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Fort Worth Star-Telegram from Fort Worth, Texas • 47

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Fort Worth, Texas
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47
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BLONDIE -by Chic Young BUT YOU PROMISED ME YOU WOULDN'T SPEND ANY LOOK, AT MONEY THE NEW HAT TODAY I BOUGHT TODAY, DEAR THERE'S FIVE DOLLARS WELL, THIS HAT WAS I DIDN'T SPEND, RIGHT THERE MARKED DOWN FROM FIFTEEN TO TEN DOLLARS 0000000 CHIC 12-10 YOUNG YOUR TEXAS ANCESTORS Information Sought On Wheeler Family By DAMON VEACH Mrs. Levi H. Pinson, 2018 6th Santa Monica, Calif. 90405, is researching several Texas families and is trying to contact descendants. James M.

Wheeler was born in 1852 in Luka, married July 10, 1880, Rachel Lavenia Jack, born July 20, 1860. They were married in Lamas County, Texas. Nothing is known of the Wheeler family before they Mutscher Asks Study in Texas On DDT Effects Star Austin Bureau A A study of the use of DDT and other persistent pesticides in Texas was requested Tuesday by Speaker G. F. (Gus) Mutscher.

Mutscher said he asked the Texas Legislative Council to "study the use of DDT and its residual effects upon the soil and streams of Texas and on the food supplies of both man and Texas wildlife." Public health officials, sportsmen and conservationists have expressed great concern over the information revealed by studies in other states and nations, Mutscher said. "If DDT and other related chemicals are responsible for only half the dangerous effects attributed to them, then it is of great importance that the State of Texas take immediate steps to see that all necessary controls be instituted to curtail the use of these pesticides." the speaker said. Mutscher noted that the study must be approved by the council's subject matter committee and the full council. Prince Philip's Mother Dies at 84 LONDON (AP) Prince Philip's mother, Princess Andrew of Greece, died in her sleep at Buckingham Palace early today. She was 84 and had been in poor health for some time The cause of death was not announced.

Born Princess Alice of Battenberg. Princess Andrew was a Briton by birth, a great-granddaughter of Queen Victoria, a sister of Earl Mountbatten of Burma, the wife of a prince of Denmark and Greece, and a sister of the late Queen Louise of Sweden. After her marriage in 1903 to a younger son or King George I of Greece, sh was known by her husband's name, according to the Greek custom. came to Texas. They lived in the areas of Blossom, Honey Grove, Ben Franklin and Paris.

Texas. The Jack family came to Texas in 1855 from Rhea County, Tenn. Rachel's parents were Thomas and Sarah Pearce Jark. Mrs. S.

C. Dye, Route 2. Claude, Texas 79019, would like to hear from anyone interested in the desendants of George Washington Cazzell or other members of the family. They moved to Texas from Kentucky. The Charlie Greenville Dye famly came to Texas in 1870.

Dye's wife was Gillie Crutcher Slaughter. Mrs. Opal Modowell, Rt. 2. Bangs, Tex.

76823, is just beginning her family research, and needs help on researching George Coffee, born about 1856, Kentucky, a son of A. J. Coffee. The Coffee family moved to Hopkins County, Texas. Mrs.

J. C. Buchanan, P. 0. Box 267, Pecos, Tex.

79772, would like to locate a cousin, Glady Pearl Comparet, who lived in Blanco, in 1918. She was about 12 years old at that time and lived with her grandmother, Mrs. Wilhimena Comparet. John A. Hardy, 1316 Redwood Lane.

Davis, Calif. 95616. would like to know about Alexander Jamison Mace, born in 1842 near Lexington, son of Irene (Dickey) and Benjamin Franklin Mace. They homesteaded near Winona, Smith County, Texas in 1847. A.

J. Mace enlisted on May 9, 1862, as a private in Company 11th Texas Infantry (Robert's Regiment) in Capt. J. H. L.

Stillwell's Company. He was promoted to first corporal in March, 1963, but there is no record of him after February, 1864, when he was in the hospital at Marksville. La. He is believed to have died during or soon after the war, and did not marry. Mrs.

John Berton Boling, Box 505, Albany, Tex. 76430, seeks any information on John Berton Boling, born around 1850, married Bertha Alice Keith. (The Keith family lived at one time in Red River County, Texas.) They had one son. John Berton Boling, born Oct. 7, 1900.

Bertha Alice Boling died about a vear later. Any data on this Boling family would be appreciated. Miss Electra Pearson, Box 542, Ranger, Tex. 76470, wants data en Burgess Alexander Donelson, born March 23, 1877, in Leon County, Texas, married Ida Dorn. Issue: Cone Allen, Robert Shuler, Talvy Ernestine, all born in Mitchell County, Texas.

Descendants are asked to contact Miss Pearson. Moonquake Detectors ecord Seven Impacts NEW YORK (AP) A Columbia University scientist keeping watch on the moonquake detectors left behind by Apollo 12 says seven impacts have been recorded near the Apollo 12 landing site since the astronauts left. Dr. Gary Latham of Colum- TOP COPPER USER The chief consumer of cop per is the electrical goods industry. a a no high is: umni On Court 10 St.

nic 0. S. be lita dad will 702 ter ery, side Dr. Mrs. kin John anar vices Lena ment Cole.

La. South Bone. Don; passed Grand Seale, Worth: Brandi Worth: Shriner. brother, Michael bearers: terfield, Services G. B.

Survivors: C. 8th B. 2 Dr. grandchildren; 1 Brily Mrs. A.

David. Rose Jr. sister, Mrs. 37, son, 2 Ave. 11 away In Arrangements Fowler Prairie; San Mausoleum, 0.

Blood Roy Friends 10 lieu Cole Mound, Miss and U.S. 740 111 Faubion, on Army, Husband. F. Iberia, Cole. Pall- Mon Mrs.

Ger- Jim Dr. 6104 Ow and and 21 at 8. Wednesday Morning, December 10, 1969 Fort Worth STAR-TELEGRAM 7-D TELL ME WHY! Last Names Have Several Origins Win The New Book of Knowledge (20 volumes). Send your questions, name. age, address to Me Why! care of the Star-Telegram.

Include Zip Code. In case of duplicate questions, the author will decide the Today's winner is: Rosalind Marshall, 14, Columbus, Ohio. By A. LEOKUM What do last names mean? At one time most people had only one name. About the nearest thing to having last names in ancient times was a custom among the Romans.

A second name was added to the first name to indicate the family or clan to which he belonged. In England, second names were added after the 11th Century for identification. They were called "ekenames." "Eke" meant Our word nickname comes from this. There were many different ways in which specific last names developed. For example, one way was to mention the father's name.

John, the son of William, might become Williamson, or Wilson, or Wills In Ireland, John 0'Brian would mean, John the son of Brian. In Scotland. John the son of Donald would be MacDonald. Last names also developed from the place where a person lived. From this came such names as Wood and Hall.

Nicknames were the source of many last names. For example, White, Brown, Longfellow, Drinkwater. Some people acted parts in medieval pageants or plays and acquired such names as Angell. Pope, King, and Knight. Among the Jews, names were suggested by objects in their neighborhoods in some cases.

For example, Bluementhal means flowery valley, Apfelbaum means apple tree. Names also came from the occupation of a person: Taylor, Smith, Wright, Carpenter, are examples of these. The fam us Rothschild family took its name from the sign of a red shield that was over their ancestor's shop. By the way, originally first names had a meaning too. Blanche is French for "white," given to a blond baby.

David meant "beloved." Susan meant "lily." FUN TIME The Chuckle Box Jack: I lost my pants when Iwas running. Mack: Were they loose? Jack: No, but your dog Teacher: Spell mouse. Billy: M-0-u-s. Teacher: What's at the end? Billy: A tail. to: "Riddles, Jokes, Tell Me Why!" Give Zip Code.

Today's Kathleen Griffin, Ft. McMurray, Al berta, Canada. The Washinaton Star Inc. Win The New Book of Knowledge Yearbook. Send your riddles, jokes, Drath Notices ALLEN MRS.

LOIS RUTH ALLEN, 2824 Willing, on Tuesday, December 9. Survivors: Sisters, Mrs. Lottie May Duke, Six Lakes, Michigan; Mrs. Llewellyn Lanham, Fort Worth; nephew, Samuel W. Lanham Hollywood, California.

Friends may call at Harveson Cole Funeral Home, 702 8th where services will be conducted 3:30 p.m. Thursday, Rev. Roy DeBrand officiatina. Interment Laurel Land. The family will be at 4808 Briarwood Lane.

Arrangements Harveson Cole. BARLOW FRED BARLOW, 71, 3508 St. Louis. Survivors: wife, Stella; daughters, Mrs. Stan Stopper, Florida: Mrs.

Bert Irby, Granbury. Mrs. Joe Mangan, Wyoming; sonS, Dewey, Arizona A. Rock dale: 13 grandchildren; three great-grandchildren. Services p.m.

Wednesday, Highview Baptist Church. Interment Pleasant View Cemetery, Bridgeport, Texas. Arrangements Owens-Brumley, 425 S. Henderson. 335-4557.

World Education By TV Predicted By RODNEY ANGOVE PARIS (AP) Science fiction writer Arthur Clarke predicts worldwide education by television one day, the death of cities and the end of the agricultural age. But he says traffic jams may continue "until the end of our lifetime." Clarke, who wrote the screenplay for the film 2001," was speaking to government experts from 100 countries Monday at a meeton communications, sateling lites sponsored by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). THE TALL, balding 52- year-old Briton was the first person to predict the use of communications satellites. He said they will make worldwide education by TV possible and will play the same role in world development as the railroad and the telegraph played in the continental development of the United States. For only $1 per pupil per year, Clarke said, communications satellites could provide the developing countries with the necessary educational hardware to "drag this whole planet out of ignor- QUESTIONED about the possibility of all these children becoming uniform by watching the same television, Clarke admitted: "We are already seeing some of this in the United But he added it would happen anyway because of rapid transportation.

With efficient communication, Clarke sees the time when many parents will no TV Crime Show Is Solid Entertainment ent By CYNTHIA LOWRY NEW YORK (AP) D.A.: Murder NBC's two-hour "world premiere" feature Monday night was good, old-fashioned crimeand-punishment story done without frills and solid enter- tainment. It was produced by Jack Webb and based on an actual Los Angeles case. The focus of the story, however, was an assistant district attorney as he bull-dogged a case of suspected murder, THE SUSPECT was an attractive young nurse whose two elderly and heavily insured husbands had succumbed under suspiciously similar circumstances. Murder for insurance is not unheard of in TV police action series but in this case the sus- not pense was built, around the identity or method of the criminal but on whether the police and prosecutor could build up enough evidence to convict her. BOB CONRAD.

late of "Wild, Wild West" played the hardworking assistant D.A. who not only developed the case but conducted the trial that wound up the story. He is bit wooden and sometimes awkward as an actor. His lot was not particularly helped by a subplot about his troubles with his wife, who was nagging him about adopting a baby and threatening to leave him when he was in the midst of the trial. J.

D. Cannon convincingly played the attorney and Diane Baker made a very handsome murderess. Howard Duff didn't have much to do as the chief deputy D.A. NBC. WITH A lot of help from a Bob Hope special, won the weekly Nielsen ratings Ch 1969 12 FORD IN LEAD New Car Slump Reflected Here By ROY EATON Star- Telegram Automotive Writer The new car sales slump ber was duplicated in Fort registrations for the month down 604 units from October and figures.

For the second consecutive tion list with strong performance given the credit. Chevrolet, shortages in hot-selling lines, bile, and Buick rounded out across the nation during NovemWorth and Tarrant County with showing 2.979 new vehicles retailed, slightly below last year's sales month Ford topped the registraby the sub-compact Maverick with some dealers still reporting came in second. Pontiac, Oldsmothe top five. DURING NOVEMBER in Tarrant County General Motors took 46 per cent of the new-car market. Ford Motor Co.

garnered 29 per cent of the market and Chrysler Corp. got 12 per cent. of the new car sales. Top 10 for the month included Chevrolet, Ford, Buick, Pontiac, Ford Torino, Oldsmobile, Ford Maverick, Chevrolet Chevelle, Plymouth Fury and Oldsmobile F-85. Volkswagen continued leadership among foreign cars with Toyota, Datsun, and Austin rounding out the top four.

Opel and Volvo tied for fifth place. Opel, which at one time was vying with Toyota for second place has slipped considerably in recent months. TRUCK SALES also slipped with Chevrolet, International, the top five. There were 640 istered during the month, down November 1969 New Car Report for the New Car Dealers Sales November American Motors 39 Buick 206 Cadillac 94 Chevrolet 604 Chrysler 49 Dodge 139 Ford 720 Imperial 37 Lincoln Mercury 91 Oldsmobile 226 Plymouth 186 Pontiac 250 FOREIGN Volkswagen 207 Tovota 41 23 Datsun Austin 20 6 Opel 6 Volvo byl UNMARRIED ADULTS CALL 261-3221 Someone Special Incorporated WEDNESDAY 5 P.M.-10 P.M. SMORGASBORD BUFFET DINNER $1.25 Per Person (Does Not Include Ribs or Filets) VANCE GODBEY'S 9800 JACKSBORO HIGHWAY CONSTIPATED DUE TO LACK OF FOOD BULK IN YOUR DIET TRY Kellogg's ALL BRAN" during November.

Ford led GMC and Dodge rounding out new commercial vehicles regalmost 200 units from October. Sales prepared by The Freeman Association of Fort Worth: Change from Change October Nov. '68 21 53 16 65 27 33 112 208 26 0 49 25 106 13 37 1 41 56 25 3 29 CARS 43 32 STRAD PURCHASED LONDON (Reuters) A 1729 Stradivarius violin was bought for 15,225 pounds ($36,540) by a man who wants to own it just for pleasure. "I do play the violin and in a mild way I am a collector." Enoch Davies said after making the purchase at Sotheby's. It was the second largest amount paid for a Strad.

A 1709 violin was sold for 22.000 pounds ($52,800) last year. ROSE POST REST MIST MOS MOT GIVE BOOKS FOR CHRISTMAS BRIDE, BACHELOR GIRL, GRANDMOTHER ALL ENJOY COOKBOOKS ON A GIVE A FLAG KIT FOR CHRISTMAS UNITED STATES FLAG By Mail Order $362 In our 3rd Floor Personal 312 Services Bureau Complete Flag Set contains 3 by 5 foot flag, 6-foot staff, halyard, metal mounting bracket and in a heavy cardboard self-storage carton. MAIL THIS COUPON Fort Worth Star-Telegram Personal Services P.O. Box 1870 Fort Worth, Texas 76101 Check Enclosed is Money Order Cash send. SET(S) at $3.62 per set Please NAME (please print) ADDRESS.

Offered As A Public Service of the FORT WORTH STAR TELEGRAM Drath Notices BEASLEY MORRIS BEASLEY SR. 75, 2613 Loving, passed away Monday, Survivors: Wife, Gertrude; son, Morris Beasley Jr. Fort Worth, daughter, Mrs. Clyds (Betty) Sioan, Fort Worth, Mrs. Gwen Wilhite, Indianapolis; grandchildren; great ch.id, Services 2 p.m.

Wednesday. Lucas Memorial Chapel. Rev. Dwain Green officiating. Interment Mt.

Olivet. Arrangements Lucas Funeral Home, 517 N. Sylvania, 838-2337. CARR MRS. VIRGINIA GRACE CARR, 79, 113 Cedar Lane, Arlingion, passed away Monday after lengthy Illness.

Native Boston, Kentucky. A Arlington resident 12 years. Member OES; University Baptist Arlington. Survivors! Daughters, Miss Margaret Carr; Mrs. B.

Fuller; tour grandchildren, Arlingion. Ser vices 10 a.m. Wednesday Moore Funeral Chapel, Arlington. Rev. Don Pike officiating.

Interment Kentucky. Arrangements Hugh M. Moore Sons, 1219 North David Drive, Arlington. COMBS MRS. GLORIA D.

COMBS, 39, 4500 Cole, passed away Sunday. Survivors: Husband, James daughter, Miss Donna Combs; parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. D.

Glass; brother, J. B. James Jr. Services were heid 1 p.m. Tuesday St.

Stephen Presbyterian Church, 2600 Sandage, Rev. R. W. Jabionlowski Jr. officialInterment Garden of ina.

Memories. Arrangements Meissner's, Nashville at Ave. B. longer have to leave home for work. -Don't commute, communicate" will be the slogan.

And then will come the death of cities, he said, and after that the end of the agricultural age. While traffic jams, might continue "until the of our lifetimes, Clarke predicted that vast areas eventually will be turned back into wilderness "and through this new wilderness will wander the electronic nomads of the centuries ahead." Composer Of Fascist Music Dies SANTA MARGHERITA LIGURE, Italy (AP) Giuseppe Blanc, the Italian composer whose musical comedy song supplied the music for the anthem of Italian Fascism, has died in a local clinic. He was 83. An announcement yesterday said Blac died Sunday of a bronchial ailment. Blanc wrote the music which the Fascists adopted for a 1913 musical comedy.

Italian Alpine troops sang it in the Libyan campaign, and it so appealed to Benito Mussolini that the made it the Fascist anthem vinezza, or Youth, with words by poet Salvatore Gotta. Blanc collected huge royalties on the music but gave them all to charity. Miss Teen Injured In Game PITTSBURGH (AP) Melissa Babish, the 1969 Miss Teenage America, is listed in good condition in a local hospital after suffering a possible head injury in a girl's basketball game. The 17-year-old senior at suburban south Fayette High School bumped her head on the hardwood court late in the fourth quarter of a game at Trinity High School Monday night. A spokesman at Mercy Hospital said there was no cause for alarm.

race in the report for the week of Nov. 24-30. NBC's average for the period was 20.2. with CBS second at 19.3 and ABC pulling up third with 15.4. Hope's special topped the chart.

followed by Peggy Fleming's ice special and the hour, all NBC programs. High School Boycott Planned by Students Leaders of Mexican-American said classes would be pupils boycotted today at Cyrstal City High School in support of demands laid before school CRYSTAL CITY (AP)- board members. There was immediate authoricomment from school Severita Lara, 17, a the school junior, said board to members refuse consider laid before them complaints night. at a meeting last It then was decided to stage a walkout after today's classes began, she said. Miss Lara said as many as 250 pupils may take part in the boycott within the next two or three days.

About 700 pupils, most of them Mexican-Americans, attend the high school in this predominantly Mexican-American Jose Angel Gutierrez, an active Chicano leader here, said the school board voted not to take any action on the pupils' grievances, deciding it was an administrative mat- The pupils demanded that changes be made in selection of class representatives, that teachers refrain from calling pupils names such as vegetables and that textbooks on CUNNINGHAM MRS. GRACE CUNNINGHAM, 77, 2213 Yucca, passed away Monday. Survivors: Daughters. Mrs. Jim Clarydy, Mrs.

Dorsey Mitchell, Mrs. Lillian Tyson, Fort Worth: Miss Gladis Cunningham, New York City; Mrs. T. E. Colley, Houston; three grandchildren, two great grandchildren.

Services 11 a.m. Wednesday Shannon's North Chapel. Rev. Robert Jones officiating. Graveside service Thursday, Memorial Park Cemetery, Oklahoma City.

Arrangements Shannon's North, 111 W. Northside Dr. 624-2191. ESTEP MASTER MARTIN ANDREW ESTEP, York Drive, on Monday, December 8. Survivors: Parents, Mrs.

W. R. Estep, Jr. brother, William Merl: sisters, Rhoda Elaine, Mary McDowell, Jane Estep paternal grandfather, W. R.

Estep, Matthews, South Carolina; maternal grandparents, Mr. and Merl H. McDowell, West Chester, lowa. Friends may call at Harveson Cole Funeral Home, 702 8th until noon Wednesday. Services will be conducted 2 p.m.

Wednesday Gambreli Street Baptist Church. Dr. Lloyd Elder officiating. Graveside services 4:30 p.m. WednesView Cemetery, daY, Valley Cooke County, Texas.

Family appreciate memorials to Tarrant County Chapter of National Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, 410 Medical Arts Bldg. Arrangements Harveson Cole. FRIDAY DAWN RENEE FRIDAY, months old. 6112 Brocks Lane, away Sunday at local passed hospital. Survivors: AIC and Fort Mrs.

Walter M. Friday, Worth; grandfather, Walter M. Friday Jr. North Carolina; grandparents, CMSgt, and Mrs. Randy Shelhorse Carswell Air Force Base.

Services 10 a.m. Wednesday, Greenwood Chapel. Father Joseph Lugo officiatina. Interment Greenwood. 3100 Arrangements Greenwood.

White Settlement at University, 336- 0548. 10 12 00 byl GERLICH THOMAS ROBERT GERLICH, 63. 109 Westfork passed away Monday, Mason and Survivors: Wife, Mary Jane: sister. Mrs. Imogene Coker, Fort Worth; niece: nephews.

Services 2 p.m. Wednesdav Gause Ware Memorial Park. Rev. Paul Duckett and Rev. Dave Cavin officiating, Graveside services under aUspices Masonic Lodge 942 Greenwood.

Arrangements Gause-Ware, 1251 Pennsylvania, 332-3232. ance. ties. town. HAFFNER SHIRLEY A.

HAFFNER, 46, 2908 San Rose, passed away Tuesday. Survivors: Husband, Merle sons, Larry: Donald; Fred; mother, Mrs. Ellen Black- nail, Fort Worth: sisters, Morgan. Gretna, LouisiMrs. Dick Price, MontgomAlabama; Mrs.

Nicholas Schnitzius, California: brother, Neil Blacknall Fort Worth. Serp.m. Thursday PolytechPresbyterian Church. Rev. officiating.

Interment Rose Hill. of flowers tamily requests donations be made Carter Bank. Arrangements Meissner's Nashville at was. Ave. JEFFREYS CHARLES THOMAS JEF.

FREYS, 66. 858 E. Jessamine. Survivors: Wife, Bessie: son, Charles Wayne Jeffreys, Fort Worth; brothers. Gainor and Jeffreys, Fort Worth.

Services p.m. Wednesdav Shannon's Chapel, Dr. N. Quentin Grey officiatina. Rose Interment HILL Arrangements Shannon's South, 3015 Merida.

926-3314. Merida. 926-3314. MONDRAGON ANTONIO MONDRAGON, 75. Survivors: Wife.

Hermenia: son. Asencion, lanacio Mondracon. Worth. Antonio Mondragon. Saginaw: daughters, Mrs.

NaviGonzalez. Chicago, Mrs. Hope Molina, Dallas, Mrs. Connie Perez, Diego, Mrs. AngeMartinez.

Ft. Worth, Mrs. Margarete Mendoza. Mexico. 6 great grandchil- dren.

Arrangements pending Shannon's North, W. North- 624-2191. MeDOUGALL MRS. EFFIE Tuesday, MCDOUGALL, Bingham. on Dec.

Arrangements Harveson MORELAND MRS. ROSCOE LEVON MORELAND, 1201 Thannisch Arlington. Survivors: daughters, Linda Brooks, Kimberly Brooks. Arlington; sons. Brooks.

many, Martin Kevin Brooks, Arlington; mother, Minnie Lump- king; Wanda Lump- grandchildren. Wacos two a.m. Thursday ens-Brumiey Chapel, Interment Mexican-American contributions, bi-lingual educators and Mexican counselors be added, and that Sept. 16, Mexico's Independence Day, be made an official school holiday. Nov.

the pupils said 10 they won a moral victory when the school board voted against coronation of an algroup's queen at the school homecoming foothigh ball game. Anti-Red League BANGKOK, Thailand (Reuters) The Third Assembly of the World AntiCommunist League opened here today with a warning that the Communists are putting their wiles to work in the United States. Comment came from Dr. Ku Cheng Kang of Nationalist China, honorary chairman of the league, who urged the "great silent majority" in America to help the league fight Communism. Skita, Wet Spot The average annual for Sitka, Alaska, is feet.

Waco. p.m. Owens-Brumley, rangements Henderson. 135-4557. PHARR THOMAS ALBERTUS PHARR, 4467 Ridoevale Rd.

day December 8th. Survivors: Wife. Blanche Pharr, Mark R. brothers. Pharr LeMaire, Mrs.

R. Na: varro, all Mrs. Vincent Drago, of New Iberia. La.r nieces and may call nephews. Harveson Funeral Home where services will conducted a.m.

Wednesday. Sutton, officiating. Russell Ed Richerson, Neison. Entombment Memorial Park New STEVE TICE, Granbury, Harveson Monday. Baptist.

Wife, Orpha; daugh- Fort Henry Besson, Tice, Houston: five grandchildren; five greet. grandchildren: sister, Mrs. Ruby Tombstone, Arizona: Roy Tice, Fort Worth. Services pm Wednesday Southside Baptist Church, Gran. Bill bury, Rev.

Archer and Rev. Gene Hadley officiating. Inters Gardens of the Valley Memorial Park. Weatherford, rangements Martin's Funeral 573-1155, Home, Granbury, Florists, Com 'ty Lots 01A 924-2291 2606 FLOWERS, Berry 292-2291 BALCH'S INC. MONDAY THRU The Universal Expression of Sympathy FLOWERS FROM GORDON BOSWELL FLOWERS 1220 Pennsylvania 332-2265 4200 Camp Bowie 738-9287 GREENWOOD Mausoleum crypts.

of John TICE bia's Lamont-Doherty Laboratory said Monday seven objects have apparently crashed within 60 miles of the Apollo 12 site since Nov. 20 when the lunar ascent stage was dropped back on to the moon. Letham said each of the seven impacts produced a series of tremors, and speculated that meteors may have landed in the Ocean of Storms, whose surface apparently resonates when hit. ter. rainfall over 18.

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