighty-three per cent agreed present, Hightower yes, Jordan
that doctors and patients should yes, Kazen yes, Krueger xxx,
have the right to settle mal- Mahon xxx, Milford yes. Pat-
practice disputes through arbi- man xxx, Pickle yes, Poague
tration rather than taking them yes, Roberts yes, Teague m
to court. The question made it White yes, Wilson yes, Wright
optional and said nothing about yes, Young yes. Republicans,
prohibiting court suits. Archer yes, Collins no, Steel
The question on lawyers’ fees man yes.
said they should be limited "so The House voted 297-18 to
that the injured person gets the override and the Senate voted
major part of any award. ” 79-13 to override the President's
—----------------------------- veto of the nutrition bill. The
Cotton futures following Texas congressmen
and senators were recorded as
are decreased voting to sustain the veto: Sen-
NEW YORK I API prom ator Tower-R, Reps. Collins-R,
NEW YORK (AP) - Profit- Burleson-D, Krueger-D, Tea-
taking spurred by more favor- gue-D. “5
able crop estimates sent the
price of active cotton futures
lower during the past week.
The price of No. 2 contracts on
the New York Cotton Exchange
closed the week down 102 to 264
points, compared with losses of
51 to 130 points the previous
week.
The current October contract,
which expired Oct. 9, went off
the board at 53.30 cents bid, off 5
points on the day and down 170
points from the previous Friday
cloae.
Volume on the exchange for
the week was 1,633,400 bales, up
from 1,282,000 bales the pre-
vious week The daily average
totaled 325,600 bales, as against
256,400 bales in the previous pe-
riod.
Open interest on the exchange
was 1,657,200 bales as of
Thursday, down 19,800 bales
from the preceeding Friday.
Open interest is the number of
contracts outstanding.
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Fisher, Norman. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 75, No. 309, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 12, 1975, newspaper, October 12, 1975; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1575694/m1/3/?q=technical+manual: accessed July 1, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Brownwood Public Library.