The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 84, No. 212, Ed. 1 Friday, September 7, 1962 Page: 3 of 6
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Friday, September 7* 1962. . THE DAILY NEWS-TELEGRAM
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-j-Personals-:-
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Mike Nabors is leaving Sat-
urday for College Station,
where he will be a student of
A«M College this year.
Gilbert McGrede and B. P.
Ashcroft were business visitors
in Pittsburgh and Daingerfield
today.
Mi MraLoufc ^ryan
of Longview will be here Sun-
day for the open house honor-
ing Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Mo-
Grede on the occasion of their
golden wedding anniversary.
Mre Bryan is the sister of Mrs.
McGrede.
Johnny Hargarve of North
Hopkins is a medical patient at
the General Surgical Hospital
in Greenville.
Mrs. Hub Weir has returned
to her home in North Hopkins
after a visit with her son-in-
law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Bearden in Wichita Palls.
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Smith of
Hawkins and Mrs. Theo • Fore-
man of Longview will be here
Sunday for the open house hon-
oring Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Mc-
Grede on their golden wedding
anniversary. Mrs. Smith and
Mrs. Foreman are sisters of
Mr. McGrede,
Mrs. Henry Cowser is con;
fined to her home by illness.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Gregg
and Robby Dale Drummond
have gone to San Perlita to vis-
it Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Drum-
mond.
Miss Sarah Lilly will leave
during the week-end for Dal-
las where she will be a fresh-
man student at SMU this year.
Mrs. H. C. Sims is confined
to her home on College Street
by illness.
Larry Milligan is leaving
during the week-end for Dallas
where he will be a freshman
student at SMU this fall.
Mrs. John Biggerstaff, Mrs.
McGee Long, Mrs. Joe Wor-
sham, Mrs, Eric Bagwell and
Mrs. Than Seaman were visit-
ors in Dallas Wednesday.
Miss Faye Chapman will
leave Sunday for Austin
where she will be a freshman
student at the University of
Texas this fall.
Mr. and • Mrs. Jack Brad-
shaw have returned from a vis-
it in Clovis, N. M., with their
son-in-law and daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Pruet and
family.
Mrs. Charles Clayton of
••W
Kukendal and to return her
mother, Mrs. John Coffey to
her home after a visit in Ft.
Worth and Greenville.
Chris Carothers will leave
during the week-end for Dal-
las where he will be a fresh-
man student at SMU this year.
(Hospital Visiting Hours)
2 to 4 and 7 to 8 p. a.
Admitted
M. L. Kendricks of Como,
surgery Friday.
Kenneth Beck, Route Three,
medical..
Mrs. C. M. McLarry, 407
West Park, medical.
Ray Williams, Como, medical.
Mrs. Vessie McCauley, Route
One, medical.
Dismissed
Edward Crisp, Route Three,
transferred to Dallas.
Mrs. Gene Heard, 827 North
Jackons, medical.
Mrs. Clyde Sells, Yantis,
medical.
Christine Askew, 714 Carter,
medical.
Gene Hurt, 524 Bellview,
fractured hip.
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TEXTILE MANUFACTURERS IRKED
Japanese Exporters
Hail U.S. Decision
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Self-Education
Trip Planned
By Sen. Tower
Washington, Sept. 7 1.4’)—Sen-
ator John Tower of Texas said
in Washington he plans a world
tour for self-education, and at
his own expense, after the Nov-
6th elections.
He will leave Washington for
Toyko on Nov. 15th, w i t h a
stopover at Anchorage, Alaska.
The trip will include stops at
Taipei, Hong Kong, Bangkok,
New Delhi, Teheran, Ankara,
Nairobi, Lagos, Lisbon and
London. Senator Tower will re-
turn to Washington Dec. 13th
FIRST NIGHT WINNERS — Talent winner, Charlotte Car-
foil, Miss Mississippi, left, and Pamela Gilbert, Miss Illinois,
who was tops in the swimsuit division, hold their trophies'
backstage after the first round of the Miss America Pageant
in Atlantic City. (NEA Telephoto)
Mr. and Mrs. Henry McCor-
kle and daughter, Nita, will
be in Georgetown this week-
end to take their son, Joseph, j"a“ rouse a federal judge
who will be a freshman stu-!°“* ^ed ^eat the m’d-
Hectic Trips
Bring Woman
US Citizenship
San Antonio, Sept. 7 l/P) -
A Copperas Cove womari, Mrs.
Charlotte Friderfch Hanshaw,
is a U. S. citizen now but it
took her a hectic day to make
it.
She drove more than 500
miles — making two trips to
San Antonio and back — and
dent at Southwestern Univer-
sity this year.
Mr. and Mrs. Randol Wilkie
were in Waco today to take
their son, Randy, who has en-
rolled in Baylor University as
a freshman student this year.
Mrs. C. E. Tittle has return-
ed from Big Spring where she
has been visiting her son,
Wayne Qualls and family.
Parents Picket
Negro School
Chester, Pa., Sept. 7 Id’l—
Parents of Negro pupils, pro-
testing what they call racial dis-
crimination, picketed the all-
Negro Thaddeus Stevens grade
school in Twin Oaks, near Ches-
ter today.
The picketing accompanied
what the National Association
for the Advancement of Color-
ed People said was a 100 per
cent boycott of the school.
The NAACP said not a single
Negro pupil showed up for
morning classes.
Philip Savage, tri-state secre-
tary of the NAACP, said the
boycott will continue at the
four-room school until the 76
pupils and their teachers are
integrated in another and larg-
er school attended largely by
white children.
Savage haa said conditions
at Thaddeus Stevens school are
deplorable, with the classrooms
over-crowded and the building
badly in need of repairs.
Dr. Jamea Shankweiler, su-
perintendent of the school dis-
trict, said last night that par-
ents who keep their children
out of school are liable to fines
of up to five dollars and costs,
under the state’s compulsory
School attendance law.
Shankweiler said tha school,
built about 15 years ago, is in
aa good a condition as any oth-
er in the district. He denied
there was overcrowding.
night deadline for her naturali-
zation.
The German native went to
San Antonio yesterday to be
naturalized with a group of
other people. Her husband,
Army Sergeant Everitt A.
Hanshaw of Fort Hood, went
with her.
But federal immigration
authorities said her papers bad
not arrived in San Antonio.
She sadly went back to Cop-
peras Cove, thinking it would
be a long, long time before
she could become a citizen.
Federal law says naturaliza-
tion cannot take place within
60 days of an election. That
means she would have to wait
until after the Nov. 6th gener-
al election. And by then she
would be overseas with her
husband.
But when they got back to
Copperas Cove a telephone cell
came in from immigration of-
ficials that the papers were in
San Antonio.
The Handhaws drove back
to San Antonio, arriving late
last night. Federal Judge Ad-
rian Spears got out of bed to
naturalize the woman from
Germany in his home.
Food for Americans
Better Breakfast Boosts
School Child’s Whole Day
By Gaynor Maddox Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
With the reopening of schools, doctors, nutritionists and
teachers urge parents to cooperate with them in teaching young
children to eat a good breakfast daily before leaving for school.
A survey made in the Cleveland Public Schools in 1959-60
indicated that over 10 per cent of the children in elementary
grades did not eat a proper breakfast. At upper elementary lev-
els, more and more of them missed breakfast entirely. The study
was prompted by the frequent complaints from children about
having headaches and not feeling well. Other children seemed
to be listless, inattentive in class, too tired and even irritable.
These were the children who had little or no breakfast.
As a result of this school survey, William G. Walters, health
educator, Cleveland Board of Education, conducted demonstra-
tion lessons on better breakfast i n move than 30 different
schools, for over 5,000 children, to combat the no-breakfast si-
tuation. The children came from families of varying social-eco-
nomic levels. He found that the following four approachess got
results—and the number of school children eating no breakfast
or a poor breakfast dropped by 50 per cent:
1— Breakfast can he planned using foods that appeal to one
or several of the child’s senses. A ready-to-eat cereal appeals to
a child’s sense of sight, because the color is warm; to his hear-
ing because the cereal crackles in the howl; to his taste, because
it is crisp and sweet.
2— Teachers can provide information ons breakfast or foods
good to eat for breakfast, during class instruction, and can en-
3— Children can participate in a breakfast party- at school,
where fruits, cereals and other foods can he served in different
ways.
4— School bulletin board posters can he made in art class,
answering questions on nutrition.
Example of an adequate breakfast: Orange juice or orange
segments; corn flakes; whole milk; sugar; wheat flake muffins;
butter or margarine; milk to drink.
AFTER PLANE CRASHES
Young Girls Survive
Ordeal in
Big Bear, Cal., Sept. 7 tfl— trained in survival techniques.
Washington, Sept. 7 UPi—The
Tariff Commission has ruled
against an increase in the du-
ties on cotton textiles import-
ed into the United States.
The decision, announced yes-
terday, was reached on a three
to two vote. The ruling dis-
pleased President Kennedy and
US
was hailed by Japanese export-
ers.
Kennedy said in a statement
he will propose legislation early
r.ext session to solve “the in-
equity of the two-price system
of cotton.” And, the President
said, he is asking the Agricul-
ture Department to come up
with a domestic program to
eliminate the two-price system.
The administration promised
earlier to protect US textile
producers from the stronger
foreign competition that is ex-
pected to result if his freer
trade program is enacted.
The Tariff Commission had
been considering a proposal to
attach a surtax of eight and
one half cents a pound on tex-
tiles imported into the United
States. This wquld have match-
ed the difference between the
world cotton price and the US
domestic price.
US cotton is supported do-
mestically at eight and one
half cents above the world
price. The government pays an
equilavent subsidy on US ex-
ports to help American cotton
compete overseas.
American textile manufac-
turers say the system puts
them at a disadvantage with
overseas competitors.
Bitter Blow’
R. Dave Hall, president of
the American Cotton Manufac-
turers Institute, described the
commission's ruling as “a bit-
ter blow.” Charles Cannon,
chairman of the board of Can-
non Mills Company, said the
decision means shorter work
weeks and fewer jobs for Amer-
icans.
In announcing its decision
the commission said imports of
articles containing cotton are
not materially affecting Agri-
culture Department programs
supporting prices of cotton and
cotton products. Said the ma-
jority:
“The application of an im-
port fee would necessarily op-
erate not only to restrict the
volume of imports of cotton
articles but also to raise the
The commission majority con-
sisted of chairman Ben Dorf-
man and commissioners Joseph
Talbot and William Dowling.
The dissenters, commissioners
Walter Schreiber and Glenn
Sutton, recommended imposi-
tion of a special fee of eight
and one half cents a pound on
in no case should the fee be
less than 20 per cent of value
or result in rates of more than
50 per cent of the value of
the imported item.
Samuel Ishikawa, secretary-
treasurer of the Association on
Japanese Textile Imports, In-
corparated, said the ruling con-
tributes to better trade rela-
tions between Japan and the
United States.
Japanese Ambassador Asakai
told newsmen in Washington he
is certain his government will
be pleased by the decision.
wS
mm
tides that compete with one
another.
“T h e higher ^prices would
clearly result in a reduction in
the aggregate consumption of
such articles.”
Civil Air Patrol officials say
that two young girls probably
survived the crash of a small
plane in the California moun-
tains because they were strap-
ped in a back seat. And the
girls’ uncle says they were able
to battle the elements for 66
Their parents, Mr. and Mrs,
William Clark, were killed in
the crash near Big Bear, Cal.
The girls, eight-y e a r-old
Laurie and six-year-old Julie
Clark, survived by taking care
of each other even though Lau-
Bexar County
Jail Searched
San Antonio, Sept 7 UFI —. A
search of two floors of the Bex-
ar Coonty jail has turned up
three hacksaw blades, a hoihe-
made blackjack, two spoon
handles fashioned into knives
and various other weapons.
The search was made by
deputies after Wednesday’s
2 Ms-hour riot that injured
three inmates.
Sheriff Bill Hauck person-
ally led the search of the floors
that participated in the riot.
It was the first shakedown of
the jail in years in which no
trusty had a part
Try h Want Ad for Results
JFK-Backed
Buckley Wins
In New York
hour, because they had been
terday by a helicopter pilot who
had been hunting for them.
The girls spent three cold
nights and three sun-scorched
days without food and water.
Julie suffered only bumps,
bruises and exposure. Laurie,
who couldn't move, gave the or-
ders and Julie carried them out
to perfection. She retrieved a
suitcase from the plane and the
girls were able to bundle up at
night. She looked for water and
food but couldn’t find it. Once
Laurie sent Julie to look for
help. Julie went a short dis-
tance and came running back.
She said she was afraid. Iron-
ically, there was a road just
300 yards away. But the un-
dergrowth was so thick that the
girls couldn’t see the road and
motorists couldn’t see the plane
wreckage.
New York, Sept. 7 Ifl—Dem-
ocratic Representative Charles
Buckley, of New York, en-
dorsed by President Kennedy,
won renomination Thursday
over David Levy, a lawyer
backed by Mayor Robert Wag-
ner and reform Democrats.
Return* from 270 of 274
precinct* in the Bronx district
gave:
Buckley 19,770, Levy 10,-
991.
Buckley, the Bronx Demo-
cratic legder, announced short-
ly after the results became
known that this would be hia
last campaign for congress.
He conceded that the race
was “about the closest I’ve had
Hi any primary.”
Wagner’s forces in the
Bronx protested the conduct of
the primary to the state attor-
ney general and asked police
to impound all voting machines
in the borough.
They cited “a tremendous
amount of irregularity with
the voting machines.”
Levy waa endorsed by Wag-
ner, the state’* Democratic
leader, and by reform leaders,
including former U. S. Sena-
tor Herbert Lehman and Mrs.
Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Houston Nan
Dies in Fire
Houston, Sept. 7 Mfl — An
unemployed insurance sales-
man died at Houston early this
morning when fire swept his
home.
He was 41-year-old Richard
Albert Parker, who recently
underwent surgery. His four
sons suffered burns. They are
Richard Junior, age 14; 12-
year-old Robert; 19-year-old
Ronnie; and Carol, 7 years old.
Mrs. Parker was away baby-
sitting to help support her fam-
ily. She was treated for shock.
Houston authorities said the
1,4-year-old son got a garden
hose and tried to douse the
flames, which apparently be-
gan in an overstuffed living
toom chair. He told a news-
man:
“I got a hose and started
spraying it. But it wasn’t any
good ... I didn’t have much
water power, anyway.”
r,: .:y
’ w a >•
Woman Receives
Fatal Shock
Nacogdoches, Sept. 7 (JH — A
58-year-old woman from the
Etoile community southeast of
Nacogdoches was accidentally
electrocuted yesterday.
Mrs. Ed Meador was killed
when an electric motor in a
chicken house shorted out
through a galvanized door
which she was attempting to
open.
Peace Justice B. F. Beard
ruled death by accidental elec-
trocution.
Her huaband witnessed the
tragedy
Packing Plant
Finns Feel
Livestock Pinch
Cornunp, Iowa, Sept. 7 WPI -
Disruption in packing plant op-
erations have multiplied since
the * National Farmers Organ-
ization started withholding
livestock from market and new
complaints have arisen about
reported actions of NFO mem
bers.
Three Iowa packinghouse
firms have announced the lay-
off of at least 600 workers be-
cause of reduced supplies of
hogs and a fourth said cur-
tailment of operations was
pending.
Oren Staley, NFO president,
reiterated that his organiza-
tion is committed to non-
violence in keeping livestocl
away from buying stations.
At the same time, Johnson
County Attorney Ralph Neuzil
at Iowa City, said he has asked
the county sherifFs office for
a report on an alleged incident
at Lone Tree last Sunday, the
day after the NFO holding ac-
tion went into effect
At Maryville, Mo., A. R.
Martin, president of the Con-
sumers Oil Cooperative, which
also operates a hog buying sta-
tion, said wire fences at his
pastures had been cut in 86
plac§& Martin blamed' NFO
members.
Neuz.il said he had no evi-
dence of violence against the
movement of 21 head of cattle
from the Duane stock farm
near Lone Tree to Rock Island,
111., last Sunday.
Mrs. Stock said a neighbor
berated her husband after he
and a trucker left with the
cattle, that she got scared,
went into town by car and
some cars followed her.
Mrs. Stock said that in town
a group of men told her that
her husband “had better join
the NFO or else.”
She said she returned home,
British Warn
Of Drug Pills
London, Sept. 7 OR—An herb-
al drug used in slimming pills
is described by a British pub-
lication as a possible crippler
of unborn children.
The medical magazine “Lan-
cet” said one woman who took
the pill in pregnancy gave birth
to a deformed child.
The drug is podophyllum,
used in some types of slimming
and laxative tablets. The tab-
lets can be bought freely in
British drug stores without pre-
scription.
The article said podophyllum
can affect the nerves as thali-
domide does and can prevent
division of body cells.
The pill is made from the
root of the podophyllum plant,
which grows in the eastern
United States and Canada,
where it is known as American
mandrake. It also grows in the
Himalayas and is called* Indian
podophyllum.
The flashes of fireflies are
courtship signals — a means of
and was told 20 or 30 men
were waiting for Stock to re-
turn.
Sheriff Murphy said last
night that the fanners he talk-
ed with “seemed very peace-
able to me” and that they told
him they just wanted to ex-
plain their program to Stock.
Said Neuzil:
“I am in the dark about
all of it. I asked the sheriff
to give me a report on it.”
The NFO holding action was
in its seventh day today with
curtailed operations ordered at
the Iowa plants of Rath Pack-
ing Company at Waterloo;
John Morrell and Company, Ot-
tumwa, and Decker Packing
Company, an Armour Com-
pany subsidiary at Mason City,
subsidiary at Mason City.
At each plant 200 workers
were being laid off. The lay-
offs began today at Rath and
Decker and will be effective
Monday at Morrell.
. Dubuque Packing Company
said an undetermined number,
would be laid off at the close
of today’s business.
Hog receipts at the Iowa
and southern Minnesota inter-
ior markets yesterday were
estimated at 30,000 head, down
48 point 2 per cent from one
week ago and 44 point 6 per
cent less than one year ago.
II
v
Safflower Oil
Becomes Major
Crop in US
Washington— Safflower, a
versatile Cinderella plant, whit-
en paint, lightens cake, and
tints cheeks rosy red.
Ignored for centuries, the
thistlelike flower has blossomed
into an important North Amer-
ica crop, the National Geogra-
phic Society says. Some Ca-
nadian farmers have gone so
far as to abandon wheat in fa-
In 1948, about 10,000 acres
were planted to safflower in
the United States. By 1962, the
acreage had risen to 600,000,
and the end is not in sight.
Seed* Rich in Oil
Key to the phenomenal
growth in demand for safflower
is the seeds, which are rich in
easily extracted, golden oil.
The safflower industry had a
tentative begining a few years
ago when chemists found that
the oil was an excellent drying
agent for paints. It keeps white
paints from turning yellow, and
gives a high gloss to enamels
and varnish.
But safflower came into its
own with the trend toward spe-
cial diets to reduce blood cho-
losetrol. Cooking oil processed
from the seeds is reputedly
lower in saturated fats than
many other fats an<j oils.
Safflower oil has turned up
in many food products. Only
minor changes adapt it into
cooking oil (it helps make light
chiffon cakes), salad oil, may-
onnaise, margarine, and short
ening. There even is a safflow-
er-oil “ice cream.”
Production of all types of
safflower oil rose from 5 mil-
lion pounds to 75 million
pounds in the past decade.
Output of edible safflower oil
shot up from 2 million pounds
in 1960 to 45 million pounds in
1961.
Safflower (Carthamus tine-
tori us) was grown on a test
plot in the United States in
1899, but full-s c a 1 e experi-
ments did not start until 1925.
Plant breeding has produced
disease-resistant varieties with
greater oil content in the seeds.
Most domestic safflower is
grown in California, Montana,
North Dakota, Nebraska, Colo-
rado, and other Western and
Midwestern states. Canadian
farmers in the “hail belt” adopt-
ed the crop because it is less
susceptible to storm damage
than wheat.
Ancient Plant
Though safflower is a rela-
tively recent arrival in the
WhSM SS; HiaJ
and Europe without stirring
much excitement.
Safflower probably is native
to India, where the seeds are
pressed for oil and the orange
and yellow flowers are dried
to make dye. More than a mil-
lion acres are still planted to
safflower.
Safflower seeds were suffi-
ciently prized to put into Phar-
aohs’ tombs. The ancient Egyp-
tians used safflower oil for
lamp fuel and medicine. The
protein-rich seed hulls fatten-
ed cattle.
Medieval Europeans grew
safflower chiefly as a dye
called Shreriff Albert Murphy, source, it was a largely un-
Meial Object
Is Man-Made
Cambridge, Mass., Sept. 7
—The Smithsonian Astrophysi-
cal Laboratory in Cambridge
says that a 20-pound piece of
metal found this week in Wis-
consin was man-made. But it’s
unable to determine whether
the metal is a fragment of
Rusia’s fourth sputnik, which
apparently broke up and dis-
integrated after 27 months in
satisfacory substitute for the
more costly saffron. Safflow-
er dye was not color fast, and
it eventually faded from popu-
larity.
But safflower dye is not quite
obsolete. A dark-red powder ob-
tained by processing the blos-
soms is mixed with talc to make
a cosmetic rouge.
NEW SUPREME COURT
JUSTICE — Secretary of
Labor Arthur Goldberg
talks to newsmen in Chi-
cago after he was named by
President Kennedy to the
Supreme Court bench to re-
place retiring Felix Frank-
furter, (NEA Telephoto).
half of the next $1,500 would
be.
The Treasury estimates the
house plan to make the full
$2,500 deductible would cost
the |governmenW 365 million
dollars a year in revenue. The
Senate committee version
would cost about 200 million
dollars
The Senate itself changed its
committee figures. It voted to
retain the $2,500 ceiling cn
what could be put into the
plan. But it provided that only
half of the total — or $1,250
— would be tax deductible.
Ranchers Vote
Against Leasing
Land to Army
Brown wood. Sept. 7 W> —
Sixty - five land owners from
three counties voted unani-
mously at a meeting in Brown-
wood last night to continue to
oppose the Army’s proposal to
lease their land for military
maneuvers.
been trying to lease almost 2
million acres of Central Texas
land„ for maneuvers. Taking
pa/t in the proposed late Octo-
ber training operation would
be two Army divisions, each
with 400 tanks.
Presiding at last night’s
meeting was a prominent
Brownwood rancher, C. Q.
(Bunk) Davis. Attending the
session were land owners from
Brow'n, San Saba and McCul-
lough counties.
★
Suspicious
sus-
Berlin, Conn., Sept. 7
—Somebody saw
picious looking objoct in n
closet, and Berlin, Connecti-
cut, high school Principal
Robert Long promptly ord-
ered the 950 pupils evacuat-
ed.
Police and fir* officials
did the rest — coming up
with two flashlight batteries
and n small capsule.
Tax-Deductible
Pension Funds
Face Changes
Wasliington, Sept 7 (jft —
The Senate has reduced sharp-
ly the benefits in a bill to al-
low self-employed persons to
set up tax-deductible pension
funds.
Debate on the measure be-
gan in the Senate Thursday.
As passed by the House, the
bill would allow doctors, law-
yers and other self-employed
persons to put ten cent of their
annual income into tax-deduct-
ible pension plans up to* max-
inpijn of $8,500 each year.
The Senate Finance Com-
mittee amended Bite to fix a
ceiling of $1,750. Of this the
first $1,000 would be. dedeot-
BrinkerNews
«
The Brinker Home Demon-
stration Club met Tuesday aft-
ernoon in the home of Mrs.
Newt Owens.
Mr. and Mrs. Perry McMi-
chael and Michelle of Naples
visited this week with her par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Jeston Wil-
liams. The Rev. Claude Stinson
of the Oak Cliff Christian
Church in Dallas was a visitor
Monday in the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Williams.
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Castle-
berry and Fern and Charla of
Beaumont spent the Labor Day
week-end with his mother, Mrsfe
Lena Deuberry, and Mrs. Ineg
Connor. AH of them attended
the Six Flags Over Texa*
amusment park Sunday.
Those attendng the
houseparty at Waco last
were the Rev. and Mrs. A.
Raney, Mrs. Newt Owens
Mrs. A. A. Strasner.
Mrs. A. A. Strasner spent
the week-end in El Reno, Okla.
with her son and his wife, Mr.
and Mrs. Loy Strasner and
family and in Purcell with Mra.
John Wells.
X
The Rev. and Mrs.
» of D
las spent Labor Day visiting
Millikin and daughters
the Brinker community,
former pastor of the “
Baptist Church.
David Flowers visited his p
ents, Mr. and Mrs. John
Flowers during the
prior to entering ,
State College.
Tylers
Service
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103 N.
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Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 84, No. 212, Ed. 1 Friday, September 7, 1962, newspaper, September 7, 1962; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth829899/m1/3/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.