Cedar Hill Chronicle (Cedar Hill, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 17, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 25, 1969 Page: 2 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 22 x 15 in. Scanned from physical pages.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:
PAGE TWO
^EDAR HILL CHRONICLE ,
Knights Are Defeated
By Bishop Tigers, 50-73
Wanda Tacke and Mamie Sparks are showing their terraniums
and a cactus garden they made in preparation for the Home
demonstation Club's program for house plants. Buying and Care.
CH Home Demonstration Club
Presents Buying, Caring Program
A regular meeting of the
Cedar Hill Home Demonstra-
tion Club was held September
18, in the home of Mrs. Rita
Fae Clark. Her co-hostess
was Mrs. Floran LeStour-
geons.
Mrs. Mamie Sparks and
Mrs. Wanda Tacke presented
a very interesting program
titled "House Plants--Buying
and Care." Wanda demon-
strated how to make decora-
tive flower containers by cov-
ering bottles with yarn. For
recreation Wanda had a true
and false game about the pro-
gram.
The club voted to give $20
to the Dallas County 4-H Club
Scholarship Fund.
The members also voted to
sponsor the Sunshine Home as
their main project for the
SUBSCRIBE TO
THE CHRONICLE
year.
Roll call was answered by-
telling what used item each
member had brought to give
to the Sunshine Home.
The next meeting wll be
an open house. It will be Oct.
2 in the home of Mrs. Ma"y
Rachael, 702 Acres.
Her co-hostesses will be
Mrs. Sparks and Mrs. Tacke.
All visitors are welcome.
Card Of Thanks
We would like to say thanks
to everyone for all 'the as-
sistance and good deeds dur-
ing the illness of Mr. Bill
Kirtley.
Thanks to the Fire Depart-
ment for their help, to Mrs.
J.W. McGee for loaning us the
oxygen tank and all our friends
who visited and called. Every-
thing was deeply appreciated.
Bishop College's Tigers
overcame a bevy of its own
miscues by capitalizing on a
comedy of errors by North-
wood Institute's young Knights
to pound out a whopping 50-13
decision here Saturday after-
noon.
While the final score might
indicate a complete runaway,
it was far from that. For
the Knights were still very
much in the game midway of
the third quarter, trailing by
only 8 points at 21-13, before
those errors began to catch up
with them.
Bishop's unleashed Tigers
racked up 5 touchdowns and a
safety in the last 20 minutes
of play. Only one of these
touchdowns was earned as the
result of a sustained drive;
the others were more or less
gifts.
Meanwhile, through the first
2 1/2 quarters of play, the
Knights managed to stay in
the ball game despite losing
their No. 1 quarterback, John
Seiler, to a back injury mid-
way through the first quarter.
Jack Julian inherited the sig-
nal-calling duties and handled
the team quite well before the
roof finally caved in.
The first quarter was
scoreless, even though Bishop
had two excellent opportuni-
ties inside the Knight 30. A
strong Knight defense, led by
Raymond Jones, Richard
Sachon and Rodney Hinton,
simply refused to budge.
However, the Tigers broke
the ice early in the second
go-round on a 9-yard run by
Alvin Barnes to cap a 56-yard
drive he started with a 27-
yard run. They added another
on the ensuing kickoff when
Northwood's Raymond Jones
was unable to find the handle
and Kenneth Robinson recov-
ered for the Tigers in the end
zone.
Northwood swapped pass in-
terceptions with the Tigers
and wound up turning theirs
into a touchdown on a 2-yard
plunge by Rusty Phillips to
end first-half scoring.
Bishop marched 85 yards
for its first third quarter
score, with quarterback Ar-
thur McCoy keeping and skirt-
ing right end for the final 35
yards.
j Northwood came back with
/its second touchdown when
Julian hit end Nat Johnson
with a 26-yard scoring pass
after Frank DeMatteo had
given them the opportunity
with a fumble recovery at
the Bishop 36.
A two-point safety and a
70-yard punt return for a
touchdown by O'Neil Jasper
closed out Bishop's third
quarter scoring, putting them
into a comfortable 30-13 lead.
Fourth quarter Bishop
touchdowns were tallied by
Wendell Goins, on a 4-yard
plunge after a fumble recov-
ery set them up at the North-
wood 25; Charles Johnson,
on a fumble recovery in the
end zone; and Leroy Howard
with a 31-yard return of an
intercepted pass.
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Carrell
ri,ui LiliUUtrr
For Your Drug
Prescription
And Cosmetic Needs
Remember
CEBAtt M«UL DRUG
291-1810
FREE DELIVERY
lolktotito i
Dear Mrs. Mobley,
I would like for you to give
special recognition to the
young people and college stud-
ents of this area.
Sunday was college day at
the First Baptist Church. We
did not have many college
student to attend. But the young
men that brought the morning
ana evening services were
truley on fire for the Lord.
And it is my belief that the
entire church recieved a great
blessing from their sermons.
And we also know not all young
people are bad for few older
church members could serve
the Lord as these young men
laready have.
Thank You,
A church member
you Iiave big
connections
with TP&L
To us, being a part of the Texas Intercon-
nected System is an Important connection. To
you, it's assurance the electric power you
need is always there—to cook your food,
wash your dishes, cool your home.
The Texas Interconnected System is made
up of Texas Power & Light Company and
eight other Texas electric utilities. They're
interconnected so that, when necessary,
emergency power requirements of any par-
ticular system may be instantly supplied by
other members of TIS.
This vast network covers 75% of the State
of Texas) Its operation is coordinated through
Energy Security Centers in Dallas and Austin,
where vigilant men and computers are on duty
around the clock ... so the electric power
you need will always be there.
Membership in the Texas Interconnected
System is just one of the many "extras" from
TP&L—to assure you the utmost reliability in
electric service.
TEXAS POWER & LIGHT COMPANY
A tax-paying, investor-owned electric utility
Mt
am
av
SEPTEMBER 25
Jack Plummer
Stacye Baldwin
Kenneth Chaffin
Kenneth Chuck
SEPTEMBER 26
Karla Kay Myers
Teresa Gene McAnnally
Kay Geddie
Sam Garner
SEPTEMBER 27
Milburn Johnson
Dorothy Clayton
Jeffrey Dillard
Bret Sapp
SEPTEMBER 28
Paula Lynn Cannady
Phyllis Vines
Vicki Burns
Lonnie Worton
SEPTEMBER 29
Pappy Lemmons
SEPTEMBER 30
Mary Rachael
Paul Reynolds
Pam Morgan
Bea Kirtley
Reta Clayton
OCTOBER 1
Debbie Phillips
Joni Marie Jones
Mary Lou Casey
Johnny Walker
Wes Thornton
Curk Myers
David Bosher
Elsie Jones
Beatrice Tindle
Ruby Garner
A belated Happy Birthday
to Weldon Eugene Mitchell on
September 2.
If:
m
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1969
d*** ***** *** ********************V£M \
I
I>
1>
I -
OUR TOWN
I >
1 >
Lets' all support our team by attending the Pep Rally Fridav at
3:15.
***
Well, Fall came in with a bang when all the rain Monday *
brought cool weather Tuesday.
***
Town and Country Dress Shop in the Tower Shopping Center
has closed,
***
Members of the Cedar Hill School Board attended a board
members meeting in Austin this past week-end.
1 Buck Plummer's Humble Station I
I ALL BRANDS OF MOTOR OIL
i AUTO REPAIR ROAD SERVICE l
108 North Main
291-1919 »
J
MISS CAROLYN WILLIS
....Plans December Wedding
Miss Carolyn Willis
Engagement Announced
JAMES* P. RIGGS
Methodist Church
Appoints New
Youth Director
James P. Riggs has been
named Youth Director of the
First United Methodist Church
here.
Riggs is a native of Moor-
park, California, where he
was born on a cattle ranch
and the eldest of seven chil-
dren.
He was graduated from Cal-
ifornia Lutheran College in
1967 with a major in sociol-
ogy and a minor in geology.
After graduation he was em-
ployed with McDonald-Doug-
las Aircraft until January,
1968, when he entered Per-
kins School of Theology.
He is a member of the Sou-
thern California-Arizona
Conference.
His wife is the former
Elaine Kormas of Webster
Groves, Missouri.
Mr. and Mrs. Warren V.
Carney, 9§6 Bennett, Cedar
Hill announce the engagement
and forthcoming marriage <>;'
their daughter, Carolyn Wil-
lis, to Charles W. Store r,
son of Mr. and Mrs. J. C.
Storer of Fort Worih.
The bride-to-be is a grad-
uate of Cedar Hill High School
Greater Dallas South
Has Meeting
Greater Dallas South met
in DeSoto Thursday night, and
Joe Christopher, president,
announced that a meeting will
be held for the purpose of
studying the disposal of com-
mercial and residential re-
fuse in the southern section
of Dallas County and the nor-
thern section of Ellis County.
The members of the city
councils, chamber of com-
merce presidents, and county
officials from the following
Greater Dallas South area ci-
ties will be guests of Greater
Dallas South: DeSoto, Cedar
Hill, Duncanville, Red Oak,
Waxahachie, Ovilla, Lancas-
ter, Hutchins, Wilmer, Fer-
ris, Dallas, Midlothian, Glenn
Heights, and Woodland Hills.
The cities of this area have
been concerned with the dis-
posal of garbage since the
federal and state laws pro-
hibit the burning of refuse.
The dinner meeting will be
held October 30 at the Brook-
side Inn in Waxahachie.
and is a sophomore at the
University of Texas at Ar-
lington.
The groom-'o-be resides
in Arlington, is employed with
LTV in Grand Prairie, and is
a graduate student of the Uni -
versity of Texas at Arlington.
The wedding dare has been
set for December 27.
Go First Class- -W ith Payne!
HEATING* AND
■AIR CONDITIONING BY
SPECIALIST IN ALL KINDS
0F
HEA TING& AIR CONDITIONING SER VICE
Wolverton Company
T. R. Wolverton, Mgr.
118 W. FABRMEADOWS, DUNCANVILLE
AX8-055.5 AX8-1327
NEW STORE
HOURS
OOOOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
7 a.m. to 9 p.m. Weekdays
8 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sundays
OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOPOOOOOOOOOOPOOOOOOOOO
P&S FOOD STORE
'
SUBSCRIPTION
SPECIAL
FOR ENTIRE SCHOOL YEAR,
ANYWHERE IN THE USA.
Help your college student son or daughter
what'
keep up with what's going on at home by
sending The CHRONICLE
as well as your letters ... to him or her
at school!
PHONE 291 4506 TO PLACE YOUR ORDER
Wf WILL BILL YOU
P. O. Box 158 307 Houston St Cedar Hill, Texas
J* 'g
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.
Brown, Royce. Cedar Hill Chronicle (Cedar Hill, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 17, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 25, 1969, newspaper, September 25, 1969; Cedar Hill, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth480483/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Zula B. Wylie Memorial Library.