The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 98, No. 269, Ed. 1 Friday, November 12, 1976 Page: 3 of 20
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•:-Personals-:-
Friends are honoring Mrs.
Mary Hurley, 410 Houston
Street, with a birthday card
shower Nov. 17.
Mrs. W. K. Milam was in
Denton and Dallas Thursday
to see her children.
The Cherry Grove Mission
Society will sell pre-Tbanks-
giving lunches Saturday at 12
noon at the North Caney Com-
munity Center and in the
home of Mrs. Preston Epting
at 821 Fuller Street. Each
plate will be $1.50.
Doil Deaton of Sulphur
Springs is a patient in Baylor
Hospital, Dallas.
Mmes. Lucille Gill, Daisy
Stout, Wanda Rawson and Mae
Smith have returned from a
trip to Plains, Ga., and other
interesting areas in the South.
Pete Wright is on a deer
hunting trip to Menard.
Ben H. Dickerson of Sul-
phur Springs is a patient in
Bristol Hospital in Dallas.
Dennis L. Harry, grandson
of Mrs. Roy Harry, 831 Ardis
Street, has been named semi-
finalist in die 1977 National
Merit Scholarship competi-
tion. He is the son of Lee Roy
Harry.
Clovis Pinion is on a deer
hunt in the Comfort area.
Debbie Merritt of Gladewa-
ter visited friends in Sulphur
Springs Thursday afternoon.
Mrs. Bobby Goff is report-
ed to be doing nicely Mow-
ing eye surgery in a Dallas
hospital, Wednesday.
Mrs. Beaulah Jones under-
went major surgery in Medi-
cal Surgical Clinic Hospital in
Commerce Thursday after-
noon. She is reported to be in
stable condition.
Capitol Yule
Tree Picked
RICHWOOD, W. Va. (UPI) -
The Christinas tree at the
nation’s Capitol this year will
come from West Virginia.
The 40-year-old, 41-foot
native red spruce will be cut
Dec. 2 in Monongahela National
Forest near Cranberry Glades.
It is the second time the
Christmas tree has come from
West Virginia.
The official lighting
ceremony on the west lawn of
the Capitol will take place Dec.
15.
Richwood Boy Scouts will
plant two seedlings in the
Monongahela to replace toe one
selected for the Capitol.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Green of
Austin will visit his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Green
and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Ben-
ny Johnson this weekend.
Guard Called
To Hospital
HELENA, Mont (UPI) -
National Guardmen today were
ordered to a strike-bound state
mental hospital under a state of
emergency declared by Gov.
Thomas Judge.
Some 550 members of the
Independent Union of Em-
ployes at Warm Springs State
Hospital ignored a preliminary
injunction Thursday night and
struck illegally, in a
jurisdictional dispute, said
state personnel administrator
Duane Johnson.
The State of Montana was
expected to seek a contempt-
ofcourt citation today, and in
the meantime, the National
Guard commanders were
under the governor’s order to
help provide basic care and
maintenance at toe hospital
Judge issued the command to
the National Guard late
Thursday. Some 245 troopers
were expected to help at the
facility, which was continuing
normal operations despite the
walkout, " according to
superintendent Dr. Harry
Xantoopoulos.
Benjamin Franklin has
been credited as the inventor
of the first swim fins. Made
of wood, they were worn on
hands and feet.
iPathf £feur0'&fl*9rastt
Clarke Keys Editor and Publisher
Joe Woosley Managing Editor
Ronny Campbell Advertising Manager
Guy Felton. Jr Printing Superintendent
Established in tltt
Published daily except Saturday by The Echo Publishing Company at 401
Church Street, Sulphur Springs, Tx. 7S4tJ. Telephone (214) MS-314).
F W Frailey President
Subscription Ratos: By carrier, 12.40 per month or S24.M per year. By mail in
Hopkins and adjoining counties, 113.00 tor six months, S24.M on# yoar, by mail
elsewhere, 114.SO for six months, S27.00 one year (all cash in advance)
Second Class postage paid at Sulphur Springs, Tx
United Press international and NEA Services
Hospital
News
Hoapital VMHug Hwn
2 to 4 and 7 te • fun.
Mrs. Art Singleton, 1122 Jef-
ferson.
Mrs. Anna Brewer, Pickton.
Mrs. Tom Wingo, 940 North
Davis.
David Dildy, 408 Vonda.
Mrs. Kerri Romack, Bra-
shear.
- Miss Martha Johnson, 301
Front
Miss Garmon SwatseU,
Route 4.
Mrs. Amy Thomas, Sulphur
Springs.
Floyd Jacobs, 430 South Lo-
cust
Master Christopher Jeffer-
son, Commerce.
Sherman George, 406 At-
kins.
Mrs. Wilma Murray, Pick-
ton.
Pate Russell, 1523 Live Oak.
Dtomiswd
Mrs. Michael Ashmore and
baby girl, Etoory.
James Taylor, Como.
Mrs. William lahmael, 823
Brinker.
Mrs. Annie Smith, Dike.
Mrs. Julia Holt, Dike.
Mrs. Oia Cfrump, Route 5
Mrs. Elvie Wherry, 118 Fes-
cue.
Mrs. Dollie Harris, Como.
Mrs. Hattie Carpenter, 707
Inffafflnn
Harrison Yount, 232 Partins.
David Phillips, Leisure
Lodge.
Gerald Bell Route 5.
Small Bomb
Explodes on Bus
TEL AVIV, Israel (UPI) - A
small bomb concealed in a
canvas satchel exploded early
today on a bus carrying Jewish
and Arab workers near toe Tel
Aviv suburb of Petah Tikva. No
injuries were reported
The bus was on its way from
Kfar Saba to Tel Aviv, 10 miles
to the south.
Authorities asked witnesses
to report to the nearest police
station to provide evidence, but
a police source said authorities
had already detained 10 Arabs
seen getting off the bus one stop
before the explosion.
The blast came one day after
the bombing of a supermarket
in Petah Tikva in which five
persons were injured by flying
glass.
Military sources refused to
speculate whether the two
bombings—the first since last
May—might signal a new wave
of Palestinian sabotage attacks
in Israel.
Friday, November 12, 1976. THE DAILY NEWS-TELEGRAM, Sulphur Springs, Texas—$
LV
Christmas
Saturday, Nov. 13
SpecialsGalore I
&
Ceramic Pots
20% Off
All Sixes ft Colon
Rosalyn’s
SHOP EABLY!
1209 Mockingbird
885-9211
lew***
yOsS't'S
Hal'5
6.0°
Spring Fashions Noted
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1
THREE GENERATIONS of the Schell family gather
backstage at a Broadway theater — actress Maria, her mother
Margarethe and daughter Maria Therese, 10. Maria Schell
makes her Broadway debut in the play “Poor Murderer.”
By GAY PAULEY
UPI Senior Editor
NEW YORK (UPI) -
Fashions for spring reflect
more nostalgia than
naughtiness.
For example, spring fashions
include bermuda and shorter
shorts, clam diggers (or pedal
pushers, as they are also
called), the bare-backed and
usually bare-topped sundress,
camisole tops for day and
evening, wrapped surplice
tops, halter tops, dirndl skirts
with fullness falling below
waistlines nipped in with self-
fabric sashes, and the
wholesale return of natural
fabrics — voile, pique, seer-
sucker, and the pure linens,
silks and cottons.
This was the opening
message of the New York
fashion industry as it began its
semiannual “press weeks,”
which will conclude Nov. 19.
Opening day, Thursday,
carried a French accent — with
several U.S. women’s wear
designers represented in a
combined show featuring
French textiles, and a preview
of Yves St. Laurent’s men-
swear collection.
One of the stars of the textile
show was French-born Pauline
Trigere, a longtime success on
New York’s Seventh Avenue.
She showed dirndl skirts with
neat, small boleros, and full-cut
sleeves done in coordinated
stained glass print chiffons.
Her silk chiffons were big
white polka dots on gray
background, toe waist cinched
with wide patent belts. Her
fulllength evening skirt was
white silk topped by a red and
white printed top, surplice or
foldover wrap blouse tied at toe
waist.
Eve Stillman, whose
speciality is lingerie and atr
home wear, featured “dance
pants,” black satin shorties,
abbreviated top, and the works
lacetrimmed.
Jousse of Paris, a newcomer
on the U.S. scene, led the move
back to 1940s sportswear,
showing slim trouser and
Tshirt combinations, plus the
clam diggers — their cuffs
ending just below the knee —
short shorts, some of which
were topped with openwork
“fish net” blouses, and jum-
psuits.
Maya, a young Indian ar-
tistdesigner of promise whose
trademark is a “body clothes”
silhouette, featured bra-less
and slip-less models in sheer
chiffons and crepe de chines for
evening wear. There were also
engine red crepe pajamas with
loose cardigan top. Red and
blade, red and white, or all
white were Maya’s favorite
color motifs.
Yvon C. Dihe, U.S.
spokesman for Yves St.
Laurent, sounded the only
verbal antinostalgia note —
then displayed nostalgia with
the St. Laurent menswear
collection.
And if you think the old is
dead, consider the way to
recycle great-grandpa’s
napery. St Laurent used linen
shirts, minus celluloid collars,
worn open-collared over
standard shirts of today. He
also stressed revival of the
double-breasted suit.
And a lot of women won’t be
speaking to him, if one idea
catches on — cotton shirts that
have to be ironed! No drip-dry,
no modern laundry technique
here."
“Polyester is dead,” said the
St. Laurent spokesman.
Wanna bet?
The Gulf Stream has a flow
of 100 billion tons of water per
hour, 22 times as much as all
the rivers on earth
fUStel Remington. /5BJ -WINCHESTERS FEDERAL
IT
Broadway at Lee
Open 9 to 9
Prices Effective Friday & Saturday
November 12 & 13
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Keys, Clarke & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 98, No. 269, Ed. 1 Friday, November 12, 1976, newspaper, November 12, 1976; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth824738/m1/3/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.