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El Paso Times from El Paso, Texas • 3

Publication:
El Paso Timesi
Location:
El Paso, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Ilial KF 2-I fir, I THE VI, PASO TIMES III Iasos HOME enspaper Want Ad Depl. 332-1971 Page 3-A Thursday, ovpmbpp If, 1 903 14-K Gold Fashion of explosive to be et off. Because of its proxinuiy to homes; and street, smaller charges are being used in the Mesita-Mesa Bel Air High Homecoming Starts Thursday Ba'aths Quell Revolt Weslsidc Terrain Changed (Continued from Page 1-A) Then, we move in with our drills and compressors. "For this job, we are using a 600 cubic-feet-per-minute Gardner-Denver compressor, and a 14-foot air track drill. It works like a iackhammer.

roushlv. exceot If" rv W. H. Fryer, Lawyer, Dies Wednesday (Continued from Page 1-A) fomia for a vacation, he became ill and was removed from the tram on a stretcher at El Paso, taken to Hotel Dieu with typhoid fever. Two months later, his weight down to 95 pounds and too weak to leave, he wandered around El Paso's streets and one of the first persons he met was the late Tom Lea, another of the great legal personalities of the project.

"We attach blasting caps to a stick of gelatin-type dynamite. The bulk of the charge, however, is amonium nitrate. But we still have to use the dynamite because the nitrate is not sensitive to the electric blasting cap," Ivey explained. The blasting caps come in various "millisecond" delays. In other words, there will be one cap that is actuated immediately when the electrical impulse is put to 2- (Continued from Page 1-A) crowds formed in the center of Baghdad and demonstrated against the new party leadership, notably Bakr and the defense minister, Saleh Mahdi Ammash.

Loyal forces dispersed the 9 ft. ivf' vi f. on a mob, and by 1 p.m. the capital the drill is mounted uwieia win uic ou. ju ui it-puiteu quiet uu milliseconds ater.

"This keeps our basic ground and air movement to a mini With its transmitters operat Holes are drilled to various depths, depending on how much early part of the century, es at reduced oower. the radio mum," Ivey said. "We may havel earin is to De moved, it is an exacting business, because Pou.nds explosives in one shot, but we'll have enough de to become mayor. bg heard jn snatches Lea encouraged the young New f0r a vvhjie. Then it broadcast Yorker to remain here long an appeal from Bakr for calm, enough to regain his health and Baker blamed "imperialists, while convalescing he served as conspirators and enemies of the deep or too shallow a hole can ruin the site's engineering.

The holes, where charges are to be placed, are spaced at in- ujuii lepoue: unuer me laie fnr thp fmnMP Hp said 1V. 11 LX i i the rebels wanted to destroy thP! Judge J. M. Goggin in 41st District Court. In 1905 he returned to New York and to his former nation.

Raohrlarl with itc tranc. ini omnna Iran nrnn pms, job as secretary to the fV, jmitters apparently damaged by lays so we will have an air and ground blast equal to about 75 pounds." Safety is always the most important factor in blasting, according to Ivey. When a blast is scheduled to go off, Mesa Street, adjacent to the area, is closed to traffic. Three safety lookouts are stationed on high points around the blast point. As another precaution, a galvanometer test is given before each explosion is set off.

All circuits are checked with the meter. LINDA ELLIS Homecoming activities at Bel Air High School begin Thursday with the football game between the Highlanders and the Technical High School Lions at Hutchins 113 H1C CUllllLV Jl i10J.lClUC3. of the Southern Express Co. bombs or sabotage, mentioned only "imperialists, conspirators and enemies of the people." They are indignant at the collapse of Gamal Abdel of Nasser's plans for a merger But sources in other Middle; ariuiEast caoitals suesested Saadi the growing ties between the Vas the man behind the coup. Iraqis ana tne tsa atmsts ruung He is a tough, gun-toting little byna tnat exclude his brand ot Qt rrm cr or incf A rnnnoH from nowPr in rLn inn nf th A lo 15 llStlnS Stalls Oh ieach charge, and a part of Both deputy premier and in- the log, there is a detailed map, showing the location and inten- A.

Unusual Florentine finish adds glamour Just S39.95 B. Fresh styling in 5-diamond dome ring Only $59.95 C. Nine fine diamonds sweep across dome ring. Low. $79.95 D.

Ten brilliant diamonds accentuate this ring $100 Prices plus tax Fine Jewelry, First Floor Downtown and Popular Bassctt fnrmatinn minictpr QaaHi reported to have headed to e3Ch harge- uEve? th Madrid with 18 followers in anlblastinj? caPs, are numbrfd and lair force plane Tuesday. Arab nationalism. MYSTERY RADIO During the day's turmoil, a mysterious radio calling itself "the voice of the Arab nation" urged Iraq's people to rise against the Ba'athists. A speaker shouted the name of Jassem Ahvay, a pro-Nasser plotter jailed in Damascus since he led an attempt to overthrow the Syrian government last July IS. countea, so mat none is leu oe-hind for someone to find.

LEARNED TO BREATHE the West had taken hold of him. As he put it in some of his frequent reminiscences, he had "learned to breathe in the Southwest." Soon he was back in El Paso, and on his way to Austin to pick up legal studies earlier in New York. With his law license, he came home in 100S and lost little time creating a reputation for himself, lie was elected county attorney, a powerful crusader who was defeated by the vice ring for reelection. Later he served as assistant U.S. district attorney, a vigorous and determined prose-cucor.

He left the government post to enter private practice and continued until physical infirmity made further court appearances impossible. After that he showed regularly at his office in the Stadium. Miss Linda Ellis has been elected homecoming queen and she and her duchesses, Miss Mary Childress and Miss Estela Yanez, will be presented charing half-time ceremonies. Miss Ellis will receive a bouquet of red roses from John Salazar, vice president of the Student Council. Miss Ellis is a member of National Honor Society and the Choraliers.

She sings in the Madrigals and Sextet. Friday's activities will include a tea honoring all ex-students from 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. sponsored by the Future Teachers of America and Future Home-makers of America. Other clubs are participating in activities and the Student Council is in charge of the homecoming program.

The Mesa project is not the most ticklish ever bandied by Ivey's firm. He once did a job at White Sands Missile Range, 40 feet from a loaded rocket, and he blasted terrain for Sun Towers AERIAL INCIDENT British diplomats said one aerial incident broke out that day. They reported an Iraqi military plane had opened up with three rockets fired into the area of There was no official word on President Abdel Salam Aref's! Nursing Home, next to Providence who directed the uprising and palace, which is the headquar-j Memorial Hospital, and received Iters of the Ba'ath revolutionary! praise and no complaints. Eventually the attorney obtained command. The land-leveling job began in the release of all.

i Radio Cairo announced! early October, and is scheduled Mr. Fryer was hishlv active flight to Spain. Spanish! for completion in about two 0 0 DOWNTOWN AND BASSETT CENTER I i. rT l. i 1 r- 1 octsseLL iuwci kj Kt-eu LouidLi in Paso do htics tor manv sources in iviaaria connrmea1 montns Iraqi officials had ar- years after leaving public office that 19 rived.

The El Dorado Apartments will have 100 units. In addition, the Spaniards said the plane hadi third Luby's Cafeteria in El Paso Shop Downtown Today 9:30 to 5:30 Popular Bassett 10:00 to a dedicated Democrat who was a delegate to the national Democratic convention in Chicago in 1932, the vear Roosevelt was first no landing permit, and hence be built on the property. A returned by Spanish govern- motel will be constructed, and nominated. Repeal of prohibition oraer 10 iVIalta 115 last; still in the planning stage is a witn his practice. In the years after World War II he tried nearly every major murder case in El Paso.

His dynamic personality assured a big courtroom crowd attracted by his flair for the dramatic. He was a showman, having at one time intended to go on the stage, and was active for some time in El Paso's little theater movement. siup uii us way iium nagnuau medical center. to Madrid. Fourteen of the Iraqis also went back to Malta, but were refused permission to was in the air and while Texas dry forces battled to keep from participating in the march greeting the late Sen.

Alben Barkley's keynote speech calling for repeal, El Pasoan Participant In Meeting stop there and headed on to Cyprus. Spaniards said the other five remained snmpwhprp in Ma- Mr. Fryer broke ranks with his Among the murder defendants fellow Texans, iore off a strip of he represented in recent years paper, printed "Texas" on it, sArA it -e Aa I- vi a i uiiA L-i oH riot- i "Cl anu jomeu me piiaue. whether Saadi stayed. ft i 'iL '''V Is i5 Times Washington Bureau Washington.

Carlos Rivera muuiCI living uir, oiaj ti vri nau iUctUCI 1U1 1 1 LUI ill In Svria. official sources said but was convinced that prohibition of liquor by law was that the Ba'ath party's founder jof E1 Paso- member of the staff and secretary-general, Michel (of Sen- RalPh Yarborough, Aflak. alreadv had left an mvited participant of the a- loan company employe; Mrs. Pearl Johnson, a two-time killer; and Mary Jean Parsons, who shot her soldier husband. In 1948 he was president of El Baghdad to attend the emergen-1 regional conference sponsored by Paso Bar Association and session.

tne President's Committee on ALllvfc. iM fULUlCS Ivpars hi; imnromntn wit was a It also was announced thatiEclual Employment Opportunity Raw hH hoon in mntart Los Angeles this week. Mr. Fryer attracted nationwide jbig attraction at the annual bar 1U.W UVV-il All VUUIUL L. UM1 111 Vice President Lyndon B.

John- banquets. He was a favorite the day with Syria's new! chairman of the President's Ra'afriict nrpmipr Amin bOIl luncheon ciud speaKer, a noiea humorist and spinner of tall tales. Until shortly before his death he headed a firm including the late Coyne Milstead, Mark Howell, and John Luscombe. With Hafez, who was named address the con-Tuesday night. Hafez succeeds Terence Thursday when he ill Salah Bitar, who resigned.

jstrcss the importance to the na-Saadi, one of the original of etlual employment oppor-Ba'ath aooaratus oreanizers initunit-v- Secretary of Health, Edu- attention in 1929, at the end of the Escobar revolution in Mexico, when he was retained by Salva-tore Ateca, a J-uarez bar operator named as a key figure in the unsuccessful attempt to overthrow the government by violence. Ateca wanted to travel through the U.S. by train and sail for Spain from New York. Delicate international complica Milstead's death, and Fryer's ill Iraq, was known as a hard-line cation and Welfare Anthony J. leader against Nasser.

xeieorezze win a.so speaK. f. i i ness firm recently was dissolved. Survivors include Mrs. Mary A.

Kev community leaders fromi 'J 5 i "f-l I Late last winter, after the California. Colorado, lf tAl I Traoi revolution was follnwpd hv 'Arizona, tions were involved and he re Fryer, the attorney widow who; Ra'athist ronn in Svria thplNew Mexico and Texas were in tained Mr. Frver to make the'had chauffeured him to and from nvprnrnpn(c trip with him. (his office for many years- and WQuM gQ intQ a tripartite union In New York the lawyer andjfour daughters, Mrs. D.

Chat-with Nasser.s United Arab his client were arrested, on "cm, public. But the project quickly charges that Ateca had nuiuaic, banks in Mexico including theHart and Miss Rosemary Fr'er, Chihuahua state treasury. Fryer, and an official of the U.S. Im fell apart, with Syria and Egypt engaged openly in a propaganda war. Possibly due to the moderating influence of Aref and Bakr, the Iraqi government stayed in the background of the battle.

But Saadi himself took an ag of Ei Paso. The family home for many years has been at 1008 Prospect St. Rosary services will be held at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Har-ding-Orr and McDaniel Montana Avenue Chapel. Funeral Mass BASSETT CENTER I -jl It I migration and Naturalization Service, were charged with attempting to assist him in leaving the country illegally.

In a suitcase they were carrying was $750,000 in gold coin, currency and securities. For days the story held the nation's headlines. gressive anti-Nasser line in pri- will be said at 10 a.m. Fridayjvate conversation at Immaculate Conception Cam-. Syria and Iraq have sped to mm I rt olic Church, with interment in Evergreen Cemetery, the Right BASSETT CENTER STOKE ONLY Tonight in 9:30 P.M.

ward a merger of their own. Their armies already have been! formally joined under the command of the Iraqi defense minister. Delegations now are detailing plans for an economic union, and other blueprints are being! studied for a political Rev. L. E.

Gaynor officiating. Pallbearers will be Judge R. E. Judge Alan Fraser, I George Rodriguez, Mark F. Howell, Frank H.

Hunter and Dan Brungardt. Members of El Paso Bar Association will serve as honorary pallbearers. MOO.MIGHT I) SALE In tribute to the Memory of 1 0 DOWNTOWN KE 2-7755 BASSETT CENTER 778-5222 1 1 XCITING PASTEL KNITS IN our beloved Chairman of the Board. This bank will be closed until noon on Friday, November 15th Pi us tax SPORTIVE STYLE SEPARATES These fine flat knit woo! separates, exquisitely fashioned by James Kenrob of Dalton, are ready to go out on the town or travel the world in exciting pastels of citron, blue or pink. Sleeveless cardigan, 10-16.

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Pages Available:
1,966,882
Years Available:
1881-2024