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The Bonham Daily Favorite from Bonham, Texas • Page 2

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

THE FAVORITE-Bonham, Nov. 30, 1969 2 The Bonham Daily Favorite Published Daily Except Saturday by the BONHAM PUBLISHING INC. Entered at Post Office at Bonham, Texas, as second class mail matter Office Address: Box 650, Bonham, Texas 75418 AUBREY McALlSTER, Robert M. Cantrell Editor rs. Aubrey Editor Rclph Allan Mechanical Foreman Mrs.

Harold Manager rw RESS ASSOCIATION NOTICE TO PUBLIC Any erroneous reflection upon the character, reputation, or standing of any firm, individual or corporation will gladly oorrected upon it being called to the attention of the publishers. United Press Internationa! is exclusively entitled to the use to! publication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited to the paper and also the news published herein. SUBSCRIPTION RAIES Home Delivery in Bonham 40c Week By Mail in Fannin and Adjoining Counties $8.00 Year Bv Mail Elsewhere $13.00 Year Advertising Representative: Dany League DEATHS Draft Lottery First Capsule is Drawn Monday WASHINGTON (UPI) p.in. EST Monday, young I man or woman will step up to a large bowl, take out a i change the Ives of thousands of young' Americans. In the capsule will be a of paper with a month and a IN NAVY Charles D.

Ber- son of Mr. and Mrs. R. Beli of Ravenna, has reported to the Glenview (III.) Naval Air Station for his basic training. After I I weeks of basic training there, he will receive further orders.1 Illness Delays Candy Barr Trial BROWN WOOD, lex.

strict illness has postponed the marijuana-pusses- on trial of Candy Barr, the shapely Texas stripper who served three-years in prison for an earlier drug conviction. The trial was to begin Monday in 35th District Court, but was delayed indefinitely pendng recovery of Dist. Ally. George Day who recently underwent surgery. Bi rr, known off-stage as Juanita Due Phillips, was arrested March 11 at her Brownwood home and charged with illegal possession of narcotics.

The blond dancer is free on $10,000 bond. She was sentenced in to 15 years in 1959 for a drug violation, but was released aiter serving three years later received a full par- late to Classify SERVICE, washers dryers, stoves, heaters, WiV appliances r.ot in work- i p. 'r r. Eib Steward, 807 Sa: 5S3-8012. 81-26tc i.O 1 b'ack on we.

oi -i Friday haif lined. Buck flume 022 i Ra burn. 81-ltC day written on it. It will be draft number 001 for 1970, and all young men born between 1944 and 19551 on the date chosen will be first in line for military conscription next year. The life plans of about 850,000 men in the age bracket of 19 to 26 will be materially affected by the first drawing of the new lottery draft system.

After the first capsule is opened, 56 young representatives of Selective Service's youth advisory "tnmittee chosen to participate the lottery will continue drawing from the bowl until a list 5f 366 29 completed. That will be the order of ca'l for the 1970 draft, and youths will be abie to make their plans according to the position of their birthdate on the list. Probably fewer than half of the draft eligiU'es will have to worry about being called up in 1970. Military authorities estimate their manpower needs at 250.000, which means the dates toward the bottom of the list will be relatively draft-proof. Traylor Services Are Set Sunday WOLFE CITY Ed 78 died in a Commerce hospital at 2:30 p.

rn. Friday, Nov. 2S, 1969. after a 2-day illness. He suffered a stroke Wednesday.

Fneraj services will be held at 2 p- m. Sunday in the First Baptist church with the Rev. C. B. Roberts, the Rev.

Robert Renfro, the Rev. Frank Caspar and the Rev. Odie Carry officiating. Interment will be in Mount Carmel cemetery with Owens Funerai home directing. Mr.

Traylor was born April 15, 1891, in Paris, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Traylor.

Survivors are his wife, a son, Eddie Van Traylor of Bailey; two sisters, Mrs. Mattie Garrison of Dallas and Mrs. Katie Crouch of Muleshoe and a number of grandchildren and grandchildren Chandler Rites Are Set Sunday Funeral services for Donnie May Chandler, 83, who died in a Sherman rest home Thursday, Nov. 27, 1969, will be held at 2 P- m. Sunday at Wise Chapel with the Rev.

Joe Patterson and the Rev. J. Payne officiating. Interment will in the Windom cemetery'. A native of Alabama, Mrs.

Chandler has lived in the Gober and Windom areas most of her life. Survivors are three sons, two stepsons, 21 grandchildren and 20 Brent Services Are Set Sunday Graveside services for Mrs. Bertha McGee Brent of Prescott, will bp held at 1:30 ip. m. Sunday at the Dodd City cemetery with the Rev.

Lionel Hallonquist, pastor of the First Presbyterian officiating. Wise Funeral Home has charge of arrangements. Mrs. Brent died in Prescott Thursday, Nov. 27, 1969 She has lived in Arizona for the past several years.

Survivors are two daughters. She was the widow of Claude Brent. Rogers Wil Ask NATO To Seek Balance WASHINGTON (UPI)-Secretary of State William P. Rogers is expected to urge NATO members next week to issue a new appeal to the Soviet Union and its allied for a balanced reduction of forces in Europe. The State Department said Saturday the top-level U.S.

thinking is that negotiated reductions would contribute to easing tensions in Europe and would be useful at a time when the United States is holding private talks with the Soviets on the possibiliy of curbing the strategic arms race. The sources acknowledged was no current indication that the Soviet Union would accept such a proposal. But they added that negotiations between NATO and its Communist equivalent, the Warsaw Pact, were more likely to have positive results than the proposal by the Communists for a European Security Council, L. Ross Garner Rites Monday HIGH ADVENTURE Hapy hunter Wally Taber smiles over the first greater kudu ever bagged by civilized man with bow and arrow. In "Safari Moja" coming Wednesday to the American theatre, the producer-star shows how it was done.

'Safari Moja' Film Brings Hunting, Fishing Adventure to the American Anyone for safaris? A trip up the famed Alaskan Or maybe you prefer a trek highway reveals the hunting and up the famed Alaskan highway? fishing available to any who i Whatever your bag, the color-; raved that way. Using pack- adventure film horses, bush plane, boat and promises hunting anf fishing, hoot, Taber hunts and fishes wildlife and native life on two up an enviable storm guarante- continents and the Polar Ice eel to make more sedentary Cap to boot. It comes Wednes- souls green with envy. He tops day to the American theatre it with a trip above the Arc- for one night He Circle into the little-known Filmed and produced by in-1 Brooks Range for barren-ground ternationally known sports-man- caribou. photographer Wally Taber, Daring fate's fickle finger fur- fari is whole-family en- t.her, the intrepid explorer goes tertainment designed for those above the farthest-north land w-ho share Bwana Taber's hang- mass in the world to stalk ice up for the out-of-doors.

bear on the Polar Ice Cap it- The film boasts more firsts self. And, since he could go no than the New York Mets made further north then the North all season, Taber bags a mas- pole, he dropped down the oth- sive polar bear with bow and er side of the globe to Mozam- arrow. for As if that bique where he filmed primi- enough, he blasts tive man and the denizens that half a dozen rhino with blunt! keep him alert, arrows to precipitate a charge Fish range from trout as for the camera. On the wild large as a leg to perch as big Ruvu River of Tanzania, he per-! as a boat, and, while Taber forms a canoe safari, while on put a lion in your lap, the majestic Peace River of he the wily predators of British Columbia, he many species within spitball- rubber life raft to catch up on distance. Using a his fishing.

wounded rabbit call of his own design, he brings coyotes, fox, jaguar, leopard, lion, anything and everything eyeball to eye- I hall with theatre-goers in an I uncanny display that but defies laws of survival. Wives 1 old to Get Nixon to Pull Out Troops STOCKHOLM (UPI) Iwo Dallas housewives, who believe their husbands are prisoners of war in North Vietnam, were told today to convince president Nixon to pull American troops out of Vietnam. The two met with North Vietnamese officials in Sweden before flying to Rome for a Monday meeting at the Vatican. Murphy Martin, a newsman for WFAA radio and television in Dallas, said the meeting with the North Vietnamese produced a harder anti-Nixon line than was evident at previous sessions in Paris. Martin said North Vietnamese Ambassador Nguyen Dinh Thanh blamed U.

S. president Nixon for the continuation and told the w'ives their husbands would return as soon as Nixon agreed to pull out of Vietnam. Marin said, however, the comment was not in reference to the husbands of the Dallas: women in particular, but to all the prisoners of Thanh would not teU the women if their husbands were alive in Vietnam. When asked if he would show the photographs showing how prisoners were treated in North Vietnam, he claimed he did not have them. When he was asked to release the names of prisoners, he went back to his anti Nixon remarks, always referring to Nixon by name.

Thanh told the women, Bonnie Singleton, 27, and Paula Hartness, 30, to return to Dallas because trips such as they were making did not do any good. Martin said Thanh took harder line than the North Vietnamese officials in Paris, but he also said there was more and in their conversation. Martin, Mrs. Singleton and Mrs. Hartness left today for meeting in the Vatican and with the Italian foreign minister in Rome.

For Our Men In Service Christmas Cards To Vietnam Time Again Fannin countp residents have remembered their men serving in Vietnam during the Christmas season with cards and other remembrances. Several names have been run in earlier editions of the Bonham Daily Favorite. Here are new names to add to your Christmas card lists for Vietnam. They should be mailed early in December to arrive by Christmas. Don R.

Weeks, EO 1 B728512 USN M. C. B. 74 A Co. FPO San Francisco, Calif.

96601 Mike D. Weeks B72S513 USN M. C. B74 A Co. Det ALPHA FPO San Francisco, Calif.

96601 Namath Hopes It'll Be Better Show By STU CAMEN UPI Sports Writer Joe Namath left quite a bit to be desired Thursday night when he substituted for vacationing Johnny Carson on the NBC Tonight Show, but the New York quarterback hopes to put on a better show' Sunday against the OaWand Raiders. The Raiders, currently leading the American Football Western Division bv percentage points over Kansas Holiday Visitors In Bonham Homes Visiting in the home of Mrs. L. Ross Garner, son of Mrs, Mort Johnson and Jrs. Ruby Grace Garner of Bonham, died f-henault during the Thanks u- in Houston Friday, Nov.

28, 19- in? holidass are a and 69, after suffering an apparent his wife, Mr. and Mrs, Ht attack. I Horton from San Angelo and Funeral service? will be held their daughter, Grant i sat 3 p. m. Monday at Wise Fu-: sey her husband and children r.eral chapel.

3ee Ann, Doug and guest, Miss The body will arrive in Dallas Cathy Tully from Orange, late Sunday and will be brought Miss Ellen Smith has as 1 overland to Bonham. day guests Mr. and Mis. I Survivors are his mother; his ihompson, Mr, and Mrs. wife, Mrs.

LouaMa Garner of the Thompson and daughters aro- home in Houston; two sons, i lyn, Dana Ann and Pern non; i Louis Ross Garner of Austin, Carrollton, Mr, and Mrs. J. and I iiomai Stone Garner of ThompS' ti, Mr. an-! Houston, and two daughters, Thompson and children. Steph- Miss Caroline Garner of Austin pn.

Mike and Lisa of and Miss Louanna Garner of I and Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Kelly Three Women Are Eyed as Judge WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Nixon administration, which has come under distaff criti- Haynsworth who was rejected by the Senate last week, is chief judge of the 4th U.S.

Circuit Court of Appeals. If Nixon were to pick a woman judge, he might choose between U.S. District Court Constance Baker Mot- 1 ley, of New York, who is black, and Sarah Hughes, of Dallas, The highest-ranking wo- i man judge in the federal system is Shirley M. Hufstedler, who is on the bench of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

There also are several women who are members of Congress and the federal regulatory commissions some of whom, as lawye might be considered for the court. Nixon May See Steers-Porkers Play Saturday HOUSTON President I Nixon is to attend the football game between first ranked Texas and third ranked Arkansas at Fayetteville. next Saturday, 1 the Houston Post said Saturday. The post said, tn a dispatch from Little Rock by Jack lagher, a staff writer, that Nix- on was expected to fly to Fay- 1 etteville Saturday with Arkansas Sen. William Fulbright, a lead- mg dove on the Vietnam War I and chairman of the Senate For- jeign Relations Committee.

Fulbright used to play on the Arkansas football team and was president of the University of Arkansas before he became I a senator. It was said in Florida, where Nixon is spending the weekend, that there are no plans at pres- I ent for him to attend the foo- i bali game but that does not necessarily mean he will not at- 1 tend. Gallagher said the President I will speak on Friday to sports writers gathered for the game about physical fitness. Charles Wilkinson, former Okia homa coach and now a member of the President's Council on Phvsicai Fitness, will be with Nixon at that time, Gallagher 1 said. City, will be making their first visit to Shea Stadium since last championship game, which they lost to the Jets, 2723.

Oakland needs a victory to retain its lead in the West, while the Jets can lock up their second straight Eastern crown with a triumph. Broadway Joe followed up his Thanksgiving workout by replacing Carson on the Tonight Show and one of his guests was teammate Bake Turner, who displayed his talents as a country singer. Turner, used rather sparingly as the backup flanker, will be upon for extensive duty for the rest of thp season with leading receiver Don Maynard on tho sidelines with a chipped bone in his instep. The game will be a preview of either one of the newly-instituted division playoff contests or of the championship game itself. Under the system, the first place team in the East meets the runnerup in the West and vice versa with the winners advancing to the championship contest.

The od- dsmakers, obviously unimpressed with Turner's singing and ehit-chat, have the Raiders four-point favorites. Put a safety padlock on your home with our full protection package policy! MEADE Insurance Co. 7th Center 583-2231 for to tha mtmi turi. Houston. whose goals American diplo- I mats consider too ill-defined.

I The sources were ino on the forthcoming NATO ministerial council, which is to be held in Brussels Dec. 3-5. Rogers, who heads the U.S. delegation, leaves for Brussels Tuesday. and Jim Kattabeau oi Dalb- and Dr.

and Mrs. Ivan Box Fayetteville, Ark. Dan Ingbsh of port Worth vis ited aunt. Miss Inglish Friday. Mr.

and Mrs. Arelan Cox ant daughter Tiffany, Lubbock wen holiday weekend visitors in thi rf Mr and Mrs. Willian and sons Jei mak nom undt co first two and Davi appointing enough posts, has three members of sex are under for possible ap- to the Supreme nr-. General John niie discussing with possible factors in i Supreme Court was discreet en- i say who the women were or to he chances were that be appointed. Nixon picked men in making his appointments to the Chief Justice Burger was a U.S.

wrt judge when he and Clement the Classifieds THE BIG ONE! r.i. 'f 4 c' ujatai'me ib Also a i Box Office Opens 6:15 Features 6:45 8:30 fPrime Smith c.r; Co 01 Sunday Feature Times: Week Days: 6:45 8:47 Sc-'1 I antastic I Hunter's Haven Amazing Archery Unix advent Man-eating Lion Bi' 1-drinking natives Boat-smashing Hippo Wiim (G) Whole-family hijuh adventure Color 4 Special Engagement Wed. x. Only Texas Power Light Company COOM DEMONSTRATION Sam Rayburn Memorial Armory DEC. 2,1969 7 P.M.

1. Featuring the newest methods of electric cooking 2. Showing new ideas of food preparation 3. New appliance demonstration 4. Door Prizes! ray Home Advr Denison Assisting Jackie Dewoody Bonham Barbara Nelon Decatur RUTH BELL Sherman BECKY ANDERSON Sujphur Springs THE PUBLIC IS INVITED.

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About The Bonham Daily Favorite Archive

Pages Available:
72,976
Years Available:
1913-1977