The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 90, No. 175, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 24, 1968 Page: 3 of 12
twelve pages : ill. ; page 21 x 15 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Personals
Hospital
i
It
News
il
i ''
K
»
*.
ly as a
4!
F j
Actor Eddie Albert Sets
fS
D.
j may
X *
/
I
I
T
/ < >■
»' I* I•»;
I ’
<
I
I
1
i
•>
•V
■■ (I
I
$299
r
W.T.
Plus Installation
-
SHELTON
APPLIANCES
BUTANE
e
. .
. MMnsKUM**-*--- -
f
I
kl
rvick
NEW
? d
Accused Slayer
Found Insane
Church Rejects
'Disobedience*
Mr and Mrs. Kenneth Wil-
liams and children of Houston
are visiting his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Byron Williams.
She
and
irthy
4HH
ire con-
own an
of Sen.
nator's
irough-
ier the
mately
dovish
idemo-
iiy.
ngs to
r than
i, who
seems
chair-
e can
Mr and Mrs Bob Lemon and
daughters, Mary Kay and Sally
of Newsome, were here Tuesday
to attend the funeral of 0 W
McKinney.
Mrs Alvie Phillips, Mrs. Boss
Hazlewood and Louis and Her-
man Earl Hazlewood returned
this week-end from Charleston,
S C., where they visited their
Mrs. George Smith of Dallas
is visiting relatives in Brashear
and Sulphur Springs'.
Mr. and Mrs. Pat Wilkins and
Mr. and Mrs. Loyd Dawson
and daughter Jan of Greenville,
were here Sunday for the golden
wedding anniversary of Mr. and
Mrs. Martin Baumann.
The Rebekah lodge will meet
Thursday night at 8:00 at the
Lodge Hall on Connally Street.
Al) members are asked to be
present and to bring a covered
dish for the social hour.
Carr Smith returned Tuesday
from a business trip to Dallas.
Mrs. Theo Davis and Mrs
Hester Jordan were business
visitors in Dallas Tuesday.
Mrs Magurada Skickney and
daughter Pam, of Ft. Worth, are
visiting Mrs Roy Davis and
other relatives for several days
Haspital Visiting Hsvrs
1 to 4 and 1 to I p. m.
222 Main 885-4520
Sulphur Springs
rn-l«4TM 14.(0. ft (AHAMltMSwS)
lto*f MMKtof towto. MStor
Hlway J7
Mt, Vernon
yd con-
triple-
lall—or
ling of
erdict
:es of
ready
nd as
done
more
dn or
such
in re-
• they
dime-
lifting
other,
s you
sleep,
up in
e re-
nove-
* are
tymp-
your
y you
more
ike a
that
oxy-
good
Has
Wig
iguish
rela-
'arthy
dom-
keep
ne of
thing
Limes
nem-
i vet-
deal-
i ani-
j can
e he
nesota
t.”
voiced
nts as
imphi-
5-YEAI NATIONWIDE WAMANH!
1 ywr Wsrrenty for repair of sny do-
feet to the entire refiferetor, plus a
4 year Protection Plan for repair of
any defect to the rafnearattof «yt
tom. aecked by General Moton*
/
<a» to
>, are
date’s
itrong
4i
INI
$
VC XT I
O
taken care of for the next two
years in the Pacific, where I
saw action on Tarawa and came
out of the war with spiritual
shell shock.
For the past 12 years my ma-
jor hobby has been horticulture.
I practice two techniques, liquid
culture and organic gardening. I
grow normal and abnormal
plants, giving the latter the
chemical treatment, and I take
special pride in the size and
beauty of the flowers.
I get some of the seeds from
research people at Oak
Ridge who study the effects of
radiation on various substances.
The mutations are unpredicta-
ble — I never know if I’m going
to rear a monster or a marvel.
I read about a trip down the
Danube in a canoe, so I flew to
Mike Glenn and Harold Hayns-
worth are leaving Cheyenne.
Wyo., Wednesday and will visit
Yellowstone National Park.
They plan to tour Montana and
into Canada to Elberta and
Calgary. '
Mr and Mrs John Granack
and children have returned
from a three weeks’ vacation
in Michigan.
Wednesday, July 24. 1968. THE DAILY NEWS-TELEGRAM, Sulphur Springs. Texas —S
Reagan’s Support
Claimed Growing
Frigidaire Automatic Ice Maker
ENDS ICE TRAY STRUGGLE!
Frigidaire
Frost-Proof
Refrigerator with
125-lb. size Freezer!
• Enjoy the convenience of having
plenty of ice always on hand. No fuss.
No bother.
• 100% Frost-Proof. This refrigerator-
freezer never needs defrosting. Freezer
space is never lost to frost.
• Twin Hydrators hold up to 23.4 qts.
of fresh produce. On the-door storage
for 2 dozen eggs, butter, snacks, big
bottles and cartons.
Frigidaire bothers to build in more help
Tom Worsham is confined to
his home by illness
Mrs. Corrine Rice of Tyler is
visiting Mrs. Mary E. Waits.
Mr and Mrs Joe Martin Hol-
lingsworth and son Timmy, of
Irving, were here Sunday for
the golden wedding anniversary
of his grandparents, Mr and
son and brother,’R D. Hazle- Mrs Martin Baumann
wood, who has been ill. -------------i“
day to attend the meeting of
James L. Burgess Chapter. Or-
der of Eastern Star, honoring
t h e grand conductress. Mrs.
Sally Matranga of Houston
Navy Commander (ret.) Tom-
my Wood of Austin, visited his
mother. Mrs. Hugh Wood over
the week-end.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hall
of Houston are visiting Mr. and
Mrs. F. G. Rogers. »
thyites
vilege
! Want
)r sev-
Mr. and Mrs. Clovis Fox and
family were in Dalias Monday
.night to hear the Mormon Tab-
ernacle Choir.
City Secretary Aline Cannon
is on vacation this week
planned to visit Dallas
•veral other Texas cities.
Mrs Will Lanier has been
moved to her home on the
Rockdale Road from a Dallas
hospital, where she has been
for observation and treatment.
Among the out of town rela-
tives here to attend funeral
services of Reece Alexander
were Dwayne Alexander, Gal-
veston; Pamela Alexander. Aus-
tin; Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Walker.
Tyler, and Mrs. Arnold Locke.
Dallas.
Mrs. Johnny Green will be in
San Antonio the remainder of
the week to attend the State
Treasurers Conference.
GREENVILLE—Kavanaugh
Methodist Church members
here have voted to reject the
civil disobedience resolution pre-
sented at the United Methodist
Convention last April in Dallas
The church also passed reso-
lutions against the Fund for
Reconciliation and membership
in the National Council of
Churches of Christ in the United
States.
Affirming the duty of obedi-
ence to the law of the nation,
Kavanaugh members opposed
the portion of the resolution
which affirmed the right of non-
violent civil disobedience in ex-
treme cases
The local resolution provided
for copies of the resolution to
be mailed to the bishop of the
North Texas Conference with a
petition that he take necessary
and expedient steps to cause
the United Methodist Church in
the United States to withdraw
from the National Council of
the Churches of Christ.
Members also voted that no
money be given to the Fund for
Reconciliation to be used for a
frontal attack on poverty and
the racial crisis. V'
i; V
Veteran Texas
Minister Dies
L
at
Admitted
Bee Williams, 608 Van Sickle
Wilson D. Davis, Route 5.
Mrs W. W Maddox, Route 5.
Mrs. Charlie H. Wren. Hop-
kins County Nursing Home
Burt Lee. 202 Como.
Glyn L. Pearce, Emo—.
Dismissed
Kenneth Ross, 219 Glover,
transferred to Dallas
Hugh Frazier, Brashear
Mrs Joe D. Hoover and son,
Route 1.
Mrs. O. D. Stribling and
daughter, Route 5.
Mrs. Alfred W Adams, Route
3.
Eugene Clark, 216 Reservoir.
Leroy Brown, 301 Highland
Drive.
Mrs. J. C. Ferrell, Route 4.
Mrs Della Brooks, 225 Put-
man.
L
SPaCe-
Mmes. Inez Cook, Vernon
Weaver, Lillian Bufkin, Josie
Bridges, Iva Lee Foster and Mr
and Mrs. Frat Davis and John
McClimons were in Dallas Tues-
the UMYF
Methodist
Mr. and ‘Mrs, Troy Norris
visited in the home of Mrs.
Harold Marts-, Mr and Mrs
Alvie Phillips and Mrs. S. W
Phillips over the week-end.
TOURISM is down in France and recent strikes and uprisings are blamed. The well-
known Place du Tertre, top, considered one of the gayest spots in Paris, normally
would be bustling with tourists but shows a scarcity of strollers. Equally deserted
•re the beaches of the French Riviera, bottom, where resorts are reporting their
worst season in years.
gj?JF
B. Connally of
short of saying
Massachusetts Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy lacked the qualifica-
tions to be a vice presidential
running mate for Humphrey,
but indicated he favored a more
(NEA>
e Presi-
■ stage
he did
!»
i'l-
1
constitutional.
“foolish.”
— Gov. John
Texas stopped
By EDDIE ALBERT
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - I don’t
want to be the biggest star in
the entertainment world, and
the main reason is that there’s
so little time. The bigger you
are, the more of your time it
takes up, and the less time you
have to investigate the world
around you and its wooders.
In my youth I deliberately set
out to become a vagabond and a
drifter as part at my growth,
but after I*d had my fill I real-
ized mat there are more subtle
ways of exploring. the
Once Burl Ives and I got the
urge to see what it was like to
be alone in a Mexican desert
with a gun, a guitar and two
cans of tomato juice. WE GOT
LOST and came back across the
border on Dec. 7, 1941.
My urge for adventure was
> <-
7-
L
f RIGlOAIflf
McCarthy, in Baltimore to try
to persuade Maryland delegates
to at least remain uncommitted
before the convention, criticized
Humphrey for saying he was
unclear on McCarthy’s Vietnam
position.
"They must be keeping the
vice president in singular isola-
tion in the White House,” Mc-
Carthy said.
McCarthy also said the Viet-
nam war appears no closer to
settlement than before the Paris
peace talks started, despite the
Vietnam summit the past week-
end in Hawaii.
There were these other politi-
cal developments Tuesday:
— Agreements were reached
in both Chicago and Miami
Beach, lifting the threat of com-
munications blackouts during
the political conventions.
to New York City, a pitch for
Maryland delegates by Eugene
J. McCarthy and agreement in
electrical workers disputes that
had threatened both national
conventions.
McCarthy and Humphrey are
fighting for the Democratic
presidential nomination.
State chief executives trooped
into a Cincinnati hotel ballroom
for statements and comments
throughout a day that was
capped with a speech by Presi-
dent Johnson in which he re-
viewed world and national prob-
lems.
Among the convention high-
lights;
— Gov. Tim Babcock of Mon-
tana, Nixon’s Western regional
chairman, said Nixon "has the
strength in the key states from
coast to coast” to win in No-
DALLAS (AP) - The Rev.
E. A. Hunter, a Methodist min-
ister in Texas for nearly 50
years, died at his home here
Tuesday night. He was 81.
He tad served as a minister
and as district superintendent
for the denomination in church-
es at Wichita Falls and Paris,
and in the Central and Rio
Grande Valley Conferences.
Shortly after World War n
the Rev. M-. Hunter also edited
the Texas Advocate, Methodist
weekly publication.
He was the father of Edwin
D. Hunter, managing editor of
the Houston Post. Also surviv-
ing are his wife; two stepsons,
Merle Polbemus of Dallas and
Dr. J. G. Polbemus of San An-
gelo, and six grandchildren.
The Rev. Mr. Hunter had
been in tailing health for about
six years.
Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Jordan
visited Six Flags Over Texas
Wednesday with
group of Wesley
Church.
COLUMBUS, Tex. (AP) -
Thomas Otto Massey, 20,
charged in the shotgun slaying
of police chief Arnold Knlppel,
was found innocent of murder
Tuesday because of insanity.
A jury of 11 men and one
woman deliberated less than 10
mminutes and decided Massey
was insane at the time of the
shooting July 8 and Insane now.
The police chief fell in a volley
of fire as he approached the
Massey borne In Columbus after
the youth's father had asked
! Knlppel to go to the house.
Lawyer Hollis Massey,' the
, father, said he told the police
chief he was afraid his son
would wreck the home.
' Judge W. W. Ellison said the
ni youth will be sent to Rusk State
[ Hospital for the criminally in-
sane. Under Texas law the
i jury’s decision means young
Massey cannot be tried again.
Testimony at the one-day trial
revealed that the youth had a
history of a nervous breakdown
and was a former mental pa-
* tie nt.
^—JUNtOO
The Look thot’s Totally Now . . the knit coat and
dress costume by Vicky Vaughn Jr. The coat in
gay, young plaid of bonded actetate and rayonz
has silvered buttons, pocket tabs, is fully lined. ■
Sizes 5-15......$24.98
* Fall lay-<-*ay on knits, 60 Davs - >
VILLAGE DRESS SHOP I
Across From Spring Village Shopping Center n
Dial 885-2242 ]
GulfoX
>■
vember.
— A resolution suggested by
Rhode Island’s John H. Ctnfee
that would lessen the impact of
a big November vote for third-
party-candidate George Wal-
lace, got a cool reception from
several governors, including
Rockefeller.
Chafee wanted the governors .
to endorse an agreement be-
tween the major parties to guar-
antee the presidency to the can-
didate getting the biggest popu-
lar vote if there should be no
majority winner in the Elector-
al College. Such an agreement
is being pushed by a bipartisan
group of congressmen.
Although several governors
agreed that the Southerner’s
strength is growing, most
played down fears that Wallace
would gain enough votes to
throw the election into the
House of Representatives.
Wallace himself, campaigning
in Iowa, said he didn’t think
such an agreement would be
He called it
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Ronald Reagan and Nelson A.
Rockefeller found themselves in
agreement today on a surpris-
ing point: Both saw growing
support for Reagan's unan-
nounced presidential candidacy.
Rockefeller, governor of New
York, told newsmen at thl-Na-
tional Governors Conference at
•Cincinnati Tuesday that he
knows of 55 delegates, most of
them in the South, who have
switched from support of Rich-
ard M. Nixon as the Republican
presidential candidate.
Rockefeller said 37 have lined
up behind Reagan and the rest
behind his own, announced can-
didacy.
Despite conceding this shift to
Reagan, Rockefeller insisted
that only he can win for the Re-
publicans in November.
Reagan, appearing at a sep-
arate news conference, didn’t
have any specific figures. But
the California governor said
"rather sizeable movements"
have sprung up designed to
make him a candidate.
"I can’t ignore them. It's
there,” Reagan said. At the
'*feame time he reaffirmed his in-
fection to lead the California
delegation to the GOP conven-
tion as a favorite son and. not as •
announced national candidate.
The governors conference pro- conservative candidate,
vided a focal point for Tues- Several governors' earlier in
I • . * ’ ■ • I day’s nationwide political do- the conference suggested Ken-
I I I artlX/DC ( Il ITClHa r-llrv^c ings whkh Included a.demon- nedy would add great strength
kJ I I I V W O U I O I kJ V? I I II I I O stration-marred visit by Vice to a Humphrey ticket.
’ . . President Hubert H. Humphrey
canoe over the same route in
1965. I once read a book which
sent me on an Introspective
journey to a tiny island oft Noga
Scotia to meditate. Unfortunate-
ly, I became ill and had to be
brought out by oxcart.
I made a film called "Human
Growth” which caused some
controversy in 1947 because it
taught 12-year-olds about sex. It
is now something of a classroom
classic, I understand, and to my
great joy it won a prize at the
Venice Film Festival in 1965.
I want to make a film short in
which a Catholic boy explains
Judaism to a Protestant boy, a
Protestant boy explains Catholi-
cism to a Jewish boy and a Jew-
ish boy explains Protestantism
to a Catholic boy.
I’d like to be 20 years old
Europe and paddled my own again.
Mr and Mrs Herbert Tatom
received word from their son, pH
Michael Tatom. that he has »<■'
been promoted to sergeant. He
is serving as clerk with the
199th Aviation Company in Viet-
nam
J I
.7
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 90, No. 175, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 24, 1968, newspaper, July 24, 1968; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1585683/m1/3/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.