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The Amarillo Globe-Times from Amarillo, Texas • Page 43

Location:
Amarillo, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
43
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

AmtrUlo Globe-Timei mi Berlin- (CONTINUED FROM PAGE II gestion, which is close to a position he has been advocating for years, he was speaking es an individual senator. He said that in addition to the Mrs. Meador of Matador Dies MATADOR, Juno 14 Funeral services for Mrs. Doug (CMoe) Meador, 72, will be held nt 2 p.m. Western proposal for a free West 'Berlin and the Western insistence Reds- (CONTINUED FROM PACK 1) hcurincs before the Judiciary committee, the Internal Securl ty Act of 1MQ nns passed.

The Subversive Activities Control Plans Airline Building PERRYTON, Juno 14 lilr- Hues administration building, ex- peeled to. be a determining let up la find those who Ity THOMAS THOMPSON There are exceptions, of but once the word geti around In management circles Thursday in tlw First Methodist Church of Matador. were controlled hy World Com. Officiating will be the Rev. Roy! numism ii opposed lo mem- status quo.

"a third way pastor, assisted by the! bcrs of some political parly. Girl Dies- (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) volvcd In collision with an nulo- mobile outside the norih oily llm. Plainview Riles For Ray Grace PUINVIEW, June 14 services for iw "bout 10:15 a.m. Tuesday. Fune- 55, in this bid for nlr Also hospitalized ns result o( will undergo construction sonic time this year.

Cost of construction of Ihe the accident were the girl mother, Mrs, Colter, and two sisters, ncatrlcu Faye, 12, and Julia Jane, niinal is expected to roach 11(1 tno ot auto- II. Felder of lie in the creation of cttyJRev. "Some courageous oPrnOoiiU which embraces all ui Communist east no less than the.the. free western segment of thai Baptist Mrs. Chut ii inlesnon is an expense jmetropolis." account pudder, he's had It.

dayci Thli ii relative situation, of "Let this whole city be held inhere, died at 9:20 a.m. Tuesdayi T-T ing around with slate boundaries, states. Le the Ihe ef- George E. Briscoe were Briscoe died in 1920. Icourl.

dilion at the hospital here early said the accident occurred when the right front fender of Mrs. Felder's auto- MV.U PAGE 11 linohile struck Ihe left real me the Warren-dominaledstruck. He said he was unableiof the pickup as the pickup with Justices Drennan.jla fly over or around a hiigeihefiiiinlng to make a left turn. the First Baptist Church of Plainview, with Dr. Roy McClung, tor, officiating.

Mr. Grace died about 9:30 p.m. Monday In Plainview Hospital and Clinic, after suffering a heart, attack at his home about 7:30 p.m. He and his family hod lived here since 1943. moving from Lubbock.

Ho had been an employe of the Soil Conservation District for 19 years. Since '1954, he Imd been employed as an engineer with Gifford-Hill Western here. Mr. Grace (be Panhandle wants its independence from Texas. The sover- guaranteed by thi Warsaw Pact irael and Ihe Arab.

On May 27, J9M. she was mar-jDousias. Black and because of a shortage ofjThe pickup overturned once, "jtenin staius to Doug Meador at with the limljfuel so he elected to land aflerj Both vehicles were traveling ine ftAiu iMr jieador died in 1947. come into existence. sure the higliway was south on N.

Maddox at the time eig-i stale of Texas has at timesf Mansfield said the Survivors; include two dough "The Supreme Court held thai clear of traffic been an embarrassment to theliaikj between President i TM clovls of the 83 witnesses may have, ambulance Panhandle, but 1 can think of no! and Khrushchev in Vienna and Mrs Betty Ozborn of been tainted, and sent the case! The forecast for Amarillo and instance when the Panhandle hasjclear that both have a resixmsibil-, Malador lhree E0 Br to the board. The board waslvicinily calls for considerable brought shame to the to find "a third way" to Plainview, John Briscoe ofjwilling to drop the testimony of'cloudincss of the state, or has been a fi- so'lve the crisis over Berlin. jMatador and James Meador ofjthosc two since the 81 other wif-'tures today nancial liability. T--T iiUtiuiuLH aim tidines mtrtuur OlMnose two since uie oimi IUIL' luu.tv HIIU their jJJatador: two stepdaughters. Mrs.

(nesses told the needed story and. widely scattered showers. The ex- twc.sisters include We positions, Mansfield concludedJWesley Hall and Mrs. Elvin Mark-sent the case back in 1957. A few days ago.

someone fwho that someone is has never been quite nailed down) suggested that Texas might gel out of its present financial troubles by selling the Panhandle to Kansas, or Oklahoma, whichever is the highest bidder, the Trans-Pecos area to N'ew and everything south of the Neuces River to the Republic of Mexico, which originally claimed it. We may be political and geographic orphans of the State at Texas, but wo do have a few friends willing to speak np when we are disparaged. "sooner or later, Berlin is likelyiham, both of Matador; a step- to become Ihe pivot of a new Charley Meador of Matador: "Again Ihe Court sent Ilio aster for mankind." Castro- (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) spokesman for the group. "I don't know what's for us (Wednesday) until 10 a.m. ill a.m.

EOT), when we will be picked up by the group in charge." poctcd hish 50 degrees, 58. Total moisture in Amarillo the year has again fallen shorti a Blair of St. John, 19j 7" re normal, according to records grandchildren and four a al Ihe U.S. Weather Bureau. The grandchildren.

i "Now in 1961, with Justice total moisture to date stands al Burial will be in East Mound Frankfurter switching to the inches, say weathermen, while Cemetery under the direction oner side, a majority vote gives the the normal to date should be 8.40: Eudy Seale Funeral Home. graduate of Panhandle AM1 Coll! Goodwell, Okla. 5iiD wTs For lwo eflrs wa a re" 001 teacher at Keycs, Okla. Mr. Grace and Lena Kearns were married April 12.

1932, in Liberal. Kan. she is a teacher at College Hill here. Other survivors are two sons, Bobby, a senior at West Texas State College, and Phil, a senior at Texas Tech; a brother, Eugene Grace of. Bentonville.

two will about aternal grandmother. Mrs. Mai-1 sisters. Mrs. Addle Jones of Ar- 'llwi low C(ltler of Littlefield, and Mrs.

Sallle Mclyaln iof the crash. The injured were cooler tempera- and tonight, with i taken lo Ihe hospital by a Box. Bonila Cotter was a student at Dumas Junior High School. Survivors, other than the par- case back. Again the hoard 1C- la sister, Mrs Floy Dickinson of i )h tnMnt ma rrW a.brother.

Dav-i and bacl( the Collrt In 195S. Imaternal grandparents, Mr. andjof Gopdwell, and one grandchild. Mrs. D.

B. Hensley of Tucum-j Burial i be in Plainview M. Memorial Park under (he direction of Lemons Funeral Home Fire- The four Americans went to the; Land Reform Institute at 4 p.m. H. E.

Shaw-- tUrA rt ri! iSSt of Mn. H. 0. Bintt Brnrio- chlldnn. Rotary 7:30 p.m.

Tu.ido*. Blackburn Show Mimorlal ChOPtl. 10 a.m. Widrmidav, SI Choo- el. Burial Mtmorlal Park.

FK (Dick) 1001 Hwf Iwnd ol Mae. ol Sam. Mrj. Bob Blldarboek. Brotriif ol Burl Manhall.

Mn, Mory Rothhurn. orandchlldnrt. Servlctl 0 o.f Wednesday. BlocKlium Sfiow Memorial Chooel. Burial Uotio, Duvlci McKlnUv Coorjlni, 4i.

11W Eost 3rd Husband of Mamie. Brolno' 0( M. M. Cooolni, Clara HolHnoiworlh, I.Mo Thompson. Ssrvtcei P.m.

Wtdneidav. BlocklJiirn Mtmorlal Cnopti. Burial Llano. HUFFMAN Creoo, II, VQ1 Potlenon Huv band of Wlnnlt. Father Minor.

Don. Mrs. Cliek. Snrvlcn TutsdaVi Memorinl Chaotl, Byriul 10 a.m. Wadnciaav.

Gravcildi irrvlcei, Roiwsll, H.M. Elenientarv School Gltnn M. 11, 2101 Huibond ct Vliwifl, of Roy, fl Molor.L. A. Wokrmon, Mrf.

Onla Rrv fro, Mri. Either Thomni. S-trvk, I p.m. Blockburn Stiaw Mtmorlot. Burial Memorial Park.

PERKINS Bertha Ann Ptrlini, 77. Rtmef. or. Let Perklni, mother ol Leonard, A. Fred, Morion, and Huotnt Rom- Mri.

Horrli, Mri. Clinton, Mrj. Mot Wllion. of Melvlfi and W. L.

Pork, Mri. WlfinU -Allen. Services I a.m. Wsdneidcv, Fairview Bapllit Church. Burial Liana.

LONDON (UPI) A personal advertisement, which might ap-j peal to whittlers or termites, Bp-i peared in today's London Times: 100 tons o-f solid oak beams for! Rites Scheduled the right to control i (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) Communist Party of Ihe United: This is the rainy season for the iture from the burning church. States which certainly owes according to the weather; Two firemen on a ladder sa 300 years oM Any 0 rs allegiance to a foreign power, and the area should be.ing against a gable about 225 I "But it is 13 vears since thei receivin moisture at the rale of feet from the ground rambled) Mundt-Naon bill; 11 years since the Internal Security Act of 1951 1 per day. the ground when the sanctuary during the night in- i roof caved in. passed!" icluded Amarillo and Dalhartj Neither man suffered serious in- CHILDRESS, June 14 Funer-! Morris'theme for this talk "Thei lrilce Perryton .01. Clayton .03,: jury.

Walter B. Moore, of the edi- Tuesday. Newsmen were not 74 at ih, Dalla. New mitted to enter the building, and TM i JMS'when me were staining, Mia inches and Built in 1942, it contained 10 class- forial staff abhors the proposal lo sell the Panhandle or any other portion of Texas. He writes: "The Dallas News, which is pro-Texan from the top of its flat pole to the bottom of Its presses in the basement, Trill never consent to subtracting oae Inch of sacred ion from the ireafejt, most productive, ir.Ml floorishinf state In the union.

mn iffi! bbjgeni and the best Alaskan clalnu to the contrary. Alaska Is two- thirds ice. When the ice melU, Alaskan bigness Not even to become debt free would we any of Tei- as." Mr. Moore out that Texas has beeft in financial pickles before. He said: "Banlc- mpt Texas may find some consolation in that jt has before.

The State of Tesai finances are in DO worse condition than the Republic of Tela. finances were 120 yean-ago. When Sam Houston started Mcond terra as President, Tel- 'without without credit without character'." "Drastic action was taken by President Houston and the Texas Congress. Salaries were reduced, two cabinet po'Sts abolished, the Texas Navy ordered into port and appropriations cut to the bone. Solvency did not come until after Texas became the state la the Onion.

When Texas ESVB up its claim to a large pari of what Is now a part of New Mexico, Okla- homa, Colorado, Kansas and Wyoming, the United Stales paid $10 mQIJon dollars." T-T The men who are paid to run Chambers of Commerce used to he called "secretaries." Then they were called "managers." Now Chamber of Commerce work mmea en er me scheduled for 4:30 p.m. 10-1945 C(e fH ta the Bible Baptist Church of cans went or whom they saw. tel here at 7:30 p.m., the experts told U.S. newsmen (hey had with various not wha or with whom. Bradley, pastor, officiating.

that they were able I Germany only "with the suslain-j inch. Assailant Flees hand of the United Stales." Mr. Trammel died at 12:15 a.m.'and Ihe USA was the dominant i Tuesday at his home. i world power with the largest ar-j At Sight of Blood Arkansas. He wasTretired farm 1 weapon of all, the atom ST.

AUGUiTINE, (AP) rooms. Four other classrooms were attached to the rear of the east west sanctuary wing, built in 1910 and remodeled this spring, Five of the 28 new blond pewsr were salvaged from the sanclu--; It was not yet certain whether the experts would leave day, as do, but so far reservations for His contention was that Ihe slow When grocer John Gillison lurnedi er and a former employe of the I TV'sypsum plant at Acme of the world by theims back to get a box of aspirin: 1 Mr. Trammel and Nila Ann Tay-i Communist flood -until it stood for a heavy set customer at his; 0 expansion proposals i SAIGON, Vietnam 11 i i Alt iramniei ana 'NllS Aim livvu uum a i oci at. uia i no 'Of werTmarried Oc 90 miles off the coast of the na- store in Orangedale, he was a university center and a rltan Wo Grosvener. Tex.

The couple tion had actually been brought led on Ihe head with something; re! village. it me return inp. i Richard Hailey Dies in Crash CLARENDON. June 14-Richard Hailey, 68, of Clarendon, an em- ploye of tie JA Ranch, died Tuesday afternoon in a car-truck crash miles west of Groom on U.S. Highway 66.

Funeral arrangements will be announced by Murphy Funeral Clarendon. The occurred about 4 p.m. at the intersection of U.S. 66 moved to Hardeman County in 1918 from New Mexico, and moved to Childress in 1952 from a bout by the "sustaining hand of i hard. the United States." Blood spurted from the wound! And that the same men whojand the sight proved too much for Hardeman County.

had geared the decisions, heavy sel assailant. Survivors include his wife, of before IMS, in Ihe giant bureauc-J "Oh, I can't go through withl the home; four sons. W. B. and! rac of executive the man said yesterday.

He Jimmy, both of Childress. Clar-iwere in Ihe same seats of Ihe goffered his handkerchief to Gilli- ence of Amarillo and Andrew of San Antonio; four daughters, Mrs. Stella Mae Mahan of Childress, Mrs. Margaret Welch of Quanah, Mrs. Ella Mae Wood of Paris, and Mrs.

LaVerta Mahan of Borger; three sisters, Mrs. Lillie Raby of Windhorst, Mrs. T.E. Lackey of Sargent, and Mrs. V.

M. Crews of Houston; 27 grandchildren and 12 great- son to help stop the bleeding and! jfled. The wound wasn't serious. FUNERAL DIRECTORS mighty. "They have almost a formula for defeat.

Walter Lippman, the columnist, ij virtually the architect o( the whole foreign transaction and through the U.N. policy," Morris said. Special Fund grants to the "The steps: 1) retreat, 2) Com- ed dictator, promise. 3) yield, and 4) isola tion. This has happened in East ern Europe, the near East, all Asia, and apparently will happen COTTER i Bivilta Elliobeth Colttr, 13, 110 North.

Maddox, Dmnfw. of Mr. oodi Mrs. C. L.

Cottar. Stater of Barboro lo Ihe Fave ond Julia Jons. Gronddouctitfir of Sjwcial Fluid grants to the beard-i iff. 9. Henslev.

Serv Church, Du a.m. Thursday. Bible faultless PAJAMAS j.iii. dt LUC tuveiactnuii ui wt and Farm to Market Road 294. ndcl 1 r- Hailey Was traveling south on the Burial wdl be in Mrkland Ceme-, Cuba.

'arm road. Investigating ieT under the direction of New-! These are the new said Hailey was starting to cross the east-bound lane of the four- ane highway when the colltson occurred. The truck driver, Raymond lizemore, 27, and his wife Hanna. 30, a passenger in the truck, were not injured. The heavy truck, loaded with sacked rock en route to Oklahoma City, struck the front portion car, spinning the at berry Funeral Home of Childress.

F. W. Springer Riles Thursday PLAINVIEW, June 14 Funer- isolationists. They have isolated the na tion in a sea of Communism. "Nikita Khrushchev might well dance the Cha Cha with Sukaino and Prince Souvanna Phouma as a reaction lo our present policies in Africa, Cuba and Laos," he continued.

"In Africa Ihe vast riches of services for Fred Howardi that strategic continent are beins 81. longtime resident of Pushed into the Communists' lips Hale Center area, will be 7 our planners. For thai con dueled at 3 p.m. Thursday i llnent the face of ra in Mayfield Baptist Church, imperialism, we have no poll died almost instantly. Springer died at 10:20 P-mf th Communist He was born Julv 9 1892 hj'Monday in Plainview Hospital andi zcn a mt er ln prm He had worked for the JAlOinic an illness is a career job like that of the amhr Walnut Creek.

and fai TM ed lhere untl1 hl! "fTM New American Pen You Can Fill 2 Ways Parker 45 With America's Largest Ink Cartridge in easy-care Nylon Tricot Cool comfort easy care smart good looks! Dad gets ALL THREE in these handsome pajamas by Enro. Quick- drying wash-and-wear nylon tricot in solid colors, perfection-tailored with contrasting piping. Regulars, sizes in light blue, tan, grey, loden green, red, navy, mocha, wine, black. 12.95. Longs, sizes in light blue, qrey, tan, wine.

13.95 MATCHING NYLON TRICOT ROBES Washable, unlined robes to match or contrast with the pajamas. Shawl-collar style with full belt. Red, black, loden green or mocha. 15.95 is now president." This may be pushing thinsi a Donovon Fielder of Los the responsibility I IMre. Helen Long of Amarillo, Mrs.

I ger ami Barb rather be called an of- lAnnie Crump of Dinuba, Calif. i a lchD re marned than a chief clerk-! Mrs. Clara WilHns of KerrviUe the 800 room Summit. The Sum- mil it scheduled to open in July, 1M1. T-T A Baptist minister received i telephone call from Revenue inquiring about a $300 and Mrs.

Edna Hill of Burnett and four grandchildren. bit far. Still it is betler to dignifyj' brothers, Roy of Lubbock and! a job than lo use a lille thatjHubert of Gorman; four downrates the would much fice T--T There are more hotels and office buildings in New York City than in any other metropolis In the United States. Scores of leir office buildings, possibly hundreds, have been built since the end of World War II in New York, but only real bonafide luxury hotel has been constructed in Gotham in the past 30 years. This hotel Is He ton Center I almost no Communists, is being a member of Ihe Cote le under of Khru UK COLD POINT urch.

i shchev hostility to the U.N. Jury Selection Set at Hereford Mr. Springer and Barbara Ger-! "The fnef that Ihe Comniu nisi Glzenga keeps ascending while the strongest pro-Western leader, Motee Tshomhe. languishes In jail Is quite a testament to our present passive Survivors include his wife; a son, F.H. Springer Jr.

of Hale Onter; a brother, E. n. Springer of Hale Center; two sisters, Mrs. icy there. Jessie Skinner of Edgar, and Mrs.

Myrtle Whipp of Delmot' "Meanwhile, Soviet ships are and two grandchildren. 'junloading guns in Ghana which Burial will be in Hale Cenler i Kawme Nknimah. who has the Cemetery under the direction fi entnus as support of our policy Lemons Funeral Home of Plain- i Planners, is running inlo Angola, HEREFORD, June 14 Selec-; i ew support Ihe Communist (error lion of a jury in the trial of ists there. Meanwhile, we support lt Milton Ramsey, 26, of Fort! If I 5 IT orth, on charges of burglary be- XVCXHlCUy JtlOSt gan today in 69th Districl Court here. I Ramsey is charged in connec.

a with Ihe burglary of Cooper's on Jan. 19. contribution listed by a church member. "Did he make this donation to your church?" asked the Internal Revenue agent. The minister paused a minute.

LONDON an President Ken- ber venires have been summoned nedy's Palm Beach hosl, oil mil- for possible jury duty. Judge Harry Schultz of balhart: will preside. Ramsey was arrested in Fort Worth by Police Chief Henry Ay- trt i the he will. Maybe more. Thank you ford cock of Hereford the day after very much.

T-T Two yoangsteri were ridinK 1" (he crowded office build- Ins one cool morning week. The (M Mtfeed (hat lady lii a mink htd her elbor Ii kef fcnttMT'f Ice cone, "For KoMbttM Mke, Johnny, rwrHl'," the ihier. "Ytf (ettlnt fur yuit let ertum." T-T The bathtub, iwyj the Coffeyville Journal wai in- Ttntwl In law ind the Ulenhom la Vtn. think If you bem fat 1190 you could ut ta UMhtthtub for tht he roof. Ramsey's billfold was ound in the store.

The Fort Worth man was re eased under flO.OOO bond follow- ng his arraignment on the bur- tlary charge here. of Lool consist ns of even by our votes in the not the Portuguese who want to be mn- friends but Nknimah's ter Wnrlr rorisls who are ohvi ous'y work woiK i i or a Anwla Anaoh and Kalanga, now being haltered lionalre Charles Wrightsman, today paid 140,000 pounds at an auction for a Goya portrait of the duke of Wellington. The painting, sold by Sotheby's for the duke of Leeds, depicts the hero of the Napoleonic wars at the age of 43. It is derived from cash and checks were taken from a drawing, now in the British Mu- by Ihe Communists, are the gate way to South Africa and Rho-' dcsia. I In Southeast Asia, we still de dine lo strengthen SEATO by allowing the Free Chinese and the i Smith Koreans who have a strong will lo fight, into that organira tion.

"With respect lo Cuba, after our President snyj lliat we can- floor safe. Entry to the storejSeum, that Goya made after (be tolerate a Soviet satellite at lad been gained through a hole InlBattle of the Arapiles River, near mlllkw ertdK fir tw purfbiM tl LAW Hrrmtnt 0. M. Jfli AiHtM. Mir.

Im Mn. A. I- Ltw. Salamanca, Spain. Wrighlsman has a large art col- ectlon at his New York apart- nent and his home In Palm Beach, where the President rest- tl last weekend.

our doorstep, we are fast movinsii' to acceptance of Castro, evenjg while he builds a military base directed to our destruction. In fact we we even revertimj to our former position of flmtnclns Castro hy supporting Ihe bulldozer OLDSMOBILE CADILLAC Why the 2 umbrellas? It is the Swiss way of saying "Come what may, you can always fill your duo- action Parker 45." It's a cartridge easiest and cleanest fountain pen to fill with the most economical cartridges; five for only 20(. Or you can fill it from an ink bottle with a simple S5f refutable adapter and, you can change back and forth. The Parker 45 with 14K gold point writes as only a superb Parker writing instrument can. Truly a great gift Available in 6 attractive colow.

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About The Amarillo Globe-Times Archive

Pages Available:
314,789
Years Available:
1924-1977