Sulphur Springs News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 112, No. 119, Ed. 1 Sunday, May 20, 1990 Page: 3 of 60
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A„
THE NEWS-TELEQfMM, Sulphur Springs, Taut, Sunday, May SO, 1990—A-3
<---------.• . 4 ■—— - •— —-~r ' • ’' -jg
WELCOME!
HAPPINESS SUNDAY
AT
SHANNON OAKS
CHURCH OF CHRIST
JON HAZEUP, former minister will be speaking
at 10:30 on the subject, "AMAZING GRACE,
GRACE, GRACE!" (He will also be speaking
Monday and Tuesday evenings at 7:30 p.m.)
Will be singing in concert at 2:00 p.m,
EVERYONE IS WELCOME
Community calendar
Sunday, May 20
SULPHUR SPRINGS Church of
God, 1150 E. Shannon Road, will
be presenting “The Alabaster Jar,”
a drama about forgiveness, at 6
p.m. Sunday, May 20.
Monday, May 21
THE UNITED Way Budget and
Allocation Committee will meet at
.6 p.m. Monday, May 21, and
Tuesday, May 22, at TU Electric
Building, to discuss allocation re-
quests.
' EAST CANEY Cemetery
Society will meet at 7:30 p.m.
.Monday, May 21, at East Caney
Baptist Church. Memorial Day ser-
vices will be discussed.
, HOPKINS COUNTY Memorial
hospital and Glen Oaks Hospital
-will sponsor a program entitled
‘.'•The Superwoman Complex” at 7
pan. Monday, May 21, at Memorial
Hospital. Speakers will include Sue
Daley, RN, C; Byrne Windham,
.CADAC, BCS, C; and Tammy
McCormick.
v, SOCIAL SERVICES luncheon
will begin at 11:45 a.m. Monday,
May 21, at Western Sizzlin. Rosie
Chamberlin will speak.
• RED RIVER Council on Alcohol
iand Drug Abuse will have a 12-step
•study group at 8 p.m. each Monday at
:109 Linda Drive.
* ________
: SULPHUR SPRINGS Chapter of
rWomen's Aglow will host the Green-
ville and Paris chapters in a sharing
ttne at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, May 22,
•in the Fellowship Hall of Sulphur
•Springs Church of God on Shannon
iRpad.
«__ m"muu»
£; ALL WOMEN are encourages to
^attend the "Superwoman Syndrome
Seminar" at 7:00 p.m. in Memorial
Hospitals cafeteria. No charge, but
Public Notices
& NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR
WASTE DISPOSAL PERMIT
call 885-3443 to assure seating.
Sponsored by Hopkins Co. Exten-
sion Service,Glen Oaks Hospital and
Memorial Hospital.
A"SHOW Pig and Lamb Work-
shop" will begin at 7:00 pm. at the
Ag. Workers Building in City Park.
Any youth interested in exhibiting a
hog or lamb project at the Fall Festi-
val is urged to attend. Public is in-
vited. _
Tuesday, May 22
THE COMMUTE on Aging will
host a luncheon for some fo our eld-
erly at Catfish King at noon. Com-
mittee members are urged to attend.
Wednesday, May 23
THE ALL-NURSING Home
Picnic scheduled for Wednesday,
May 16, has been rescheduled for
11:30 a.m. Wednesday, May 23.
Don’t complain about graduation
expenses - your student made it
THE HOPKINS County Exten-
sion Homemakers invite all inter-
ested individuals to have fun with
them at their "Quilts/Coverlets wcuk-
shop" from 9:00 to 2:00 at the Ag.
Building in City Park.
NEWCOMER’S CLUB will
meet at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, May 22,
at Western Sizzlin’. Members are
asked to bring “white elephant”
gifts for bingo. For more informa-
tion call 885-8329.
COMO-PICKTON High School
will host an academic awards
breakfast and ceremony at 7:^0
a.m. Tuesday, May 22, in the
school cafetorium.
JAMES VANDERBURG Band
will perform at 7 p.m. Tuesday,
May 22, at Hopkins County Nurs-
ing Home.
Thursday, May 24
THE MOTION AIRES will per-
form at 7 p.m. Thursday, May 24,
at Hopkins County Nursing Home.
Friday, May 25
THERE WILL be a barbecue
dinner from 5:30 to 8 p.m. Friday,
May 25, at the Arbala Community
Center. Donations will be accepted.
Proceeds go to the community cen-
ter.
Sunday, May 27
MEMORIAL DAY Services are
scheduled for 3:30 p.m. Sunday,
May 27, at East Caney Baptist
Church. The Rev. H.B.
Montgomery, pastor of Morning
Chapel Baptist Church, will be the
speaker.
Dear Ann Landers: For several
weeks, I've been hearing parents
moan and groan about upcoming
graduations. They complain about
the money they have to spend
because their kids want everything
- parties, fancy evening gowns and
rented tuxedos, limousines and
permission to stay out all night.
Some teens are even asking for
money to stay in hotels. Parents say
"OK," because they don't want their
kids driving around drunk.
I am also hearing a lot of
complaints from moms and dads,
because their children didn't make
grades good enough to get into the
so-called better colleges and
universities. Some of these parents
are depressed and downright broken-
hearted. I hope this letter will help
them be more realistic.
My son, who two years ago was a
terrific swimmer and high-board
diving champion, played the
saxophone, was sensitive and kind,
and bad a fabulous sense of humor,
will not be graduating.
He dropped out of sfchool six
months ago, because he kept falling
asleep in class and was flunking
everything. When we caught -bim
snorting cocaine in his room, we put
him in a rehabilitation center, but he
was doing coke again two weeks
after he swore he was "straight."
So, when you are sitting in that
school auditorium or standing under
the hot sun on that football field,
feeling a little unhappy because your
child is a disappointment, because
somehow he or she didn't live up to
your expectations, please remember
us, all the parents who would give
anything in the world to be sitting
there with you.
Remember us and love your child
for what he or she is, not for what
you would like him or her to be. Be
Ann
Landers
honest enough to admit that perhaps
you may have been living your life
a bit too much through your child,
wanting the child to be what you
wanted to be, but somehow never
were. Remember that there is only
so much room at the top and not
everyone has what it takes to get
there. Being in the middle is OK,
too.
When your child reaches out and
gets that diploma, be proud. Think
of all the parents who wish they were
in your shoes. -- LOS ANGELES
MOTHER
DEAR MOTHER: You have
written a moving letter. Thank you
for giving millions of people another
way to look at life. That's what this
column is all about
Dear Ann Landers: A while
back, you had a column about people
who help themselves to hotel bath
towels, sheets and pillowcases. What
I read in The Palm Beach Post
recently beats anything I've ever
heard of. Here's the story:
A man who stayed at the Palms
Motel in Ocala, Fla., apparently liked
the accommodations so much he
decided he couldn't bear to leave
them behind.
The Ocala Police Department
reported that the guest, who stayed
eight days and left without paying
his bill, took the following items: a
$40 lamp, two wooden chairs,
valued at $130; a $300 refrigerator;
a wooden table worth $40; a $400
TV; a $425 air conditioner; the
shower curtain, rods and rings, worth
$20; the bedsheets and bedspread,
worth $50; and a portable heater
valued at $32.
Please tell me, Ann, how could a
person possibly get away with that
much stuff? - DUMBFOUNDED
IN FLORIDA
DEAR FOUNDED: He probably
had a truck.
Gem of the Day (Credit Judy Van
Dam, Burbank, Calif.): My morn-
ing prayer: Dear Lord, thank you
for granting me this day. Especially
after I did such a cojnplete job of
lousing up yesterday.
An alcohol problem? How can you
help yourself or someone you love?
"Alcoholism: How to Recognize It,
How to Deal With It, How to Con-
quer It" will give you the answers.
Send a self-addressed, long, busi-
ness-size envelope and a check or
money order for $3.65 (this includes
postage and handling) to: Alcohol,
do Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11562,
Chicago, III. 60611-0562. (In Can-
ada, send $4.45.)
ANN LANDERS®
© 1990, Creators Syndicate
cathy®
by Cathy Guisewite
*- JackH.Kempenaar,Route1,Box24,Como,
Texas 75431 has applied to the Texas Water
fcommission for a permit (Proposed Permit No.
t»188) to authorize disposal of waste and was-
tewater from which consists 800 cows in confine-
ment. Washdown water, fiushwater and store-
water will be retained In two storage ponds,
where it will subsequently be used to irrigate
agricultural land. Manure/solids will be disposed
of as fertilizer on agricultural land. No discharge
of pollutants into the waters of the State is
§uthorized by this permit.
; The dairy is approximately 4 miles north-
northeast of Como and 4 miles north-northwest
ol the Community of Pickton, approximately 1.5
rrtiles southwest of the intersection of Farm to
Market Road (F .MJ 269 and F .M. 3105 in Hopkins
County, Texas. This location Is In the drainage
area of the White Oak Bayou in Segment No.
’0303 of the Sulphur River Basin.
-, The Executive Director of the Texas Water
.Commission has prepared a draft permit based
on the application submitted by the applicant and
Other information presently available.
Legal Authority: Section 26.028 of the Texas
Water Code and 31 TAC Chapter 305 of the
Rules of the Texas Water Commission.
; No public hearing will be held on this applica-
tion unless an affected person who has received
notice of the application has requested a public
hearing. Any such request for a public hearing
shall be in writing and contain (1) the name,
mailing address and phone number of the per-
son making the request; and (2) a brief descrip-
tion of how the requester, or persons repre-
sented by the requester, would be adversely
affected by the granting of the application. If the
Commission determines that the request sets
out an issue which is revelant to the application,
or that a public hearing, would serve the public
interest, the Commission shall conduct a public
hearing, after the issuance of proper and timely
notice of the hearing. If no sufficient request for
hearing is received within 30 days of the date of
publication of the notice concerning the applica-
tion, the permit will be submitted to the Com-
mision for final decision on the application.
. Requests for a public hearing on this applica-
tion should be submitted in writing to Claire P.
Arenson, Assistant Chief Hearings Examiner,
Texas Water Commission, P.O. Box 13087,
Capitol Station, Austin,Texas78711 .Telephone
($12) 463-7005. Information concerning any
technical aspect of this application can be ob-
tained by writing Firoj Vahora, Wastewater Per-
rtiits Section, Texas Water Commission, P.O.
Box 13087, Capitol Station, Austin, Texas 78711,
Telephone (512) 483-8201.
■ Issued this 9th day of May, 1090.
■> (Seal)
(s) Brenda W. Foster, Chief Clerk
Texas Water Commission
_ 5:20
BID NOTICE
The Hopkins County Commissioners' Court
r will accept sealed proposals until 10:00 A.M.
Tuesday, May 29,1990, in the County Clerk's
office for the annual contract for Janitorial Sup-
plies.
; Bidders may use lump-sum or unit pricing as
designated in the specifications. No money will
bit paid to the contractor until completion and
aixeptance of the work or the fulfillment of the
purchaseobligation to the county. Specifications
may be obtained from: SuzanneN.Bauer,County
Auditor, P.O. Box 288, Sulphur Springs, Texas
75482.(214)885-6046.
5:14,20
[DO I LOOK
HOT IN
THIS HAT,
OR WHAT ?!
1 LOOK
BEAUTIFUL
IN THIS
HAT!!
Hawaiian holiday
Residents and employees of Leisure Lodge Nursing Home celebrated
National Nursing Home Week with a Hawaiian Day. Judges and win-
ners of the costume contest gathered to celebrate.
j m ]
STUN-
NING
IN THIS
HAT !!
I LOOK LIKE A ^
MODEL! I
FEEL LIKE A
MOVIE STAR IN
THIS HAT!!
WE LOVE
THESE HATS!
WE MUST HAVE
THESE HATS!
rar
ru. just
SNIP Off THE
TAOS SO VOU
CAN WEAR
THEM HOME.
M/EAR THE/H ?! AACK!
NO!! WE C/IN’T WEAR
HATS OUT IN PUBLIC f?
Crack seized
after stop
on 1-30
A joint effort between the Sul-
phur Springs Police Department
and Department of Public Safety
officers Thursday, netted a drug
rest on Interstate 30 near the
League Street exit.
David Glen Berry, 30, of Sulphur
Springs was arrested and charged
with possession of cocaine and the
intent to deliver. Bond was set at
$1,000 by County Judge Joe Pogue.
Four baggies of lame chunks of
cocaine, valued at $2,000, were
seized. Police said Berry threw the
bags out of his car window minutes
before he was stopped.
According to Narcotics Detec-
tive Ron Plaxco, who orchestrated
the drug bust, Berry was on his way
back from Dallas to make a drug
delivery when officers stopped him.
Acting on a tip, Plaxco said he fol-
lowed Berry for several miles on I-
30 before DPS officers pulled Ber-
ry’s vehicle over.
“I followed him (Berry) in a car
we seized from two people we bus-
ted in a bank fraud operation a few
months ago,” Plaxco said. “And
we plan to seize his car. too.”
According to Police Chief Don-
nie Lewis, Berry was on probation
at the- time of his arrest.
“I believe we stopped a large
flow of cocaine into 'the city,”
Lewis said. “And we’re going to
continue to stop the flow of drugs
in and out of our good city until the
drug supply in Sulphur Springs is
totally depleted. And that’s a
promise.”
9
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lb
1113 E. Shannon Road
L lolfeiRL 1
i A Ska dlniKiwI’
r Sulphur Springs
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Sulphur Springs
$feuf0-Qfcirgrattt
Clarke Keys..................................Editor and Publisher
Dave HBsamer.................................. Managing Editor
Johnle Hardgrave...........................Advertising Manager
David Hooper................................Production Director
Jim Butter...... ......................................Controller
Johnny Mills..................................Circulation MBnager
UaMMadhUW
r.W. Frailty, Editor USd-lWl
Sulphur Sprint) Nown-Trtatrom, (USPS Na 144-5*0) (ISSN 4745-4425) published dully uxcupt Saturday,
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Keys, Clarke. Sulphur Springs News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 112, No. 119, Ed. 1 Sunday, May 20, 1990, newspaper, May 20, 1990; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth823969/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.