The Silsbee Bee (Silsbee, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 44, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 28, 1967 Page: 2 of 10
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Silsbee Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Silsbee Public Library.
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Entered under a second class mailing permit April
M«th*3 Office at Silsbee, Texas, under the Act ol
Published every Thursday at 410 Highway 96, Silsbee.
Texas - 77858. *
Subscription Rate: $3.50 per year in Hardin, Jasper, Tyler,
Jefferson Counties; $4.00 pef year outside these counties.
wbmmmm
IVfJlVI IVIJVIIVV
irman Sends
Thanks For Success
smuplty's partidpa-
“Toys for Tots” pro-
DAVID I
TOMMY
tana
Mtta.
EDITORIAXj, staff
and R. L. READ
tA WHITMAN
■ - Bui tor* A« Msnsg^r
Society and Personal Editor
MECHANICAL DEPARTMENT
HAROLD LEIGH ____ Printer-i
MRS. JOHN S. BASYE . - -___Linotype
JAMES JOHNSON -- Printer-Pressman
BILLY JOE WILLIAMS__la._. Printer-Pressman
—p.......S.........—...................... -» i
Chance-FI etcher News
MRS. SIDNEY DAVIS, Reporter
Pfc. Eddie L. Lancaster, 19,
of this community was killed
Tuesday. Dec. If. in the vicin-
ity of Quasi Ram, Republic of
her sister, Mrs. Perry Smart In
Port Neches.
Mrs. I. M. Butter Sr. and her
son, Gordon Rutter atiehded
^^^8hL°rptrfnS Horn the ^wlTc^ JortSK^S.igglfryi
Navy Department. Eddie was in'died Frida>. of a ]oftg iHhe8S. 4‘™'‘
ne ^°H)* and ft.ad been Burial was Sunday afternoon
in Vietnam only a week. J
Funeral arrangements are
pending at Kelly Hixson Fun-
eral Home of Beaumont.
Eddie was a native of Sour
JLake and had lived in this
at 2:30 p. m. at the Sparger
Baptist Church. Burial was in
Turner Branch Cemetery
near Spurger.
Dear Sir:
This com
tion in the “Toys
gram this Christmas season was
just fantastic. That is the only
way to really describe It.
I 4m sure that the very fine
publicity which the program
was given by the Silsbee Bee,
Kid « great deal to d6 with its
success.
There is no Way of knowing
how many individuals and busi-
nesses deposited toys in the col-
lection boxes, but the number
must surely have been an all-
time record, jiMging by the
number of toys donated.
Since so marly of tfW toys
did come from anonymous don-
ors, the only way to thank those
people is through some means
such as this, and we hope that
1 consider this letter as
being our committee’s way of
doing just (hat.
In addition, many, many peo-
ple, either as individuals, or as
representative* of organiza-
tions, contributed their time
mmmmamH and
distributing the toys, had while
(he following list may not be
complete, due to oversight, nev
ertheless, these, at least, should ing colleges and universities in
this state by 1985. And junior
colleges must be able to take
Mr. and Mrs
community for several years, of Albuquerque, N. M.,
He whs a 1907 graduate of Sila-nouncing
bde High School,
Our deepest sympi
out his parents, Mr.
R. H. Biembrink.
athy goes
and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Picker-
ing of Kingsville spent Satur-
day and Sunday in the home
of his parentasi Mr. and Mrs.
A. E. Pickering.
Mr. and Mrs. Hilton Davis
and family of Daisetta were
visitor* Saturday in the
of Mr. and hits. Larry Newton,
They Were ertroute to CaftMge
to spend Christmas with Mrs.
Davis’ parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell West
arid sons, Harlen and Eugene
spent Christmas in SplendOr#
with Mr, and Mrs. Larry Alus-
tin and “family. ’
Mrs. Edna Dixson and son.
John Ed, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Campbell and daughter of Lln-
drith N. M„ spent the holidays
her# in the home of Mr. and
Mrs. James Larry Davis and
family. Mrs. Dixson is Mrs
Devis’ mother.
*n® Mrs. Cecil Dominy. Mr.
HU!? and Mf*. Dortiihy and son,
James, Who have been Station-
ed at Ft. Eustis, Va., with the
US Afmy have also been visit*
ing here. |Hpp
Mf. and Mrs. Odell Burkhnl*
tet and children spent Christ
mas in Longview with their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ben
Burkhalter and Mf. and Mrs,
J. A. Jones. They also visited
with their brothers, sisters and
their families.
Mr. and Mrs. Alvie Pickering
spent Christmas Day in Kirby-
ville with her mother, Mrs.
Mary Davis.
Funeral services for Frank U#nn!#Cw{p
salt, 81, of Lumbefton were lavllllil Oil ■ • ■
Pr»M,l
held last Thursday at 10 p. tn
at the Old Hardin Cemetery in
Kountze. The Rev. A. D. Spears
officiated
Pratt died at 8:40 p. m. Tues-
day at the Schlesingers Nurs-
ing Home in Beaumont.
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Pitkin
and children of Rdcouch, Tex
as, spent last Friday in the
home here of their friends, Mr.
ahd Mrs. Robert Greene and
family. 1 I
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Greene
and children, Sharon and Al-
len, Mrs. W. H. Green went to «
Houston Thursday night to see
their son, Pfc. Johnny Greene,
had arrived in Houston
(■ a layover wait-
to carry him
roipp
from
to Camp
Rev. Henry Shattlas left
agM z r£.fms.
lOisSS*.
Mrs Gil
d home
Waltoi
......
and family, Mr.
i Jr,
in the1
plan-
the
their da
Bice to
Of Beaumont. They are
hiog a June wedding.
Mr. and Mrs. Bice and their
daughter are former residents
of this community. They moved
to Albuquerque in the summer
be given recognition:
Mrs, Laura Ashcraft, Mrs.
Birdie Singleton, Mrs. L. A.
Bates, Mrs. Ester McDonald,
and Mrs. Sam Samuel of the
“stuffed toy” detail.
Mrs. Joe Nelson, Council
Mr. and Mrs. William Jasper
of Centralia, 111., spent Christ-
mas here With her parents, Mr
(Continued from Page i)
her to 61 cities. The advance
ticket sale is part of alt am-
bitious program originated by
e East Texas Chamber of
Commerce, combining promo-
tional activities tor their Heri-
tage trail[program and Hefnis-
Fair ’68. the program includes
the enlistment of host cities on
the Heritage Trail route, print-
■■■■■■■I . gad
recently made an official am-
bassador to HemisFair, pointed
dut that more than li milUeft
(people are expected to visit
this exciting world’s f#ir and
that
revenue to the
[State’s economy. More than
$14 million in taxes are expec
ted as a result of this tourist
■::
influx.
largest industry in the state,"
is now the third
Singleton,
Herdis J. Bice Bates, Mrs. Ester
are an-
engagement of
aughter, __nJP|||
William Lynn Fridelle president, and the four Silsbee
Chapters of Beta Sigma Phi.
Mrs. Dear and the Rainbow
Girls.
Silsbee Chapter of DeMolay.
The ToWtt and Home Dem-
onstration Club.
Pine Burr Chapter of ABWA.
Boy Scout Troop No. 88.
Boy Scout Troop No. 82.
The silsbee Lions Club,
The Silsbee Optimist Club,
l.And all the individuals Who
came by the workshop on their
own, just to help out.
John Meide and E. B. Clark,
co-owners Of Morris Pharmacy,
deserve a Special vote of apnre-
huntable deer population for lect a
Austin — Closer relationship were low bidders.
Cbmm. J#rry
between junior and senior col-
leges is inevitable.
Crowded senior college cam-
puses across the state have con-
vinced the Coordinating Board
of the Texas College and Uni-
versity System that education-
al emphasis cannot be laid
solely on the larger schools in
the future.
Answer seems to be a junior
College program that offers
two - year courses of study
which then can be transferred
to the foOr-year colleges for
degree credit.
Dt. Jack Williams, commis-
sioner of higher education, has
submitted to the board a plan
to establish guidelines for fu
ture relationship .between the
two fields of education. It also
sets jp 52 geographic regions
in Texas for junior college de-
velopment, 18 of which have
no junior college
Idea behind the regional ap-
proach is to prevent creation of
any junior college in an art*
which cannot support it and to *
encourage the development of
junior colleges in areas need-
ing them.
None of the existing public
junior colleges would be dis-
lodged by the plan. But each of
the 52 regions would have at
least one junior college in it,
Envisioned is a junior college
system of 70 to 75 camouses.
In briefing junior college
presidents on the proposal,
Commissioner Williams cited
the importance of community
d two-year colleges in the over-
all higher education picture
According to Williams, 727,000
Texas students will be attend-
Land COffim. J # r r y Ivdt
ler termed the rate "impres
sive.” He said it will enable
veterans of World War II, the
Korean War and Vietnam to
purchase property at five per
cent down payment and five
and a half percent interest on
the« balance ovef a 40-year
period.
Board will begin taking ap-
plications to buy lapd .about
Jan. 15.
APPOINTMENTS — Gov
John Connally appointed Tom-
my V. Smith of Austin acting
commissioner of the Bureau 6t
Labdl Statistics to finish the
unexfkred term of Charles H,
King Jr. of Dallas who resign
#4
C o ft n a 11 v also appointed
Thomas A. Wheat, Liberty at-
torney, as 75th district judge
(Liberty ahd Chambers coun-
ties). Wheat succeeds Judge
P. C. Mathews who
effective Dec 25.
VOTER REGISTRATION
(RIVE — Secretary of State
“in L. Hpl, as diief election
resigned strength by 500 and add a new
parachute unit serving the
southeast and central parts of
the state.
... . - . . Reorganization will insure
o f f i c er, has announced plans better operational capability
for a statewide voter regiitra- *nd improved riot control po-
tion drive throughout January.
Hill has asked daily news-
papers to publish registration
application forms at least eve-
ry Sunday and weeklies to car-
ry them in each issue. Forms
may be filled in and sent to
county tax assessor-collectors
care of 305,525 of them.
New schools would be re-
commended only where enroll
ment of at least 500 students
could be expected by the end
of the third Fall term and 1,000
by the fifth term.
Recommended regions would
include seven Panhandle divi-
sions. These would\center
around Borger, Amarillo, Clar-
endon, L e v e 11 a n d, Lub-
bock, Plainview and the Old-
ham - Parmer - Deaf Smith -
Castro Counties area.
In West Texas, the region*
would encompass El Paso, the
gSkFtoLn, i?dec*a' H
Spring, Wichita Fails, San An-
gelo, the two junior colleges in
Eastland Ounty, Uvalde and a
12-coUhty region around Ma-
# '
Mg ____
time, all persons over 6ft who
live in towhs under 1(5,000
population or in rural areas
must register in order to vote.
Deadline for all is Jan. 3l.
TRAIN DISCONTINUANCE
SEEN —Missouri Pacific Rail
road’s application to discon-
tinue passenger trains 7 and 8
between San Antonio and
Longview will be heard by the
Railroad Commission
eiattor, tor making their former Cefito^ajoun<f**wlathSd
store available to be used as a “ ■ — - an - ^
workshop and distribution
point. *
And so, to these and all oth-
ers we say “Thank You.”
Silsbee “Toys for Tots”
Committee
Jimmie R. Sims Jr.,
Chairman ,
Wild Chickens Are
Great Game Birds
Sayi A. J. Denby
Silsbee, Texas
Dec. 25, 1967
Dear Editor:
fh tegard to East Texas Wild
life Conservation, I am stilt
Very much interested in mak
ing ft a place that otir young
Dallas-Fort Worth, Cook Coun
ty, Sherman, Paris, Texarkana,
Hill County and Corsicana.
South Texas section of junior
college education would be La-
redo, San Antonio, the Lower
Rio Grande Valley, Alice, Cor-
pus Christ!, Bee County, Whar-
ton and the Caldwell - Guada-
lupe - Gonzales - Wilson Coun
ties area.
East and Southeast Texas
areas would hive schools in the
regions of LongVlfew and Pan-
ola County, Tyler, Lufkin,
Houston* Oalvifston, Beaumont-
Port Arthur - Orange and two
other four - county areas just
northwest of Beaumont.
Central Texas junior college
education would be centered
around Waco, Bell County, Aus-
tin, Brenham, Bfyah - College
Station and San Marcos.
Public hearings on the pro-
boys and our families can en- Jan. 8.
out ahd enjoy nature
infoiynation centers to assist
the cities in capitalizing on the
unprecedented influx of Hemis-
Fair hound tourists,
Fred Pool, executive vice
gMddent of the last Texas when! retired'becaus’e! could
Chamber of commerce,
COURTS SPEAK - District
WWW .■■■■■■...... ■■■■■■■ ! H___________________
Maybe catch a few fteh, shoot Court at Corpus Christi has up- hour. A driver with an alcohol
a Squirrel or just enjoy being held Atty. Gen. Crawford Mar-
cut in the woods for a day.
I bought a small place ahd
movSd near the conservation
at that time go out and shoot a
few squirrels and catch a few
fish. Rut now for some reason
I go Out and find a likely place
and rit down ahd smoke a pipe
of tobacco watching the acorn
visitors will be re* trees and the ground and
don’t see a squirrel, a rabbit, a
a woodpecker,
yOMB, a woodpecker, a jaybird,
or any living creature. This has
brought Out the fact that we
are going to have to do some-
thing about
1 tytod to
tin’s opinion that voter regis-
tration applications cannot be
submitted >h bulk by third par-
ties. Court refused to
writ of mandamus to Nueces
County tax assessor-collector
to issue registration certificates
where applications were turn-
ed in by someone other than
the applicant’s Closest relatives,
I Derision will be appealed.
Mate Supreme Court will
hear arguments Feb. 21 as to temporary lease allowable sys
whether the state may tax tern inaugurated in June to
■is*- -
*ool stated, “and the stra-
5 Tjteglc location of East Texas ri-
RV*|ties, coupled with than
attractions along its
provides an tin
opportunity tor
advantage of a 6
occasion and
M Texas vIL^
the members of
Interested
our wildlife with
tel
IS
we casinghead gas used for lifting
oil to the surface.
A Jan. 10 hearing has been
ret at S4rita
on an i:
stopped Indiana and California
li. 1U IlOb UWH UR A#
torita (Kenedy, County) MENT
WMWto order;, that WMli
Indiana and California have b
state-
. I didn’t get any firms from exploring ruins of
icatue the toMfe *BrtWMtoMB ~
had any expert
chiritens.
in the
an old Spanish ship on
______land near Port
1 “eld- _ ^
NEW HIGHWAYS _ Texas
Highway Commission has
and got a
it. They were proved a “consolidated
(pure way program” which will ...
cost each elude 1382,000,000 construction
Or reconstruction of 1,668 miles
of non-interstate highways over
the next two year*. H ■■
Master plan places emphasis
on what the Texas Highway
it Department calls its
and butter"
highways of the primary ay»-
are the transportation life-
i for a Vast number of Tex-
tile ~ - mamt
place on the Democratic ballot en Texas and New Mexico per- nurse educational programs in
Restocking has provided
mission to sue Colorado to col-
42 counties which formerly had debt und
interstate compact. El Paso and
few deer, says the Parks and
Wildlife Commission.
Agriculture Comm. John C.
White received a Federal Land
Bank Commemorative medal
for distinguished service to ag-
riculture.
Former state Rep. George H.
Cook of Odessa, who served in
the Texas House from 1959
through 1963, has been named
director of field operations for
the Texas Parks and Wildlife
Department.
Federal approval has be*n
given a $91,980 grant for im-
proving three city parks in Mc-
Kinney and a $108,850 grant
for the development of the 478-
acre Caddo Lake State Park
near Jefferson.
Texas Water Rights Commis-
sion has recommended that ity *?r ac<5 of eW>j>loyees and
Governor Connally approve an
$18,000,000 federal flood con-
trol plan to widen and other-
wise rework Clear Creek just
above where it flows into Gal-
veston Bay.
Austin—A mass!
allgnmeht of the Te
ve new re-
exas Nation-
939,000 acre-foot water
er a 194Q Rio Grande
Hudspeth County have a big
stake in the dispute,
APPOINTMENTS — Lt. Gov.
Preston Smith named Senators
William N, Patman of Ganado,
Charles Herring of Austin and
J. P. Word of Meridian to#the
Senate’s “little Hoover” com-
mission to promote economy
and efficiency in state govern
ment.
Smith placed Clint C. Small
Jr. of Austin and Reverend J.
Texas increased during this
year by approximately 25 per
cent over last year, reports the
Coordinating Board, Texas Col-
lege and University Syrtem.
Total now is 7,002 or 1,385
more than in 1986 Largest area
Of increase is in enrollment in
baccalaureate-degree programs,
which went from 3,626 to 4,367.
In April, the Board Wiled the
lick*of nursing students an
“emergency” and made exten-
sive recommendations for new
college programs and the en-
largement of old ones. Obvi-
ously, many ol these recom-
Carroll Chadwick of Center mendations have been carried
and Sens. Tom Creighton of
Mineral Wells, Dorsey B. Har-
deman of San Angelo and
Charles Herring "of Austin on
the legislative committee look-
ing into exemption of chari-
table organizations from liabil-
agd&ft .. .
AIRPORT AID SOUGHT -
Texas Aeronautics Commission
will seek $500,000 in federal aid
for airport construction in I960,
an increase of $50,000 over this
year.
Sixty-seven Texas communi
ties are on the waiting list for
al Guard will increase its airports and 23 mbre are ready
and improved not contn
tential, according to Maj
Thomas S. Bishop, the adju
tant general.
Texas’ two Guard divisions—
the 36th Infantry and the 49th
Armored—will be replaced by
the 72nd Mechanized Infantry
Brigade and the 71st Airborne
f°L Infhntry Brigade, plus miscel-
~ laneous units. v>:,'
Headquarters of the 72nd,
covering North Texas and the
Panhandle, will be in Dallas.
Headquarters of the 71st Air-
borne will be in Houston. Pres-
ent 36th Infantry Brigade will
maintain its headquarters in
San Antonio and cover all of
South Texas.
Guardsmen from Fort Worth-
Dallas and Odessa - Midland
areas will form two new types
of command units, called “em
ergency operations headquar-
:ers.”
Canyon, Clarksville, Belton,
Dumas, New Boston and Rusk
Will lose their guard units in
the reorganization. An artillery
battalion with headquarters in
El Paso and batteries in Odessa,
Midland, Pecog, La mesa and
Big Spring will be separate
from the three brigades. So will
an engineer battalion in Abi-
lene, a tank battalion in the
Srownwood * San Angelo area
and an armor group in Fort
Worth.
early in
February at Longview, Austin
and San Antonio.
Railroad brotherhoods have
filed 4 protest. Notices of ap-
plications have gone to mayors
of all towns along the route.
DRUG-CONTROL PUSHED
— Rep. Burke Husgrove of
Breckenridge wants to mobilize
state - agency resources to see
that laws against drug abuse
are enforced and the public
told about the dangers of drug
use.
Musgrpve, one of the spon-
sors of the anti-LSD bill pissed
by the last Legislature, met
with representatives of a num
bet of state agencies ahd pri-
v„t. wS In Austin StJK JWltTpES fiSSS
«h.tevr nroblnn, ttM and “h°e ”,tC“ ia. cf tw
to suggest solutions.
it was generally agreed that
the drug-iaw-enforcement di
vision of the Department Of
Public Safety should be tripled
in size and that the State
Health Department should be
made the clearing house for
public information on drug
USe.
DRINKING DRIVERS — If
a study conducted in San An
tonio represents the state as a
whole, the Texas Safety Asso-
ciatiorf says almost half of the
drivers and pedestrians i n
Texas traffic accidents may
have been highly intoxicated
10 - year blood - alcohol
study by the Bexar County
Medical Examiner’s Office
more alcohol
blood.
Thai
percent
present in thair
t means that, theoretical-
posals Will be held in Austin on ly, each of them had consumed
more than three highballs
more than six beers ift his fi
or
final
content of .10 percent is con-
sidered by most experts to be
too intoxicated to drive safely
OIL ALLOWABLE IN-
serve a CREASED — Railroad Com
mission boosted statewide oil
317.796 barrels
Commission
extended its
lource
RIP ....pHH _ ,, ihSuttty
have been public
Texas Industrial
Titles are “Texas Community
Profiles” and “Texas Plant Lo-
SttssSf
Sir
Sr
SP*
muni
be
te locate m
. Plant
is a of four
tion
from in-
1t shou
m
Gen,
adju-
brigides, but not as a part of
them.
Total authorized strength
will be increased to 17,375. Al-
though the number Of COm-
pany-sifed units will be reduc-
ed from H9 to 122, UflitS win
be larger and sometimes divid-
ed between two and three Ci
ties.
While general recruiting is
banned for new Guardsmen
without prior experience, en-
listments are Wide Open for the
hew airborne brigade with units
in Houston, Columbus, Bran-
ham, Gfah|e, Austin, Port Ar-
thttr. Beaumont, Port Neches,
Waco Whitney Stephenvilie,
Clifton, Hillsboro, Cleburne and
’ETt^Sii’SS! CCOlmTS SPEAK—State Su-
ttolwtnu wT « Preme Couft< itt Hiring a
accidents had .15 percent or t„v,
to start construction.
At is meeting here, Commis-
sion heard an application by
Miller Aircraft Co. for a route
from McGregor to Dallas and
set an additional hearirfg to
find out if Hood Airlines in-
tends to use its permit for the
same schedule.
Hearing originally set for
Dec. 18 on Air Southwest Com
pany's application to operate an
econo my service between
Dallas - Fort Worth, Houston
and San Antonio Was postponed ler Counties,
until Jan. 15.
NEW TEXAS TRAVEL
HANDBOOK — Texas High
way Department has released
an expanded version of its 208-
page travel handbook.
Publication now lists 400 ci-
ties and towns, more than 2,-
500 individual items and con-
tains 112 photographs, includ-
ing such attractions as El Paso’s
aerial tramway and restored
Presidio La Bahia near Goliad.
Special Sections are devoted
to recreational facilities in Tex-
as forests and parks and hunt
ing and fishing regulations are
summarized.
WEST TEXAS SULPHUR-
Sulphur blew into the Texas
(economy last week, and the
University of Texas and West
Texas in general can only bene-
fit from it
UT Board of Regents collec-
ted $766,123.43 from the sale of
mineral leases on 20 university-
owned tracts in a bid-opening.
Bid on one tract alone almost
equaled the total minimum that
the University expected on the
“All indications print to the
ustry lh West
out and others will be imple-
mented in the fall o! 19(58,
JUNIORS WANT IN—Rep-
resentatives of public and pri-
vate junior colleges have told
the interim legislative Com-
mittee on Faculty Compensa-
tion that they want all the ntw
fringe benefits being given to
the state’s senior Colleges.
Particularly, they cite group-
insurance plans, leaves of ab-
sence Slid tuition waivers for
the families of faculty mem-'
bers.
“We too long have been as-
sociated with the high schools
and not the senior colleges,”
Delton Goodin of Lee Junior
College told the Committee.
“Any college legislation should
include all coleges so we won’t
be segregated.”
SHORT SNORTS — Oov.
Connaly announced a $21,000
regional-planning grant to the
Houstofi-Galveston Area COuh-
eii, a council of governments
Covering Brazoria, Chambers,
Fort Bend, Galveston, Harris,
Liberty, Montgomery and Wal-
A total of 118 Texas cities
have approved the one - cent
city sales tax as of Dec. 18, 16
cities rejected the tax and more
elections will occur in Decem-
ber and January.
Col. Homer Garrison, direc-
tor of the Texas Department of
Public Safety, was honored ato
a testimonial luncheon at
Waco, attended by Governor
Connally and representatives of
the nation's leading law-
enforcement agencies.
New 1987-68 T#x*s Fishing
Guide now is available from
the Parks and Wildlife Commis-
sion.
birth Of a new indi
Texas,” ames B. Zimmerman of
Midland, geologist in charge of
University lands, said. Oil and
gas, at course, will remain the
financial backbone Of Weit
Texas, but in some areas, sul-
phur is the object of most of
the present exploration.
NURSES’ EDUCATION
Public
Notices
Enrollments in registered-‘city
»«^arjrss»,-
th* City Charter, AOtic* 1* h.r*By
given that all peraoni holding, aa
agent or other*!**, an* personal pro-
perty or teal ettnrte subject to !nu«i-
ctpal tax** art required to tender
name (or taxation on or before the
drat day of April, Ifto. All mer-
chant* floteg busihe*s within th- City
ar* required, within the «am« time
to furnish the Alieseuf ahd Collec-
tor of “fixe* a true etatement M re-
quired by statute of all goods, ware*
and merchaadiw) owned or kept on
1 by such merchant on the fl
of January, IMS.
Cedar Dominguez
Assessor-Collector
first
Johnson County district court
finding, ruled that a man can-
not be held In jail indefinitely
if he proves he is uhable to pay
delinquent child support pay-
In other recent decisions, the
high court:
Set Feb. 21 to review a Jim
Wells County malpractice suit
against aft Alice hospital and
two doctors. Mrs. C. K. Gra-
vis claims an operation was
performed on her without con-
«'rs^Mp^r‘,fSF ** tai *•
for January. Figure permits 3,
s.«
(too award to a Waco depart-
ment store employee injured in
an escalator accident.
MSiSr"tortn*
on developing ‘ *
an intersection
faulty traffic si
Sustained lowe
moval
S
A
•nee of Alton Ci
regulated by
signal,
lower courts in
unction to Bishop
to prevent his re-
w«fTs^rth-
Court of Criminal
A rife death
Charles for
1SiA*Bre?c«y.hM
SPECIALS
Heaters $10.00 & up
Paints - - - - 10% off
PLUMBING REDUCED
Pre-finished Panel $2.95 up
Building Blocks ||
Ruth Berry Pumps
Guns & Shells
Commodes---
Fir Plywood 14” BD
Corrugated Iron
J.M. Floor Tile
Common Brick
40c each
10% off
10% off
$1845
$2.50
$10.00 sq.
box $6.98
■■■HPp 4%c each
OTHER BARGAINS At
REDUCED PRICES
[ IV ‘
ilPII
• * *.
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i
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Read, Tommy. The Silsbee Bee (Silsbee, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 44, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 28, 1967, newspaper, December 28, 1967; Silsbee, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth775189/m1/2/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Silsbee Public Library.