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Lubbock Avalanche-Journal from Lubbock, Texas • Page 10

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Lubbock, Texas
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10
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United Press International week and to AIGON Viet Con; Saturday staged a surprise rhttime mortar attack on the the total lost guerrillas since the air war was launched in 1965. The spokesman said the U.S. 1st Air Cavalry Division Communists had greatly headquarters in the central high- their antiaircraft fire lands while the horse- power in the Dong Hoi region in were celebrating the southern panhandle of first year in Viet Nam. Some Americans were reported killed. American military spokesmen sii id a guerrilla band of unknown size rounds of mor area at An Khe, Communist ground about 260 miles northeast ofjQuant Nam province North Viet Nam, frequent target of the U.S.

raiders. Chopper Crashes, Burns In South Viet Nam. a U.S. lobbed about 27 Marine CH46 helicopter also ar shells into the was shot down Friday by fire in I 75 miles! at the RIGHT HERE YOl'R Lynn Morris, 3, peers over the jury box in a Dallas courtroom during naturalization ceremonies. Rebecca, Korean by birth, came to this country at the age of six months as a ward of a Dallas couple.

She was adopted by the couple Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Ray Morris six months later. Rebecca received her American citizenship papers after taking the oath from Judge T. Whitfield of Dallas.

(AP Wirephoto) Second Church Blast Victim Dies: Rites Set PLAINV1EW Mrs. Doris Lee Lauterdalc. 40, of Ralls became the second victim of the Aug. 22 explosion of the Church of God in Christ here when she died at 12:30 p.m. Saturday in Medical Cen- lei Hospital of injuries suffered in the blast, which also killed Mrs.

E. A. Duke, of Pampa. Mrs. services be at 2 p.m.

Monday ini the Church of God in Christ in Ralls with Bishop J. E. Alexander of Floydada officiating. Burial will be in Ralls Cemetery under direction of Carter Funeral Home in Ralls. Survivors include her parrot Mr.

and Mrs. Albert Anderson, Lorenzo; her husband, Anthony Young Lauterdale; two naughters. Rebecca Lee and Lela Mae, both of the home; nine brothers and three sisters. She had boon a resident Ralls since 1912. of Th oiniis Rasco Area Rites Set For Mrs.

LAMESA (Special) Mrs. W. E. Ogle, 78, died Friday at herl home in Visalia, Calif, after aj lenghty illness. Services will be held ati Brooks a Miller Funeral Home in Visalia today at 1 p.m.

A second service will be held at Brannon Funeral Chapel im Lamesa Tuesday at 3 p.m. with the Rev. Jimmie Hardy, pastor ol the Bryan St. Baptist Church, officiating. Burial will follow in Lamesa Cemetery under the direction of Brannon Philips Funeral Home.

Survivors include her husband. Ogle of the home; three sons, Jerry Newbrough and Clarence Newbrough. both of Lamesa, Odell Newbrough ff Memphis, one sister, Mrs. Minnie Wayland of Vernon; three brothers, Furnie Johnson of Vernon and Willie Johnson nnd Joe Johnson of Houma, nine grandchildren and 10 great-grandchildren. Pallbearers will be Olin Nor- Iris, Wayne Calhoun, Bub Williams, Frank Freeman, W.

F. Bingham and T. H. Calhoun. LUMBERMAN Sliamhurger In Vecident Hunting They said tliey immediate reports on ties or damages.

But a first sergeant scene reported: of the boys in the ceremonv are dead right now." The 1st Division polices the strategic central highlands of Sou til Viet Nam and it has pioneered and developed the concept of war nunting the enemy in choppers and using others to fly in troops when they are found. Lose Two Planes In cd two more shot Friday and Saturday. The pilots of both were rescued, one in a daring operation carried out under the muzzles of Communist had no north of Saigon. The chopper and burned, injuring 14 I Americans. In other air strikes, Guam- based B52 bombers hit a suspected Viet Cong base camp and training areas in Tay Ninh province northwest of Saigon near Cambodia.

The plane shot down Saturday was an Air Force F105I Thunderchief, hit while on a strafing run near Dong Hoi. pilot, Capt. Edward Skowron of Cheshire, parachuted into the sea and the air war against North was picked up 20 minutes later Nam, a spokesman report- by a seaplane while Communist down shore batteries blazed away rom three sides. ait I Util Plane Lands MUST PI IILK EMBRAi Denmark's Crown Princess Margarethe embraces her French fiance, Count Henri Marie Jean Andre do Laborde de third secretary of the French Embassy in London, in Copenhagen Saturday after the count flew in from Brussels. He will slay with the Royal Family at Fredensborg Castle north of Copenhagen.

(AP Wirephoto) DESIRES POUCE PROTECTIONS Survey Beliefs Shatters About Negro ants P.A PATRICK I. SIX) AN WASHINGTON (UPI) Sen -if piloted Rims near heavily defended Done Hoi. 1 rr, at? subcommittee surveys re- and 1 he Air orce seaplane wash A leased Saturday tended to He It brought to five the number of American planes downed in the raids over the North this AT AGE 92 renci Dies Of Attack DEAUVILLE, France (AP) actress Cecile Sorel, by Capt. Duane 32, of Seymour, Wis the Communist waited until the plane landed in the Narrow bay and then opened up. first blew geysers 40 yards from our Miller said.

could also which meant bly ihrowin tars at Capt. Harold iew, Fla they were proba moie than mor- G. King, 32, the navigator, W. M. WALLACE Hill Wallace Services Monday in his automobile "ho by Frcnch I Texline in iS ia.

Of Goldsboro, N.C. so Dies In Snyder Chambliss Dies: Riles Sel SNYDER Thornes Bunyan Rasco, 50, a Snyder resident foi the two years, died Saturday afternoon in Cog- oili Memorial Hospital following a short illness. Funeral will be at 2:30 p.m. Monday in the Firsi Baptist Church at Groesbeek. with the Rev.

M. Rexrode ol Dallas officiating, assisted the Rev. Odis Carruth of Stephenville and the Rev. Jack H. Smith.

Burial will be in Fortenberry Cemetery where graveside rites will be conducted by the Groes- bock Masonic Snyder arrangements were handled by Bell-Seale Funeral Home. Born in Thornton in 1916, he was employed by Service Pipeline Co. since moving here. He was a member of the Baptist Church and the Masonic Lodge. He is survived by his wife, Mrs Mary Coffee Rasco; his mother, Mrs.

Debbie Rasco of Thornton; a daughter, Mrs. Shirley Gibson of Odessa; a son, Alan of Snyder; three sisters, Mrs. Gertrude Boatler of Thornton, Mrs. Clara Cox of Dallas, and Mrs. Madie Clem- rner of Kingsville; three brother', Homer and Rawls, both of Thornton, and Ralph of Hutchens; and two grandchildren.

Airs. Katie Services Scheduled BROWN FI ELD (Special) Funeral services for Mrs. Lulu May Chambliss, 86, will be held at 2:30 p.m. today in the Immanuel Baptist Church, with the Rev. Darold Baldwin, pastor, officiating.

He will be assisted by the Rev. Ed Crowe, pastor of the First Baptist Church. Burial will follow in the Terry County Memorial Cemetery under direction of Brownfield Funeral Home. Mrs. Chambliss died Friday at 9 p.m.

in Brownfield General Hospital. She came to Terry County with her family in 1924 and farmed until the death of her husband in 1940. At the time of her death she was living ith a son in Brownfield. Survivors include seven sons, Loyd, Sam and Marcus, all of Brownfield, Robert of Plains, Roy of El Paso and Woodrow and J. both of Ojai, two daughters.

Mrs. Ora Bello Chopin of Ojai and Mrs. Lois Jones of Clovis; 33 grandchildren and 38 great-grandchildren. Ted A. Henderson's Kite AMARILLO (AP)- One of the! best-known former lumber dealers in Texas, C.

D. Shamburger! died Friday night of suffered when his shotgun dis-j charged as he placed it in his: car Wednesday. Shamburger, head of C. D.l Shamburger Co. until he sold the company in 1963, was found slumped half i on his ranch Texas Panhandle Prairie I)og Hunt Dallam County Sheriff R.

C. Johnson said Shamburger had been hunting prairie dogs. He was given emergency treatment at Dalhart and then taken to St. Anthony i a 1 here, where he died. Two ranch employes, returning from a funeral, found the music Services for W.

M. (Bill) Wal- victim about 12:30 p.m. Wednes- movie roles and wrote books. In the North Friday. They ace 16, 3010 1st Place, who 10 miles northeast of 1950, she entered a religious or- seven oil depots, storage Texline.

Shamburger, 54, lived in Dal- ter widely held assumptions about what Negroes in the ghettos want. Small but carefully controlled interviews in Watts, Harlem, N.Y., Chicago and tha burst of mortars Baltimore indicar into the air 30 to average Negro: Lives stead of in near-anarchy. In- neing concerned about hear explosions from the shore police brutality, he wants much the nation's prepared for the New rhts died Saturday of a heart attack. She was 92. One of her earliest roles was the 20-year-old girl Celimente in Moliere's fast he practically walked on water getting to the downed pilot." King said Sutton tied a rope more police protection.

Cares, Rejects, Loathes I little for civil ri of laws. Rejects school integration, lie wants school's that can teach basic discipline, manners and personal hygiene. Loathes welfare programs. with the Comedie iaround Skowron and pulled She played it so well that sheihim riKht Within two stayed in the part for 32 until she was 60. After that she went on the hall stage, played a few was dead on arrival at Method st Hospital Friday morning, are ider in Deauville.

The late Premier lumber Clemenceau likened Miss W. Rix Funeral 1 lome company. The firm owned more to a victory trophy and scheduled for 2 p.m. Monday at after he sold the the Chapel. The Rev.

Leroy Norton and the Rev. J. R. Church will officiate. Burial will be in the City non and of Lubbock Cemetery under di- until he rection of Rix Funeral Home.

Wallace, a native of Bromide, and a former resident of Meadow, had been a Lubbock since 1945. He was member of the Western II iJ Baptist Church. He married th former Margy Perry of Lubbock Army Air force in 1945. Survivors include his wife; two sons, Clifford of Big Spring and Walter of the home; a daughter, Sheila Jo of the home; i(c his parents, Mr. and Mrs.

W. M. Wallace, 2001 16th three brothers, James Wallace, Lawton. Wade L. Wallace, 2518 Marshall and Lester Wallace, 2001 16th a sister, Mrs.

Rosie Lee Basham of Indianapolis, and two grandchildren. Pallbearers will he George Lampe, Ross Spencer, A. T. Bradley, E. M.

Irby, Ed Spencer and David Weir. than 30 lumber yards. Attended S.Ml Shamburger was born in Ver-jand the lived in Wichita Falls France, moved to Dallas. He was on the board of the Wichita National Bank. The lumberman resident of nipci Militaiy Boonville, and Southern Methodist University in Dallas.

He was a flight officer of the in World War serving in the India-China- Burma theater. Survivors include his widow; a son, Don minutes the seaplane, was airborne and headed for U.S. Air Force and Navyj planes flew 96 missions against hit and areas and transporta- Georges tion facilities near Thanh Hoa. Sorel jVinh, and the Mu Gia Pass as Mar- well as Dong Hoi. shall Ferdinand Foch described her as most courageous! greatest artist of In July, Miss Sorel fell and a broken collarbone.

She was recuperating at the attended home of a friend when she died. Academy in -------Services EELAM) I IKES Well known Today Tor Mrs. Clark ASPERMONT (Special)- Services for Mrs. Elizabeth Hodges Shamburger; two Clark, 77, who died at 11:30 p.m. s.

Lynne Meredith Friday at Kent County Nursing Shamburger; Home in Javton. are scheduled Texas and New for 3 p.m. today at the Jayton Church. DALLAS Leland Fikes, 64, who learned the oil business in the boom days of the East Texas Field, died Saturday. His oil and real estate dealings reached into many states and the District of Columbia.

Fikes studied law and petroleum engineering at the Univer- MRS. ,1. MM Mrs. Mullins Services Slated ind Miss Susan and two sisters, Mrs. Eugene Clark and Mrs.

P. P. Langford Methodist Jr. The widow and children reside in Dallas and the sisters in tor Wichita last year from the American Saturday just after noon in her University in Washington, D.C. home after a four month illness.

James T. Jones Sen ices T. Jones, 59, a Fort 1887, in Stephen County, and was the complex will be named the Bar Denver Railroad cm- a resident of Stonewall Countv Leland Fikes Research Center. Set LITTLEFIELD i vices for Mrs. Katie Funeral services will be at 2:30 Tuesday at Downey Church Christ at Ted Allen 1 ond-year School of was killed Wicker.

86 mother of Littlefield banker, E. J. tJacki Wicker, are scheduled for 2 p.m. today in the Belton Church of Christ. W.

F. Wiley, minister of the a one-car church, will officiate. Burial willjtesia, N.M. be in the Belton Cemetery. I J.

J. Walling, minister of Mrs. Wicker, a resident of Lit- Downey Church of Christ, will ilefteld for nine years, died Burial will be in Rose day evening in the Littlefield Hill Cemetery at Whittier, di for Henderson, 21, a see- tudent at Sunset Preaching here who Thursday evening in accident west of Ar- Hospitality House. She had previously lived at a Lubbock rest home. Survivors include her son, three sisters and three grandchildren.

K. L. Hardin Services Set MUNDAY (Special)- Services will be at 2:30 p.m. today in First Baptist Church here for Mrs. E.

L. Hardin. 64. a lifetime resident of Munday and mother of Mrs. Willie Burleson of Lubbock.

Burial will be in Johnson Memorial Cemetery, at Munday, directed by McCauley Funeral Home. Mrs. Hardin died Friday night at Knox County Hospital in Munday. She and Edward L. Hardin, who preceded her in death in 1953.

were married Dec. 24. 1917. Survivors include, besides the daughter of Lubbock, five other daughters, a son, two sisters, a brother, 28 grandchildren and lour great-grandchi 1 dren STUDENTS DEMOHTKATE KUALA LUMPUR (UPIi More than 1,000 students demonstrated Saturday to protest certifi- (-ites" required to enter the university here. The rates are given only to youths who can prove they are not Communist or subversive.

by Rose Hill Funeral Lamesa Kites I or Rulstcrhaum LAMESA (Special) Services for Jimmie Bulsterbaum, 33 who died Friday in McAllen of a gunshot wound, will be held at I p.m. in the First Baptist Church in Lamesa with Dr Georye E. Worrell, pastor, and the Rev, Earl Dunn of Alpine officiating. Burial will follow in Lamesa Cemetery under the direction of Branon Philips Funeral Home. Survivors include his wife Bennie and three children of the home in McAllen; his par years, died ili Methodist Hos- James Worth ploye for 40 day morning pital here.

Funeral will be at 4 p.m. Monday in the Ford Memorial Chapel, with Dr. J. Ralph Grant, jorary doctor of laws The Rev. Marvin Fisher, pas- of the Rotan Methodist Church, and the Rev.

Bob Doss, pastor of the Peacock Church, will officiate, will be in the Jayton under direction of Littlepage Bank. On it will be built a com- officiatin plex of teaching, research and by treatment facilities. A part of Mrs. J. M.

Mullins, 71, a degree year resident of Lubbock, The oil and real estate man Baptist was known in Dallas as the do- Buria will be held Monday in Sanders Memorial! Funeral Home in Aspermont. Mrs. Clark was born Sept. 29, Services it 2 p.m. nor of a site for a new Wadley Chapel with the Rev.

W. Fer- Research Institute and Blood guson, retired Baptist minister. the sociate Baptist Mrs. He will be assisted Rev. J.

T. Bolding, as- minister of the First Church here, Mullins lived in Tom He sees current welfare programs as causing degeneration forcing families to sepa- shat- rate. Surveys Released The surveys were released by th Senate subcommittee on executive reorganization which has concluded first-round hearings on the plight of the cities. They were by John F. Kraft the Ford Foundation York Times and the American Broadcasting Co.

The survey of Watts was completed this spring. Some of the findings have been made public before. But surveys in Harlem and otlvr areas were completed only two weeks ago. Sen. Abraham Ribicoff (D- Conni, chairman of the subcommittee.

noted that previous have been unrealiablc I because Negro resident refused to give white outsiders accurate information. Polled By Residents To breakdown this barrier against the Kraft firm hired and trained ghetto I residents to do th job. Unlike past surveys that have dealt mainly with Negro women, the Kraft teams hunted down selected Negro men to fill out carefully prepared questionnaires. result was that the I survey started from a basic trust among off said. of this, we have reason to believe this data is more accurate than other data that has reached Family Falls One of the main findings was that without the man, the family falls apart.

Ignorant, unskilled or unable, he cannot find a job. He leaves his family to permit the mother and children to get welfare income. The children are left to streets. As they become of age, the cycle is repeated. The Harlem phase attempted to determine what could be died Parmit family stability.

Want To Stop Crime The overwhelming response was a demand for stopping crime in the street. Dope addiction was pinpointed as the cause of crime. Whole neighs had been turned over to junkies ready to kill, maim or steal for a fix. No one is safe on the ghetto streets. An equally important re- 48- about 33 years before moving to Gage, about 20 years ago.

She married R. Clark in Feb- where ruary, 1912. She was a member He of the Methodist Church. Survivors include her husband TI rp was the need for better He belonged to many civic and Dean, before moving to housjnr -r imo to protect the families social organizations in Dallas, in 1918 where her hus- from 1error the stmHs band was an area farmer. he had lived since 1938.

was born in Chickasha, but was reared in Texas. He lived for a number of years Baptist one son, Lowell Robertson of in Corsicana. J- T. Jayton; one brother. Buck Hod- Cause of death was not an- otficiating.

Burial will of Lubbock; a nephew whom nounced. pastor of the First Church, and the Rev Boldin he in City of Lubbock Cemetery she and her husband had reared Survivors include his widow; under direction of Rix Funeral from childhood, Walter L. Sim- a son, Lee Fikes of Dallas; and Home. mons of Denver, Colo Jones joined the railroad at grandchildren and three grandchildren. Clarendon, and worked at Shamrock and Amarillo before moving to Lubbock in 1941.

He was bearers a member of the Brotherhood of Railway Clerks. Survivors include his i fe two sons, James Larry Jones of nine great- a brother Houston. William H. Fikes of She was a member of First Baptist Church. Survivors include one son, J.

M. Rt. .3, Lubbock; four daughters. Mrs. Louie McFarland.

330 1 25th Mrs. C. Ward 2507 57th Miss Mary Virginia Mullins of home and Mrs. Paul Waters, 261 42nd four brothers, Eugene Wilson provide a dignified home. When they were asked to volunteer what they thought was the w'orst.

problems, polic brutality was never mentioned. appears that iHilice malpractice is an issue in Harlem only insofar as the police are the Kraft study said. It said that Duchess Dies Vl California Home rected Home. The young ministerial student, a resident of Downey, was returning to Lubbock to hegin hisjing almost 15,000 acres second year of studies at the Phoenix, is the school here. I city park in the United ents, Mr.

and Mrs. Paul Bui- Oklahoma City and Terry Jones sterbaum of Alpine; one sister, thr home; and many rela- HILLSBOROUGH, Calif. (AP) Mrs. Ruth Phillips of Pampa, tivcs in this area. The Duchess of Manchester, and one burgh.

Frank Bright Dies; Kites Sci Services for Frank P. Bright 81, 1908 15th who died Friday night in Home, are seneauied at 2 3615 44th Earl findings in Watts of Wilson of El Paso, Cecil Wilson was not brutality protection. two great- exists in the ghettocs at present is apparently a Raymon situation whereby a small Royce I the large of Tom Dean and Paul Wilson but fnilure ofpin. nioolotectcej Guymond, seven but. failure of polic and Pallbearers will be Berryhill.

C. T. Wright, brother, Max of Edin- Pallbearers will be Bill Boone. 64, died at her home here Fri-S ivfonday in the Henderson Funer- Colonial Nursine Bumpass, Len-jmajority, making decent living scheduled at 2 roe Krr1on and Orb Vincent. but Bill Edmunson, Joe Benefield, day night after a long illness.

Mount tin Park. James (Red) cover- Scharnberg, and al Home Chapel with Kline Nall, elder of the Memphis Avenue near largest States. SAN SALVADOR dor sugar output is at Norman, Jake Duke Alexander George Fran Earl Bullock, cis Drogo Montague and wife, the former Nell Vere El Stead of Melltourne, Park under direction a record, moved to this San Francisco suburb four years ago from their cattle and coffee estate in Kenya, Africa. The duke and the two uu i sons Sidney Arthur Robin to 21 years ago. He was a member I I960 Church of Christ, officiating Burial will be in Resthaven of Henderson Funeral Home.

Bright, a retired grocer and a native of Warren County. resided in Athens for 40 AMBULAN NOTICE CE George Drogo, the Viscount Mandcville, and Angus Charles Lord Angus Montague, were with the duchess when she died. She is survived also by two sisters, Mrs. John Grimwade and Penelope Somerset of bourne, and three grandchildren. WATCHING I IIINCiS plans to regulate sales of some goods.

ago. of the Church of Christ, 7th Street and Avenue N. Survivors include i wife; three sons, Wr. T. Bright of Tucson.

Raymond Bright of Odessa and Frank P. Bright Sugarland; four daughters, Mrs. Logan Jones, 5310 IKth Mrs. H. W.

Letts of Corpus Christi, Mrs. A. Hancock, 1926 38th and Mrs. I. M.

Caldwell. 4803 52nd 11 grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. WE WIL SERVICES A A. NOW HAVE 11 RET AMBI LANCES OPERAT BY EFFICIENT, AND WELL TRAINED CONTINUE Ol AMBULANCE TO THE PEOPLE THE LUBBOCK EMERGENCY COURTEOUS, PERSONNEL. FUNERAL BENEFIT PLAN Available to all regardless of age or health condition.

For Information: Name Adilre- PATH FOR l.I\IN(i OSTS This chart the rise in living costs during the past decade in the I ruled States Through the month of the consun index In 1 a new- high of IF.3 based on an index of 100 derived from the of prices-fn the 1957-59 period. This that what cost $10 in 1957-59 period now costs $11.33. This average is shown on the chart as (AP Wirephoto Chart) -Jrendi 2) I irectors 40- 19th FI XERAL HOME Lubbock IQ.A Sunday Morning. September 4, 1966 TWO PLACES DOWSED Mortars Surprise Americans.

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About Lubbock Avalanche-Journal Archive

Pages Available:
420,456
Years Available:
1927-1977