The Dublin Progress (Dublin, Tex.), Vol. 91, No. 2, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 11, 1970 Page: 2 of 8
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^TTdlilS COMMUHff? tfm0N 6R0VE COMMUNITY (SPACE and AERONAUTICS
Read The Classified
4-
By Ethel Perkins
John Kidd, ministerial student" Reeves,
from Howard Payee College in ; Mrs. Jimmy Parker and her
Brownwood, was th\spe^ker for j sister, Kristi Jurney, from El
the Sunday sanies at the Cot- Campo, spent several days this
tonwood Baptist Church. (week with their parents, Mr.
Weekend visitors in the Wes-1 and Mrs. John Jurney, and their
ley Berry home were their‘grandmother, Mrs. JWill T.
daughters and families, Mr. and | Gandy.
Mrs. Donnie Finch and daugh- Mr. and Mrs. King Stephens
ter* Donna and Debbie, from
Alice, Mrs. Jack Collins and son
Craig from Roscoe, anil Steve
Jennings, a grandson, from
Plalnview. » ( _ _
Mr. Clay Vaughn returned* Tommy MclU and Miss Sue
home Friday from a brief stay ^rcen *Pent Uw weekend with
in the Veterans Hospital in Tommy s-grandmother, Mrs. H.
Temple. We are happy that he 11111 stroud ^ Tommy and
bad a good report. !Sue *re summer students at
; Angelo State University.
By Mrs. J. A. Fine
Jim and I visited Mr. and Mr*.
Mike Smith of Clairette Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. King Stephens
, . tr .attended the Howell family re-
attended the Howell rmmion in !union , Stephenvilie Park Sun-
Stcphenville on Sunday. The late | day
Several from the church with
Mrs. Dessk D. Labaurh of Pe- Dimen.
cos visited with her parents, Mr, i -Mrs. Willie Magee attended
and Mrs. Frank Perry, last week, t the La Bau;ne f.'.miiy reunion
. Mr. and Mrs. Winston Ross of I Sunday at Stephenvilie. .
Stanford visited her parents, Mr. Mr and Mrs. Osten Davis of
and Mrs. Clement Jones, last Comanche visited her parents.______, ____________„
Friday. Jfir. and Its. 0. D. Capell, Sun- the Moon is not about to make
There’s an old saying. “What
goes up' must cqme down." But
this does not necessarily apply
in the space program. They’ve
launched items from Cape Ken-
nedy that are never coming
down, and that hardware left on
Mr. W. G. Howell was. Mis. Ste-
: phens’ grandfather.
neighbors of Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Adams met in their home and
had an old time singing last Fri-
day night. Everyone enjoyed it
very much.
Mr. and Mre. Alvin Reeves
vfsited her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Thornton, on Smtday.
The Reeves have just returned
borne from a two weeks vaca-
tion. They visited relatives in
Georgia, the Mammoth Cave in
Kentucky, and attended the
Grand 01* Opera in Nashville,
Tenoewse. They also visited
Mrs. Reeves’. uncles in Hot
Springs and Conway, Arkansas.
Mr. Reeves' mother, Mrs. John
Wilson, of Dubnn, went with she
Rev. and Mrs. B. F. Jcnes are
home after a week’s revival in
Jerry Lynn Chambers surpris-
ed his grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Gray, with a visit on
Tuesday. Jerry Lynn is enroute
from Fort Garden, Georgia, to
Seattle, Wash. Accompanying
Jerry was his sister,
Chambers, from Stephenvilie.
They also visited Mr. and Mrs.
J. B. Gray.
Mr and Mrs. Ray Buchanan
and d >HgVm Ponna and Te-
resa of Comanche have been
'T^uudSmu
Comfy* Slippers
From
Quality-
Service
spending their two weeks vaca-
tion with his mother, Mrs. Zera
Buchanan. They and her other
children^ Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Buchanan, of Dublin, and Mr.
Dianna and Mrs. Jerry Buchanan and son
Ken of Eastland, and Billy Jean
Buchanan' who is home for the
summer from Texas A&M Uni-
versity, surprised their mother
by remodeling and painting her
house.
Mrs. Bill Gray entered the
Dublin Hospital on Wednesday
and was dismissed Sunday.
1 Mr. and Mrs. Luther Stewart
of Comanche visited in the Fred
Patton home on Sunday after-
noon. The Pattons are also en-
joying a visit from Mrs. Pat-
ton’s granddaughter, Marsha
Shaffer. Marsha’s parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Buford Shaffer of Fort
Worth, brought Marsha to Dub-
lin on Wednesday.
Mrs. E. p. Smith of Caldwell
and her daughter and grand-
daughter, Mrs. Don Randal, and
Paige, of Kansas Citv. visited
Mrs. H. T. Stroud on Tuesday,
Visiting Mrs. Stroud on Thurs-
day were Mr. and Mrs. JoW|e
Huse and Jessie’s mother Mrs.
Ben Huse
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Gilbert
and children, Steven and Kim,
Mr. add Mrs. LeRoy Everett and
Erick of Stephenvil’\ in-
ner in the home of their grand-
father, R C. McQueen, of Dub-
!lin, Sunday.
There will be fellowship meet-
ing at the First Congregational
Methodist Church this Friday
night. Will have refreshments of
home made ice cream and cake.
Mr. Scott Bradleysboke at the
church Sunday in the absence
of the pastor.
Jim and I visited B. F. and
Leona Jones in Stephenvilie
~ 'Monday evening.
its way back to Mother Earth
unless someone carries it back
And that’s exactly what NASA
has in ipind-
W j’vc v Teamed recently that
one of the truly exciting quests
for future Moon explorers will
be the search for artifacts left
by the earlier lunar explorers,
and perhaps bringing some of
them back to Earth. „
These range from a minute
^obot spacecraft • Surveyor 3,100 Pieces of discarded equip
which soft-landed in the Ocean meBt: seven M® ca®eras amJ
of Storms in April 1967. These a ™ earners; scientific instru-
are now being examined for the 1ments; four Pai[s °,f Iun18r ^o s:
effects of exposure to the harsh four *Pacesmt backpacks; tools;
lunar climate. lunar land®S maps. to name
,, j- Just * few.
Still awaiting possible inspec- As in orbiting the first Earth
tion or recovery by future ex-! satellite ami putting the first
peditions are the remains of two man in space, the Soviets were
dozen other spacecraft, U.S. and first to leave their mark on the
Soviet, that have soft-landed. Moon—the wreckage of Lunik
crashed on the Moon, or pre- 2. which impacted there Sept,
sumablv been drawn from lunar 12, 1959. i
orbits by the Moon's magnetism. The total weight left is about
61,000 pounds. Brought back:
Abo, two U. S. flags and 18 pounds of Surveyor parts and
other ceremonial items left by 123 pounds of lunar rocks and
Apollo 11 and 12 and more than dust.
Attend Year
Church Sunday
SOME QUESTIONS
TO ASK THE PRINTING AND
OFFICE SUPPLIES PEDDLER
7 7 7
• • •
r%1
When The Person Selling Printing and Office Supplies Solic-
its Your Business, Here Are Some Questions He Should Be
Willing To Answer TO YOUR SATISFACTION!
1. Is He a Taxpayer in your community or county?
2. Does He Donate Space In The Newspaper To Local and
County Projects and Enterprises?
3. Does He Pay Wages To Employees Who Live and Do
Business In Your Community?
4. Does He Grant Favors That You Woud Ask Of Your
Local Newspaper?
5. Does He Donate Newspaper Space To Promote You and
Your Neighbor's Business?
6. Does His Price Include Freight, Postage and Insurance?
7. Does He Help Support Bond Issues That Bring Improve-
ments To The Area?
8. Does H/Support Your Civic Organizations, Schools and
Churches With Free Publicity?
We Sincerely Believe That These Questidn Should Be
Considered When You Purchase Printing and Office Sup-
plies — A Question Of Whether You Should Support Those
Who Help Support You!
i
lubltn fhrwjrttSB
J
PRU'JTING
OFFICE SUPPLIES
DUBLIN, TEXAS’
\Ve were glad to have Annie silicon disc microscopically etch-
Mae Berna back in church Sun- ed with goodwill messages from |
day after an .absence of several 173 world leaders, which future!
weeks dqe to having surgery in lunar explorers may study but I
Dublin Hospital, • -not remove, to the wreckage of I
Julie Jones is visiting with 3 15-ton section of a Saturn V
vVuUe Mae and Jerry Ross in rocket which cannot be carried
Stamford this week. Winston is -| back«but some of its smaller
in Kansas City working out of fragments might be.
there now. The tiny, coinsze disc was
left by pioneer Moonwalkers
Neil Armstrong and Buzz Al-
drin, of Apollo 11. Jim Lovell
and Fred Haise, of Apollo 13.
didn't make it to the Moon, but
the third stage of their Saturn
V did.
Intentionally aimed to crash
cent Sevin to 100 gallons of wa- j into the Moon as a scientific ex-
ter, plus two pounds of zinc sul- i periment, it hit with the force
-u-‘- 'of 1114 tons of TNT, 85 miles
Spray Tress Now
For Pecan Borers
“It’s time to spray for pecan
caseborers," says County Agent
Richard Gary, who advises a
formula of two pounds, 80 per-
phate.
The three day optimum pe-
riod for spraying pecan trees is
May 25 to 28, Gary advises, and
growers are urged to protect
'-heir trees from caseborers this
markon to insure a sound pecan
crop.
Gary suggests a formula of
auv teaspoons 80,percent Sevin
0 one gallon of water plus one
ablespoon of zinc sulphate for
ard Jrees.
INSTANT CASH
Witha Progress
Want Ad
from a moonquake recorder
left last November by Pete Con-
! rad and Alan Bean, of Apollo
12.
The impact set the Moon to
vibratng for four hours, and
measurements of the shock wa-
ves radioed to Earth gave scien-
tists new information on the
lunar structure. The outer shell
j seems to be a rubble oF'crys-
i talline rock to a depth of at
least 12 to 23 miles.
I There can’t be much left of
the rocket itself!
Conrad and Bern were the
first to retrieve man-mad? items
from the Moon: a TV camera, I
Lvo pieces of tubing, a length -
of cabie, and a soil scoop from '
«-.Fi a ,1
* 1
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Hicks, Linda. The Dublin Progress (Dublin, Tex.), Vol. 91, No. 2, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 11, 1970, newspaper, June 11, 1970; Dublin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth775350/m1/2/?q=peddler: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Dublin Public Library.