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The Vernon Daily Record from Vernon, Texas • Page 2

Location:
Vernon, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

DAILY ttCOftD, Vcmon, Aug. 31, 1970 Wichita Requests State To Pay Full Bridge Cost AUSTTN Kails asked the Highway Commission today to pay the full cost of a bridge over tracks being moved to make way for the new Kell Freeway. City Manager Gerald Fox said the city is trying to find every was possible to rut the size of a planned supplementary bond issue to complete the freeway. If the commission will not pay the full cost, instead of half as now planned. Fox asked it to allow a grade crossing instead of a separation.

U.S. 277 and U.S. 82 will cross the relocated tracks of the Fort Worth and Denver P.ailroad. Markets Fort Worth Livestock FORT WORTH AF) Cattle 1400; calves 800; steady; cows 19.00-21.70; cutter 18.0020.50; canner 16.50-19.00; good calves 30.00. Feeders: Choice steers 240275 lbs.

42.25-42.50; 340-400 lbs. 35.00-38.30 465-560 lbs. 32.10-34.50; 680 lbs. 30.25; good 375-400 lbs. 33.00-35.00 465 lbs.

standard 330-433 lbs. 27.10-29.00; 500-770 lbs. 25.0027.50; choice mixed heifer and bull calves 40.00-42.75; choice 300 lh. heifers 35.10; 300-400 lbs. 31.80-32.80 450-540 lbs.

29.00-30.50; good and choice 26.00-27.80; good 300-425 lbs. 29.70-32.(X); 385 lbs. 27.60; choice 275-350 lh. bulls 39.0039.50 476-500 lbs 32.00-33.60; good 28.50; choice stock cows 5 and under 23.00-25.80; older 18.30. 500; steady to 25 higher; 2-3, 19.30-20.00; sows not established.

Sheep 200: steady; and choice spring lambs 25.00-26.00; shorn 26.00; utility lambs 12.0014.00; ewes 6.00-7.50; good to choice spring feeder lambs 20.00-23.50; buck lambs 17.00. Stock Market Report NEW YORK (API Stock market prices, apparently under some pressure from profit- taking, were little changed at midday. Trading was moderately active. At noon, the Dow Jones average of 30 industrials was off 0.20 to 765.61. The margin bv which advances led declines among the issues traded on the New York Stock Exchange narrowed to about 3 to 2 from the earlier to-l lead for gainers.

Among the glamor issues, IBM was off at 268S: Control Data was ahead 1 at 37; Polaroid was up to Xerox was off at 78H: and Memo- rcx, was up at Roan Selection was the volume leader on the Big Board, unchanged at 5 on turnover of 311,1000 shares-chiefly a block transaction of 282.500 shares at 5. The Associated Press 60-stock average was off 0 2 to 251.4 at miday. with industrials down .4, rails unchanged, and utilities off .1. Noon prices on the Big Board Included Iowa Beef, up vi at 17; Chrysler, down to Nato- mas, off 1 at Telex, down at Occidental Petroleum, off to and Litton Industries, down to On the American Stock Exchange, noon prices included; Astrodata, ahead to Dome Petroleum, up at 59; Saxon Industries, down at Savin Business Machines, up to 26; Amrep, ahead at 22; and Marshall Industries, down to 20. Latin Leader Is Arrested LOS ANGELES militant Mexican-American leader, Rodolfo Gonzales, was arrested for investigation of robbery in the wake of a rally- tumed-riot in East Los Angeles where be had been scheduled to speak, police said Sunday.

Gonzales, 42, leader of the Denver, based Crusade fop Justice, never got a chance to apeak Saturday as law responding to a ailent burglar alarm met resistance near the rally and as violence dispersed the crowd estimated at Gonzales was arrested with 31 other Mexican-Americans 1 block from the riot center whin, policc say, officers stopped the truck the Chicanos were riding in for a traffic violation tad found three revolvers in the truck large amounts of money on some of the adults, including Gonzales. The tracks are being moved as part of the freeway project. Commission Chairman DeWitt Greer suggested the city was trying to on its existing agreement under which the city and the state would reach pick up half of right of wav costs. If the state all of the costs of a grade separation, its share would exceed half. The commission also was asked by Callahan County Judge A.

E. Dyer of Baird to build a 12. 3 mile farm road costing $749,200 from Interstate 20 to Farm 603 at. Eula. Greer told Dyer this could not be done at once because the commission has spent all its current appropriation.

Other requests heard today, by county: not her crossover on U.S. 271, 1.8 miles north of Pans to serve the access driveway of a filling station and truck stop costing 523,000. San Saba Extension of Farm 1031 from its present end southeast of San Saba, seven miles to Rough (Ycek. $450,000. Polk A 1.1-milc, $50,000 road from Farm 1988 to the proposed Southland Park on Lake Livingston.

Schools End Segregation ATLANTA, Ga. (API Schools throughout the South be- jran classes today under orders decreeing the death of the dual school system, and many officials were saying this truly will mean the end of segregated schools. But attempts to combat federally forced integration continued here and there. School openings went ly in Georgia, where there were only scattered demonstrations at Sparta, Augusta and Stockbridge. Schools in Richmond, opened with enrollments in many altered to conform with desegregation plans approved by U.S.

District Court. Major Thomas J. Bliley pealed to parents in Richmond to keep their children in school. School officials failed in an effort to have the Richmond desegregation plan set until the U.S. Supreme Court rules on constitutional issues involved in busing pupils to achieve racial balance.

Area Deaths ARCHER CITY Funeral services for Mrs. Mattie L. Morgan, 86, who died Saturday in an Archer City hospital, were conducted Monday. Burial was in Riverside Cemetery in Wichita Falls. Carrie Power BURKBURNETT Funeral services for Mrs.

Carrie Lee Power, 87, a former Burkburnett resident who died last week in an Orange, nursing home, were conducted Monday at Owens Brumley Funeral Home Chapel. Burial was in Burkburnett Cemetery. O. L. Ladd JACKSBORO Services for Omar L.

Ladd, 70, who died Saturday in a Jacksboro hospital following a brief illness, will be conducted at 10 a. m. Tuesday at Southwest Baptist Church. Burial will be in Perrin Cemetery under direction of Leon Hawkins Funeral Home. Jefferson Flick WICHITA services for Jefferson Flick, 95, a Wichita Falls resident for 20 years, were conducted Monday in the Hampton-Vaughan Funeral Home Chapel.

Burial was in Riverside Cemetery. Mrs. Annie Lee Griggs WICHITA services for Mrs. Annie Lee Griggs, 58, a Wichita Falls resident for more than 40 years, will be at 2 p. m.

Tuesday in Mount Pleasant Baptist Church. Burial will be in East Lawn Cemetery under direction of Wells Funeral Home. t. H. Spikes HENRIETTA Graveside services for Clint Howard Spikes, 73, who died Saturday in a Henrietta hospital, were conducted Monday at Bellevue Cemetery.

Burial was under direction of Paul Hawkins Funeral Home of Henrietta. BOND SET Bond for a 41-year-old Vernon man, arrested Sunday by Highway Patrolman Stanley Gouge on a charge of driving while intoxicated, was set at $750. He was released from custody after posting bond Monday. VERNON DAILY RECORD I NICHOLS, tar. ORUM I.

aNsr Act of Much AaMctatM pnw errtttM to tt or aot othorwtM MNW SttMMNa herein. SUB SCRII WMk. 4Sc, WU barter airi wieaiu Com- throe MHttaa, 412.002 ttaas fT.00; xm Town Crier (continued from page one) stethescope entering the hospital. you a he asked him. He said that he was.

Members of the Vernon group introduced themselves and explained their problem. The doctor prescribed the high blood pressure medicine on the spot but said it would take a specialist to provide the eye medicine. He telephoned an eye specialist at home who was a member of the hospital staff, found he was away for a few minutes, then left word for him to call the Vernon woman at the hospital. The telephone call came through within 15 minutes, All the medication was available at the pharmacy at the hospital and the Vernon vacationers were on their way. Both doctors refused payment.

"I have just mailed a letter hack to the Boulder doctor expressing our Mr. Miller said. TO THE list of students heading off for college this Fall Greg Sherman. Texas Tech. and Lynn Sherman, Midwestern University.

FRANK SIMS, president of the Vernon Lion Booster Club, imports that a regular club meeting will be conducted at 7:30 p.m. Monday at the Vernon High School cafetor- ium. Dr, Sims said that the film of the Vernon-Perryton grid scrimmage will be shown if it is received from the processors in time for the meeting. MRS. ETTA MAE KEENER, 2204 Wheeler, has been dismissed from a Wichita Falls hospital where she underwent surgery, She will be staying in Dallas for several weeks in the home of her son, Ronald Keener, Cards and letters may be addressed to her at 3920 brush, Dallas, 75200.

SEVERAL DAYS A(iO in the was an article about the writings of Robert says Mrs, Jerome J. Steffen of 3826 Wichita in a note to this department. "An article appeared in this column in 1968 hich my mother thought worthwhile for a newsworthy note to a daughter in Goose Bay, Labrador about Mr. Flynn and his writing of to book bad just arrived in our library there and was already checked out and had accumulated a waiting list. I added my name to the list and several weeksc later I finally got to read the book.

It is marvelous. gavp the clipping to the Librarian for her bulletin board Needless to say with all the rave notices, his book was popular for some time. thought like to know that your column and a book written by a friend of long ago brought many memories to a homesick Vernon BIRTHDAY greetings to: Ronda Eads. 6, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Robby Eads, 3526 Beaver. Bobbie Lee Allen, daughter of William Allen, Odessa and Grandniece of Mrs. Pauline White, 1201 Houston. Nancy Clair Quillin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Truman Quillin, 4105 Bismarck. Tom Nelson, Dallas, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. H.

Nelson, 3701 Texas. Rhonda Smith, 9. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Dalthorp.

Carrollton, granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Garrett, 1903 Cumberland. W. D.

Gordon, 2620 Mesquite. Death Takes Ex-Resident O. (Mann) Christian, 65, a former Vernon resident and a brother of O. D. Christian, 2304 Mansard Street, died Sunday night in Amarillo of an apparent heart attack.

He made his home in Amarillo. Funeral serv ices will be conducted Wednesday in Lubbock. Interment will also be in Lubbock under direction of Sanders Funeral Home. Mr, Christian was born Aug. 28, 1905, in Taylor County.

He was a member of the Baptist Church. He resided in Vernon from 1963 until 1965 when he moved to Amarillo. Surviving are four brothers, O. D. Christian of Vernon, J.

B. Christian, L. W. Christian and G. W.

Christian, all of Lubbock; four sisters, Miss Virgie Christian, Mrs. Dona Carruth and Mrs. Ruby Graves, all of Lubbock, and Mrs. Bernice Wallace of Amarillo. Branch School At Sw eetwater SWEETWATER, Tex.

(API Toe Sweetwater campus of Texas State Technical Institute was to open registration Monday for Fall classes. The main campus is located at Waco. The new branch campus is located at an abandoned Air Faroe radar installation here ar.d already has about 100 pre- 300 Friends Nixon- See Hoax Doctor Off ODESSA (AP) Still smiling and promising not to die, the West Texas one-time mystery doctor was carried by stretcher to an airliner bound for Los Angeles and then Australia Sunday as a crowd of 300 well-wishers waved goodbye. Francis William Dalgleish, 27, who was arrested in a month ago on charges of illegally practicing medicine, is not expected to survive a kidney ailment. He was released from Medical Center Hospital here at 2:30 p.m.

Sunday, was taken to Midland-Odessa Regional Air Terminal in a McCamey ambulance, and a1 4:15 p.m. was carried by stretcher aboard a Texas International flight to Angeles. With him at the airport were his brother, Ian Dalgleish from Australia, his former wife, Frances Samara: McCamey hospital administrator, Joe Collins: and friends from McCamey. Though supine on a stretcher, Dalgleish to be in good spirits. He smiled and said if he made it past the next two weeks, I he thought he would live.

His brief stint as a doctor in McCamey apparently won him friends who stuck him even after he was accused of being a fake doctor. The charge was giving a false statement while posing as a doc tor, but Collins, who uncovered the guise, said, can fault his work." Dalgleish is qualified as a veterinary technologist in Australia and has a degree in animal husbandry, He claims to have studied at London Medical School and also in the United States. At least $600 his air fare back to Australia was contributed by McCamey and Odessa people after they heard his brother, Ian Dalgleish, was unable to raise the necessarv funds. World War II Lost 1 U. NEW YORK (APt Aviator Charles Lindbergh, an outspoken opponent of entry into World War II.

says be believes that in the perspective of history the United States lost the war. won the war in a military sense; but in a broader sense it seems to me we lost it, for our Western civilization is loss respected and secure than it was before," he wrote in a preface to Wartime Journals of Charles A. Lindbergh" to he published Sept. 30. order to defeat Germany and Japan we supported the still greater menaces of Russia and now confront us in a nuclear-weapon era." he said.

of our Western culture was destroyed. We lost the genetic heredity formed through eons of many million than a generation after the end, our occupying armies still musl occupy, and the world has not been made safe for democracy and freedom. On the contrary, our own system of democratic government is being challenged that greatest of dangers of any faction and unrest. Houston Ends Segregation HOUSTON (API The sixth largest independent school district opened with some dissent today under a new federal court integration order Most of the anger came from representatives of Mexican- American youngsters. Leaders of the group are upset over their elementary schools being paired with predominantly Negro schools, Mexican-American spokesmen had threatened to open their owti schools today but none as in evidence during the morning.

About 36.000 Mexican-American children are in the district. The Houston schools, with an anticipated enrollment of about 245,000, were ordered last week by the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Anpeals of New Orleans to operate senior and junior high schools on a geographic capacity basis and elementary schools under an equidistant zcning pirn that had been ordered by a lower court. The lower court order also had called for equidistant zoning for secondary schools. Draft-Dodge Ruse May Be Thwarted WASHINGTON (AP) Selective Service officials are taking steps aimed at thw'arting a migration to Northern California by draft resisters hopeful of sympathetic treatment by judges there.

Banker Phares, deputy general counsel, says the U.S. attorney in San Francisco recently reported that of hundreds of backlogged cases, about half involved persons who had their induction transferred to Oakland. (continued from page one) remarked, the Middle East situation no hope; since the cease-fire, it has some hope." He cautioned against being overly optimistic, saying differences and passions going bark thousands of years are not settled quickly." as far as we are concerned, we believe we have made some progress," he said. "Because, after all, (here is a cease-fire. People aren't being killed now.

And as long as that goes on, it looks better than it was." Nixon was asked alxiut a suggestion mentioned by high administration officials at a Western House briefing for nows executives last week of the I possibility of a U.S.-Soviet military force under United Nations auspices to keep the Middle Fast jieace. would not comment on il at this the President said, adding: do not helieve that suggestions of that type, well inten- tionod as they are, are going to he particularly helpful at a time when the Jarring mission is tng forward," He referred the Israeli- Arab talks being conducted at the United Nations by Ambassador Gunnar Jarring. Nixon has scheduled a general review of the Middle East situation at the Western White House Tuesday with State and Defense departments, Central Intelligence and military chiefs represented. In the interview with John Hart and Bernard Kalb, Nixon also discussed his practice of leaving Washington from time to time to stay here, in Florida or at his Camp David retreat in Maryland. changes the perspective, so that you aren't in a rut, you think in a way that is noncreative," he said, adding beautiful place is a place to, well, to clear the mind but when it comes to making important decisions or it comes to writing something that has to precise, there is no substitute for just sitting in a hare Nixon turned aside as a question whether he could conceive of anyone but Spiro Agnew as a running mate in 1972, But he added, would say the vice president was a great asset to our ticket during the campaign He has been a very strong vice president He has done a very effective job in his travels abroad and in the United Rogers Rites Set Tuesday Funeral will be conducted at 10 a.

m. Tuesday at the First Baptist Church of Mrs. E. I). Rogers, 69, who died at Ray's Convalescent Home in Lubbock Saturday night after a lengthy illness.

Rev. Darrell Robinson, pastor of the First Baptist Church will officiate. Burial will be in Wilbarger Memorial Park under direction of Dudley Fields Funeral Chapel. Mrs, Rogers was born April 11, 1901, as Minnie Mae Milner, daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs.

T. J. Milner. She married E. D.

Rogers in 1927 at Frederick. Okla, She was a member of the First Baptist Church of Vernon and was active in Sunday School and training union before suffering a stroke in 1963. Her husband preceded her in death in 1963. Surviving are a son, Marvin A. Rogers of Lubbock; two daughters, Mrs.

Evan M. Threat Jr. of Lubbock, and Mrs. Lloyd Kent Morrison Jr. of Cbiilicothc: three sisters, Mrs.

Bess Barker and Mrs. Jessie Caperton nf Vernon, and Mrs. Joe Adams of Odessa. Eleven grandchildren also survive. Pallbearers will be Clevc Milner, Pershing Milner, Aaron Milner, Allen Milner, Sam Garlington, Earl Maddin.

CALENDAR MONDAY 7:30 p. meeting, IOOF Hall. TUESDAY Noon Rotary Club luncheon, Wilbarger Auditorium. 7:30 p. Legion Legion Hall.

7:30 p. m. Stated Convocation, Vernon Chapter 192, Royal Arch Masons, Lodge Hall. 7:30 p. m.

Archery Club, Hill Crest Country Club. WEDNESDAY Noon Optimist Club luncheon, Wilbarger Auditorium. THURSDAY Noon Club luncheon, Canton Cafe. 7:30 p. VFW meeting, Post Home.

FRIDAY Noon Lions Club luncheon, Wilbarger Auditorium. FIVE FINED Five persons were fined a total of $110 in City Court Monday. Two persons were fined $25 each, one for drunkenness and one for riding a motorcycle without a safety helmet. Three motorists were fined $20 each, two for running red lights and one for speeding. Bank Robliei Are Mushrooming As Major Law Enforcement Problem WASHINGTON (AP) There was Dan," the soft- New Yorker who dressed neatly and used a note.

Then there were the four men in Cincinnati who left four women dead in their wake. Between them, and thousands of others who followed their line of work in the past decade, they have robbed more banks and stolen more money than John Dillinger could have aspired to in his heyday- Since 1960, bank robberies have increased nearly threefold, the FBI says. Despite a drop of slightly more than one tent in says FBI Director J. Kdgar Hoover, bank robberies are becoming more than ever major problem facing law enforcement." institutions are sustaining mounting monetary losses, of course, but the more alarming problem involves the numerous acts of violence inflicted upon the bank employes, bank customers and law enforcement officers during the commission of these crimes," Hoover told a congressional committee rec ently. In one of the most brutal Outbreaks (continued from page one) wounded one of the men who apprehended.

Gibbons was reported in critical condition and Nolan as satisfactory. Four policemen in Riverside 65 miles southeast of Angeles, were shot from ambush Sunday night, during a search of a Mexican-American for persons suspected of throwing firebombs earlier. None was reported seriously injured. Police said they did not know what precipitated the throwing of firebombs and rocks in a city park. Four persons were arrest- i ed but none was charged in the shootings, said.

Trouble also erupted Sundas night in the Wilmington section of Police said 500 Mexican-Americans touched off several fires in a 12-block area, threw rocks and hurled bottles. Some arrests wf re made, Saturday night, person died, more than hf) were injured and 185 jailed. Property damage estimates ranged up to $1 million with 17K businesses vandalized looted. Killed was Ruben 42, a Mexican-Americ an newsman i covering Pie parnde as news di-! rector of a Spaniih-languagc television station and columnist for the Ij Angeles Times. He was hit by a police tear gas pro- jectile.

cases recorded by the FBI in recent years, three armed robbers forced one woman employe and three women customers into the vault of a savings and loan of- Indonesian Rebels Take 13 Hostages THF HAGUE 'API Three busloads of young Indonesian rebels stormed the lesidence of the Indonesian ambassador today, killed a Dutch guard and hoisted the flag of the 1950 Republic of the South Moluccas. Ambassador A. Natainin- grat and went into hiding, but his wife, their two children and 10 other persons were held hostage the suburban embassy mansion. The raiders demanded that Indonesian President Suharto, due in the Netherlands Tuesday, receive J. A who himself the prrsident-in- exile of the South Moluccas.

harto is making the first visit by an Indonesian president to his country's former colonial masters Indonesian Foreign Minister Adam Malik said in Jakarta that Si harto has informed the Dutch government he will make the scheduled sit until the wife and children the Indonesian ambassador are released by the Amboinese dissidents The raiders were Amboinese exiles from the East Indonesian island of Ambon They or their families fled from Indonesia er the brief I960 revolt which proclaimed the Republic of the South Moluccas and now contend that Suharto heads a military dictatorship which subjugates the Last Indonesian islanders. Retail Trade Held ficp in Cincinnati, Ohio, last year, shot them to death and fled with $275. "Dashing so named for his fast footwork, is accused of robbing 13 New York banks in a three-month period earlier tbU year, getting away with $34.000 without so much as pulling a gun. Dan would hand the teller a note, warning that he had a gun and demanding large denominations bills. If the teller hesitated, he would say me" and walk away.

If the teller complied, he said you" and left with the loot. Rank robberies now number i year and losses run in the millions dollars, according to FBI statistic s. The most likely victims are branch banks or savings and loan offices in cities of 25.000 tion or more, although rural i banks are still being knocked off the FRi says. I Despite the dip in lOfiO. bank robbery has reased more in the past 10 years than any other tvpe of bhery recorded by the FBI's Unirorm Crime Reports hank robber ba- risen by 296 per cent sine 1'toO, compared with a jump of 186 per cent street robberies such as rm g- and armod idup All i i lent crimes, including robbery, se 130 per ent during the I ade.

Convictions, at least those for robbirg financial protected bv federal bank rob- I hery la fall short of the total number of offenses, Enrollment (continued from page i 1967 5 56 1968-6! 2.522 196U-70 2,556 1970-71 2,831 Local residents will reniero- her the peak enrollment in the pHs decade during 1961-62 came when Vernon had a large number of struct ion on the A It us 1 missi-e rnplcv living here, i Housing conditions were ex- tight at the time wjth no rental property (continued from oage one) Pentagon said the Spartan was launched and guided by a prototype missile site radar, also lev cated at Kwajalein, which located and tracked the incoming missile, The Pentagon said the test was the first to use major elements of the Safeguard system to intercept with a Spartan missile a target nose cone launched in a ICBM trajectory. In the past the Spartan missiles were merely fired into points in space to test their accuracy but never at an actual target, officials said. Congressional opponents of the controversial Safeguard antimissile system have sought to bar funds for its development on grounds, among others, that the system would not work. They argued that its complicated radar system would be ineffectual against a surprise missile attack. Rogers Services Slated Tuesday Funeral services for Mrs.

E. D. (Minnie) Rogers, 69, a former Vernon resident who died Saturday night, at her home in Lubbock, will be conducted at 10 a. m. Tuesday in the First Baptist Church of Vernon.

Rev. Darrell Robinson, pastor, will officiate. Interment will be in Wilbarger Memorial Park under direction of Dudley Fields Funeral Chapel. Mrs. Rogers was born April 11, 1901, in Vernon.

She married Mr. Rogers in Frederick, in 1927. She moved to Lubbock five years ago. Surviving are one son, two daughters, three sisters, and 11 grandchildren. Vandals Damage Tractor at Farm Vandals caused heavy damage to a tractor on the E.

Shepherd farm Eight miles southeast of Vernon sometime during the weekend. Wilbarger County Department officers said vandrls broke out the head lights, released all of the butane fuel, shattered the coil and broke off a radio antenna on the tractor which was left in the field. Members of the retail trade committee of Vernon Chamber of Commerce at a noon luncheon meeting at the Ramada Inn Restaurant voted to support a Wilbarger County Guar Week CeiehraUon Oct. 19-25 which bring Lt Gov Ben Barnes Commissioner of Agriculture John White and others to Vernon for a massive barbecue at noon on Oct. 23 Mrs Hester Hill whs designated chairman of a committee to assist merchants with downtown decorations, of Commerce Manager Ld tharp said.

In other action. Committee members Discussed plans for a Shrine Parade here Sept 12 but decided not to sponsor retail promotion in conjunction with the event. Agreed to name a committee to on hand to assist the District TSTA during its convention here Oct. 23 Heard a report from Mr. Colt harp that the teachers' reception sponsored Aug.

17 bv the committee was a success, Heard a discussion by Mr Colt harp of Christmas decorations for the coming season, including the possibility thai some additional fixtures may be added. Chairman Dick Steadham presided at the meeting. Others present included Mrs Eunice Ansel, Mrs. Scott, Mrs, Evelyn Birnbaum, Ballard Ramsey. Newman Hughes, Rav Coleman, Bill Holter, Mr.

and Mrs. Lloyd Hill, Mr and Mrs. Bill Thome, Mrs. Louise Clayton, Truman Quillin and Mrs. Fred Palmer.

Wilbarger General Hospital Briefs (Visiting hours: 10 a. m. to 12 noon, p. m. to 5 p.

fi p. m. to 8 p. no children under 10 permitted on nursing Admissions: Mrs. Francisca Galvan Charles Robot.

Mrs. Adel la Bustamante Arthur Simpson Mrs. J. H. Stone Mrs.

Lula Gates Mrs. Danny King Mrs. J. L. Kesee Births: Mr.

and Mrs. Roland Hatley, a daughter Mr. and Mrs. Danny King, a daughter Dismisnals: Mrs. Sue Moore Frank Matthews Mi's, Ranzy Chennault Charlotte Potters E.

K. Hunter Paul Shores Mrs. Tom Turkett Donnie Fort me iocaj growth in enrollment this other than that prompted moving ut the dent btidy from Lockett is in- die Med. this ear, however i Ve: non enrollment last. was 2 -5 and first day enrollment had increased i to 2.707 tins i A 1 ai students were enrolled at Lockett the end of the scbo.

yeai 10 students were trans erred to school district- Lockett, a net. gain some '5 studentt other in Vemoa I over the se enrolled in toe local svstem a year ago on tbs basis of end of last year of 2,556 and present cnrcilment rf Enrollment by schools and as of start of the second week school Mondav was jed as; Central Elementary First, i 79; second, 82, thud, 72; fourth, 57: kindergarten, total. 320. I Haw kin- Elernf ntar. First, 129; second 113; third, 122; fourth, 115; kindergarten.

30; special 10; total, 519, Sluv a rv First, 43; second, third, 13; fourth, I 33; total, 153. Intermediate School Fifth, 231; sixth, 23 seventh, 230; eighth. 213; special education, 25; toM), 967. i High School Ninth grade, 299; tenth, 198; 1 1th, 175; 12th. i 187; special education, 13; total, 872, ROI ND St ITS Reg.

to $105,00 or 2 for $100.00 LONG'H STORE SULLIVAN FUNERAL HOME Service In Time of Ptase 552-6234 Problems? WE LISTEN AND CARE Call Concerned 552-7311 A 24 Hour PRICE SHAKING DEALS ON PICKUPS Start Right Htrol GMC KREBS MOTOR CO. Vernon 552-6261.

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About The Vernon Daily Record Archive

Pages Available:
80,418
Years Available:
1921-1978