W. C. "Dub" Poison Is Named Marfa Athletic Coordinator

Transcription

W. C. "Dub" Poison Is Named Marfa Athletic Coordinator
/ -
VOLUME 41
Summer Instructional Program Is
Offered By Marfa High School
County Requests
Airport Lighting
NO. 9
PRICE 10c
MARFA, PRESIDIO COUNTY, TEXAS, THURSDAY, MAY 27, 1965
Junior Rodeo
Starts June 3
W. C. "Dub" Poison Is Named
Marfa Athletic Coordinator
. David Bates, principal of Mar- . tend t h e first scheduled class
H i e a n n u a l Marfa J u n i o r Re»
fa High School, h a s announced meetings o r contact Mr, Bat p.s
deo
Is scheduled t o begin J u n e
Application for the lighting of
t h e schedule a n d information a t Marfa High School
3 and run four days a t t h e Marrunways a t t h e Presidio County
for t h e s u m m e r instructional
1
fa Rodeo Arena.
S u m m e r School for Elemen- Airport have been
completed
Events scheduled f o r girls
p r o g r a m . Classes t o be offered t a r y School studems v i l l stait and a r e now being sent to t h e
W. C. (Dub) Poison, 31. was json to change at this time. I
thte year include Barrel Race,
including Typing I, English A, J u n e 7th a n d will r u n for six Federal ^Aviation Agency d i s
named Athletic Coordinator in think we wfll have a good first
Pole Bending, B r e a k a w a y RelivB, 11 a n d 12, Civics, Driver's
<OT M a r f a
!
i
n g a n d Ribbon Roping. T * e
S
n
'
t
T
M
o
n
d
a
y
^
a
v
^
T
"
'
"
^
^
''*>*
**°**»^«5
M
h
o
*
^
T
w
e
*
a
£
a
little
Education and H o m e Economics.
aPPrOVal
2l
! n f h o nprn^nM
- ~
: » succeeds Bob Howard -weak In p r e s e r v e strength."
boys events include Barrel Race,
All clases, with t h e exception ^ s ! a , 9 M a m
w
Poison
played
football
-one
year
Yearling
Riding.
Breakaway
of H o m e Economics, will start pal's office.
i The application, according t o
^ , . ^ ^ / ^ , ^ 1
Poison
is
a
g
r
a
d
u
a
t
e
of
Sul
a
t
Houston
University,
t
w
o
Roping, Steer Riding, Tie d o s m
Tuesday,
June
1st. English
| Presidio County J u d g e W . R.
Subjects offered will be EnRoss
receiving
h
i
s
Bachelor
deyears
in
t
h
e
A
r
m
y
and
3
years
Roping,
Rihbqn Roping, B a r t classes will commence ' a t 7:00glish, Reading and Math in u V Johnson, requests t h a t 4600 feet
. -,,. ,
r
back Riding and Bull R i d i n g . .
a.m., last until 9:20 and meet 6th, 7th a n d . 8 t h Grades. English !of thp n m w a y - 4 ^ - 4 j g h * A i - A . _ £ w ™ Physical Education, a n d at Sul ,Ross
gained
hTs
"first
experience^
as
Books f o r t h e events wfll
for 30.-class-days.
and Reading will be taught by ; lighted wind cont* b e installed
Poison w a s born in Walner,
an
assistant
students'
coach
d
o
s e at 8 p.m. on Monday, May
Typing classes will also start Mrs. Evelyn Davis on Room 221, and a lighted beacon be installand is t h e son of Mr. a n d Mrs.
there.
H
e
was
assistant
coach
a
t
3 1 . - E n t r y fees must acxx«mpft»y
a t 7:00 and .-meet for 30 ekiss Math will Ix* taught
by Mr.ed.
S. C. Poison, now of Big Spring.
Clyde
before
coming
t
o
Marfa
3
entry blanks a n d e n t r y blanks
days, but t h e length cf the class Prieto in Room 213. Daily seho
Poison expressed his t h a n k s t o
Thv
proposed
system
has
been
years
ago
as
assistant
t
o
Howmay be obtained a t t h e Marifc
meetings will be determined by jdule will r u n from 7:30 a.m. t o
former coach Bob H o w a r d "for
:appro\ed
by.
t
h
e
F
F
A
however
ard.
,
Chamber of Commerce offlCR
t h e student's needs. T h e Civic ,11:30 ;um. Supplementary n v all h i s help t o m e d u r i n g t h e
the
formal
application
for
aid
He is married and h e and his
I T h r e e a g e groups a r e s c h e d u t
claes wll meet from 9:30 to 11:50 dit o r m a k e credit may be*given
past t h r e e years. T h e football I
in
installing
these
units
must
be
wife
Nancy
have
t
w
o
sons.
Rink
|ed" in both t h e girls a n d b o j »
, S t u d e n t s interested in Home : in these subjects. F e efcs$15.00
have learned from h i m shotTfd
imade
through
t
h
e
F
F
A
w
h
o
i
n
5 and J o n 4 . [events.
Championship awsdrife
Economtcs~classeT" a r e asked to per subject.
be a big asset t o me in this new
turn
submits
t
h
e
proposal
t
o
t
h
e
His assistants named today
twill be given in each a g e g r o u p .
'contact Mrs. J u n e Martin f o r
budget committv'e for final .ap- are- George Richards., head bas- position.
The age groups a r e u n d e r thir•further details.
proval, according to. J o h n ^ n .
teen years of a g e ; t h i r t e e n to;
ket bail coach, h e h a s been here
Estimated 'date f a r the* begin- two years, and this y e a r coachThe classroom work for d r i I !."> years; of a g e a n d 16 to;-.lftning of construe! km o n - t h e ?>ro- ed ,the- golf t e a m . Reymundo
ver's Education will start a t
i y :'ars- of°.age.
W C (Dub) Poison
-jeul.. i f U|fpTnv<xl, LE .September Roman
9:30. T h e driving a n d observa! "There -will-'be cute cowgirls
r e m a i n s a s . assistant
. . N a m e d T o p Coach
Marfa
Chamber
of
X,
1965.
-ttorr• schedules will b e worked
.(.Continued on P a g e 8)
f''otball coach . a n d coach of t h e
*•-<
Seven people from t h e Marfa;
out to fit .the needs of t h e stuIM earn. H e ' i s t h e head track Commerce suggests that
Alpine and Big Rend a r e a : \*Xdents involved.
coaeh. MaUU41L. Prieto Ls grade Marfa observe Memorial
• Tuition forXTivics. English and ended t h e convention of the \wF C M ' J O l coneti. a n d he,., lias b e e n
Typing m i l bo S16.60: p e r i ^ . c r e - ernatioruil Oood Neighbor Counhere " ; \ e a r as has£ a y on Monday,^Mwy 3T U ^ l t
cil
in
BrownsvilleVlast
vockcnd.
dit. Typing will be offered for.
<V >: i'.'11 nis coach, hi/ the —business houses "™»*
Tluv group all ended a get- ae—
a full credit if student demand
vEin that eapa- remaining
closed. This W h i l e MfMU-oial F>a\'. M.'iv
CiuainTeTr
[>arty
Wednesday, :
Is-enough to w a r r a n t it.
ritv
is one of the Chamber's • f-ills. onJ Sunii'TV .this ye;.n
Tuition for Driver's Edueation is night where they met delegates
].'•
rt%y.
^
1
.
plan
, M a if a l f )st Office- wii I oh^< > \ (from all over t h e United States
$20.00,
1" s i p y
\\ _ i h f
Single wing designated holidays.
!
Mondav.. May 31. ns t h e hnlE'riy
'nnd
Mexico.'
T
h
e
A
i
r
Force
Students should p a y their r e :
f'.i m;;! i<.>"i. W E L'tN-e' had real
land custo-nmry window sor'vi-..••>.
gistration fee a t t h e first-class • Hand from San Antonio provid-.
M : C . ' ( - 5 ^ w i t l r ii atid
ee; no rea:from; ^:30 In P:30. will >.e i - <<•
ed
music
for
t
h
e
affair.
meeting. Class will meet in t h e
jfect on t h a t day. Jock MorVi'v
I n a u g u r a l Ceremonies of LIHL
Marfa Elementary Building.
•local postmaster,
.staled
that
assembly
were
Interested students should at- twenty-second
stamp, parcel post a n d general
held on Thursday with Attorney:
'delivery
windows would be oy>e:>
General W a g g o n e r C a r r -as t h e
ed during t h e morning hO'ir .^nd.
featured speaker.
D u r i n g this
,
u r g e d t h a t patrons alra'n g«v **t. 0
meeting a packet containing
FOP-r ixAV^LS - - A two-part i a Union m a n ; and t h e Confederj t r a n s a c t t h e i r postal b-^ines?
brochures of Marfa, B i g Bend
program . is scheduled for four ' ates, V. M . -Ward; William D .
Itor t h e d a y dur ing t h a t time.
National P a r k , Alpine a n d t h e '
o'clock in t h e afternoon of Mem- Maxwell, Jos^>h Granger, a n
Only curtailment of window
"Several families will b e mov- C h i h u a h u a a l Facifico Railroad
orial Day. May 3Q, i n t h e town e a r l s ^ a y f r e i g h ^ r v j j p d noted j «ervioe \s S a t i n e d fof the l^fon>
i n g into Marfa this s u m m e r and w e r e passed t o all t h e delegates,
plaza whc!n
a commemorative y a r n Spfntier; a n d Phni|> H a l k e r
d a v holiday a n d a n adequate
jwilj b e in need
of adequate D u r i n g t h e afternoon a relaxaservice will be held in connec- Pruett, w h o w a s a l i e u t e n a n t «e jeal complement will be on i
r
r
p •'••'•
* -nousing.'' according
t o Miss tion period was held on P a d r e
tion with five Civil W a r veteran with"Arkansas troops.
dutv
to
proniptlv,
box
incoming
'
-Charlenc Roberts, Marfa Cham- Island. T h e a r e a delegates visi f a v f m a r k e r s and t h e presentak,'
T h e historical plates a r e a t m a i i as well a s to proee«; f^r ,
ited a n d told of t h e Marfa. A I-.
ber of Commerce Manager.
tion
t
o
nnhlir
view
nf
iwn
rA.
Connie Adams
^ L l j l ^ i l n { i i l l TrMinjBLJE'ffflJJan^
-aft - m a t t e r - p U ^ d - i r r j ;
"We need all of y o u r r e n t p n v pine, Big Bend Area a n d plans
eontly
installed
state
historical
s\tore, owned now b y T y r o n e t h e office dur ing the dav as re-'-T
Lady I n Waiting
p e r t y listed; -with t h e Chamber for. e n t e r t a i n i n g d e l e g a t e s t o t h e
markers. .
Kelly, and, at the T r u e h a r t house. gular train, ttxic'k and, .Ktfi.r voVifr>
w h e t h e r it 5s rented x or not," MazatJan. Mexico convention to
. T h e How Neil Hufford, local marked becaure of its a g e a n d
schedulps* .will be . .-m-a'.ntailed.Miss Roberts said.
",
. be-.-held, in • Noveinl>e-f,- 1 9 6 . 1 . "
.Method.1*! pastor., is to . m a k e . a. its American Romansque archiLocal "business firms BV^ remind':•" Miss Roberts' said that
the • F r i d a y was devoted t o ; comIjrief.-address about t h e voter- t'ecture. It is t h e liome 6X Mrs.
ed by the'• postmaster .t? ahti^i"Charnber requests a l l rent pro- . m'toc meetings and a _ membernii5i. who are ._Cha.cles Mulhern. _Tjer?a N e m \ who maintains. 11161^
C.E.JV (Cosme) Alvacado
i
pate—thei>.'"
s t a m p voc\u'ii^e.m*5ht's
-per-ty - o w n e r sJ m p r x i v e _ t h e —prct:: ship... lLm.(?li&cm_,-WJth-i.Glc n G
31 Years Faithful Service
hor extensive museum of Ame- for
endrOf-the-mont h- ma il ings
perty they now h a v e and t h e r e rett, Executive vice-president 'of
rican, French, Japanese, English and t o make, their purchases
. w i l l ; . b e no trouble. in renting, t h e I G N C a s the main speaker.
M : ss (Tonnie /Vd.am^daugiiter
atid tndian dolls. j5he will hold 'with t h e M o n d a v ' ' w i n d o w s e n i c e
Those t h a t d o m a i n t a i n t h e i r I O h S a t u r d a y t h e last g e n e r a l •of Mr. and- - Mrs. H. c, Adams
•6pen house without admission hours in mind.
rental property dtr-TTot--yeerfr to m e e t i n g : w a s held. At this
of Marfa. J i a s been 'chosen b y
charge.
t.have trouble in keeping their ing Del Rio was voted a s t h ethe COIT>S- of. Cadets at the New !
Mrs. A. J. Rqach .and h e r dau-•
sight of t h e next convention t o MeA.ico MiiitaiT Institute; Ros- \
places.rented.
The "Annual - Union Vacation ghters. Karen and Linda /Mrs.
Red ford
Elementary
School
beheld
in t h e United States. •\veil. New Mexico, as their L a d y
Church School of t h e Christian, George Grubb, J r . ) with o t h e r s ;
"We need
your cooperation. J o h n n y Newell of Alpine invitheld graduation exercises Thurs'for t h e 1965 Final Episcopal. Methodist a n d Presby- are..- too render t h r e e Civil W a r
/ M a n y people a r e looking for ed a l l membcrs- of t h e IGNC to in Waiting fc
day, May 20, a t 8 p j n i when; 7
~
terian
Churches will b e held songs. -Miss Ellen Carlton is, t o . ,
^places t o live so t h e y can move come t o - t h e -Marfa*Alpine, Big E^llE
students were given certificates
J u n e 7th through J u n e 12 a t t h e present a short paper on the 4
t o Marfa* W e a r e losing one o r Dend area and spend some time
of graduation..- One of t h e honorMiss Adams is a junior a t First Methodist ChurchE
.,-.
Civil
War.
'
•
•
'
.
"
•
'
.
' t w o families a week
because on t h e i r w a y t o t h e MazaHan
ed guests was C. J. (Gosrne) Al--;
Marfa High ,. Schooi. She. is a
It is expected .'.the p r o g r a m
we d o n o t h a v e . suitable r e n t Convention. The; group w a s inrnember. of t h e .National-..Honor . . T h e r e are,; classes planned -for K\ Ml last leis^lhan half a n hour. ' Commeneement exercise?;, were va ratio, school •buy driver 'for tfM?
property." -Some of these a r e vited t o stop in t h e a r e a on Nov- SocietyMarfa ..Inlependent , School Difr
and a m e m_____
b e r of t h e2_,arul^n-,J^iX->^ar_jildiv-llim
held ..FriTlny fright. May 21.- In 'frjet,—awl a former student.
loyingu t o Alptne," M | § l _ B Q b i e m b e r 8 b e f o r e ^ o a ^ d - ^
the Junior High School age. , Sconce, who i s t h e Jeff . Da\^s Marfa E l e m e n t a r y Auditorium
e r t s said. train f o r ' t h e ' t r i p orTTo.Mazat- -has been in t h e Beauty P a r a d e
:
Classes begin a t 8:30 and last ' c o u n t y chairman for. .the .Texas
"If your property needs re- Ian,".
j of Marfa High School for t h r e e until :10:30 a.m.. each • morning;. State Historical Survev Com- for t h e , fortyeight graduating j Hepolito Aeosta was , m a s t e r
Seniors of Marfa High School. ' 0 f ceremonies.
pair, repair it a n d list with us
1 y e a r s , a n d is this y e a r hoftd ma- Air a r e welcome t o attend:
r
Page
•S>
T
("ontjnued
o
n
;" T h e RoA. Robert. Bohn of S t . j Alvarado w a s presented a
a n d w e feel sure it can be rent- l "Oilf area will be very busy jonHte of t h e Marfa Shorthorn.
apffnrrting
t
n
t
h
e
indication
of
Mary's Catholic Church^, gave C e r t i f i c a t e of ^Appreeiation bjr
• The teaehrrs for "•-the-classes'
ed i f it is m a d e suitable," Miss_
^ano-—
the i r i v o ^ t i o r i ^ n d L h e ^ Honors .Rjcardc. Sotelo. member of t h e
tn^robers t h a t plan t o attend t h e
are: Nursery, ^2^-3 year olds)
Roberts said.
Band, played^ a s o c i a l number, j Marfa Independent School B o a n l
iMakatlan meeting and w e a s k Mi?s Adams has also beon a iVfrs. H e r b H a r l o w ; Kindergar.
I t h a t a l l m a r k this d a t e oh t h e i r member of the Ail-Region Band ten. (4<5 y e a r o l o ^ : ) . Mrs. A . E W ;
"March , Wynds." written and \-0_ Trustees,-' oni behalf of grateJ
IContinued dn Page %)
scored, b v Grace H u m p h r e y s . : fU] rnombew of t h e Board a « 4
for two years, H e r future plans Bishop; P r i m a r y U 1st, 2nd and
valedictorian o f thf -class. It was school officials! •
iate that; she .will attend 3rd grades), Mrs.'>Bishop Bailey.
Officials
of
the
Presidio
W
a
t
e
r
played-after
the . salutatoi-y
(Baylor ..tnTfyTsity a n d major m Jr., arid Mri. J a m e s C h e r r / J u
^^Earndo \yrtj a.Ko. reoipie'nt..-el;.
Elementarv Education.
niors (4th, 5th a n d - ^ t h grades). Supply Corporation have b f i e n ' i ^ i c h ; w a s , given by • Albej^o P Certificate' of Merit f r o m - t h e
. ^Operation . H e a d s t a r t "
will
Bill Christopher, a n d Mrs. advised t h a t t h e letflrig r>f t h e Morales, and before her^address.
Tis>;as Safety
Association^ pres
.
.
.
Miss
Adams
will,
leave.
J
u
n
e
bids
-for
t
h
e
construction
of
t
h
e
j
^
u
r
>
t
,
«e
G.
Adams
introduced
•Start rolling in'.-Marfa on Ivjay
;
:
Pat Ryan. J u n i o r High, (7th and
sented
-also
by
Siotelo. T h e s e
j 6 for Wica^JLviiAi'e she "will at- Sth grades), George .Archer *and Presidio W a t e r System will be ^
$1 whep t h e -tliree')• teachers of
^ e a k e r , D r . Ollie S ^ C a u :
E~. ....Uend. 3 ' . pix AveekVi courye for Mrs. M. S. Baker.- ITh is..group held on Tuesday," J u n e 1st a t [thern.. director o t PublicE-R^Ja- a w a r d s w e r e presented 1ft" fecot h e p r o g r a m will g o t o TheE^^
T h e Texas-Big fa Geitt a n d Special Students. T h e credit I will meet from 3:30 to 9:30 a.m.) the Presidio School a t .-.1:00 j r t o " s a t San Ant»eU^ C o l l e ^ E H e grdtion o f t h e 31 m i s h a p free
^niversfty of Texas for a seven
:
' d a y t r a i n t n g session,:
• ;'.;." .';-. -Mineral Society. will meet F r V she. e a r n s a s a high school stu
lo^loek in the- afternoon instead i s , i s t t ^ ir1 Who's W h o In Ame years A l v ^ a d o h a s driven a
'••. *
mt ^ S •
' . ' f . "• • • • ' E . '-:
••"• - 1 . 1 - - 1
ricari Colleges a n d Universities, schciol bus.
•lJf.-Mrs.-.. W, C. Poison, a n d Mrs.; i d a y n i g h t a t . 7 : 3 0 p .m;' in t h e of dent will 'apply, oh her ..college
of. 7:00' in t h e ?5|eninu as
and in W i o ' a W h o in t h e 3outli.
p a y i d ; B a t e s o f t h e . Marfa units ficeslof t h e Marfa Chamber--of ; record. -. '/••;.. •'•--' ' '•:' "' --v..
l-K'en sch.eduled.: .r.-.••;.Father
CJ)ivern
J . E . :.--T-'XT- ^f'**'*'^*::.•..,'"-•*-""'T^v*r"j
Southwest. H e qi\ce taught
an3
.audiUJfe' Kdmundo Madrid, of ' Cbnimerce..
~ •'.;.'•.-'
and - Sotelo p r e s e h ^ i "
The Final Rail, w h i c h ' i s held
Pi*espnl a t t h e bki .operiing'-j school in McCjmey a n d w a sspeaker;
,
tjie Bedford/ unit w i l l be. in Aus.
'Charter membership of t h e
will be t h e President of the N a : j principal in /Sheffield ^ d e p e n d - diplomas to S<&ferina :Ooori, G3av
i l n uhtil J u n e 5, Here, they will organisation will close d u r i n g annually with Commencement:
ria Cordero, J o e Carrasco, R e Pilot CHub o r l ^ r f a Witt spon- jtional
Engineering
CompanyEJent
School District f o r ^ s e y e n
learn t h e necessary procedures t h e m e e t i n g ari& all persons in- weekend activities a t NMMI,
fugio T a r i n , A r m a n d o Carrasco,
will thi^. year be stagetrifon Sat- sor a "Welcome t o Marfa , ? pro- •! «^d other engineers, ofJMals of !year$ ;
- E "?
, | o r '-OperarJpn Headstart."
terested In joining the^gropp a r e
1
Daniel
Catano affd O r l a n d o M *
:
urday; May .29 on t h e camRys. j'ect f o r new^ residents. ,
' ' t h e Presidio W a t e r Supply Cor 1
.r..-'Arf orientation meeting f o r urged t o attend.
drld f H e commended : the" * stuCadet J a m e s Britton of Liibp a r e n t s a n d a n enrollrnent pro^
Newcomers a r r i v i n g in Marfa poration. t h e i r legal counsel, !; ^ . Cauthefh's. addr<?ssE w a s dents on t h e work; t h e y h a v e acT h e m e e t i n g will be a n organ-,
Texas, will eicort Miss
based on t h e topic, "Personal
r a m f o r children will begin a t izational m e e t i n g and a- p e r m a n - ,bock,
on Juile 1, o r afterward will h r 1 M r 1j- A ^ l l i s Q T 1 a n d repre> Preparation.'"
- A.
,
A , _
He; stressed t h e complished a n d inVtted t h e m $•p.m. o n H d a y , J u n e 11, ac- ent s l a t e o f offlcefs i s t o b e - ^ ^ ^ . , ^ , ' * e g ^ ^ n t
personally welcomed b y mem-senfatives of FHA.
importance of. being trained fbr enroll uv M a r f a H i g h S c h o o l
Mbotding t o H . Gi Adams, Super- elected, a c c o r d i n g . to Gene COT •!••' 'Mr. a n d Mrs. H . G. Adams bers of t h e Pilot, C l u b and given
Present information available t h e Johs of th f t ftitu^ ^ ° w o n next fall;—-. ;. E..J.:.U.^:....'-.:'• '••• : '['•., •-.^ e n t pf t h e M a r i a seriools. der. t e m p o r a r y chairman Of tt* ^}'_**?*'_*lth
C d h n J ^ r h i i r s d a y aM envelope containing & letter
indicates t h a t 8 -or 9 contractors tioned that the artual worth of The welcome address
for Koswell.
TPhe iorirtal classes will begfn group.
p i welcbrne from t h e m a y o r of will submit bids, a n d s o m e r e the dollar presently ts approxi- made < by Gloria Cordero, ~aa&
Monday^June 11 at the MarMarfa, a n d cards from participat* presentatives
The. group will affiliate
Seferina Ocon made a brief talt
of
contractors mately 50 cents,
la Elementary school for thewith the Texas Federation at
Ing merchants.
.
- .Sotelo was accon^anJed to
have .been in Presidio looking a'tf
*is^-'-'iftarti:i. units and at thethe dose o* the Charter MemT h e cards will e n t i t l e t h e n e w t h e •terrain."'
David Bates, principal of the4|tea|6rd j ^
WMierd school for the Radford bership period. '
resident t o a gift from t h e nam*
WifTlV- School,' presentedVthe sent fa Elementary Scfctol teachtr,
mit- SehOiil^ bus serv!<» will be
ed m e r c h a n t w h e n presented a t
The
National
Engineering or^, w h o received t h e i r diplomas and. Pat ftyan, p%»basher of tte
Available to;get the children to
t h e place of business.
Compahy h a s had experience in from tbe president of t h e Marfa Big Bend Sentinel.
M d irotn to school.
).
F>inePal
.
s
e
n
^
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K
w
e
r
e
held
T
h
e
m
e
m
b
e
r
s
of
t
h
e
Pilot
Club
the. design a n d supervision of Independent School 'Board of
Scofch Fourtomt ,
There are 70 students enrolled
•$•*0^ration Headstart is not to
j Monday* May 2*. ?»t 9 a'jn. I n will contact alt m e r c h a n t s &ur* construction of similar facilities Trustees, F r e d Shety,
in Redford School, and the prinbe coniused with our regular $«* Fbr Sundoy
Xhe Cafholir Chxrr'-h in Presidio ing J u n e , a n d give t h e m t h e at poto.-;!.* CooJidfje, Drippin'g
Special a w a r d s were presented cipal Is Edmundo Madrid, and
for Jesus M. Ksqueda, a g e 65.opportunity t o t a k e p a r t in t h e Springs, Telico and other Texas by Supt. A d a m s , a n d Mr* Bates, th* teachers are Jfes. Clyde
fpreschool classes for the 1 non. The Marfa Qolf AwoolaPlglish speaking students/ Mr. tion
H e v^vas h o r n In Mexico, M a y project.
\
cities.
T h e y ! Included t h e State Teach- Vaught ^iaid Rene Franco.
has ann^inoad plant
[Adams said, 'Tills Is entirely a for a aecond monthly Scotch
24,- 1900, a n d died In Brewster
T h e 'spokesman f o r t h e Club
According t o spokesmen of ers* Association Scholarship t o
Attendance Certificates were
pjferent program from Operav Foursome Tounnmont.
County Memorial Hospital i n Al* said, '"We hope t o g e t t h e ball t h e corporation, all .of t h e ser- Marty Taylor. M a r i a KJstoiy
Issuedto:Jesu^ Valenzuela, Jo*
rtttft Headstart-"
pine, M a y 23.
roiling in J u n e a n d after J u l y vice a g r e e m e n t s h a v e been sigti* Club Ajvard w a s presented t o Onrtlf'im, rTVidte Mfdridr. Ante.
Tha date has bean set for
HIS SOn, flftffl tt^iiwlnf nt th* 1 to be abh» t o WUILUHU? all iiew- ed a n d r e t u r n e d t o t h e -secre- Rose M a r y Halze^, Urace Him??E »ra^ Marfa unitforO p g ^ ; 1 Ainday. May 30, play tn b»
nio Rios, Macaria Qulroz, JUbes>
Headstart/Us approved jor #J gin at 1p.m.
United States A i r Force, Pana- vomers as soon a f t e r t h e i r arrl- tary, w i t h t h e exception of 5 out phreys received a check in t h e to Valenzuela, PQar UrouideBL
children and two teachers. The
ma Canal Zone, survives.
/al in Marfa a s possible.
of t o w n m e m b e r s w h o a r e be- mronnt of $150.00 -donor, anony- Elosia Urquldez, Gloria Cordersv
There will he tha- mined
fiedford unit approiwed for 15* .drawbig
Burial " w a s in t h e Catholic
T h e Pilot Club h a s for years ing contacted. Members Of t h emous. Reader's Digest award, Aurora Carrasco, Marta Carfor partners, and m
children and one" teacher with a addition to prtaea. there will Cemetery In Presidio, u n d e r t h e sponsored, t h e r n r t i ^ : r f tulips corporation w h o do not sign t h e and a scholarship for use in a n y •asco, Maria Oarrascb,. Zuema
total of riSO.Of) to»he «pr>nt in be some added surprises.
t'/rrctiott?". ?f Kf»l?cy
F^meral bl>lk '.•»
•* •"* • " -:-*r-\ cn«^T\nce a ^ r e e m e ^ v-',t1 - * b 3•r.ate school a n d o n e good i n Carasco, Hector Morales, OrlanPresidio County fob the projedt.
(Continued on Puge 4»
Home of Marfa.
I s o l d . w a t e r b y t h e corporation.
do Madrid and Joe Carcasoa
IGNC Members Go
To Convention
Post Office Sets
Hours
Memorial bay Services Scheduled
In H??tsric fort Davis Setting
flent Property
Needed By C of C
Ife-'. E - E |
£'•' •
Church School
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Has
Commencement
Held
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^Hecidstort" Wi!l
i&H JuneH
Be l e t
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T h e Big lS*>nd Sentinel, T h u r s May 27. 1905, Marfa. Texas
, T O * " " NEDITATIOK
I
TU WorWi Moit Wid«* Us«d
D*vo»ional Guld«
tb« Upper K^m
Q
rut uf-PI» ROOM NA',HVIIIIT. TfNNtSSif
ji,-;,<l Mink J^:2X-3-l
•j |111(J ,h;,|i l o w Uir I/Oi'l t h y
r;,„l v\nh .-ill 111>• l»i-;tfi. and with
;,H tt.v -.'ii11.. .iii'l vvit-h all t h y
/nihil '.iriil w itti ;ill thy Mn-ngth:
, iLc fi: t << • jnrhandment.
ff.,.
s
'.AJI'I fIn- '<-«IJI'I i- Oki-, namely
fhi. Thou i-hali love thy neigh[;,„,;• .,. ihv.-ll Mark 12:.30-31.
First Baptist
Church
Sr, Mary's Catholic
Church
Father Robert Bohn
Father Peter Alon20
Sunday Masses. f,;?,0. <*:30 a n t
11:00 a.m.
Masses on Fii-t Friday v f.;30
and 8:00 a m .
':
Week D.\v }:;.>.-' - 7:00 and
8:40 a.nx
Confessions. Saturdays, 4:00
to 5:00 p.m. and 7:00* t o 8:00
pjn
Rev. Lloyd Conner
^ H K S H I P SKkVICES:
Sunday Morning. 11:00 a.m.
'f'/.e : ri;*r i >t r,pp<•• t to >ee if h e
.- ,n!d he of a:i.v h"lp. I I ' ' stoop"'^'iirul.-H' K \ I - I L ? . 7:00 p.m. i-d. (iiAui and ask'-d them if they
VvW. iv>clrtv ?AT'nir:f_'. 7:00.
u-ere hurl. -They --aid no. Then
SPANISH SERVICE:
he .-el'.i'd them why they were
Thurso a v. 7:(K) p m.
ervirm if lhey .vei e not hurt.
"JKI\NI7AT10NS:
O r e " Mtth'—ptrf raised h e r head
-1:0(,1,
Sunday,
9:43
.
. m r | S . I M J . ' p n n u n v h i n t himself.
Sunday
a.m.
'We | o \ c him nn<\ w e a r e crying
Trainir/T Union. Sunday. . 6:00 ' hvr:iU>(,
j u . l s hurt."
V m. - . . , .
W.M.SV. Monday. 3:30 p m.
We live in a world oi unrest
'Adult
Tr.o'.r, *Sur.day; 9:00 :;md inflict., of hunger and need.
atn.
'
AW a r e failing as Christians un*
First Methodist
Church
fcev. A. W. Robinson
Church School. 9:45 a.m.
W o r k u p S»-j*viee. 1 0 : J J a.m.
MYF
5 p.m.
Ev«*ing Services
7 p-m.
Choir Practice . . Wed. 7 p m 'Fffftt Tues. WSCS—7:30 p.m.
F i r s t Wed. M*ri's Club—7 p.m.
Rev. Antonio Ve(a, J r .
S u n d a y School, i 0 a.m.
Service. 11:00 a.m.
1:30 p.m.
fw^t^kf*»fion
^Jy Service, ttSO^pttL
r t * u r of P r a y e r , r 7:0G
-^^J^
Church
Hew. Wiitlam V a n Auken
Sunday m o r n i n g service,
Church Of Christ
_
>
•
.
.
.
W 8 W. San Antonio Ave.
E. W. Martinez
Tuesdav. 7:30 p.m., Bible Stu«y.
Friday, 7:30 p.m., Ministry'
ScfeooL
Friday, '8-30 p.m., Ministry
Deuel o p m e n V
Sunday, ,3 p.m.. Watchtower
Study in Engli«h.
. _ • •'-Siindayr 4:15 p.m.."~Waeht<5w'er'-Study-in Spanish.
of life. . ' . ' -
mm^^^
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-
J.E.P£AVY,liO;
-Comtisstoner of Health
Mr. George Archer
w •
t
"Vhiini.
Church School 10:00 1 There, a r e no plants, shrubs ot
^ni.
i tir?es on t h e rrinon. a s f a r a s w e
_ Mornin;i Wo'ishig' 11:00 a.m. 'know today. /_ .
.•
•'
Prav,^
Service
Wednesday,'! "<m planet Earttr, ho^eveTTLe;"•30 p m
' s•'-'.-•' .;'pet«tinn' helps sustain life. Bui . ^,
'
• . <nme plants, trees or'shin.bs are.
•
• ._•.' . .
...
i-K.int.Tal .Ui.ller^ of m a n . .'
S t . P o u l S E p i s c o p a l -.-» -Some parts of t h e ornamental
,:
JChurch
-•
-'li-flai.it> a>: -ilo^vejs. in -your..yard;E"
'._'...
'. .
':.rr-i:iy-(••riiita-in (li-.ad!y'poison.-Many
Rev;., Charles. Oawson, Vicar
jj>olonnus plants a r e ''"so 'commorv
Morning ' Prnyer; Sunday; 11- [a n dE ; :seemirvffly i n n o c u o u s ^ you :
'.'.:r...:..c?aiV.V-iy Sehn,',] at 1-0 a-.m'.- -i^oh't suspect tlTejr toxic quali- '
. '' •
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K:
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. •
....
first ChrisNon Church
-•.'•'
•-
M a r i n e F . 'Wallaw.'
Pqsttnistress
(Tennessee)
9
Rev.'Murl GeesMn, Pastor
Sunday School, .10 a.m.
_ WorsfiipT-fipur, .11 ; A.-HK; .;
Night Service : 7t30 p.m.
..Friday Service. 7:30 p.m.
The Church is God's eppcinfed og:ncy in thus world for spfeo'ding the knowledge of His love'
5
formen end of His derr.ond for man to respond to the? inve by Jovirvg his ne^hbor Without
— ihis'. jwunxiinig. mJht-l&vs.&l'&QiiL, n&..$QULnmtnlMAme\y. or .woy fil-lif* W4+! I-MUJ-. - ^ - persevere end- thB frerdorns whidiw-e-hold so-deo.r mil inevitably perish. Therefore, eve'neIronr o sslfrsh point of view, oneyshotrfdt support the Church 1^-4^^01^-^( the,««lJar« .
.•'of: himself'.and his fomily. Beyond that, however, evfery' person should uphold and par* ^>y.'
tiCipote in the Church becouse it tells the truth about man's life, deoth end destiny; tht. -- ^¾ 1
truth which alone ¥rifl«t him free !o live as o thild of Cod.* .
—
; *- .«Co1t»an Adv;s»r.,?.O.Bcit 20067, DoUoi 20. Ttwi
I
First Baptist Church
•
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Assembly Of God
Church
The Bible is a sign given to us, and directs lisin a"pathway of living. Interpi^efting1:these directions is not always easy, so the natural thing to do, should be to seek
•'•'• Bomeone to help us. Our churches have many trained personnel who are familiar
with the language of the Bible. Attend Church t h i s week and follow God's way
Miovoti's Witnesses
. ^
United Church School {Pr*stiyterian-Christ ion
meeting a t
First Christian Church, 10 a.m.
Imagine yourself in a train depot in a foreign country, and the signs a r e in a
language unfamiliar to you. You know that the signs are-there-to" direct .'you,
and you try to figure Urent out, but despite your best efforts you are not "sure
of your interpretation. TheTiatural thing to do then, is to check with an atten<iant _
v
and have him explain things to you.
\ /
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Mr. G. W. Austin
SUNDAY:
Classes, 10:00 a m
Worship S « v t c e , 11:00 a.m.
Wednesday-Sunday night s e r
, 7 ptn.
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Volentine Community... L i ^ ™
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J ^ P ^ v ^ai the
•'
waiTliful
oleander
hush,
indoors and
outdoors
allsrovvn
over
the country, contains a deadly <
Dr. C. S. P-efandorf
S u n a a y ; School ...., „ ... 10 a i m .he^art stimulant, similar 'to t l w
Morning 1 , Worship
U a.m. drug dififitalis? So powerful is ,
this .poison that a singlc-^ea/ .
of a n oleander can kill "a child,
Many people have died merely
h'om eating steaks speared on'--'oleandeiE nvigs and roasted over
a ;fire. .
"..-'...
T h e pretty . mountain laurel
plant wan uped by t h e Delaware
Indians t o m a k e a suicide p o
tion. T h e popular C h r i s t m a s flower .• the ponsettia - is full, of ar)
acrid, burning }uice, so fettia)
t h a t . a child w h o consumes one :
leaf
of the ^plant miphi dieV T h e ;
:
l)evi:l<^. of nil^leto^ proved dead?
ly< t o adults who brewed what
thev thought w a s a ^'medicinal. -:;:
Church
3¾
-+2-
itutions
24 Hour Ambulance Seryice
Lou Keiley
Nolond 4 ; Keiley
"Your Find Dooler4'
p,.'-
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9»-W^^%^ ^[f^^$i
FJ'-E
-I.
•tea."
Ip--:.'
215 N ; Highland
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Ph. PA M 5 4 2
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The Family Stoi4
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Marfa And Presidio, Tvxat
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MrEiiid; Mr* *«W*: Mus)»»t :*i ••0*tt»r:
M.
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Hiwoy 9 0 W « t U *A MJ171
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Marfa And Presidio, Texas
CO*
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ANDARD SERVICE
t*m**m*mmmm
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MNPV^wJhtf
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DEPARTMENT STORE
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Ph. tA 9-4679
f
'. I I ' I .ii il il.
301 W . DaHot - t*h. r*A # 4 # 4
'Gimtral Repair
2 ! « I . Son mmito
f h . PA * 4 « 8 4
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Ranch Loens And itoal Estate
MtM«>itMa^aw>
ST I 1 '
W e put in
Mike
knew
w e r e and wer
spots.
In £T coupl
eight nice bia<
When w e j
Sam * Wood,
pondent for
Waco dailies,
ing to fish 1
time. When I
w h e r e we co
blacks he \vw
to go.
!»->s w e f'-el t h e ' : n r t o f o n T ' f e l -
lowman, as these children felt
Emmanuel Baptist
! t h e hurt of their little friend,
Church
i and =rhow our compassion ..arid
-ew- out ;i^ain^t ,t)>f wrongs.
Rev. Glenn Recce
.Sundtiv
School -—fh45-—ettt - P R A ¥ K R : -Most, gracious FaPreaching 11:0(1 a.m.; Training ther, as we' go 'rihout-'our. daily
Union $:30. p.m.; Preaching 7:3<X tasks, w e pray for .Thy. spirit t o
be hv. us. F o r Thou a r t love.
Monday. W o m a n ' s Missionary Teach us to cultivate that love in
Society. 4:00^ "p.m.;
Sunbeam our own hearts s:o .that others
B a n d . ' 4 : 0 0 p.m.; Royal Ambas- m a y see' T h y love. Thy J-ompassion, expressed through us. In
sadors, 4:00 p.m.
Wednesday, P r a y e r Mooting, the spirit of Christ. Arrieni •
„:JHQ!JQHT_FOR:._THE_JDAY:'
Let us love o u r feftowm^n
e r
tht
in
Son Pablo Methodist
Church
Presidtd Texas
""•'_'•
; Rev. Lloyd O. Scott ' : "
\Sunday- School' a:t 10 a.m.
lioniirvg Worship Service a t
U ajtt.
Evening . Wo: ship S»-'r\Mce a t
' 5 P.m.."
.'Wednesday Night .'Prayer Serat 0:30 p i n :.' ' _. .' '
Training Union' at 5:45-p.nr^
By—V<
Did you e
h o w t h e unus
occur while y
it such a fasc
Early o n e
out on t h e
for a fishinf
Mike Rogers
a n old timer
fiiness and has
know-how.
WalKong clowr* t h e .street, a
mini i-.-jmi' opori >\x chilldren. a l l
alioui fire years old. They were
<T>in,' a* they sat on t h e sidewalk WHIH- ilii-ir 0-<-' »" t h e gutter and ih'-ir h'-ads bowed in
111(4)1 hands
-r
SCnTINct
716 W . Son Anronio
•Dmm—mmmtt*
n »ri
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It's ea^y t o be deceived by
plants. One...part m a y b e edible
while another i s poisonous. For , ;
example, twigs'J of c h e r r y trees ;.
release cvah'de
wheriE eatetW
Peach fr'evh . leaves:'-contaia^Mi-,:
drosyanlc 8&i<i,' o n e .of t h e most
dangerous poisonis . k n o w n .
Even t w o of o u r most popular
yegetables. t h e potato arid toma*
to; come from p l a n t s related t o
the tlealy nightshade. AlthoUg'H
fresh tomato fruits a n d potato
tubers a r e harmless, t h e foliage
and vines 6f both p l a n t s contain
ajkaloid poisons ; capable of
causing digestive upset a n d nef'
vous d j s o r d e r i
__ . -. .',.
Most daifgwii8'"in'..Your vege^ ^ {table garden is rhiibard. Ws
stalk, c o m m o n l y \ i $ e d "lii!. baWnJfand cooking, i s n o t toxic. The
leaf Made, however, contains
oxalic acid which} crystalizes in
t h e kidneys, causfng seviere damftge.
'•'-, "."•• '
: A l s o J ^ w a r e of laurels, azaleaSr
w a t e r hemlocks a n d : buttet*eup3
because of their pofeon content
Both foliage- a n d yeorm
JxsWJ
oak .trees can b e deadly- a s a r c j
twicfe and fol-flgA ETmm wild and
cultivated cherries.
R e m e m b e r . . . • Ju^t because ft
Is a planet 1 doesn't m e a n that It
Is safe. Treat u n k n o w n plants
with respect, a n d teach
your
children t o d o t h e sanie.
Shop In Morfo First
r
So w e set
light t h e v e
Hr~ pointed o\
where I hac
I cast out,
t h e - fish. Sa
idc^ntieal '"spot
in. Thin Iiappi
Tn short - - nice' bass, I c
4>am' -says_.
guide he eve
said t h e sam<
Anyway, sc
fisherman.
rve~rTeerr~Austin's top. i
Jim
Roddie.
pound 1^ arks
thrill. Also w
a
consistent
A l s o . & I i m , V.
Hewlett, both
cally live on
these, fisherr
many- Bass-of
Yet I've ou
occasions. (E
day. they s a y
On
the (
taken fishinf
several trips
fellows w h o
tossed a lure
i n c l u d i n g nun*
and they ha^
hollow.
As T said •
i«V the
. thiit_.rrVake J
Vou just cai
happen on an
It's a lo
that after a
^the .'same
strike, you'd
Yet I went
one day. . .
easting".'-.'. a
a nice two
eleventh cast
Another sp :
if a fislv i s !
off— you m a
to a n o t h e r . I
will not hit
now. Maybe
'agaJrv'ahd h a
keeper man:
Wood did: on
.earlier^ :
^It could b€
entirely diffe
second time,
anglers m o \
Catch. My f«
travel in • gro
one.. thcre 7 s a
. Apparently:
tio firrn and
game.
. Of course
scares t h e dn
fjshefm?rn~~trn
.bass hiti^auJ
a£?Et;hc; anglf
t h e bait out a long east.
Here's a J
ready has '
WHAM ~ ^ r i :
boat .•i'heJEteh
couldn't b e *
— unless it
night.
ing
Outdoo
WiHlamsbn^
fishing Inaid
a t Mountain
Spicewpod, oi
Suddehly V.
Sef^'..he <
in motion, 1
nibble. Final
away with 1
reels w e botl
all things, t
was a five
t h a t took hot
An unusual
least!
Which r e r
time
Outdo
Swan, Of tl
Caller
Tx**
bay tithing t
Tin- Big -Bend S<'ntiric!, Thins. May 27. VMi'>, Marfa, T e x a s
TATIOK
Marfa PCA Has Annual Meeting Marfa Broncos
Tiie .'il.vf Annual Storkholders J W . Rawls, Jr., of Presidio
Meeting of the Vl'irfa Production; <"i,imt.s. J a m e s W. Pate of Brew- Stomp Marathon
C'n<Jit A:-- ••' -eiation v\as /-ailed t o site County a n d W. H. Duncan
fckvrUttd
ulde
Rwm-
OUTDOORS IN TEXAS
IIUf.TtNNtSSie
wit-*i all
r
By VE UN SAN FORD
ihi- I/Oi'l t h y
•ari, arui with
The
Bronco baseball
teaai
oider Safrrdft.v, Ma\ 22. at 10:1."» of Jeff
Da\is
County
were
a.m.
i>> :!)'•
f)i<'si(|eut.
Wade . ejected members of tfie nominal- '•. started t h e season with a b a n g
; ii'
las ihey traveled t o Marathoft
Jt<'id of I'oit Davis
ing committee.
and trounced t h e Miners b y a •
The Rev. A. W. Robinson, of
All present _officers wt-ie also to 0 score.
t,he Kii^t
Methodist
Church, re-elected, Wade Reid, presirient, Ernest Ontivcro.s and T o n y IjQ»
gave
t h e invocation, a n d Worth
Kvans. vise president. jan handled the pitching chore*
James W. Pate, chairman, field Hayes Mitchell, Sr., of Marfa, for t h e Broncos with OntiveWM
representative and a resident of : Dav id S. Combs, Marathon, and g e t t i n g credit for t h e victory.
Alpine welcomed members and i Dr (j<»arhart, rlirectors.
Benny Gonzales was t h e big g t a t
guests a n d introduced three ofat b a t for t h e Broncos as ht
ficials from t h e Winter Garden office personnel. Claude Lee a s banged out 4 hits o u t of thm
at bat. Adan
Ramirez
office;
Buddy Bell, manager; general manager, Robert Hum- times
Arthur ? h a r b c r , assistant man- phris, assistant manager, a n d T o n y Lujan and E r n e s t Ontiverager, and Leo NVwsome, a dir- Mrs. J. C. .Nelson, stenographer- oz w e n t 3 for 5 a t t h e p l a t e .
T h e next game's site a n d
ector, Mr*. C. M. Winterrowd, clerk, were r e hired.
bookeeper for t h e West Texas
Mr. G. -W.--'Archer,- pastor of will be let k n o w n t o t h e
Production Credit Association- of the First Christian Church, gave by use of posters which will
distributed around t o w n ,
Pecos, and h e r husband, Curtis. the benediction.
Roy Scuddy, public
relations
Members of t h e Beta Sigma Bronco t e a m would l i k e l o r t #
man
from Fort W o r t h ; a n d Phi served a barbecue lunch t o t h e people in Marfa t o
t h e m out ' t h i s s u m m e r - b y I
Wm. N. Stokes, Jr.r president of approximately 125.
tending the home games and,
the Federal Intermediate Bank
possible, t h e out of t o w n
of Houston;- Worth Evans, Vice
also.
President; David S. Combs, and
Shop In M a r i o First'
Hayes Mitchell, a n d Dr. Ben F .
; —,
"'«•
Gearhart, directors of MPCA.
thy
thy M l e n g t h :
jrifhandment.
tiki-, namely
v-<> thy noigha i k 12:.30-31.
We
both got strikes a n d
By—Vern Sanford
I he .street, a
Did you ever stop t o think yelled for t h e landing net at t h e
chilklren, all
h o w t h e unusual incidents that- same time.
d. Thoy were
Roy flipped his flounder into Carol Lynley, as Jean Harlow, is radiant over her m a m a g e to Paul
occur while you're fishing m a k e
on t h e sidethe boat while I w a s still Bern, pluytxl Hurd Hatfield (left) a s Efren Zimbalist, Jr.,. Jean's
it such a fascinating pastime?
devoted friend, offers congratulations. A scene from Bill Sargent's
!-t in the. gutEarly one morning, I went pumping mine t o the top.
ids bowed in
out on t h e Pedernales River
Then just a s my fish sur- "Harlow," story of t h e life and times of Hollywood's platinum
for a fishing expedition
with faced it opened its mouth and blonde bombshell at the Palace T h e a t r e and Marfa Drive In, starts
Mike Rogers of Austin. H e is spit o u t t h e bait. There it. lay Sunday with a matinee at 1:30 at t h e Palace and Sunday, Monday
t to -ee if h e
a n old timer a t this fishing bu- for a second or tWo^jusT long and Tuesday nights at the Drive In. T h e Marshall Naify presenta•lp. l i e stoopsiness and has plenty of angling enough for m o to whip t h e tion is an Electronovision production released by Magna Distributhem if they
know-how.
bait right back at him. Believe tion Corporation.
•aid no. Then
it o r not h e struck again. And
iy they were
W e put in a t T a t u m ' s Place. I brought in a flounder. Roy
>ie not huit.
Mike knew w h e r e , t h e . bass said, "I've never seen that haps<-d hi-r head
w e r e and went right t c t h e hpt pen before!"
hurt himself,
spots.
\.~ *-4-*,ve are crying
In a_ couple of hours I had
Anyway ••- w h o says
they
First game listed will be played at 6 p.m.
eight nice blacks. Hen had none. won't hit again?
When w e got home I called
Speaking
of t h e Gulf . . .
Second game listed will be played at 8^p.m.
jrld of unrest
Sam * Wood, Capitol
corres- one d a y Sid Richardson and I
All games will b£ played at Coffield Park
M'ti and need.
pondent
for t h e Austin and were bay fishing for trout just
Christians ure
Waco dailies. We'd been want- a short distance from his Redirt of onT'feling to fish together for some fish Motel, south of Raymond
Tuesday,, June 1
ehildi'en felt
time. When I told him I k n e w ville. I was casting artificials
little friend,
Presidio vs. Corder
w h e r e we could land ome nice and Sid was using live shrimp
npassion ., arid
blacks he was ready and r a r i n ' and a popping cork,
W T U vs. Border Patrol
i- wrongs.
to go.
,
When Sid's cork went under
. gracious FaI reeled in and g r a b b e d _ t h e
Thursday, June 3
mut o u r daily
^ S o w e set sail before day- landing net. I could see ^he
Border PatroJ vs. Presidio
Thy spirit t o
light t h e very next
morning. trout and it was a big one. But
hou a r t love.
~f~ pointed out t h e first spot Sid said, "It's small
v Corder vs. W T U
- I can
te that love in
where I had been
successful. handle it."
o that others
I cast out, got or strike, lost
Tuesday, June 8
But. an amazing thing h a d
, T h y j?ompast h e • fish. S a m cast
into t h e happened. While h e was reelPresidio vs. W T U
rough u s . In
identical'-"spot and brought h i m ing in. a large fish-swallowed
Corder VSE Border Patrol
in. Thin happened repeatedly.
;t. Arrien: '
the smaller one,
L T H E DAY:
Result
- a s Sid lifted, his
•.•-- Tn short ^- S a m caught eight
Thursday, June 10
it - TelloWmencatch
from
t h e jvaterE v trie big
nice'
bass,
I
c
a
u
g
h
t
.
n
o
n
e
.
Corder vs. Presidio: —
with t h e m in
-"•r-Sam' - s a y s I_ a m t h e best_ fish - opened its _huge mouth
-Border Patrol vs. W T U
irot beinff~hookM'
iH
guide he ever had. I'd already a n d
Vallaeo.
slipped " quietly-, back into t h e
said t h e same about Mike,
Tuesday, June 15
Anyway, sc goes the life of a Gulf. This of course still left
the smaller trout t o adorn
PreSidiCLVS. Border Patrol
fisherman. _ „ . . . , g;rtvc
t
rjnftf.ri
IVe~Heerr~6lir~wftti—some of
- W T U vs. Cordor——
Guess t h e moral here is t o t
Austin's top. anglers • ••-• such a s
Jim Roddie. I - whom .eight use a net every time.
Thursday, June 17
If you forget t h e net. then
pound Wacks a r e n o , longer a
W7\) vs. Presidio
thrill. Also with Clyde Graham, you'd better fish with a buddy
Border Patrol vs. Corder
a consistent
trophy
winner. who will give you t h e shirt J
off
his
back.
Also. &frm. Brown a n d .Tackle
You'll understand
what I
Tuesday, June 2 2
Hewlett, both of whom practimean
after
I
tell
you
of
an
incally live qn t h e water. All of
Presidio vs. Corder
these, fishermen have copped cident that happened„ when m y
W T U vs. Border Patrol
m a n y Bass-of-the-Month awards,. ^ l ^ > _ S a n i g , -tied onto a five
;
Yet I've out-flshed them, .''.on pound, nine "^6iince~ ^blaclc On"
Thursday, June 24
occasions. (Every dog has his Lake Travis. Fishing with him
w e r e t w o young b a n k e r s from
Border Pgtrol vs. Presidio
day, they say!)
~~~~~~
"~
On
t h e other
hand, TVe S a n Antonio. They w e r e C.
Corder vs. W T U ^
taken fishing with m e — onLyndon Sledge a n d Leonard
ants, shrubs o r
several trips t o t h e lake — i M c C r u d e r of t h e Frost National
Tuesday, June 29
i, as f a r a s w e
Bank.
fellows w h o no^er e v e r have
J^sJdiQ vs: V/TU
TTits~ tx*rrlci?r- - -b*i*a gaye—HITtossed a lure i n ' t h e w a t e r —"
r
Corder v^; Border Patrol
T, h o t t e v o r : L e - ~
"including numerous youngsters— young :i*en a lif»rdi time. It
stain life. Bui and they have skinned m e alltowed trie boat some twenty
Thursday, July 1
feet . and swam
under a n d
or' -shrubs a r e
hollow.
>f m a n .
As T said - n t h e beginning around t h e boat not once but
Co rde r vs. P res id i o
he ornamental
it's t h e unupual
Incidents several times. N^ver onre. old
—Border P.atroi vs.. W T U
in VOUIE.yard;E"
thjiLmakj? _.:fishlng_ fascinating. .Sandy let it get nut of t h ei \v*y poison. Many
You just can't . t e l l ' what wTIT \h>r o r - d i v e deep----.-.-~-.'^-oi^-f-* ar- of
^Tuesday, July ^
r
losing i t . .
r e so 'comrnpn
happen pri ^ n y trip out.
Presidio vs. Border Patrol
Finally Leonard peeled off
innocuous ypvj
It's a
long standing a^age
•ir toxic qualiW T U vs; Corder
that after a -couple-of casts in his shirt an dtied t h e sleeves
together;
Then
using
t
h
e
shirty
^the .'same
spot,
without a
Thursday, July 8
spreT that the .
"strike, you'd better rnove on. as a net he dipped..the fish out
of
the
water
and
pulled
it
safe\ hush, grown
Yet I went down t o t h e lake
W T U vs. Presidio
loots all over
one day. . . .just t,o practice I'lf aboard.
Border -Patrol vs. Corder
tains a deadly
How's that for .giving t h e
casting . . . and came u p with
similar 'to t h e
a nice two pounder, on t h e shirt off your back?Tuesday, July 13
>o'-"powerful is ,
eleventh cast into t h e same spot.
Just goes to show that emera singlc--3eaf .
.Presidio vs.-.' Corder
Another so-called rule is that gency is"" the* mother "of invenm kill "a child,
W T U vs; Border Patrol
if a fish, is hooked ' - - and gets tion/;-'.'' ' • - • • / / • •
^ died merely
off— you m a y a s well move, on
mining
Jto speared on t o - n n n t > i n r Irymtinfy T w ^ n g A h e .'.' M a n y ' old German
Thursday, July TS
1
Tt>i
ms
(Jtiginatlng
in
Saxony
id roasted over
will not hit again—at least for
Border Patrol vs. PresidTo
• now. Maybe so. But weVe cast have been adopted in other lanCorder vs. W T U
again and have come up wjfh a guages.
ountafn
laurel
k e e p e r m a n y . t i m e s . (As : S a m
'v t h e Delaware
Tuesday, July 2 0
a suicide p o
Wood did: on t h e trip mentioned
ATHLETIS FOOT GERM
Presidio vs, W T U
.earlier,) •
^
C h r i s t m a s floHOW
TO
KliAITV
It could be that another and
3- is full, of art
Corder vs. Border Patrol
IN ONE HOUR,
entirely different fish hit that T~4-L must atbi> th» iiih tend hwrdkg
uice, so tethal
consumes one :
second time. Anyway, lots of or your. 4Se bjutk «t «ny <nif »t«r*.
S u n d a y / July 22
In 3 to 5 d«y», infofttod tkUi tloufbi
might die. T h e
anglers move on after o n e off. Th*n w.tch HEALTHY «kin apPresidio vs, Cdrder v
••to proved dead?
catch. My feelfng i s that, fish pe*rt NOW »t
Border r?atrol vs. W T U '
r bre\ved what
travel in groups W h e r e t h e r e V : r fcity PrefeoriptJ4Mt_Pharrnacy
s a *'medicinal
;. one^ there's another..
. Apparently ' there jitet "ain't"
e deceived by
tio finn and fixed rule ,1¾ jhis
m a y b e edible
game.
•- •: . '
" /•• •
pbisonous. For .
. Of course t h e incident
that
if c h e r r y trees
, scares the .-dnyllshts- o^at of any
whenE eateiir
fisheftirinrLJiapperts yi'hen '... a" big
^ ' • C ^ l t t a i f t ^ M i J : .^.. Bass hilit.aufop:_wnitet_jliIC i ^ :
n e of t h e most
a s . t h e ; angler is about t o lift*
s . known,
t h e bait out -'pf t h e w a t e r after
ir most popular
a long cast.
••...,'...- -r\ "•' ••.
5tato a n d toma*
Here's a fishiTrmah w h o al-,
lants related t o
r e a d y h a s "given u p " -— ifii'ri -j
hade. Although
WHAM - b r i g h t alongside t h e
aits a n d potato
boat theJfish t a k e s it. Oh boy!
less, t h e foliage
couldn't be a n y m o r e startling
v plants eotilain
— unless it happened a t mid; eapablg of
_nlght?
i ^ upset a n d nef'
^ ^ E a r l y one b i t t e i ^ ^ 4 d r - i « o m 1
ing
Outdoor
Writer
Ifiigh
s in y o u r vegeWiHIaBsbnT^-t^^
s Thubard. I t s
fishing Inside a baited dock
used i n baking
a t Mountain View c a m p n e a r
not toxic. The
Spicewood, on L a k e Travis,
vever, contains
Suddenly HuKh- liW a s t r i k e
hi crystali/es in
Before'..he could get Wa reel
s l % severe dain motion, I too h a d a ohefty
n i b t t e . Finally after pumping J
away with bouncing rods and j
laurels, azalea
1965 Little League Schedule
Claude Lee. general manager
of MPCA, gave t h e financial report, a n d Dr. Gearhart t h e d i r
ectors'- report.
M. Stokes, w h o was the guest
speaker, said t h a t . t w o years ago
in a speech here, h e asked,
"What D o You Owe Your Association?" a n d this year he
would a s k " W h a t Do Directors
Owe Y o u ? " H e mentioned diligence, judgment, management,
knowledge, courage all factors
iif* " k e e p i n g - . t h e . Association
strong.' H e discussed each a s a
necessary requirement for a
good director t o possess.
Election of officers was held
and Dr. Gearhart was elected to
succeed himself
a s director;
'••••H^imNo need to swelter
N,ot when you can call
us for all your a i r
conditioning needs ^ ,
Free Estimates. Low
Prices. Call now.
-PtUMBtfte
HEATING
AIR CONDITIOHJNG
SALES - SERVICE
l
V00 VWOlfirfT HIT A GOV
WITH GLASSES ON ?
TAMMEN PLUMBING and HEATING
lOd E, Oak
Marfa, T e x w
• >
-..-
-
•!»_••.•
.
*•
j
.
KH'I^WIlWH
iI
affl
' • • • • - • • « • • • • II "
•m
ffpr the rnqnthe o< Dec., Jan.,* Feb.In Taxas
.>«9vt^
m
. « L ^ B ^
-•
«
r
and buttercups
poison content
id nphfflfi
!••
\ft0fll_1
3 deadly- as arc
» k m ' w i l d and
es.
. jVflt because »
n't mean that It
mknown plants
tad teach your
le same.
reels we both came up with, of ;
fill
th^|T a i
thft
'•;"""»'
fish. I t
W«i8 & SvV pound channel cat
that took both baits.
.
An unusual incident to say the
least! '•
•••
;
'
!
••• '
•
Which reminds me of the
time"" Outdoor Writer _ Roy
Swan, 0« the Corpus Christi
Caller .T»mef, toov yours truly
bay Ashing in the Gulf.
.:11
"n
• **3
Don*t mi$s out! Joiathe thousands of new Chrysler owners who have
alrfl^dy m a i j f t h ^ ^
. ^
{ f o t / * * »'»AtAt 17) « r »
actually priced Jgst a few dollars a* month more than the most popular
sffiaflf^ojfoy ^
Chrys^eris^^
of engine and drive v^ft'-^^iic^o^;.'; M)©^''/ up to C^ryslery It -s ea^y.
s
^
jSST* l^8IO|
. wW r^yifH-^.-,•• rap»tr«Mn
bioek, h»-j<i uKd thtarnsl"
Ing nmrtUat cHitch^ UMTI
f i
or 4i000 q*6» *»
41
i.:
JftUHBWi^^
mmm
tarn*
ciud*
_ __
^M^&^^.m^^^s^s^^M
cMt% mm current m(l»ai«.
_ ; rMf
•t
-JL
:0
iiifli:t(ii;ii;f
41
lorfo First
4*~i
'&mm»m
The Big Hornl Sentinel, Thui-s. May 27. lc>ir>, Mai fa. Texas
PERSONALS
\ Local Group To
Kermit Assembly
Mrs. Dee Locklin Installs
Century Culture Club Officers
Mrs. N. K Markle
Midland ivecntly with
g h t e r and family, Mr.
D. L. 'l"V>n) McClur^
daughter. Lx^ Anne.
feolo;;:^t with the Pan
visitml in
her dauand Mrs.
M's. Charl.'s fiowman, presiand their
;
Culture
Don is a dent ot th» (Yntury
1
Ameriean Chili, ral'ed tilt regular meet\v.\i <>f the elub members to oron.
Aw at 3 p.in. in the home of
Mr.-. A , !•'. fl.rdne:-. Wednesday.
( ' • i l l ! - ;- lE.t t e i m e r . t e d
JUJCC
S|MH i.i! i:ui'vt \%r.> Sirs
Doe
Of the apple, while
fermented ! I ^ k ' - . H ; :v<ii!.'p.t cf the Westpoar iuiec is eaJled porry.
ern D:.«tiict.
Texa- l-'etieration
of Women's Clurx i.om MeCnm"SKJE&S&J
e\
Final instructions and a r r a n g e
' ments have been made by all
:
'ncmbci's <>f tht* hxial congrega- \
eei\-ed a tfift.
Present for th<? u.iitinL' were tion of Jehovah's Witnesses to
Mrs. Cooloy. Mrs. Fiank, Mrs. j attend a three-day assembly in
Pat Ryan. * Mrs. C 1,. Ailhur. : Kerrnif iM^'inning Friday. May
Mrs. If. L. Hord. Mrs. Logan. j 2^ and ending Sunday. May 30.
presiding
Mis,
Mitchell. Mrs. Bowman. | E. M. Martinez,
•minister
announced
the
meeting
Mrs..
Gardner, Mrs. Robinson.
Mrs. Cross. Mrs. W. K. Christop- will be held in the Kermit Junih.-r and Mrs. R. S. MsCnuken. or High School, West CampThe hostess duties were shar- bell at South Mulberry. Local
by Mrs. Gardner and Mrs Mil- meetings here at the Kingdom
Hall will be canceled the week
. ']"• - (' i|]«\-t w as r» ; J In uni- ler Robinson, with Mrs. Howi
of
the a>„semb!v *'J resume the
!M '. .:-. i following :h«' rx>!l call. man pouring
! following week.
vea<i.'::.j ni T}\«-' n..r;uti-s. Mrs.
MARFA, TEXAS _ ! ihc
i "With mo'-e than bsiioO new
Ker: Mitih.dl. E ! E t ivasurer's
WB&M&ZF^ZZ ^-^isKasascaayj j v i ' o n by Mr-* " HeyU- Cooley.
Witnesses
of Jehovah' in
the
TONJTE — FRl'. — SAT. NITES a'-.J a r<-p..>:"! >>> Mrs. Mitchell
I past year we find these rn<>efGandy's
Theatre
' im:-. most beneficial," explained
, l';i>m t!v i/wu; tcs\committee
I'.v.ly Sat. P a k u v
; M a r i n e / . "It l.« here that we
I «;i< : ; \ en
1 ,;;0 Mat:m-o CV.;>
was i >Trs. ptfima L. ITowanl of • learn tn be more effective in
•> s cvrvtitution
t \ " A " K n v Bioru'.•>. A; FvftN <
rrar.^: eUvtion of = Marfa Hik'h S*-hoo) is one of >15: our mhii.try. he'ping. ail people
', to better understanc' what
is
•t - ^ - N T S . rm;i plaf^J for the 1 s»'c<-tndai*\"
school teachers of
J •
c wer.» «i;sciissed 'F,r,.elish w h o will pailicipate in ! written in their Bible."'
Stressing the assembly theme
\ \ •v ; d'h h
v
w i l t - N * th.e summer institute to l>e off- i
| "Willingly Fulfill
Your Minis!
l*hi\'ert rod b y ' T e x a s Chri^tinn
| tiy." all delegates were remindM'
'sitv- from June 7 to July 16.
ed" that there will be time to
Looker..
*-ak-.
M.>
Tn be dirrs^t.'d b>' Dr. Karl K.
participate in the ministry from
'i^n to
r>>\'
<r.vdw professor nf English, the
w:
house to house in Kermit.
V'.
•e
C
s \ \*. • ek program is being made
iv
Transportation
arrangements
fH-.sMh!.- by a ?4*l 576 prant to
Mi
vveie
completed
making
it possil.S\ s ! ": ta'.rNr • ; on ' "r-'odcr- .TCP 1 bv the Office of Education.
V
ble fer entire families to attend.
Wahoo Jackpot
State IVpartment of
a:
TVst^iT
and
Health. EducaMaiTine/
will heat! the local de$170,1X1 This Week
" S S - A \ . V iv. s-tallim r offi- ti-n ar.ri Welfare. The Xntlonal
I.-.
legation.
i , ; r Mr*
P a :: l"ra k ;•< r>'-d nse English
Institute p r o
,71* Ti TTTJT.^.
*rr: I T Tr~T7 *; T7r«i~.,
The
subject
"The
Moral
Embolic. ;i\l'' of
a w h t H * ) LTl'am vvas p^rovid^d by legislaWhat Can
He
M A T I N E E S U N . 1:30
\\ as nsTaMo( a president The tion in late \9CA. when the Na.- Breakdown
7
Done About If " will be the feaPALACE T H E A T R E
ol'fieer.s we: e
des : £:nnt"H
i - t;ona) Pef cn.se Education
Act
tured
talk presented by II. A.
srw-'krs- bv Mi'-. Lock I in. and was broadened .to include addiS U N ^ — MON;..— TUES.
Fet/ik. district supervisor -reprerho.-'e t"'<-,-•.AV with Mrs. F r a n k tional areas.
•
I AT ORive IN
senting
the Watehtower Society
arc:
f.irsr \ i^.vpresident.
MI:*L: —•-TCP's lbi-(>e ; pa.rt program will
of Brooklyn, NT 4 ^ - S u n d a v at 3
' G e o r g e r'rfiss ;. sr-c(>!'vl \ iec -piT^M- provide instruction in the snyf
p.m.
?
:
- -**rth— M x , X. }• >. Chaffin: Mrs, thesis of
lanfTMape, literature j
P.. l'I . Gi-dlxiM rei'irrdinc secre- and eomjKLsition. The Institute 1
• taryj ?.!is. I'j'i'bl.is- La^itr-E eor- v\ ill- seek to assist in the im-•
•;-i e^:jiondins secreta-rv'4 Mrs. Movie. provement of secondary school |
,' Coolry, Ireastiier; Mi's A. K t.-;ach'n^ by setting examples', of |
iGas'dner.
nress rejjoiie'r: 'Mis'.- h"iyh-quality
present ati<5n . and j
. K. '(". ..\Tf»Manl. Club • counselor-: t;se of materials w h i l e brin^inp f
A "'good time was had by all"
.^\Irs. Ch.arles. B o w m a n . ' parlia- to the. participants' attention the
,; men t a l i a n j Xrn^. A1))« • i\ l.o£,±u±- TTcAVesT—forms ami—direet-kms- m of the -forty or so members- andMc*
j^nT'-sts- of tho Historical S c i e t y
e study of English.
tonan
\'isiting lecturers and apoeial- .Simflay evening at a lawn supjvsis jn the major areas will par- ' per given' as a farewell for Mike
hieipnte alone-with. TCU .faculty E"ntf .R-Ut.h ^Beckerr and their
"grade sc-ho< )\ . da tight er^TCaThleen.
: members.
. ' , • • . _ •
j
!• Enrollees will be awarded'Fix who departed ^Io^!day for a new
•semester hours of college erettit ; assignment .,wit.fi t h e Xational
'upon s t r e s s f u l
etrhpletion of > Pai k SetA'iee.
:
;tl .e Institute's .requirement. Dr. ! .The.-Beckers came here" near: ly two and a half years ago. he
S'nyfii-r ndvi"H
Ml
; as superintendent'of the_o1d.Fort.
P a \ i s National historic site. He
goes to a similar position with
r i h e XPS at a new recreat'onal
J^ fMCfMtlWSOM Production
cCom-}rwe<.\ 4^o«i-Pa2eI-13i-u.„ *-nt-c-a- near---Bo^'g^'r--^f^xa^r-T-heT
M*,vi v, WCW WSTOBDTWCWP
"ar;.y chtn-eh affiliated school.
i had become an .active part of
1
• T h " Key. Llbyd Conner of | this community.
First, r.aptisl Church said t.he
>H-ncdicl
ion.
the
recessional ;_ The party was hi:Id at the
WEONESOA.L O N L Y
ET<••:,r> a-nd Circumstance." was pleasant and hospitable home of
PtDltO
ii'av )>y the Honors Bands. Mr. ; Mrs. I E E. ( L u e y l Miller. ' l > s AR«£N0AR)2
ime*. A. Jariv-11. din^.'tor.
j)ite an. unruly w i n d ' t h a t , blew
MICUfi
<
"T l'as~""- "S'tit-'rrsors
Mrs. one lady's s-upper plate into a
were
A « V E S MEJJA
Mui;'> T^'U KeJJe;. and' M E Em- flower bed and"had"olhers holdANA miHk LfP{ . MARINA UMAOfO
1.: LT 'heir !,»iate> to ..the. tables
I .(Hi Howard
t : shers were C\>-j(hia C;ie\;oa. with on-e-hand. ' h e wcasinn was
Susan Se-arJs. • F r a n r c - \*ald<•en!o\,-dile .a.«d 1'jv'ely thdiHTli' lou-,
i
an<J.
elied with re.^i'et at the Rockers'
'J'omm.v ..Urown,. Joe! ( c ;4»k
•fi?:;
Eddie Gonioles.
'leaving.
MARFA DRIVE-IN
PERSONALS
China Painter Here On Sunday
Mrs. Walton Poage of Rankin
and Marfa. china painting teachei'. is presenting tov the people
of t h e Marfa area Mrs, Wanda
Clapman of Odessa, nationally
known china painter, deraonstrating the art of china decoi'ation.
|
! m a n ' M l s < F a r l Hammond. Mrs.
I E a w < ' n a Hurlye r -Mr??. H. G.
! A d a n ™ . Mrs. Tom Roblson, Mrs.
i B i n • s h u i ' k > > ' all of Marfa and
< M r > - N o r i l l a Littleton and Mrs.
; W l J f o n Williams of Alpine,
The public is in\it(Nl Sunday,
May W at 3:00 p m at the Bi'ta
Sigma Phi
Budding. Assisting
with the rofreshmee.rs following
the demonstration will be Mrs,
Hoyle Cooley. Mrs Charles Bow-
Maria LuLsa Cabe/.ucla has returned from a brief stay in Long
'Beach. California,
wnere she
; viMted Mr. and Mrs. Benito
| Juarez del Puenta ar;d Mr and
Mrs. p-rnael Tarango. •
Mr. and Mrs. R. VV. T h o m s burg have had as tjielr guests,
his mother, Mrs. Wilma Bauer,
of Cincinnati, Ohio, and his rig. tor and her huband, Mr. and
Mrs. Hill Nieberding of Erianger. Kentucky. AM attended graduation
exercises.
Pollyann
Thorn.sburg, and
sister Krista
will return to Cincinnati with
their grandmother where they
will spend a few weeks vacation.
i
Mrs. Howard Will
Attend Institute
»-V> * > ^ L
»
The Beckers Are
Honored At Party,
IfRtW ZIMBfcUM, m.
BHHWSira .HffiEKIKEB
SAFEWAY IS GIVING AWAY THOUSAlslOS IN
CO NEED. E RATE M0 N E Y TO BE TRAD ED Fd R
Commencement-
* , W j " U »**fv
m
•**f
Save your Confederate Money and exchange
it for Northern Cash when you have the exact
amounts. No more-no less as listed below.
**—
N*«CA-A^»#.
4 ^
•;
5.YEAR/50,000-M1LE
WARIUNTY'
m-
n
Cbtfiitr UifWi*\ i•-mtirfyiHy
'U
JSrt •E5--.-
Wi '
N(irW^ii
CONFEDEWeftl^
-j'-
"
'•.'"'-$ 1 2 0 0
, $-24.00
$ 36.00
$ 48.00
$75.00
$107.00
$12900^
$141.00
TintJ «<( oi tti* tollOwinj yiUI parts
0« it« 1965 « r j far 5 y«r» cr
50.000 .mUe$, whlchev«r comei frrst.
<Jurtfl| whfth time, any tucft pirti
that provi d«f«cti*« \n-'Aitwlii tni
workmtnship will b« rtpljted or
repaired i l i Chrysler. Motors Cw
port»tion futhonttd Dealer's- pt*cp
ef buwntti without xharj* tof mnh
peril ,e> lebef; enfwie t>\&ck. headend internalpjrtt, iWake manifold,,
water pump, transmission' case and
mlVnul .pertj <txciptin4 minuet
UUthJ..torque converter, dnvestialt,
•v.e:s.»t jpir'.ts; rear stie and ffl-'.
fef***itiai;, an* rear whetr beannss.'•ftt"Qj<Rf0 •JfrAINTtNANCFi-'The IpE
•'}l*».tpf: •rna^.t'ehinpe .vetvicer" are'
,:v,-..';.'(d !,nder Ihe • wa-rrAnty —E
'•>.>•••••£(••ov-ne Qil e'*(»ry.- J. mcfltf'S
cr i'jC'j >.iesE Khfcrjev'ei.'.cbme*.;
f">t."r»r:»ce't*tLtiiter every second
p
RECHVES
$ 12:00
RECEIVES
$ 24.00
RECEIVES
$ 36.00
RECEIVES
$ 48.00
RECEIVES
$ 75.00
RECEIVES . £ ' $1074)0
$129*00 'E-E^-;i1?E<iEIVES
RECEIVES .--"-, .$141.00' .;'..:" ' ' ' . . ' : .
't
FOR A
iinw/Hia»
mm
-, *u
One jfreie card ptt store visit; Nb purchase required. Purchasers not favored, to need to
pass through checkstand; Secure your free card at either end of checkstand or from any
store employee other than in the meat depart
f
arte of the extras you get in dealing with the
wjurarit/ jr. the Jyto industry! Add ttot to thd l ^ i >
and e^sytermi on every head of ^65 Dodges oh JW Spread .vvarid
you^ see v^y the Dodge Boy^
great sales year! The/Ve g6t a herd of bargains just waiting for you,
Go cut ouMhe one you like right now during SUCCESS DRtifE '65!
m
Roto ValentueUi
•;T'- Shoron Lend
Ucy Mogaline 0arret^
Twilo Elmendorf
M^* Hv 6; Metcolfo
Carmen Mcndios
>,. >^....:.^,-.;-.„,>
•*L
s
,, 1, LV*..t.J»w*uv^>«Jw!«ifc^^
,
•iiEiiiiw-i i^t£i^hi&ib'&-'2-'~iitiii&&
SjU^H.'iii
:'" •" E"*•::^':;" . •
V -&\Jt. • f' y,i!> '#* Vj i. fi*.bSjj. & h^JrH^Sih-TAd
««SBWHh*!MW*:;
Gloria Serrqno
&^&^&&?&>*i:K$>v.<
kv.
Mrs. Jose fa J. Pino
-^«.t.
rf
\
I
A Series O f Activities
TRADE IN MARFA
TlieBig Bend Sentinel, Tburs. May 27, 19G5, Marfa, Texas
Two Loco I Students To
Get Degrees At Boylor
I
Baccalaureate Sermon will be
delivered tonight at Baylor University, and degrees will be
awarded Friday Tiight, May 2S,
A reception was hold in the
mother of the fhird ranking stu- in the College Coliseum.
AiJ PUI-|X>SP Vj«,rc, of the Maria dent. Mary lie'e r - Hentley, and
KieiTUTrfary Srh(»o! ror.oring tru> jthe wife i\i vne Rupcr-i.'itendent,
President Lyndon Jonnson will
4S Seniors- folJ'.vv ir.j: Commence- Mrs. H. (j. Adams, served the se- be presented with an honorary
yrru-nt Kxi>rfiMs 'May 21 1965. : cond thirty minute period. The degree, and will deliv< r the prini Departmental chairmen named
! The table wa* eov< . i d with a two Senior- Class .sponscis, Mrs. cipal address.
The Marfa History Club con- were Mrs. Don Merrill, Conser*
whito cloth, the overlay was of George Howard and Mrs. No
Mr. and Mrs. .7. M, Hum- cluded the scheduled meetings
i purple net. Aiiov the front of land Kelley poured during the phreys, and darjj'hler Grace will for- the season when the mem- vation; Mrs. E. F. Mallan, Eduthe table wa.« or-apf-d white final thirty minutes of the re- be present to see son and bro- bers met in the home of Mrs. cation; Mrs. E. B. Holmes, Fine
Arts; Mrs. Alfred Means, Home
i tulle which "-war" rnrirhi" M "The""-eeptiorr.
ther, James, receive his U. A. Don Merrill, Tuesday. May 21. Ute'r Mrs. iSF. K. Markle, Intercornel's, with sj'.-avs- of pui-plc | Following the reeeption, the degree.
at 3:30 p.m.
national Affairs; Mrs. P. J.
flowers, the •.(Ii-y.J (<}ors.
j students of Marfa High School,
Also. Mr. and Mrs. K. W. de
Mrs. J. S. Livingston, presid- Wareing, Public Affairs; Mrs.
• At the bark .irwj V'I nter of the [and their guests danced to the Volin of Marfa will be present ent, presided, and during t h e Carl Robinson, Texas Hertiage;
table were two j-iv-braiuhe^l, ; music ~^furriiKh<'d by Granger to see their daughter, Beth de business session, announced her Mrs. Harry Hubbard, Arnerican
Volin Tebeaux receive a B. S. selection of members for com- Studies; Mrs. Alfred Roosevelt,
brass cartdeJahr a. IT.-e branches ' Hunt and The Believers.
degree
in Math.
signifying the - mplvc school
mittee pos's as, Year Book, Mrs. Club Reports; and Mrs. E. F .
After viewing
the movie.
years, f tanking t/>e tandcabra Kimberly J i m " at the Palace
King, International Clubs,
The first wagon road through G. VV. Archer, Mrs. J. B. Steen,
entwine<l with vines and purple Theatre as guests of Mr. and
After reports were heard, Mrs.
and white fJcmvrs stood pairs Mrs. Wayne Beauchamp, the Se- the Alps was begun in 1338 and and' Mrs. J. B, Little. Budget,
Mrs.
J.
B.
Steen.
Mrs
Harry
Livingston
turned the meeting
Jed
through.the
Septimer
pass.
of dolls dressed-to depict gradu- nors. their guests, sponsors and
Hubbard and Mrs Frank Cof- over' to Mrs. Frank Gervasi who
ates, the girls in white flowing chnperones returned to the engowns, and the boys in the tertainment center at the school
Entomology u the science fielJ. Coutesy, Mrs. P. J. Ware- gave the program on American
white robes. Other table appoint- where they were serv(»d break- A-hich deals with insects; etymo- ing, Mrs. Colo Means and Mrs. Women in Art. She told oT three,
ments were in crystalone of whom is a native Texan,
fast by Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Hum- logy is the science o i words.
N. K. Markle. Project, Mrs. J. M. a sculptress, Dr. Waldine Tauch.
Mrs. J. M, Humphry-} >. m o phreys, assisted by Mrs .Cecilia
Humphreys, Mrs. Carl Robinson
ther of the Valedk'(on:»n. Grace Gutierrez, and Mrs. K. R. Aguil- Bates.
and Mrs. Frank Gervasi. TeleThe artists Mrs. Gervasi seHumphreys and Mrs Juan D. ar. The cooks were Mr, H. G.
Mrs. II. \V. Thornsburg was phone. Mrs. JE. F, King, Mrs. lected as her two favorites in
Morales, mother <A ^-( .Saluta- Adams and Mr. Dan Frank and in charge of decorations, and W. B. Johnson and Mrs. E. B. the fir-Id of painting were both,
torian; Alberto <Acei Morales, their- assistants
were Coach the brass
candelabra
from O'Quinn.
from wealthy families. One a
;«
served punch irr, the-first thirty, W. C. <r>ub> Poison, and the Greece, were ^applied bv Mrs.
spinster. Mary Cassatt of Pittsminutes, Mf^. Brocks Bent ley. High School principal. David N. K. Markle.
burg, Pa. This talented artist
was born in 1845. Her family did
r-^t api-rove of h:.r career, end}
after traveling in Italy. Spain,
j and Holland, she esTablished.
herself in Paris. Her talents
drew her to the famous impressionist group composed- of Degas,
Manet, and Courbetand and by
1-S71 her paintings were being*
shown with theirs. Mrs. Gervasi
said that, one of her, paintings
"Mother and Child" hangs in
Metropolitan Museum of Art in
New York.
Mario History Club
Spotlights Artists
Honor Seniors And Guests
GOSPEL MEETING
HEAR
fe
JIM HANCE
Rankin, Texas
PREACHER
May 30 thru JUNE 6
7:30 P.M. Nightly
CHURCH OF CHRIST
i
Corner Austin and Lincoln Streets
Wonderful foods from Safeway.. /specially for a
SAFEWAY
MONDAY, MAY 3!
Tcwr, Hcu e. for L'.e
Ort p'vniciiJTciwichej
...*j
.
"TV
d
••'• , .-'-AV. •••• -/K
-••"
-'••."i'\\.--t-\m
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•abm
.
New At S&fewtty^FULL mt QUART 1
=: /BURGER BUNS
' • " • "•'•"'«"••»
" '• o<- Ho.r "Oc-g Buns,
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8
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Crtigrn.01 1 '--. I.F i ;'
L .-.<;•.
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Bamboo
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WKw
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Quart
Botttt.:
PIMI
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'
•t^W-ia/iiii'JS
C»»
; : . ' . W-OL
•••'•"',•
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• > • » • » • •
Sandwich Bread
Is The Place To Buy Quality
Deposit Edch loflie
SrviitiSe^ •'•
.>•• • «. : » > . J*?;
,
c*m»m %
Safeway
Mi*. C r y w S o g « , L»>HOfl L>mu, Oi«f>n»>, SparUific) furiitifOu'iK he
W*t«fTTtoot fcKfri Spo'Mmq W S ^ ' . - l M t k CKerry. S*f»w**'>y
iC/^'Ofc
C'n'V • .»• > •-. - . . . « . . .
— * .
j Oroti* of 13 {Vlid-Mt F!*vo»$, Cola, f.ioo«f Alo. ^r«p«. .CnH-n-E
I w V ' ' w t -°'- « • > • « • • « • • J*r
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'J :8
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•«!«'
"
.€«.L.l.«rdf
Trv,fy-H-e.'for
48-Ov
B lt
Spicy
ORANGE
•
.
•
' It-Ot' j W *
F*rnilv DABCJRKHambur^irs
;
' •* • '*« 1 p
Mrs. Wr^M's'
\rVr«r» of WhMt
;
HA
, J ^ d Rifce Sfx)o>i^n Good 6R0UN0OIUCK
61*«
* * » • ~«. ,
.
»
*
Hb.
Pkg.
,
3
-7.07::$*
Pkqj. . f-
U.S.D-A. ;^RApE-A
• Safeway- 7 Varlofie; "E r -^y- yctr -\>^cr[!* .SandwicK
tr.ry-h^;....:
... .' . .
. •>"'•> L • -~> « n "'• •
» .»
l-fct
CUT4JP FRYERS
K<erorfHout?.
TraEiVor
•
W
[•>• o';.; M ,."•»• , lb,
U.WEJ*.
V5D*,
-0.riutn;$tieks' t^T'i'^rTLC'
Qrown
I - :Doiicou*-'
;
t I Breasts
i T ' 2 4A/iMiM»
SpflngTtne
Ttwr-. , «
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5«»
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It.
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0----.no
Potatoes
1
N«Wn ^,
U:S..M«..I
.
• • .
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• * > « Lb. . • *
.
.:,.;••
•
lb.
f
y'td*y
Tttj* S i r l o i n " « : . > - ^ 7 ~ ^ $1.19
•i- k,r 25 f
* •- • .
Milk
Frt.iti <3(«rf« A
Yi-Sal
Horpo9«nizod . . , , Ctrl.
.
•a.
m
lltLlftC
8-0».
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.,
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8i>ilJwi>r« .. . . .
Fail
4 4 ^
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•
The < second artist she told of,
was Georgia Q*Kceffe^-sajso a
daughter_of_wealthy_ parents of
Wisconsin.. She traveled - ahroadf
but found h e r greatest inspiration in desert painting, and
prairies scenes. Mrs. Gervasi
decribejd her paintings as abstract, and mentioned as probably her best known a s t h e
skull of a horse in the middle of
the desert. She is stfll alive and
makes her home in New Mexico,
Mrs... Gervasi said.
The-Texas' sculptress. Dr. Waldine Tauch. by contrast-was not
from a-, wealthy family. She,
however.
"occupies a
place
among the greatest and foremost artists, not only of Texas
but of the world." (Texas Parlade. Feb. 1963).
Her first figurine to,, win an
award {nr her was one made of
butter and entered in .a Bmdyi_
County. Texas fair. Some of her
hest-'Rrirwn works of art include
"Pippa Passes" which stands
?x»fwe' Aiim^trong-Browning Library' at Baylor- University in
Waco: a •• statute of Texas hero
>iQ««'-s.__-Anrst-in- that towers over
City I fall :ScTu7ire" 'IrTSaTT' "Antohlo, Land the most recent work that
of a Texas Ranger. . His right
hand, not his gun hut oyerlt, and
the left hand extended to repre- :-.
'sent peace and order. At the bSSer"of statute appears the. legendary
motto of the organization "One
Riot. One Ranger."
The programs presented this
year have been /ah,women.
The hostess was assisted in
serving•'•••;• refreshments by Mrs.
w ; B; Johnson and members
present -'iBchiflfi^l^
ton, Mfs, Humphris, Mrs. Mallan, Mi^- Markle, Mrs. W.. B.
Johnson, : Mrs. E. B. O'Quinn,
Mrs^ Wareing, Mrs. Steen, Mrs,
Gervasi and- Mrs, Coffield.
tX)fYRr6H? i^$44 - M M t * M * i n i # S r t u r ^ M«y m
h\U
3 '.>VE..
: «t:-^f.
fft#
I Jf .'
The Big Benc|. Study Olub held
•its installation'., ttfa-. 55attirday afternoon; in the home of. Mts.'
John LankfordJln Pr^sWio. Mrs.
R. -G..: Tiptcjn! oin^oiTTg^ Presideerit. porsii-jod. Mr^. Ben English
pave tho H u b coliort, Mrs. Tir>
tori, J W I * a- report of the yeafs v
vV'ork. al>o reporred the ^u^>
wc»n « y e m l awards rejportejd at
the District Convention of Te:tf«
a Fedeation of Womens* Club3.
M r v p f # Cross cohdiicted t h e
instaljation when jthe following
— ^late of officers assitrned- ttVeirJ
duties: Mrs.j>Joc Riamirez, President; Mrs. H. C.: Tipton andMrs. Arturb Oohoa, Vic^ Presidents Mrs. John Lankford^ Beeording Secretary; Mrs. Ostar
Spencer, Corresponding Secret
taty: Alrn^T^utoaiOriyers, Treasurer; Mrs, John & Link, Parliamentarian,
.
Mrs. Ramirez announced t h e
following
committees:
Year
Book, Mrs, &..-:.-0: Tipton, >frs.
A ^ y o ; Qchoa anij Mrs, vCarloa
Spencer, Social Committee: Mrs.
John K, tinfc; Mrs; Clajr Slack
aj)4 Mrs, $tAnley Ca*ner.
The serving table was covered
with a hand m a l e lace clothV
;.usij?g a yellow and green table
arrangement, making ft colorful
and very attractive. Sixteen
members and guests attended.
A ;»ui).r>.;
Charcoal titer
Cider Vinegar
C. -- »r Ct-.lr>r.y
[
OVl
tms.^r
V/ ? Q».
. >^J
<\r f?r'n*
ftfltf"
isccc-dc^x .««.•. <flr'
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Fte.Fi «:r,j Cr0ATiy
Jft^
-.,..—ftfr. .Tfy • 1
•Ho»C>«-:- S..-»d*«>«<.-.,-•?. A.'rOCJv
.'6Ct.fkfl.-i!
59* Lemonade
.
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« • «
2 '^-°'-16«
,
•«»•.•'!*.• - » ' »
W«5f OT
Crw»*
-'finjj
More Holiday Needs
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[Cucumbers
Bell Peppers
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Big B«nd Study Club
InstoHs Officers
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•'Hoftday PicWic , .
SnoWhife SaSt
Garlic Salt
BBQ Seasoning
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.
,
Circular masonry towers were
o.tilt where native stone was too
hard to be squared for comer
• M W M W W M H
construction.
Milk is pasteurized by heating
to 140 degrees or more, then
cooling very quickly.
ftliT r''r^*fi^r*fr V'- Y t':- '• -\ P Ha*-;Ji?i "T V• •'' • u ' J.'•»dflifcjrf^A'"AlI.T.rt^v• Pf. vJVii' r'r. ViV^^eV^IVI''M^*Yjft ft t
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•39
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6
The Big Bend Sentinel, Thurs. May 27. W n Ma;-f:<. Texas
Highlights And Sidelights
From Your State Capital
U 7 $ r BEEF I N EUROPE
thr AnvTi'','))! Meat IrL^iiuti a.".' ! :v ivpartt>* < M v»<.i /.jiij/ lo^M-ihc r .> ,i program
A.i^i'u . i i t r : r c ha\<'
L > lui'r.'i.M' our i'\;M)i'ts (,f Innf and OIIHT in<-ai ,I".<1 l i v
v. to \V(E--i«'in Kuroj*' .iri.l t i't* I 'n.ti'tl K;:'E iorn. In
I"i>r ;i l;v ; - i s t
* \ t'!". t <>'.
«!. s i g n » <!
;i \ i -Ti
runs about 320 per cent, accord
ing to Quilliam. His bill would ture cleared the Senate, but wa»
i l i \ . L W f\
A M I fias U . T tf|;ri-s<'rTir,_i, H i- I M I H " m e t !
(.:1.Texa3 Press Association
permit approximately 120 per6ent back to the house,
>-t i \
Bill calls for nine-member
AUSTIN. Tex
Tabulation cent.
of the activities of the Texas
,\."A tin I us!,! u ; r \ l>oard "f u- V.IM. ^ M.IS vuir<| in fVkiy-iiii ihi*
Bill, introduced early in the committee to draw up licensing
legislature
reveals that the session, has boon buried in a requirements and requires anjrij::u:n f<>r a >r;.r nfiw-^hr rxpi; alion of l!u- i-umvU ptiax- on
ual registration under bond.
current
body
has produced more subcommittee.
Tunc 30. The reason is that, despite the problems iiisolve^j results
new laws than any of its preto date have l*-en encouraging and the future look* bright.
SHORT SNORTS
Proposed
Quilliam asked for a vote to
decessors,
The figures indicate the progivs* made. U. S. i'.\|)ort.-, of beef
[""Instruct" the iiommittee to re- constitutional amendment to rear\l \-ea! had increased to 57.2LYO00 pounds in ]\)M as compared
This is a remarkable achieve- port the hill out of committee move restrictipns on solder votwith o!i':y 27.31^.000 pounds in 10G.1 Variety meat exports also
ment in view of the pressing for a vote on the floor of the ng has legislative approval and
.showed a very substantial advarieo. The hoj>e is that these trends
time-taking demands of redis- House. By refusing to do so, the will be submitted to voters. . .
can Ix1 not only continued but accelerated. In the words of an Int ricting an increased spending. House, in effect, killed the bill. House members voted to remove
sfttite spokesman, "trade between the United States and Western
requirement that jurors in capias well as the controversy on |
Europe can develop onLv to the extent that it is of tK?nefit to both
raising the pay of teachers and SPECIAL EJECTION CALL tal cases not be opposed to deaour cn.mtry and those of Western Kuropc. We are extremely hopeED -- Governor Connally has th penalty.
increasing taxes.
L^_^
ful obstacle* such as price differentials, ocean freight rate* and nacalled a special election for June
tional restrictions can be overcome."
REDISTRICTING—State law- 126 in District 78 to elect a sucAmong other favorable factors, growing affluence in Western
makers have faced up to their cessor to Rep. Ed J. Carpenter
Europe is exported to increase demand for beef, including the high
most painful job of the session of Coahoma, who died May 11.
quality beef produced in the United States. The marketing program
legislative redisricting. •*
District is—made up of Martin,
promises major benefits to all concerned. May it have th* SUCCt«S
In a tension-charged atmos- Howard,
Glasscock,
Sterling,
phere, senators performed self- Coke, Reagan and Irion Count11*
It deserves.
surgery (under federal court or- ies.
der) which in effect \_;iVJ cut off
seven rural
incumbents and -Candidates may file up to 30
transfer their places to major days before the election. Secre- Dear Fellow Texans:
STRONG MAGNET
tary of State Crawford C. Marpopulation centers.
tin says applications for ballot
The amendment to the Voting
must
be
in
his
office
by
May
Rights bill which would eliminSomewhat more
peacefully
In recent months, a good deal has been heard of Soviet inten1 he „ Hou.se placed the heads of 27.
ate the poll tax was narrowly
tions to take leaves from the capitalist book. For instance, such
16 of its members on the chop- j --OIL .ALLOWABLE UP LIT- .defeated in the Senate by a vote
inducements as the profit motive are lying tried in an effort to. stiTLE Railroad Commission., de- of 49 to 45, This issue is still a
This has been another busy in my own substitute. I believe i ping block
mulate competition and to improve the quality and quantity of
cided state oil production should very live one, however, as the
the Administration's bill to b e '
week in Washington.
various kinds of gtxxis.
Under
the
Senateplan,
IJ-frr"be
KeTcTto 2S.1 per cent of poten- House of Representatives bill
The Senate continues t<r de- both discriminatory and uncon- cumlx^nts will be jammed into tial during the next month.
Now. reports Stuart H. T-oo-ry of the Herald Tribune News
has this provision in it, and will
stitutional, and although it
Service in a dispatch from Moscow, another long step is tx>ing taken. bate the Administration's propo- would have little practical effect six districts. They are:
That would set the June al- soon be debated by them. Be
Sens. Dorsey Hardeman, San lowable at 2.900.000 barrels daily. cause of the importance of this
He writes: "The commissars have decided It -pays to advertise. It sal to establish federal standards in Texas. 1 will not- vote for a
brings, they say..'higher turnover, faster selling and other economic and enforcement for local and measure under any circumstan- A-ngelo. and Pete Snelson. Mid- May production, under 27.2 per issue, I. made the following
ord
w a s maximum
of
benefits.'" Writers and artists of high talent are being -mustered state voting laws.
ces that I feel it is in violation land, (pist. 2o); Walter Richter \ ^
statement ;in supi
And
this
week
we
heard
the
Gonzales,
Culp
Kruegef.El
j
to produce layouts that, it' is hop..•<U ' will lead eager consumers to
of
the
Constitution.
I
2.800,000/
ameiidmeht
in the Senate;
President's message calling for
: Campo, and Bill Patman. Gana-'
|>art with their rubles.
NAVIGATION BILL PASSED
My—own -bii 1—wouId insure ' in
Mr, President:
•""'' About all one say is, "What will they d<> -next?'". Maybe, on repeal of Section 14b of. the form application of all State do.'. iDisf.-1SV-; LouLs Crump. San -House"members passed a bill
Taft-Hartley
"Act,
which
is
„that
Saba, and J. P. Word,- Meridian
some distant day. the commissars wi.llrnove. toward a truly free
section of the National Labor voting requirements. It would TDist. 12);•. Jack Strong. Long- to create a Deep East Texas NaI have co-sponsored the Ken
. &6cicty:r~ the kind of society which-the capitalist economw .systems. Relations' Act that^gives' sanc- prohibit fraudulent voting in fevigation District, to build_ art
18.
.
nedv
Amendment to removfr-tn
view, and Galloway Calhoun, Ty„ tax ^ ^
maintain,
tion to'-.«4ate right-to--\york laws. deral elections., and provide for ler (Dist: 2); Jack Hightower. mile canal linking Sam Rayburn , h a p ; . ^ ^ o f {h(t
As you know, wo have such a a detailed study by the/Attorney Vernon, and Andy Rogers, Child- j and Toledo Bend reservoirs -• : t h e h a l l o t b o X ) because T be^
law in Teras, and in my'estima- General and Secretary of De- ress TDist. 23)1 and Rill Moore. ; . Canal would promote b a r p ; , ] i ( i v o x]mi s u c h r o m o v a l is,' j u a t
to" "determine whether
.traffic from Fttst- Texas to -the ( t i m e l y a n d constitutional. In the
tion .'it has been largely respon- fense
Bryan, and Mrs. -Neveille H.
some
state,
voting
laws
discrim-Gulf -«f Mexico..
! affairs of men, institutions arise,sible for the comparative labor:
Coison. Navasota (Dist. 5V
inate
against
Armed
Forces
pervHighway Commission, m e a n - | i m . e t h ( l j r g o n P r a t i o n s > outl f ve
management peace we have enSenate reapportionment mea- while,
sonnel.
•'''
.
let ''ohtracts for t v v o ^ h ( i i ^ i | s e i . u ] n ^ s S i h m ) r a e
joyed in Texas for many years.
imp^h
sure
would
assign
Harris
CounWhat one hand giveth, another hand taketh away
Of course, (luring any extendhighways to serve recreational,
.
If 'President'• Johnson's proposal
ty four ^senators, plus, a share in facilities oh north side of Ray- m o n t s {() p r o R r e s s i n l a t e r R c n
That is often the case with taxes;
ed'
debate
on
the
Senate
floor,
is accepted -by the .-Congress, it
] erations, and pass away. The
.'.-.. lire Washington publicists see to it that all out--notice - to tax- will not he lorii; before stale where -emotions-; sometimes over- two more. Dallas gets thnn?, burn Reservoir;.
poll tax as a bar to voting has
reductions. But it's a different story with tax increases. A little as right to work laws a thing of rule logic, there are things said plus a share in one. Rexar gets
NEW COLLEGES VOTED
lasted beyond its time, and now
two. plus a share in one.
|>ORsible is officially- said of them.
the past. In my estimation, when that'.ought . not .'-to' be said. For . Tarrant County retains a sin-Texas' 23rd and 24th state, seni- should pass away.
• Take, for instance, the social security tax. From the time tiu that hapi>ens, the working man instance, during debate on the
or- colleges are abojjl to be degle Scnate^rjIacjCL, and shares in signated, subject to-itpproval of
In my own state, the million
system got under way in 1037 until 194.9. the maximum was $3u a ''.w< .n«iFi«.-i..-. .«>>.
- *-•
voting rights bill one Sen^ori-h—-,. _
_ , . , . , „ , ,,
„„._
and one-half Texan Americans
yoar~eacrT.on employee and employer. UndiuLJLxi sting law,- it i s " ^ l -suffer, and personal liberty said, in arguing
K
for, a complete
-^- >will
e r district.
El
Paso area the- higher, education coordinat- with Spanish, names have the
n n t h have
its
own
senator:
scheduled to reach $222 on each of the-payers in 19GS. ^ ^
-will' be that-nrocii c l o ^ ^ t o v*n Congressional ban on the poll
ing board. "
House
races
where
mcumE
However, a pending bill, which includes the dubious medicare ishing in our land.
- Both Houses approved a seni- lowest incomes of any ethnic
tax as a prerequisite for voting:
Also,
during'
this
week
in
the
bents
are
combined
with
one
to
group in Texas, and the poll tax,
program, would shoot, it vup farther and faster, By 19S7. each emSenate. We heard rather heated The history of the poll tax is be eliminated, if all seek re- or college at Odessa. Texarkana •for them, is a crown of thorns
ployee earning $6,600 or more a year would have to pay $369.60-and debate over the. Bobby Baker af- >.o entwined with racial discricollege bill was paired by /Senelection, shapo up like this-:
Kis employer would match it, for a-total of $739.20. '
ate and promptly "approved by and a cross on the road to the_
mination
that
it
can
never
and
fair, Ii seems that case just
Reps.
J.
E.
Miller,
Jr..
Burkeyoting place;
— ——
That isn't the end to the tax story. The states have been joining won't .«o away..' no matter - how ;\vHI "never be s.parated from ra~
House committee.
ville
and
Emmett
Lack.-Kount^:
in the act. With new or increased sales, income and other- such hard some people try to cover it ; cial discrimination."
APPOINTMENTS ANNOUNC- • Without, the poll taxjsan, this
Neal Solomon. Mount.r Vernon, ED- -Governor Connally named
"or
my
part
I
rl.V
not
propose
taxes.
up. From ail 1 have heard and
bill would effect very few statv
and E M. Edwards. Pattonville;
.observed to date, however. I 'lu'-ieEto arguo the e!at:ve mer- John Allenr Longview, and John R. Wofford. Cain of Dallas "to es; it is' frankly designed to co* would say that • it "will--be a long j.irs or demerits of. th* pvll tax. Mobley, Kilgore; David Crews, the board of Texas. A & M Uni- 'vdr^vepy few states. I favor ex; time, if ever, before the Ameri- •I have always said that this is Conroe. and Cameron Hiffhtow- versity E
panding, the opportunity to vote
He
reappointed
S...B.
Whitterimatter
for
the
peopie
of
the
can people arv treatexi to the a
in every state, n o t just some
states, not the Congress, to de- j w Lib^rty; Vernon Beckham. burg, Amarillo. and Sterling C. other- states than my own.
full facts of the matter.
Don He ft on, Sherman Evans; Houston.
This report is being recY>rded cide I personally thin\ the poll jDcnison,
**
and' 0Bill
, n Dimgan. MeKihney: Rill
CRIMINAL
CODE
BILL
Some critics state that the bill
A good, many people, doubt that the government's war on po\-er- • in mid-week...to allow time for tax cis something of a nuisance. •Hollo
well.'
Grand
Saline
-Tim
PROTESTED
Revised
code
of
But
the
implication
th.it.
Texas
as
drawn does not apply to Texty will produce the hopeci-for result. Time will tell as to that. But -. mailinq and • distribution. • so I
MaVkgraf. Scurry: Bill Salter- ^criminal procedure has passed
adopted
the
poll
Laxl_as_a
means
as: I want it to apply to Texas.
one thing is sure, it is producing a high degree of affluence for a , cannot say_ at • this point what
H :
| >> w u r ,
liUu.L-i.
i* t1
• WT, - 1 , . » ^ . . . .
ofKvopm^rimnxr
&^^/oti
jwhito._;Ennls..
^
^
^
¾
.
t
b
o
t
h
houses
but-i^
in
wrrforonco
Some proponents of this bill
-consiaejjible. n.inrilK'rJqf J e d c r a l . jol>hoidersl
. - . . . . the disposition -of"•trie."" SehaTe"
:.the
voting
list.
absolutely
false,
'erts.
Hil'lsboro;.
Lloyd
Guffey.
El
would use a few deep. South
committee.
This has. raised the dander of Senator Simpson of Wyoming was toward my own.amendment
A
searching
study
.of
the
subject
j
Campo.
and
Otha
Rirkncr.
V-an
-states
as a ..whipping' boy and
Newsmen have protested a
Ke points out that the Office of Economic Opportunity, which is : to the. Administration's voting
reveals
that
the
poll
tax
in
Tex;Vleck:
J,
T;
Newman,
("uero,
House amondrrVent which would overlook arger disenf ranchfisethe ''poverty office," will have a. Direct or a t $30,000 a year; a De- ! rights bill. -My. amendment' was
as
was
adopted
as
a
prerequisite
and
Paul
R.
'llaring."•'•'•
GoliajgLj
prohibit law enforcement offi- ments in' their own states, t fap u t y Director, at S2R.50T); three 'assistants at S270W; nini; other 'Scheduled' to come up late Wedapststants at $2=4.n00; eleven, more at • $21-.445: and another 'twenty' nesday and be. .offered as a com- for' vot ing . in an effort to clean j A. C. At wood; Edinburg. Felix cials from making public any vor fair treatment-for all states.
Edinburg. Gregory information . which may "pre- Some would pluck the mote from.
• at$ls.ri.'ir> 4-ach.. In his words. "National poverty headquarters plans i plet-'e "subst-ittif^ to the Adminis- up voting frauds that plagued ;McDonald.
Mont
ova.
Elsa.
and Haul Ixmg-. judice a jury."
the state. Obviously, it did hot
Ncwspapers4
- i hbdr's eye and overa staff of 1050 as a starter which makes it appear . that the war •vation's bill.
.^-,mia_^J__L&rr; Jim Nugent, Kerr- maintain that the amendment ;.11lT5iT n0 ff
j
eradicate
takes the form of mass Federal employment. as sky-high wag'*s." •I " have outUn.od. before my completely
ville. and Terry T«.»wnsend,--Bra- . would restrict, fi-ocdom of the )f)ok t h p b c a m i n t n o i r o u ? 1
k
The Senator plans to join with other Senators in.an effort to place .main obiections to the 'Adminis- fi:aud. in run- State, but
dy; Po.y Arled.urc Stamford. K a - | press and -ask that the amend- want this bill to bar the poll
tax as a voting ban completely,
'<*urbs on the "salaries.
'
. . tration bill, and it is.these ob- help.
leigh Brown. Abilene, and Grant ment be deleted. .
in my own state and in.every
'E Whatever' happens to this efioM. it is apparent that another jwtions that I seek to overcome
Jones, Abilene; A. C. Hallmark,
ATTORNEY GENERAL; R.UL- other state.
•elite.bureaucracy,.whos^e ultimate size and cost • is >T»t- u'nknovyn, is. - ^
.Dalhart and Fritz. Thompson. ES-—Atty. Gen. Waggoner Carr
:—• -i
tn the process, of creation
JBorger; Hudson Moyerr Walter held as uncdnstitutional a bud- I oppose the use of literacy
—<_s«*im_-^,
;Knapp ..and. .t:—1Mf— Simpson/ get^bill~ rider to provide for tests in some states as a &isa.
i A
• Amarillo; 7JacTr"'VVQods, •' George mandatory retirement at age 70 criminat.ory tactic to b a r large
I Cowden. Dick 'Cl'ierh*. all of of statutory officers or employ- J groups from the. franchise, and
Waco, Tra\ds McClintonE Cory. _I _t
am proud of the fact that Texas
...-.•- .
„„_-. ,
^ cos, of the State
T r a d i n g remained seasonally
r
-held:
practices no literacy test dls:
AWVPP
slow in cotton markets' of Ari- ell bounty; Charles Wheeler and [ J n o f h e r o p i n i n J S , Car
or an eiecuon peti- crimination. But the poll tax' is
J\ VV
'
lihlY
p n p r 0 f a n elect:
zona, California, New Mexico Glenn Johnson. Temple, and | : t ? i igncr
A bill has been introduced in the Senate designed to eliminate
t ion for local" option sale of al- discriminatory too,, in many
Fondren, Taylor,
and the El Paso-Pecos section of Gene
the ;confusions'ihat come with daylight saving time. But those
House bill would giVe • Hairis eholic beverages may not with- ways, and I am just as willing
• \ ' / " M|_E-5;-TAl_i<"'',:'
Texas, according : to "Consumer County 1.9 representatives; Dal, choosing it would have to observe it from the fourth Sunday in
draw his signature after 30Klay tx> uproot,this discrimination in
April until the fourth Sunday in October. An author of-the.;'bill' , "This -suit \vill wear like iron," and* Marketing Sendee. U. -S.las 14; Bexar. 10; Tarrant eight time limit for filing.
my own state as I am to tell
contends that scrambled time and clock confusion now constitute, the friendly -salesman assures t?epartrpent of. Agriculture. 15b- and El. Paso five, or a total of
2. Seawall Commission for o t h e ^ ^ t a t e s ,4vhat-to^o^.^orfe
*' . / I one-of the greatest puhhc.inconv'eni.enccis--m.the Nation.'*
you. If it ^doesn't really wear mestic mill inquipes.-WerJ^E^hE ^6 of theEHcxuse's 150 seats. :
Mftt a&orda County •tfrttr-rroitbn]
le are probably barred
Congressional .r(»distHcting re- er be an effective body after from the ballot box in Texas by
liko iron, are you entitled t o . a fined mainly- to -filJ-in needs.
J Foreign inquiries originated in mains to be unraveled.-It is. estimated trat 9^ million .kilowatts of ^ generating equip-. refund? :.:
September 1, 1965, .•'•.'.:>
the poll tax than are barred in
India, Japan, Iormosa, 'Sweden.
Etnent will be addcxi to the nation's electric power supply bv the end
BUDGET BIIX. TO "COMPr
3.
^Travel
expenses
"of
task
any other 'one.sti^te by a literacy
f3bviousl^___D2t^;_^ven - though and The .Netherlands. Sales in- TRGLLER a record ^3,600.000,-:
<tf 1970.
..
'• 1 , .
•,'••:.:
f
the
Emergency
Plan*
0
test.
';•-.' ?'•'".,"; : . . ' • • ' ' "
- .•_ _ _ _ _ — _ r . . .1
» "the,
salesman exaggerated, any cluded both Upland and Amevi 000 state budget bill, major bu; !£<yroups
Gommittee
can
be
paid
i r | g'
sensible person would have .tak- can-Egyptian growths. Some PL siness of tiie_-scission finally i s i n ^ - - ^ ^ . properly, approved. ..
The pending hill is deficient'
en- his statement, with a grain of 4x0 allocations remain t o be fill- the • hands of . th*P ' State- Comp- |
in
failing to remove the poll tax
pjjj r eguiating ptirchasing
4
ed/
Neithergrowers
nor.
mer-;
"salt.
The
J
a
w
doesn't
require
abP ASSOCSlllflU t
trolter - for •'-• cert if ieatibn, after i , n c o f j u r o s 0f, g^_s and : electric. voting ban, because 1 believe
s
; Folute .honesty by a seller E for chants were snowing lnt-ov-os* in agreement .on corrections and., r T «jahix
s in ,,J_*»xar County is that a majoHty of the Senate
com
;'the'*, simple reason that people new-crop contracts.,;
is agreed on. the principle of dojlast'.mlnute ad;ditions hy resoluu.n con st i tiitlo na[ a^' a local and ing a\vay with the poll tax. I
l-j-.US.t-."doh't7<VXrtaot i%; .
Middling:;"'l>l/t6°--Vas -:^uot<»cl.'j.tipn-.
' • v V
special law.
( 11
;.-' '"It:.:- aivvays h.as been Eunder- !May 20 on t h e Fresno market j IndepeT^e'h^T-TrstJrnates , * ; j ; PESTICIDE BT1X ADVANC- do not .think the kjccoss.of t h e
bill will be prejudiced by adop' stood., thei 'wOrlicr"over,M observed J' at 36.00 cents per .^und unchan- [ laie .the".\.$B'-«.400;0Q0' general iEr>_-BilI to reglalate pesticide tioh of .this amendment- -a, large :
an. advisory
'Oliver Wendell':. Holmes, *Hhat gedvfrom a week ago. Phoenix (fund ..appropriation would" leave : :. a ^ H c a t o r s ,-;through ar
majority will still favor' the 'bill..
I such statements are to be dis-quotation for this quality was j a' ^ T h * of^ S T O O - O O O , . ^ g ^ F 'committee in t h e offiice of the
1
\ ^t^e Commissioner of Agricml- •Neither, do I fear.for the con31.90 cents, the same as ; last spending measures are passedv
trusted.'.''
.
^ >
_ _
week. Middling 1-1/8" was quot- ''jSut--'other, Handing hills a r e '
stitutionality of this bill if this
Of course, salesmaiiship can ed in El Paso at 37.30 cents per almost certain to be passed. Tax
anti
: poll tax amendment' is adoptspill over into fraud. Although p W p d , onchnnred from a weett tsiii authors are faking that into
ed. The .recent 'Supreme Courtthe diviqinETffire^Hrot always earlier. Grade J, 1-3/8" Ameri- consideration in writing a re*~
decision 1ft Harmon v. Porssenicjear, there are several factors can-Egyptian Was quoted in venue-raising measure which will
uss (from Virginia) Should lay
EArt |nd«pendent Ncwspap«r
that weigh heavily in the law's Phoenix at .$0.80 cents and in pay for the $70,000,000 (State
those fears to rest for all w h a
PubMihed 6«ch Thursday By.
share) teachers' salary boosts j
balance.
EI
Paso
at
51.35
cents.
Purehasread the4 case,
THE BIQ BCND SENTINEL COMPANY, tNC.
For Instance:
(es of cotton reported, on t h eand other pending requests for
m+rfm, !•**$
••#.-1>. Box P
Titepfiotia PA
I mtik the time-is ripe to eliw
! « the
X seller
tiller stating
stating a
a ifact
Was
a ^ or* {Fresno hiarHet during
totaled the
4Qfl week
hales ^ n i m t f AY CQMPHOmlhate i discrfmtnatory : precononly oh oplnloti? 'irlily car will
MISE SET ~ Teachers and Govditlons to voting, and to support
compared
to
300
in
the
precedlast you for the next fiveL years'*
ernor
Connally
reached
a
cpmpresident Johnson's State of the
is usually just the seller's opinion ing week. Upland cotton^ puwhas- prombe in their pay dispute.
Second Claw Pottage Paid at Marta, Texas. Any S_f'
!Tnio*i ^ ( " J R ^ " '"•^'.eh urged the
not a spedflc guaratitefcy ^But es reported on the Phoenix marm e o u * ReflectJon Upon the Qhatacte^, Standing,^ or
T^aehersr
wUl
get
raises
from
{country to et'ndnate the barriers
'This is only five yeats oldf is kei totaled 1,000 bales compar- $90 for beginners to $1,089 a
Reputation of any Individual, Concern or Qcfpdrat*
to the right to vote.
factual. By and large, the lawed to 1,200 last week.
tJon That may Appear in the Columni of the B i t
year for M.A_ degree holders
expects statements of fact to be Exports of cxrtton. through with 18 years' experience. I_oeal
j. The poll tax 'Is a poisonous
Bene) S<wjttn^ will be Corrected when called to the
California ports during April
accurate.'
snake across the path to tlie
Attention of the PoWteher. Copy Omiiilitlont end
totaled about 84,700 bales, a<> school districts must share about
voting box, and I intend to hit
Also; a seller ha* a greater cording to the Western Cotton -10 per cent of estimated $101,*
Typographioal Errori are fubject to
11
it
with any stick in reach. The?
duty
to
be
truthful
tyhep;,„tfr^re;
fftt irt-f **"• * ^ r * ^ ^ ^ ^ " ^ ,____
Skippers Association, This conv 000,000 biennial cost:—: > •••'•' .
is
a
relationship
of
trust
bet
Kennedy Amendment is a good,
• te tft« AttenUOTl o ! the-Management Tltti
LOAN BILL STYMIED—Rep.
pares with 137,700 bales in Marw
e
e
n
h
i
m
and
the
buyer.
Thus,
legal and lethal weapon in easy
paper wffl not be responsible for mantiseriptt or
r a ^ U f c W « T s e l l e r w w h.W to vch and 81,000 ta Aj.rU a . j ^ - W. Reed Quilliam, Jr., of Lub-.
reach, and we'should not pass
photograptts not solicited lor publication.
bock tried without success to
IIAVriHCWOHWoriSfe
be fraud, not salesmanship* be- ago. April exports have exceed- spring his bill to reduce interest
up this opportunity to use i t
•UMCnfPTION RATKt
HtC Fl^ST ¥ K TO P0UC»
cause he, happened^ to be the ed those of March only In 1956
In Presaile, 4eff Davis and trewstsr Countlss, $3 per Year,
and 1959 in the last ten years. I rates", on "small^small" loans of
o ^ e w ^ i
jggg
buyer's trusted advisor.
Outside Tlires-CoofHy Ar« f WW per Vear.
(Continued
on
Page
7)
Hess
than
$108.
Currently
,1«
(Ctonttnuecl m Page 7)
tuboorJprtons are Paysb^t ^ A-*vanoa
By—Vern
.Sanfocd
1
Yarborough
Newsletter
TOWARD A FREE SOCIETY?
JOHN TOWER REPORTS
A MATTER OF HANDS
AFFIUENCE AND POVERTY
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J
Letter To
May
The Big Bend Sentinel Thurs. May 27, 1965, Marfa, Texas
The Editor
Family Lawyer-
Presidio Texas
May 24, 1965
Pat Ryan, Publisher-Editor
! The Big Bond Sentinel
Marfa, Texas
P e a r friend:
12 IJfOC
, 7
cf-udt ^.our (Sup o\ ^ea
Pat . Kyaru
Bij.' FW'nd Sent in- :
Ma/fa, T e x a s
U a r !'at:
Although we Americon* drink over 75 million cups of tea every day, few
"1 *
people have any idea of the fascinalin g story behind the tea leaf brewing
The Olrl Timi .«.* ru<l Ofjen
m your teapot. This ij how tea is prod ucfed for Thomas J. Liptgn, Inc., the
With greatest regret I a m
' ' m m IE- |)i;.;j wt:: \ :i>i' S'ue(V'Ss,
largest tea packer in the U.S.
M.tnv Tfiap.k^' r< -.<,. VVV could writing this letter to \ on and I
r.'A \\a\i'
tiik<ri ' i, J- \i< h a n o r -wish you pu^s it on to your
fj
(l<vl! u i l h e u t \ . ; i , ; : ( ; ' p . ' i n y p<»o readers:
pK- like yon.
| It wa* on Thursd*\\ J u n e 20th
The Marfa On.-ii-.f* I of Cornjwhen I was printing t h e second
Classified Insertion Rotes
mere*' v\ant.s to tajVelhis oppor'section of my paper T h e Presidio
tunity to Kiv<- their sincere
First insertion — 5 cenU p e r word; 3 cents p e r word thereafter.
fVoice for our J U N E issue, when
thanks t o r a job \v<J* done.
Minimum c h a r g e — 90 cents first insertion; 70 cents thereafter.
it he welded p a r t of t h e Drive
Very sine^rrly yours,
Non-consecutive insertions 5 cents p e r word p e r insertion and 90
j Shaft of my old J o b Press that
Jerr>' Hop*
2. The* harvesters, usually women,!
cenlts minimum.
j has heen welded since 1947,
CEYLON1
are called "pluckers," and they
President
Le^ftl Notice r a t e — 25 cents p e r line p e r insertion.
[broke out, a n d prohable our
1, The finest teas ore usually grown
pick an average of 70 pounds of
Open classified Display'advertising —• $1.00 per column inch.
•JUNE issue will be delayed for
at higher altitudes in India, Ceylon
leaves in a dpy —enough to make
and other countries.
Deadline for receiving or cancelling classified ads is 12 noon Wed17 pounds of finished tea.
some time, if I get t h e Drive
LEGAL
NOTICE
nesdays.
Shaft welded again.
The Big Bend Sentinel fullfills requirements for publication of alJ N O T I C E
OF MEETING OF
If il can't he welded, in that
Tegal notices.
BOARD
OF . EQUALIZATION
case T have to retire against m y
To place an ad o r for information Dial PA 9-4334.
OF
MARFA
I N D E P E N D E N T will, when this is t h e time when
SCHOOL
DISTRICT
we have to work most in behalf
READERS ARE CAUTIONED
You a r h e n l : ratified' that of next young generation and
to investigate thoroughly any advertiser whose ad requires cchool- the Board of F.q;;aI'/ation for t h e
ing paid for by t h e reader, or an investment as a condition of em- Marfa IndoptT.d.-il School Dis- denounce and work hard against
Communism, and we to keep on
ployment
triet. Pmsidio r«-,i"ty. Marfa, working in behalf of our PresiTexas, will e o n \ » - i on Friday. dio County in general.
4. Toby Fleming, chief tea buyer
A - l SPECIAL NOTICES C-9 Business
J u n e 11. 1W,~>, from ir.OO o'clock
3. After rolling and twisting by
for tipton, may taste 200 different
g'unt machines, the tea leaves ore*
Opportunities
The name of t h e Job . Press
A.M. t o 12:00 oVlf* k Noon a n d
teas a day carefully selected from
dried in,ovens that seal.in the natufrom 1:00 o'clock P.M. to 4:00that I have ixu'Ti printing my
several thousand tea estates to find
1
ral
juices
and
oils.
The
tea
is
now
teas
that ore suitable for the
—
EXCLUSIVE
o'clock P.M., in the Board Room papers si net 1947 is George P.
ready for pocking and shipment.
"Brisk"
Upton Wend.
at t h e Marfa Hrfch School Ad- Gordon, si/,e of Chase is 11x15.
FRANCHISE
Amazing n e w liquid plastic ministration Build: HL- l<xated at if there is one of our brothers
coating- used on all types of sur- 401 North Hi)!. Marfa, Texas, P r i n t e r s who have a Drive Shaft
n a discarded O o r g e P. GordonWe wish to stress the import faces interior o r exterior. Eli- for the pyrpo*.-v of r e a r i n g all Job Press, I would be glad t o
anee of subscribers notifying minates waxing whru appticd protests a n d di ••errr.infng t h e h e a r 'fi^m him. y e s 1 would
the newspaper of any change of m Asphalt Tile, Vinyl, Lino- valuation if all i ^ o j v i t y subject like t o bear from him because
(
Asbestos, H a r d to taxation by Marfa Independaddress; The Big Bend Sentinel leum, Vinyl
I
a
m
anxious
and
desperate
and
is penalized every time your pa Wood, and Furniture.* Complete- ent School Di^tnet.
liable.to'go'crazy. I haven't been
per is not delivered. The address ly eliminates painting when apYou a r e r i w b y ':otilit*d t o be idle since T w a s V4 years of age,
label is returned to us marked plied t o Wood, Metal, or Coi. and -appear bejo.'*-- .*ai(J Board, .as you read my t r u e biography
5. At major tea auction centers
experts bid for roast of the world's
postage due and it now cost us crete surfaces. This finish is if you s o desire at t h e date, on December issue, a s I know
6. SeTYTnglTne quality tea 1> no
crops. At these auctions the Upton
problem. The latest refinement is
10 cents to find out whose ad- also recommended for boats o r time, and. place fhov/n. at which retirement is not for poor workbuyer Jwds for those teas which are
automobiles.
the Flo-Thru tea bag with four
dress to change. time and. place said Board will ing peple.
••nilstanding; in flavor, body, and
brewrng tides, to-give fuller flavor
NO
COMPETITION
then consider ar.y evider.ee you
color.
~'
faster.
*
* The. post office may fcave your
As these a r e exclusive formu- may elect t o submit a* to' t h e T h a n k i n g you in advanee. I
new address but newspapers are las irrttarcend by all businesses, value"1 of said pix>i*riy for
to remain as ever
not first class mail and are not industry and.---homes'. No. fran- rt$*..•". pm-pnftes Th<» Board, on
—Italy is second .to F"rance in
iorwarded. It is therefore neces- chise fee. Minimum investment said date, will from t h e .evidence
your most loyal friend.
wine production.
sary that we be notified of an $300. Maximum investment— now before it and <v.(/h- additionJuan ftivera
address change of any kind
J u a n Rivera. Sr. Editor
$7,000.00. In vestme n t is secured al evidence a s may be then beDemonology is the study of
The Presidio Voiee
by inventory. Factory trained fore it, finally "tlx: determine
evil spirits.
P. O, Box 518
'
TREE LESSONS when yarn personnel will help set your and equalize t h e value of your
Presidio, Texas 798.5
selections are^ made from the business. F o r complete details property for taxable-''j-itrpoj.es for
colorful stock' at Auris Knit and descriptive literature w r i t e : the y e a r 1965.
• '„ '
. Not all crows are black; some
Dear
Mi".
Ryan.
.
Shop. 08 West Tihrd. P 9-4691, GHEM-PLASTICS & P A I N T
have brightly-colored feathers. *
XRi Faye Oamet't
' I ' m - s o r r y I haven't h a d t h e
:
C
O
R
P
.
1828
Locust,
S
t
.
Louis
3,
etfc
Fay Garra it
opportunity t o meet you a s yet. Distemper is cr/mmonly consiMo.
_
- 4S-14tc
Secretary to t h e Foard of However, I d o wish t o say that
'Kquet'izatJon t^r Marfa In- from iudging from t h e excellent dered a form of influenza.
LOSE W E I G H T safely
with D Real Estate (Rent)
dependent $^-o.-ol District. writing you p u t intoOex-A-Diet Tablets. O n l y . 98c
Most species of sharks l>ear
SEAL
impresses me that you have one living young, called pups.
George Cross P h a r m a c y .
7-8tc P-8 Apcrtment for Rent
BOK U . M;-;v 1>7 JJW 3. 10 fine and solid newspaper.
APARTMENT FOR R E N T
GOLF S H O P will pay 10 cents
.'.I iTiiov all of- your columns
Nice and quiet on Lincoln; St.
"Around T h e Bond". To me, and
for each uncut, used" golf balls. See Eddie Pierce.
Dr. Thomas L Coats
1-tfc
I'm sure t h a t a lot of us ex_...'•
&2tc
Optometrist
Marfa'-people, t h e . B i g Bend Sen-,
Downstairs apartment, 3-bedGOING OUT of business sale room, 1½ bath,- air-condition,
~ Hill Building
tine'l is something more t h a n
now in .progress. Gifts, cosme- panel roy heat.—few furniture.
just" news from home. It is a
Alpine, Texas
tics, fixtures and everything- Dr. John P . Scarls Hospital
home away from home to m e .
Hrs 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
One-third off at Merle NormaBest Regards
ing.
45-tc
Studio,' 20S North Highland.
Harold O- Biediger. J r .
Except
.•^_^__...
8-2tc FOR R E N T a 5 room furnished
P.S. Enclosed is another year's
Wed. & Sat. •- 9-12
house call PA 9,4521.
9-1 tc
subscription.
N0TICE4&
SUBSCRIBERS
i Continued F r o m Page 6)
And
a seller with technical
knowledge of t h e product, not
available to t h e buyer, must
stick closer to t h e t r u t h
- because the buyer J s more likely
to rely on what he says.
Moralists' may argue that a
seller should bo held t o total
truth, plain a n d unvarnished,
under all circumstances.
But, a f t e r a l f . i t ^ i s f r ^ - n e c e s s .'arily a question of saint a n d
sinner. Buyers, too, often stretch
a point in t h e process of bargaining. If sellers exaggerate,
buyers belittle. W h a t t h e seller
calls a peach, t h e buyer calls a
lemon. T h e Bible (Proverbs 20:M i puts it this w a y :
"It is naught, it is naught,
j saith t h e buyer: but when h e is
[ gone his way, then he boasteth."
Cotton(Continued From Page 6)
Ex polls this
season, August
through April totaled 661,600
bales compared to 929,200 for t h e
same period a year earlier.
t
Weather
conditions
ranged
from cool and cloudy t o n e a r
ideal with temperatures over
100 degrees a t some locations.
Hail destroyed some acreage a t
Ft." Hancock. Texas. A small
amount of replanting remains a t
scattered locations. T h e crop appears to b e slow i n starting b u t
stands a r e generally fair t o
-good, Cultivation-has started.
1 ^ The
Big Bend Senjinel
Do Your
*i&
•if
UTfl£ APS,,
A-2 Lost ond Found
FOUND: On F t . Davis Road a
pair of brown framed- glMsra
Owner please call T h e I Jig" Bene
Sentinel,.'; PA 9 4334.
4-tQ
••••••^••••^PBW**"*"*"*^""""**"*""""
m.
A-18-Professionol
Services
.1!
w&
'•:'S.
'm
\<m,1¾¾
•A**.
•w
v£i.
>Sf
'A
-¾
E^
•-M-E£#
-¾¾¾
-
Mqrio's Point Shop
Auto DfcLuxe Paint
•'-._.. Body Kepatr
• - 4 Reasonable Price*
113 Waco St. Marfa, Texas
8-2fc>
E-Rf AL ESTATE (Sale)
1-9 General Rea< Estate
Tlie building and property
formeMy occupied by the Presidio General Repair Shop, Presidio. Texas. Write to: P. F Wa-gner'Estate.. A. J. Wagner Execr
P. O. tfox 421. Yorktown, Texas 78164,. ' •
3vVtfc
F-MISCELLANEOUS
F-3 Home
B-1 Help Wonted
NEEDED wood shingle layers
on -contract. See our Superinten&Wt on the project site a t old.
*?ort Davis. Guldemann Construdiorr & Engineering. IiW.
84tc
iiisa.
m
FuUer Brush Dealer
mm,
m*
Presidio & Jeff Davis
Counties
Mr*."C
Box 98
--.-..-
K. Smith
P A 64846
MjtHa
SELL K N A P P A e « O T R E D
^SHOfeS••» PULL TIME OR PART
white plastic uphold
Exeellent weekly earnings sell- stered studio couch; and chair
ing famous national lyadyertis and one blonde oak bedroom
r c t , K n ^ A l r ^ f i o n e d ^ ^ . ¾ ¾ for sa^. Call PA 94114.;ag
6tfo
Cornpiefe line i o r men and wo ter 4 p.rri.
.'•••'.•
~
~
r
m
t .•• .-
men. Daily commissions plus
monthly bonus. Paid insurance F-4 MisceHonous for Sole
benefits. Here is your oppor- LUGGAGE CARRIER m
tunity for financial; independ- ¾ny automobile - Vinyle cover ence ins a profitable business of Like new • Call PA 9-41204;. 9-2tc
your own, or to earn extra cash.
Selling - equipment
furnished MEMORIAL ARTS Monuments
'free. Territories, now open *** for lasting beauty. Markers Marfa, surrounding areas and j Headstones', •- Complete line throughout Jeff Davis and Brew- Easy Terms. See or Call Jose
9*10
«ter Counties. Write E. M. BIJS-'Roman, PA 9-4564.
- ^
tow. Kna^p Shoe, Broekton.
S-4tc
MONUMENTS
Mass. 02402.
a R A N l ^ i OR M A R B t E
TO THOSE W H O CABE; T O
Marfa, Pr«5rai<
'"»«V-^THe_;.;-BEiT t E- N O N E
Two men:" One paH time; one TOO SMALL Of* TOO
LAHfull time for Old Texas Cbmp- <SE.
S E E , P H O N E OR
any^—Wellteained. Can Mak^ W R I T E , J . H CASS•>; MARWANTED
A*
il
$100.00 a \veek and up; Age 2f
or over. VVVite Box No. NW, Big
Ben3 Sentinel, Mar(a, Texaj.
•.PA."-:.
:"'::"-:-^-r'•"::-:•
mss
M
J=j7^lUfecitt:,-«*. you llva k little tatter bacaUM^
of the U. S. Savinga Bonds program^-because^
BO many people in our State buy Bond* and
eventually redeem them to buy things for
wMch ^ e y have saved.
Buring the last 24 years, many billions of
dollars have flowed back in-taB''"tlfir'«con6my of
the State and the Nation in thia way.
These dollars have benefited our merchants,
riiantifacturera and builders. And in so doing
higve created jobs and improve^ earnings for
countless workersMn our iities and farming
cpmmunities'alike.
,•' Tlte people of our State and America today
hold•••* record total of over $48. billion in
SerieB % '™* " -ifefrnd's . . ; rnoneV that will someday be spent in worthwhile
ways and belp n? grow ./further.
I if r^ievery • one of you to>«lp yo.UT future and the future of our State by
i>iV4«itiiig ^gr;Urly in V. S. Savings Bonds,
mmy*mwklili»*~m
Johri Connally
GtivctmoT of Teqa*
Serfes E Bonds
come in ^r
different sizes
'"1
lEfi^fcNOtlCg
nottefc',,,.
•ggSgg
m
-*m
m
•::f)
!?* i t
•' «K - B
m+*+ym**m*™im*+militi*BjmVmTm+
•'-''.
TWO ItE^ISfERlSt) Appalotea
Stallions at sttid. Buck Tomilnson, Highland
Barber Shop*
^far^a,.
PA
94162.
3-7tp
The Board of Equalization tor
the City of Marfa .will be in
-session June 2 and 3 «t the City • — i
Hall in MarfaV The B©ard la
•oum'puwd of l^rari^ Jones,
Chairman, Hayea lilitchel , r»»M
and Benjamin GoitoaWfc.
.'
Should- anyone wish to dis^
euss their yaiuataon at this
Shop In Morfo First
time they may do so.
(S) Mary Taylor
Mary Taylor. Secretary
City of Mai-fa
BE 2-May 20, 27
1
—a message from our Governor
•
^^vants to S0f6ad the word
it's no toriget a difficult, costly t&sfc
to be cool during the long hot $U
WTU:s special o f f ^
r\mi enables more .ferirnlli©s" to.$^|€^vtt*d"-'
comfort of clean refrigeratedS air, I
SEE YOUR EtEGTRICAL APr%!Ate
DEALER NOW and choose your refrrgerated room air conditioner before hot
weather gets here.
^
::M
..iv3
.V- -^¾
• S' -.
:X
iL
* m t WWW UtVU wW«HJ cvtfMMn n u* t«n m lw|*t- SMI
iW ifwfpWWp- wt fi§(wlij|Wi irtMp.jwdBii|l iwwrlprt| Wtw9t%.
•.'•v;
Buy U.S. Savings Bongs
i.
i •
•
^ '•• ^
m
-
•' '•
. '
.
'i •'
;
,)'•
i Vi'ii
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'
'. '•"•
•!.'.^^^."
• ..'•'~'-^—*^T^^*^l^^>^^-r^^^*^^^^—^^111.^1
•»"'#• _
STARSPANQLEO SAVINGS
:''••'.>-.••.-.''•
":••'.'•'• I ? • ; ' . . • ' '
:
•"•••••'
'
'.«*•*&*:.*1*
jawm
^M^lS^M^ll^iMjilC[: t '"•
MftALL AMERICANS
^J
. ;i*U R * 9*9*r*m$M Utt iw»t pay for tkitMwrtUtmtnt.
il
ItU P™*»*** « ' » >««'«
. . . . . , ) njii,
E^^^EE-J,
•: f.iwfwf.lWi'';!' <»;<i->>. «
« n W ' ''lift *• -^^^^^-^.
. ^ -"' •'ij gA; • .v -,'„;- .,-•
1 ^ ^ ^ ^ 1 ^ . 1 ^ - : ^ 0 ^ 1 ^ 0 ^ ^ . ^ - ^ ^ . - - . ^:. Jl^ja^^A'S.t'*-.^-..'.!.*..••".'.• ..I'M.-II*'^
X
j
8
T h e Bi« FViid S e n t i n e l , T h u r s . May 21, 1965, M a r f a , T e x a *
Junior Rodeo-*
Memorial-
Counselors Are Needed By TEC
As A Matter
Of Record
Work Progresses On
Natural Gas System
( C o n t i n u e d F r o m P a g e 1)
( C o n t i n u e d F r o m P a g e 1)
and
g()oxhtooktng r Cowboys o n m i t t e e , a n d h i * a i d e s , w i t h t h e
P U P t o a n t i c i p a t e d e x p a n s i o n s fice of t h e T e x a s E m p l o y m e n t
h a n d to g r e e t a n d w e l c o m e t h e local
historical
society,
Miss
it; y o u t h counsel in<> s e r v i c e s , t h e C o m m i s s i o n OL\ w r i t e t h e M e r i t
out of t o w n c o n t e s t a n t s a s t h e y L e l a W e a t h e r b y , p r e s i d e n t , par- F I L E D M A Y 4
Mont in C o n s t r u c t i o n C o m p a n y ! w h o a r e noi C h a r t e r C u s t o m e r s .
T < ' \ a s E m p l o y m e n t C o m m i s s i o n .System Council, Post Office Box
F r a n k X . L u j a n , et
r e g i s t e r a t t h e R o d e o H e a d q u a r - t i c i p a t i n g . V i s i t o r s will b e a b l e
u*_
t
o
h
a
s a l m o s t c o m p l e t e d t h e dlstriP r o p e r t y ©vners w i l l n o t b e
viJl
need m a n y n e w
employ- \'A'- 9
in A u s t i n for
additional
Mrs. C h r i s t i n a T o r r e s , L o t s 5 & b u t i o n lines f o r n a t u r a l g a s i n
t e r s . " C h a r l e n e R o b e r t s , M a n a g - ; to sit in t h e i r c a r s a n d h e a r .
r e q u i r e d t o place a d e p o s i t tor
m e n t c o u r w l o i s in . v ' . i ' r a l aica.s i n f o r m a t i o n . H e add**! that t h e
: it. Blk. 1. West Height*. M a r f a . M a r f a a n d A l p i n e . T h e installae r of t h e M a r f a
C h a m J x r of
As
an
a
d
d
e
d
a
t
t
r
a
c
t
i
o
n
for
vig
a s service. Renters will be re<'f t h e s t a t e ,
erjti.jiue s a l a r y is $3.33 | H T m o n i Warranty Peed
• l ' o m m e r e e said t o d a y .
s
i
t
o
r
s
t
h
a
t
d
a
y
.
K
r
w
i
n
T
h
o
m
p
tion
of
t
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e
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e
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v
i
c
e
l
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n
e
b
e
g
a
n
in
q u i r e d t o place a d e p o s i t o f
th a'.'I t h a t s a l a i y advanoerner.t
Mrs. C h r i s t i n a T o r r e s t o Luis Alpine, M o n d a y , M a y 24, VM'fi.
A Koden P a r a d e is s c h e d u l e d son, h i s t o r i a n a n d a c t i n g superv. -. . i ] i ;
,
;'. i!'. ;< T t o i
i if
_
$10.00. T h e r a t e s for t h e g a s w i l l
aii'i
pi'i tinoii'ifial
ojij-f )' ''ir-itie>
C
o
m
e
/
.
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t).
Blk.
1
W
e
s
t
in
d
o
w
n
t
o
w
n
M
a
r
f
a
on
T
h
u
r
s
T h e s e r v i c e line w o r k in M a r f a (not exceed t h e franchise r a t e a s
S\st"'
i n t e n d e n t of t h e old foit nationM r l It
i V'U:M iJ in
t :e i l . 'A
day a j t e r n o o n . t h e o p e n i n g d a y al h i s t o r i c site, a n o u n c e d t h a t a H e i g h t s M a r i a . W a r r a n t y Deed. is p l a n n e d t o b e g i n about J u l y c o n t r o l l e d by t h e City - C o u n c i l .
A " •riM. said 111 •;, a r c sTiei-ia'iv-j
Liu- Corn* 1 /, et ux to Koxvvor- 1, 1085. S e r v i c e lines a r e to b e T h i s r a t e c a n n o t be reviewed unof i | u . R o d r o P a r a d e M a r s h a l l n e w l y i n s t i t u t e d , r e c o r d e d , pre«»d. professional positrons requirH C A'.iams has a s k e d t h a t "all s e n t a t i o n of " R e t r e a t P a r a d e of ;th C a l h r a i t h L u m b e r Co. Lots 5 i n s t a l l e d w h e r e a p p i c a t i o n s h a v e til 5 y e a r s a f t e r t h e f r a n c h i s e
i n g college g r a d u a t i o n with a
. businesses and o r g a n i z a t i o n s en- 1^7(r>" will
m a j o r c o u r s e of s t u d y in fields
be given
a t t w o l\ W e s t H e i g h t s . M e c h a n i c s been received.
date.
,
tor
a
float,
a
h
o
r
s
e
,
a
bicycle,
a
a
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a
r
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b
e
i
n
g
tadealing
with
people.
F'mplovo'clock, on t h e jx\st g r o u n d s .
At a n y time, a n y n a t u r a l g a s
• C o n t i n u e d F r o m PJL^O 1<
w a g o n , a n y t h i n g a n d let's m a k e
T
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e
M
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P,ank
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t
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S.
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v
e
.
o
r
iru-nt c o u n s e l o r s a r e r e s p o n s i b l e
o
" R e t r e a t " is a n old a r m y . <uidc u s t o m e r m a y r e q u e s t h i s ser*
*
I'" v »}< involving i he r e n d e r - i a l e n d a r a n d h e l p w e l c o m e t h e this t h e best" p a r a d e we e y e r of-day r o u t i n e
T h e r e c o r d i n g , W i l l i a m H. K a r n e y et ux. Lot 6, m a y be m a i l e d t o B o x 158. G a s vice d i s c o n t i n u e d b y g i v i n g 48
Homestead
T r a c t , s e r v i c e t o t h e individual custo- h o u r s notice to t h e c o m p a n y .
ing of a n effective
c o u n s e l i n g IC.NC d e l e g a t e s t o t h e Big fiend ' p u t on in M a r f a . " P a r a d e t i m e is l a s t i n g IS m i n u t e s , i n c l u d e b u g l e Ida J o r d a n
Block 1. M a r f a . R e l e a s e of lein. m e r will b e g i n a t t h e d a t e reservice
by a n a l y z i n g
u n u s u a l Area," said Miss C h a r l e n e Rob- 1 p.m.
calls, b a n d music, t h e voices of
T h e r e a r e p r e s e n t l y 15152 CusT h e M a r f a s h o w is a p p r o v e d c o m p a n y c o m m a n l o r s r e p o r t i n g F I L E D MAY 5
applicant employment
p r o b l e m s erts.
q u e s t e d by t h e c u s t o m e r . T h e r e t o m e r s signed w i t h t h e s y s t e m .
Manager
of t h e M a r f a
V. S. A i r F o r c e to Glen C h a is no c h a r g e for t h e i n s t a l l a t i o n T h e r e a r e 278 in B a l m o r h e a , 115
a n d needs, a s s i s t i n g t h e s e appli- C h a m b e r of C o m m e n t * , " W h o by t h e A m e r i c a n J u n i o r R o d e o "all p r e s e n t o r a c c o u n t e d for,"
cants
in m a k i n g a v w a t i o n a l : k n o w s . t h e y m a y r e t u r n s o m e Association a n d is s p o n s o r e d by b u g l e s s o u n d i n g T o t h e -Colors, vira .Reyes, D i s c h a r g e .
of a s e r v i c e line u n d e r 100 feet in F o r t D a v i s , 407 i n Alpine,
choice, d e v e l o p i n g
a n employ- 1 day for a v a c a t i o n . "
t h e M a r f a C h a m b e r of C o m m e r - t h e boom of a c a n n o n , t h e lowGulf Oil C o r p . t o S. HerzTeldrj in l e n g t h on p r i v a t e p r o p e r t y .
a n d 762 in M a r f a .
imenl p l a n , a n d a s s i s t i n g applice
e r i n g of t h e F l a g , a n d t h e s o u n d s et al. A d m . E s t a " * of J. C h a n o s - • At t h e t i m e t h e i n d i v i d u a l reBe s u r e t o get y o u r applicaA b a d g e w o r n by I be" "Marfa
c a n t s in m a k i n g j o b a d j u s t m e n t s
ky. Xvc. 17 & IS, Blk. 2, T & P ' q u e s t s g a s s e r v i c e , t h e c o m p a n y t i o n in so t h a t y o u r s e r v i c e One
- - — - --— - of m a r c h i n g soldiers.
"Hello Cnfortu
RY. • 1,280 a c r e s . R e l e a s e Oil, will c o n v e r t h i s a p p l i a n c e s f o r c a n b e i n s t a l l e d w h i l e t h e conw h i c h will i n c r e a s e t h e i r oppor- d e l e g a t e s r e a d
H o w long t h e g i a n t G a l a p a g o s
t u n ty
for successful
employ* n a t e , I'm from M a r f a " a n d caus- t o r t o i s e f i v e s — i s u n c e r t a i n , but
3T>.0Q for t h e first f o u r a n d $1.00 t r a c t o r is h e r e a n d w h i l e f u n d s
This program
w a s i n s t i t u t e d , Gas a n d M i n e r a l L e a s e .
ed
q
u
i
t
e
a
few
q
u
e
s
t
i
o
n
s
and
reGulf
Oil
C
o
r
p
,
to
S.
H
e
r
/
f
e
l
d
,
tnent.
for e a c h
a d d i t i o n a l a p p l i a n c e . a r e a v a i l a b l e t o i n s t a l l t h e lines
s c i e n t i s t s e s t i m a t e f r o m g r o w t h ; for t h e first t i m e in t h e U n i t e d
m a r k s g i v i n g t h e d e l e g a t e s a r i n g s a r o u n d t h e p l a t e s on t h e i r :'States, on S
Su
un
nd
d aa y
y .. M
a
y
1G.
M
r
;
et
a
l
A
d
m
.
E
s
t
a
t
e
of
J.
Chanos^
T h i s c h a r g e is only for t h o s e o n p r i v a t e p r o p e r t y .
May
T h e a p p o i n t m e n t s will bo m a d e c h a n c e +r> tell abnvt I h e M a r f a
o v e r 130 ; T h o m p s o n said it will be a ro- ky. SN;. 14, 15 & 16. Blk. 2 .
ba<'ks t h a t
s o m e arc
f r o m r e g i s t e r s which- a r e esta- a r e a .
! g u l a r f e a t u r e on S u n d a y a f t e r - T & P RX-. - 1.920 a c r e s . RJ-lease
v e a r s of a g e .
blished
through
open-competi\ noons a n d on s o m e h o l i d a y s , a t Oil, G a i & M i n e r a l I ^ a s e :
A t t e n d i n g from
Marfa w e r e
SOUTHWEST TEXAS MUNICIPAL GA$ CORPORATION
tive e x a m i n a t i o n s . S h r a d e r ^sairl j Mrs.
J o e Lowtlior
and
Miss
' 2 p.m. T h e recoiviing w a s pre- F I L E D M A Y 6
APPLICATION FOR GAS SERVICE LINE
t h a t qualified p e r s o n s , m a l e a n d ! RolxM'ts. A l p i n e w a s r e p r e s e n t senierl t h e Big Bend N a t i o n a l . j>ared e x c l u s i v e l y for t h e
fort
1. T h e u n d e r s i g n e d h e r e b y g i v e s c o n s e n t t o t h e S o u t h w e s t
f e m a l e , i n t e r e s t e d i n ' t h i s c h a l j ed by Mr. a n d M r s . R. M. P u d - , P a r k and G e o r g e .lordan of t h e site, at F o r t
,U)p W Cope-land to -Perlit'e
Sill,
Oklahoma.
T
e
x
a
s Municipal Gas Corporation ( " C o m p a n y " ) t o install a gas
l e n g i n g .counseling
o p p o r t u n i t y l e y and J o h n n y N e w e l l . Mr. a n d i
West
T e x a s C h a m b e r - of
Com- w h i c h w a s e s t a b l i s h e d b y G e n . P r o d u c e r s Inc. L o t s 3 t h r o u g h scrvt<*e line on t h e p r o p e r t y located a t :
s h o u l d visit t h e n e a r e s t local ofi R If. G r i e r s o n . w h o latter w a s 1.7. inclusive, Blk. 76. O r i g . M a r •Mrs. C o l e m a n
N e w m a n repre- merce.
• t h e c o m m a n d a n t a t F o r t D a v i s . •fa. All Blk. 6S, G r i g . M a r f a . ex. in t h e 1 ^ 0 s . T r o o p s w i t h h a n d - cepf p o r t i o n 27" x 270'. R . - k w
picked, ^op-level buglers*, p n r t i r i - ' t o Lien.
'Street Address)
(City)
I
^-pated in t h e p r o d u c t i o n .
2.
H
i
e
u
n
d
e
r
s
i
g
n
e
d
f
u
r
t
h
e
r
a
p
r
e
e
s
t
o
'
p
a
^
t
h
e
C
o m p a n y a ConFist a l e of R o b e re A. C l o t h i e r
Men w h o h a v e h a d m i l i t a r y
C l o t h i e r , d<»cs'd t o v e r s i o n P e e of $5.00 f o r t h e first f o u r a p p l i a n c e s a n d $1.00 for e a c h
- Service,
old s o l d i e r s , w e r e s o { a k a R. A
Proceed- a d d i t i o n a l a p p l i a n c e t h a t is c o n v e r t e d b y the C o m p a n y .
P'ederal a p p r o v a l of M a r f a ' s versified, r a n g i n g from g r o u t u h 'thrilled by t h e r e c o r d i n g t h a t ! T h e
Public. P r o b a t e
' 3 . - T h e t v > m p a n y a g r e e s to i n s t a l l s u c h gas service l i n e a t the
a p p l i c a t i o n t o t h e N e i g h b o r h o o d ktM'pers a r o u n d school t o s e c r e t h e y fnund t h e m s e l v e s s t a n d i n g | i n g s .
c o n v e n i e n c e of t h e c o n t r a c t o r f M o n t i n C o n s t r u c t i o n Co.) a n d
Youth. C o r p s is e x p e c t e r i ; m o m - t a r i a I positions.
I .<t stiff a t t e n t i o n , at t h e b e a u t i f u l M a u d e K. A n d e r s o n , ei al :.o to .convert--such a p p l i a n c e s - f o r a b o v e W r i t t e n a m o u n t s a t t h e d a t e
e n t a r i l y , a c c o r d i n g , t o H . G.
Cul- \V K m m o t t D'eV'elin. et a P a r - t h e u n d e r s i g n e d d e s i r e s to begin r e c e i v i n g g a s s e r v i c e . / .
T h i s p r o g r a m is d e s i g n e d pri- ly c l e a r b u g l i n g of . T o t h e
A d a m s . Director'.''
i
' ors.
c<'| out of ^0( 2 i l . Rlk. v G-H.
4. T h e C o m p a n y -agrees to b e g i n s e r v i c e t o t h e u n d e r s i g n e d
If t h e p r o p o s a l is a p p i ' > v M as.j niai'ily to a i d s t u d e n t s w h o a r e
T
o
w
n
of
A S.A.. McvB.
M a r fa: .at.-the .date r e q u e u e d hy t h e - u n d o r s i g n e d a n d t o bill t h e undec^Sgned
w r i t t e n , t h e local school district, j h a v i n g financial difficulty stayR e l e a s e \'». , ndors f.k'n an i b,-,vj at t h e r a t e s e s t a b l i s h e d , hut not to e x c e e d t h e f r a n c h i s e r a t e a s cona c t i n g a s administer/mar a g e n c y , j ing in s c h o o l . " T h e p r o g r a m will
of- T-rusf;
t r a c t e d by t h e C i t y of M a r f a .
p l a n s t o employ.>e a p 7 > r o v m a t e - ; c o n t i n u e u n t i l ..tunc. I P L O . w h e n
, T
,.">. T h e u n d e r s i g n e d u n d e r s t a n d s t h a t h e m a y at a n y t i m e r e L
anr! . \ rs. Ce'-n O.. Tlaldvvin [VlIJ-rfT MAY 10
lv oTv y o u n g s t e r s ' r r m g i n g . -TI. a g e , ; i: will p r o h a b l y b e . r e n e w e d ; I n
que.st
p a s w ' r v i i v to tx> dlscont inucil by g i v i n g 4S -houns n o t i c e to th;*
t.hei-r" d a u g h t e r ,
B e v e r l y ;•• P a h A m e r i c a n I V t , y
from 16 t o ' 2 1 , <
! tei'ested pei'son a r e a s k e d t o fill <\"id
tV»jr;|>any.
.
.
h a v e been v i s i t i n g M r s ;.ci.!..o ^ l o r r d e s "t . u \ .
S a l a r y will \&;%\ •»') r- r. '-..'lur. ', i n . ' c l i p a n d m a i l t h e -foflowinc: •leal
:
fir..ld\v;n's fjai'diti?'.' ATr, .rind M r s , . t''.')('t om r;f Soc
nd t h e wc*rk \\i\' . '><r. w : 1/ ' v di- form
S'ixtn Xtil.>ia|e. a n d t h e i r ' / l a u g h - '?;VA C,i\ •$-- ^EP.
19..
; t n 7\'.ni!a. .TTVey a r r i v e d -May. ,1(> ,ij;is ^ Mi'h; 1A"\^
;rr\it.urV>
D
a
t
e
.-arid Irft on May 2 1 for' ' P e r u . i f >.,-i r;i
MAIL T O :
American
|-I'ndiana.
\vii."i:<''. t h e y ~vvil! ma!;. 1
«.'•
Mr. D a v i d B a t e s , Cooi'tir. e.TC
;•itusM'4'l. K. -White
\ t.h-f'ir Jmnitv
Neigh!x>rhood' You?--''1 Coro'-t
; a'-reage out of N \ V ' 1
' A i i r o t h e r <d ^!l.s. ' B a l d w i n • i:ik. I : D&P IU-. S-2
P. C). Box 20G
-iVMisor
' i a . n d - l i i s family. Mr. a n d M r s , : 1W a"r"es:-_ , \ W :'1 Sec
Marfa. T e x a s 7^1.¾
; R-ic-hard Xuhiale a n d d a u g h t e r s . : a e r i ' s ; S F '4 S»«c. 172.
1. N o a p p r a i s a l fees. N o
! Hoj>e M a ) i e a n d D o l w r a
Ann.
Ma T<> rSox' T ' s . M a r f a . Texas.
XT-: f ' S e e ; 17s ir,o
_ ai-Lc- U '
commissions.
' ' s p e n t - t h e w e e k e n d he:v
Natni
with
All
. Call PA 94:">Sf> "
,Sec. 122. l(5f) a c r e s ; _ Klk. 1
2. R e a l i s t i c a p p r a i s a l s .
: t h e families.
I \ v P . Ry. R e l e a s e • Oil, Oa>
3. N o p e n a l t y for p r e - p a y 'ADV.),
Min.
Leapf.
ment.
Grade
S<l;.)o;
Pan
A m e r i e a n P e t . •Co. t ^
4. L o w i n t e r e s t — long
RuxsolJ F. .Whi.te. et "ai"' All S-H'
term*
5. S e r v e s s m a l l a n d l a r g e
T>10 actr-*?:
•1«
operators.
aei-e^; All S e r . MS.
150, 4«i0 a c r e s :
W h e n y o u ne*d a loan, c o n
S 2 # NK I Sec
Sec.
\r,A. V^O
toct:.
A m e r i c a n P l a n t Food C o r p o r a - to d o m e s t i c sal^s, e x p o r t shipN•'!< &
N '2 S '2 _
t i o n , a n e w multi-million d o l l a r m e n t s '-are b e i n g neqf<5tiated. :
p c r e s : Alt' So<\
f
manufacturing
comTo stay
ahead i n the—^ast
AM See. T.\9 <\4(T~ikcvrs: S '2 & e r t i l i z e r
r
plex
located
a
d
j
a
c
e
n
t
t
o
t
h
e
c
h
a
n
g
i
n
g
fertilizer
sitirttion,
N F 'A S e IOH. 4S0 a c r e s : N ^2
J. F r e d LaLanhe, Manager
i
fr-.W1-Srr t r > r W a c f e s : .All j H o u s t o n ' -. S h i p C h a n n e l , is ap- A P F i s i n t r o d u c i n g i n n o v a t i o n s
• C o m e by a n d see us a t •j SVc. 17J, r>m" acix«s:,S-'2 & N V V ' t proachinj?
c o m p l e t i o n a n d e x - t h r o u g h s p e c i a l t y p r o d u c t s , jtio" <„r 17«. 4^0 arre,s< All Rikv 1. p e c t e d t o t>e in o p e r a t i o n b y J u l y . d e m h a n d l i n g a n d d i s t r i b u t i o n
P A - P R V , Sec,
M b l k . C GH.?:
T h e A P F c o m p l e x will consist facilities.
'•y
: A P \ ' GK ;»*•-.•'.;, r0-U
; of
several plants, including a
Perry
continuu^d. . saying' - ( r-K '& \Vn T ' e ^ i ' ' . • ' •
!
75.000
ton
w
a
r
e
h
o
u
s
e
,
c
o
v
e
r
i
n
g
"Tlie
c
o
m
p
a n y , will -stress a g r o V:^} A ror'ric,'!iii I'El, Co. to Kd- , ' i h r e e ' iu'-'-m?:-—When • r o m p l e t e d , n o m i c s e r v i c e s in its m a r k e t i n g
'. ,- 'n. I T F o u i L - o et ah A«'"icr:'- ! t'hf. rorripany w.i'l. o t ^ r a t c w i l h -Mrfpri^BTr-4v>:pe}'i-eneod c o m p a n y
•..'r - r v . t . o f < » . " l.Trf) ^ ' 1-V>V2.
2 Ri ; Tinprdx.imrdelv 100 full-time e m _ agronom'ict's
o r e already con
:
\ ( »r P r e e m i o . n S H I A I ' V . N •f^ood- ploy-ees.' a n d nn a d d i t i o n a l ' 0 d u c t i n g f a r m e r - d e a l e r : e d u c a t i o n
nian $.• M A , Miiycs. ;f)i-j; T ,
p a r t - t i m e : ..ernploypej^
durin.q; p r o g n a m s -and - f a r m e r diemons:
v
tres. 2,r>no,0 acr«' s.
t f a H o n s throughotiT t h e a r e a . - '
•pea'k p e r i o d s ,
Pr>n . ^ n i p n e . v V Pr't (' 'V . •; n
A P F d e a l e r s 'will offer special1
' ' A P F -was f o r m e d -h\- a num^
\V.. pird'Kall.Eot n | . tr
i*i'te'\s
fv
f o r m u l a t e d plant' foods f o r
C'."'r<ain fu'-^.T^e- out of S<" '.. T / T b e r of i n d e p e n d e n t m a n u f a c t u r - t h e c r o p s a n d soils o f t h e . i r p a r CT'S, d e a l e r s a n d d i s t r i b u t o r s ' " a s a
; v ' k . 1. Vf-P R v ' rn.d -othi
m e a n s . of brin.^int^ to f a r m e r s t i c u l a r a r e a . - . a«e.
n n d ' r a n c h e r s b e t t e r p r o d u c t s uf'
P r i n c i p a l s in. t h e c o m p a n y , i n
CM ATTT- \. V O R T C J Aftf:
- ."
m o r e e c o n o m i c a l prices. Which a d d i t i o n t o B e r r y , a r e K e n n e t h
Alfred E • M o a n V t o - M a r f a ' N a will r e s u l t in g r e a t e r a g r i c u l t u r - E. W i n b b r n , Jr.; P r e s i d e n t ; P a u l
tic":)l' I^ank.
•.• . •
al p r o f i t s i n t h i s a r e a . v : said T^o- H . D u r c k e l , Vice P r e s i d e n t o f
J e s s e j . .Vizcaino t o Mart" ^ . N a - w o l l W . Berry> C h a i r m a n of t h e
O p e r a t i o n s ; ' E s p e r K. C h a n d l e r ,
tional. B a n k ; \ .
JSoard.
Vice
President of M a r k e t i n g ;
Tf!\iirk ttndeo (^o, to M a r f a Naa n d R o b e r t H . P a r k of J o s e y Oil
tional Bank.
T h e c o m p l e x will consist of a
Co.,
Secretarj'-Treasurer.
Alex Domingup*/.; f t ux f -;Mar>- s u l i u r i c a c i d - p l a n * , a n a m m o n to U n i v e r s a r ^ C I . T . of T e x a s .
ium sulfate plant, a n a m m o n i u m v O t h e r
APF
Directprs
are:
! S a n t o s H . G o n z a l e s t o T . D s,u l f a t e p h o s p h a t e
p e l l e t p l a n t , B. M . J e n k i n s o f J e n k i n s " B r o s .
< Sejnjra.
a n d n Pfrlfet'** p h n g p h n r n p l n n t . S e e d Co.; G r a d y G o o d p a s t u r e of
.
D a n i e l R e e d t o T . 0 . S e j ? u r | L 7 ~ I n a d d i t i o n , t h e r e wj.JI b e ^ w a r e G o o d p a s t u r e -- G r a i n a n d M i l l i n g '
j Vickev A l v a r a d o to Universal- housing, a ' d r y - r n i x plant,
a n d Co.; J a m e s A. P o t t s o f T a y l o r
C T T . of T e x a s .
•'•''.'•' ? s h i p p i n g i a c i l i t i e s . lV)tal s h i p - E v a n s S e e d C o . ; W i l l i a m T . J a r E n r i q u e M a d r i d t o P>U S^nn p i n g c a p a c i t y w i l l e x c e e d 2 , 0 ¾ vis o f J a r y i s - P a r i s - M u r p h y C o . ;
' Coca-Cola B o t t l i n g C o .
t o n s -.Der- d a y .
J o h n B. Coffee, i n d e p e n d e n t oil
!• C. K ' S m i t h t o M a r f a N a t i o n - i
m a n ; Phillip N; O f f e r s of f a r T h e aramnnium sulfate plant
•al Bank.:'- E '•'•'•
.
•\
m
e r s S u p p l y Co.; D a l e L. MayeV
^ . ^ ^
:. C K. ^ m i t h t o M a r f a N a t i o r - i hai; a c a p a c i t y of 500 t o n s p e r ^ ^ a n d ^ r r ? ^ f
a n d te-n-dw ih T ^ n A ^ ^ T ^ 2 ^ and_ H a r r y•» - F
e e l s , *D^ ii vr il so ii ol /nu
— r»~*.»v>»
' a l . B a n k . ^ '.• .:..; ". ....
' \d a y a n d is n o w in. p r o d u c t i o n
Ameri•'•:. A m a d « p ^ ^ i t ^ i a - - ^ . v M a r f a . : N a - I T h e f i r m i s p t e s e h t l y o p e r a t - S a l e s M a n a g e r s of t h e
i n g frorriE facilities of t h e Good- c a n P l a n t F o o d C o r p o r a t i o n .
tional B a n k ,
P a s t u r e G r a i n a n d M i l l i n g Co.,
Berry
owned
and
operated
fnc.fyGalena P a r k , T e x a s , on t h e T h e B e s t F e r t i l i z e r s Co. of CaliHouston S h i p Channel,, adjacent fornia and Texas, before merg*
t o AP'F's p l a n t s i t e . T h e t e m p o r ^ i n ^ w i t h a n oil c o m p a n y in 1963.
ary
s h i p p i n g facllitiesV h a v e a
_ Winborn,
Durckel,
Chandler
{ c a p a c i t y of 400 t o n s
per d a y . Mayeaux and Freels are former
S a l e s b e g a n in Feferoiary 1963. ! officials
of t h e . B e s t
organlzaa n d I n c l u d e a c o m p l e t e l i n e of ition.
fertilizer g r a d e s "and- materials.'
Tile n e w piantr
ten' m i l e s ,
past.-of d o w n t o w n H o u s t o n , w i l l ;
s u p p l y a c o m p l e t e l i n e of fertili ,
• . W
2ers to d e a l e r s in Texas, Okla- j
/
l»et TJI0
n o m a , N e w Mexico, K a n s a s Ark- '
*>*§ B e n d S e n t i n e S
,tosa)i a n d 1 ^ 1 ) 0 ^
^
Voilf^ifiaiM
IGNC-
9
m
W-*
_
_
I
* *
National Youth Corps Applications
Now Being Accepted By Director
PERSONALS
Why Ranchers Like
Federal Land Bonk
Loans
Amenc^n
Is New
nn" mrj-*ip-^sr~AU see
Federal Land Bank
Association
Food Cproorrtfion
ir
r>n. c.\n ww.
MARFA, TEXAS
&:?'•••
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•'•y-k-i
W:
iV ' Ti 'n r i' :"' ' '.
&Ji woon4» «6uld «av*.your' life. 0^ prevent wrlovui
..faUij^?)ty^&
tfiket-'to;|M«p.i-iNiiberi.l- WTJ) \
. . . and Jfc«t«n i t
" IWSr \
If tvetyonkW thit-every tinw-the N«tioBai^3afety
Council sty« at l^et 5,000 Uvet could be gave4 each
year, aft* •arknig i^urfei reduced by one-third. o'
Here*g a iimpk reminder for yotj »^<j your paaa^arti
the next tin« yoti drive-4<Buckle your aeatbelt, pteaee.'^t
H,
Fwhifing Quolity Animalt
Av«ilobl« On Th« Grounds
Sal* Starts At 12 Ncetr
Morfo, Texos
PArkview 9-4122
^Customers Friend •- Help When Needed/#
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M first acquaintances, then friends tr^ to bring them
into tfhft war on the side of the Confederacy. Emissaries
try to buy or steal their farm stock. But Stewart stands
firm on his principles. He fights to maintain his position
until his youngest son is arrested by Union soldiers who
mistake him for a Gonjfeder^te^Ste^ai3t_sete out with all
but one of his children to find the boy. The search, the
unavoidable disa$ters and tragedies build one of the most
powerful stories filmed in recent years.
. L iThiswarm and intensely- human story of family devotion during; the tempestuous days of the Sivil War
emerges as one of the year's outstanding pictures for
the whole family. Stewart, who. has been nominated for
an Academy Award five times, is familiar to all. Three
younger players familiar to the teenagers and TV fans
play opposite him: Dough" McClure of TV's ^Tlie Virginian," Glenn Corbett o f uRoute 66'' and Patrick Wayne,
son of John Wayne.
' ~
A brilliantly backgrounded production, "Shenandoah"
brings to the screen a war, story in the broadest sense of_f
the term. Although it is set against the conflict between
the Union and the Confederacy/it is primarily a powerful
story of people — particularly the people in one man's
family whe-are swept up into the conflict.
James Stewart plays the role of a widower and the
father of seven children, six sons and adaughter. The
family lives with him on .the verdant farm they have
pioneer^dj-plantedL developed and built into r a state of
complete self-dependence, all without the help of slayelabor.
As the film opens, cannons boom in the distance, but
Stewart, his sons, and daughter agree to have no part of
i t They conduct their everyday lives in the fashion of a
peacetime Virginia family. When, the war^engulfs them
and their home the impact is so great that the viewer is
swept emotionally into the conflict.
(obovo) During boff/t Phillip
Alford rttiif fat* o boyontf M
lft# hands of a charging Union
toldfor.
(uppor Mt) Janrt Sfrwart fightt
off intrudirt who cqm« fo tale
hit ho*tei away.
(upper right) Doug McC/or* and
kofrnmytortyth
" • •
in a ramanlit
infrlud* — toon fo b# /nftrv
/
rcfpfto* by war*
:v
ffowor Ml) A raging bafffo b«<»
twn
Unipn and Confodorofo
idrcos.
;&
v;
J>
Uowr right) Janft Sloworf
soorchos lor hit mitting ton
taktn pritoniby Union told}ft.
When you sea Richard Haydn,
as-a stuffy British school teacher
in Africa wh<f has a dread fear of
all animals, waking up to find
himself in bed with a 550-pound
lion or, on another occasion, sharing the limb of a tree with a tenfoot python, you'll have an idea of
the laughs and excitement in
"Clarence ' the Cross-Eyed Lion,
Ivan Tors' happy new family pic
- ture for -Metoo^Ooldwyii-MayeiL
- Tors, who made a movie and
television star Out of the almost
human dolphin,. Flipper, now introduces another fascinating and
endearing animal actor in Clar-
TALE OF COCK-EYED KING OF BEASTS,
HAS LAUGHS AND THRILLS FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY
lt>£ roaring JL/ fumy
He's i»o
tate o f
RELATIVE
o f mine?
a teen-ager/n/Africa
. - ^ / : ^ ^ 1 ^ ^
- \
ence. the cock-eyed kiny of beasts
who shares adventures and comic
tribulations, as well as thrills, with
Marshall Thompson, Betsy Drake,
Cheryl Miller and Haydn in this
unusual and lively picture, filmed
in Metrocolor.
Thompson is seen as Dr. Marsh
Tracy who, with his attractive
teen-age daughter, Paula (Cheryl
Miller), is In charge 'of a study
center foranlmai betta^torih
ricaf-A frequent visitor is™JuTIe
Harper (Betsy Drake), an anthropologist who is observing a group
of gorillas in the wilds nearby.
Paula does her best to spark a
romance between her widowed father and Julie.
. When they befriend a cross-eyed
lion who has trouble in surviving
in the jungle, everyone Is happy
with Clarence excepting Rupert
Rowbotham (Haydn), who comes
to the study center to give lessons
to Paula.
It Is when a. local terrorist,
Gregory (Maurice Marsac), and
his rebej band arrive on the scene
In a plot to round Up the gorillas
in order to'raise money for guns
and ammunition that trouble begins from Julie, she refuses to let
him take her back to his study
center. As a result, both fan into
the hands of Gregory.
When Gregory leaves to ransack
. Julie's camp, his men are captured
by a regiment of government askaris and Marsh and Julie are freed.
It remains for: Clarence, who
has broken free from his compound at the study center, to capture" Gregory in a unique and unpredictable climax to the story in
which a chase through the jungle
in a model T Ford affords not only
suspense but added comedy moinenis.
.
.-.••." •••••.''.•"••
Alw^ough Clarence is the leading
Unimal star Ipf "Clarence, the
Cross^Eyedr Lioni'V two others do
their best to steal scenes in the
delightful picture. One is Marylbu,
» python; the other ports, a
chimp, Itnd youngsters will take
both to their hearts.
[JouM j&M U kn unfa
r
I'ijerc have iieou • many
giwu
comedy teams in Hollywood history,
Martin and* kewi», Abbott and C»»teHd, and *JLauref and Hardy an*
among the hest, hut nunc of these
great entertainment duo* have been
quite as unusual a« Taffy and Margo
who are\ seen In "Taffy And the
Jungle Hunter." . . . t\ Taffy weighsxmzde pounds, eats hay andpeanuts
and trumpets without a musical-inE
strument, while Margo loves bananas
and Hiimw IWM:
You see, Taffy is a baby elephant
and Matgo is a rhimp and flu- fun
they create, is a highlight of the stor\
of a young hunter's son who runs
away into the twining African
junyh'. Manuel -PudiHa plays -the.
youngster who disappear* with his
t wo pals when he leafhs that.: his
father, played hy jaccjUes Ih-rgcrac,
has derided to ship Taffy the bahy
elephant to an American 'xnoi,
There's luirdly a speuvs of wild
life the runa\va> trio don't encounter,
nor a jungle hazard thaT doesn't
await the.m as their incredible safari
crosses- tin- dense wildernoss. Lions,
leopards, giraffes and hippopotami
•jr...-JSUL ::\..VlJffl'. A^MPf
J U N G L E H U N T E R " along ^ v T t n ^ T
zelles, impula*. crocodile* a n d zebra*
tii mention ju>i a few. The danger'*
which he set the little hunter. h i *
elephant and tin; ehimp i n c l u d e a
'•
. . . vol<>ank erupjiun, a. j unfile .fitf. which
sends thousands of animals fleeing
desperately across the veldt and
tribal tfivajry which .threatens to
engulf everyone in warfare.
•TAFFY AND THE JUNGLE
fit INTER'! follows the traikof two
^set.s of jungle parties, the trio of
fugitives and a search party hentted
by the 'hoy Vfather. Jaeijues Bcrgcfac.
With the latter are lovely' Shary
Marshall, the hoy's governess who .is
u former circus performer who. has
^ been mimed In a Holt! 'aWl stalwart
llari lU*o<le« play ing a., tribal chief.
Together tfie\ face the. fantastic
peril* 'knowi; mi|\ to the Dark (innlint-iil.
n..
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So how did he inherit an elephant... a blonde... and a tribe of restless natives
Robert Mitchum h a ^aEy-eUng^medji
cine man, fugitive smuggler and ex-circus per
former who arrives in Kenya in the-midst of an
Bajst African crisis. The local natives, inspired by
the teachings of missionary Alexander Knox and
daughter Carroll Baker, refuse to evacuate a village which HS threatened by flood waters from a
nearby dam. The Bible says that the children of
Israel, when they went to their promised land,
took their animals with them and the Africans
refuse to believe district commissioner Ian Bannen
when he tells them there simply is ho room in
thy helicopters for the bca sts.; Hope arrives with
Mitchum though, for he is named Joe Moses and;
thus, their logical savior. Miss Baker blackmails
htm into leading the exodus from their land by
threatening to expose his past to Bannen, her
fiance, if he refuses. And so the great procession,
Composed ftf ^
^ n , " " ^ S >Ki1/fc«w
*nAEaT.
sorted animals, begins. When they reach the dam,
Emily, a friendly elephant who earlier had saved
Mitchums life, utilifces her strength to draw the
sluices iaJthe locks and the caravan is able to wade
through the waters "parted" by Moses.rlfroubtes
arise, thoirgh, when a jealous native (Rayiiiond St,
Jacques) steali Mitchum's compass and attempts to
incite the tribe to. paganism. A hand-to-hand fight
between the" leader and the native puts an end to
such villianies and Mitchum succeeds in freeing
Miss Baker, Knox and Bannen who had been
imprisoned by the rioting natives. Once peace has
been made with the tribe, the caravan continues.
After tfrey wtfrh their d f tinatinn Barin^n Ktivinj
jearned of Mitchums past and aware of Miss
Baker's growing love for him, permits him and
the elephant to escape into the jungle. Miss Baker
hastily bids her father farewell arid runs off after
her man, Moses.
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L I E SA6A OF THE UNION MAJOR AND CONFEDERATE CAPTAIN FIGHTING SIDE B? SIDE LIKE DEVILS!
CcnIjdBfate Captain Tyreen.,,
• Swore'to kill the mantie
called commander!.
LiwtinjntGfihBm,..
: He leaf ned to Mil :
with fiery vengeance!
UnionJijflr 0 8 ^ « , . ,
Commanded a regiment.of
renegades and desefters!
lipptiwi...
She, made.men forget
the heat of battle!
^•ArartSiiftltt;,ii:;
He Rifled W f i ^ ^ j n y
and kissed his first woman!
Pure adventure, brawling excitement
and lusty action^-along with some superb
characterisations
— - » V ' ~ * _ " * « ™ y « V « p -of
V * -tried
I I W H in;
l l l i ' battler-can
WB»»IWt—V«II
be found in thje breathless nevr Columbia
Pictures re)e>ie;»'Major i)undee/'
Charlton Heston plays the. title role,
that of a Union Army officer who commands a company of renegades and de*
grtera in I desperate m ^ o h through
tne great Southwest. Also topping the
stellar cast is Richard Harris, the brilliant
Irish atar of **£hl* Sporting We," as a
Confederate captain who is second-incommand of the expedition and who is
determined, once that mission is completed, to kill the hard-bitten major.
Also part of the•'. desperate crew are
Jim Hutton, as an Army lieutenant who
t* .*, to keep his sense of humor In the
middle of battle and sudden death; James
Cobtirrt, as a one-armed Indian scout;
Michael Anderson, Jr., as a baby*faced
bugler who learns from his fellows how
tokill, and kiss; Mario Adorf, as a knifethrowing Mexican 'sefgeantT Brock Peters, as the leader of six Negroes who
r
^r^jvwiii^
His passionorere: ,
whiskey and slaughter!
volunteer :-W^|^ ? ; : ^tt.' : ^iS8|^-.- even
though its personnel includea Confederate
soldiers more eager to flghl Union
soldiers than they are to fight Indians,
and lovely SentoBerger, as the Widow of
a Mexican doctor.
VMajor Dundee'* is partially baaed on
historic fact. Sierra Charriba, gaunt and
murderous Indian chief, has massacred
a company o*-.¾S. Cavalry, and agatn
escaped into Mexico/ Civil War Or ho
Civil War, Major Dundee leads his own
troop of misfits and killers against the
Apache, accompanied by Confederate
Army Captain Tyreen and others of his
men; the rebelsrhave been given acboiee:
they can fight under the American flag
or they can face a murder charge.
"Major Pundee" is a powerful story,
itvt
malpmftgtiritly
brought tfr tfrtt BcTeen by
players and technicians who, to judge
merely, from what is presented on the
screen, worked long and arduously to
capture the hatreds and frustrations, the
beauty and misery of the time.
m*mmt
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I Z and
BU R J O
TOGETHER
AGAIN
IN
ii
THE
A N D P I PMM
Whenever the names of Elizabeth Taylor
and Richard: Burton dash on; a movie theatrerTtiArf4ire^"^oircan be sureof tremeirdotJs-:r
public enthusiasm. THE SANDPIPER;is a
vibrant love story packing a terrific emotional wallop., a story made to order for the
combined talents of the world's most highly
publicized acting team.
Miss Taylor, of course, has been making
newspaper headlines for years. Burton
cemented Jus growing popularity with his
^g^tnovilflii t i n ^ T h e ^ i g h t o f the Iguana.''
A third star in the new picture is Eva
Marie Saint, who won brilliant notices for
her performance in "'36 Hours.''
._
THE SANDPIPER tells the love story of
a beautiful, unconventional: woman living a
nonconformist life and a married man of
/^J**t.
t I
strong, conservative background, whose
passionate love affair comes dose to breakingiup the man's marriage and ruining his
career. Miss Taylor is Laura, who has
chosen to lead an unfettered life as an
artist, even spurning the offer of marriage
from the man who fathered her child out
of wedlock. Burton is Dr. Edward Hewitt,
an Episcopalian minister and headmaster jpf
a private school, married to Claire (Eva
Marie Saint) who is devoted to him.
Respite the explosiveclasho£4he clis-v
parate personalities of Laura-and Hewitt
and his dislike of her beatnik friends, their
"mutual attraction is overpowering And their
love inevitable. In the end, he finjis the
strength to break with Laura^-but their
love affair has left them with a jgreater
understanding and has enriched their lives.
•E, - E
WALT DISNEY
BRINGS BACKf'MERLIN JONES"
NUTTIEST
SHAGGY PROFESSOR
As the title suggests, "The Monkey's Uncle" ts
another wacky Walt Disney comedy intended for
those who like their movie fare on the madcap side
' — especially the swinging teenage set. in the tradition of "Absent-Minded Professor," "Son of
Flubber" and "The Misadventures of Merlin Jones,"
the zany feature h-a&javerytli ing—^from. a wilcLWj*.-.
tusi with the shapely Annette Funicello to a hilarious plane ride with Tommy" Kirk -^- to delight
the'.young-'at heart. .
ADVENTURE
:¾¾
E:f
E ' : - E *»•
WithWIS latent fa its series of zany"
comedies, the Walt Disney, organization
again involves Merlin Jones (Tommy)
Kirk) in a variety of escapades, First he
keeps two dim-Witted football players
from flunking out of college by inventing
a sleep-teach ing device, but the dunces
answer their questions in the falsetto
voice of AHhelle who had provided the
voice recordings for their learnings.
Judge Leon Ames convinces the college
officials.that there is nothing dishonest
in Merlin's unorthodox tutoring methods
and, to prove t h a t anyone or anything
• • • - .
-
•
'
.
•
•
•:;.caii::1eafti.;from' Merlin's invention Stanley, the chimp, de
how he has
been ''humanized" through the machine.
The college's troubles are not over, however. A mysterious millionaire will donate
a million dollars to the college if football
is abandoned, but another eccentric, Ar*
"lUM O'Coniidl, will provide the college
with ten million dollars and let them retain their football team if it can make
good hi« claim that man-powered flight
is possible. Only Merliri can save the day
and the results are hilarious.
- * > - • ' ,
V *
W P ^ i ^ ^ j i v i «nd toppfer *l*«i»ff*iK«>
whil* sh» drvds** for ktr «n#»l, damoiuUnS itftpmothftr
«n«( fitters,
the elements of entertainsnent — romance, drama, suspense, music
and humor— Walt Disney spent six years in
preparing and producing his all-cartoon film
version of one of the most beloved fairy tales,
"Cinderella."
No cartoon production has stirred his
enthusiasm and imagination more-than this
most famous ofaFl love stories/Every scene
of the picture spells Disney at his best.,
In bringing to the screen the age-old story
of the scullery maid who wins the heart of a
handsome prince, Disney has surrounded the
frrst Jady of legend with an irresistabte group
of animated cartoon characters which are
iE
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He cando it every time. In the language of his world-wide legion
of young fans, Elvis Presley ''sends^ them, and he does it with a
vengeance in ^ckleMe."
But this time the parents, if in a quieter way, gol right along with
the "youngsters, for this tuneful Allied Artists picture in full color
brings baefe what is supposed to be the greatest medium^>f-entertiaimneht^a quality that has been all too rare at the movies
lately... caU4t^6yt
y
Interspersed w^H*l} the singing, the cavortmg, and the love-*,
making is a generous Kolping of broad comedy;in the no* classic
tradition —explosive "sight, gags'' that make the audience roar
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l£ %stdry that n e w takes itself too seriously, Elvis is surrounded
by youth and beauty as a champiorirodeo#ider who becomes the
singing; swingingwrangler oh a ddde ranch for girls. Whatever the
girls aire doing-—the minute he twangs his guitar, -they are all
around hiro>
•.•:'."'v '"••:•
But jocelyn Ibane, the newly importedriymphetcalled "the British
Bardot," is the lucky one, ca^st opposite him romantically as, phy^
slcal instructor on the eleigant be^uj^ranch. •
•;•
'^ekle Mej" is just what theTP^resley fans demand of their hero,
and that also goe* for the nine songs he sings, all chosen by
popular demand. .."..'
second to'none among his fabulous creations.
He tells- the tale with a rich balance of warm
emotion, comic relief and great beauty. Not a
single living actor, of course, intrudes upon
the scene. At the same time, Cinderella, does
emerge as substantial and believable a
human being as animation can make her,
While some authorities believe the perennially popular and appealing story of Cinderella may be of ancient oriental origin,
Disney used a more modern version, written
some 300 years ago. by,Jfo&-Eim^ author,
Charles Perrault, as the basis of his musical
fantasy. As translated into Englisht', this is
the ver^ibii^: most widely known and most
popularly accepted;:
_