Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Fort Worth Star-Telegram from Fort Worth, Texas • 28

Location:
Fort Worth, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
28
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Stoney 0 FORT WORTH STAR-TELEGRAM Tuesday Morning, July 11, 1972 Martians Didn't Crash Into Aurora Windmill by Gerry Hemmons. For the thousand first and al UFO Bureau have got to Society has worn out two or time, no, absolutely not. understand. The U.S. Govern- three secretaries telling UFO last No space ships.

No Martians. ment is not trying to keep the researchers that Aurora was Nothing. And nobody alien. 1897 Aurora Space Ship crash not crashed into by a cigarListen carefully. No Mar- from the American public.

shaped space ship. I have told tian piloted space ship crash- If it were true the IUFOB dozens of UFO fans. Still the ed in Aurora, in 1897. would be the first to know. inquiries come.

Or ever. The story is a hoax, You have my word. I'd tell Now Hayden Kietha a practical joke. you the truth. Hewes, directors of the InterYou guys at the Internation- The Wise County Historical national UFO Bureau (Box 1281, Oklahoma City, 73103), are asking.

"The Bureau is See the Navy's Great interested and all in any UFO DUANE BOBICK sightings," they write, we were wondering if there was any information. per- U.S. OLYMPIC BOXING TRIALS DanielMeyer Coliseum Fort Worth JULY 19-20-21-22 TICKETS ON SALE At Central Ticket Office Sheraton Hotel Ph. 336-1313 See NICK WELLS BUBBA BUSCEME JESSE VALDEZ 88 CHAMPION BOXERS! Only house capacity will be sold. ALL SEATS RESERVED INDIVIDUAL TICKETS FLOOR SEATS ELEVATED SEATS JULY 19 Wednesday Night $2.50 $2.00 $2.00 $1.00 $1.00 JULY 20 Thursday Night $3.50 $3.00 $3.00 $1.50 $1.00 JULY 21 Friday Night $4.50 $4.00 $4.00 $2.00 $1.50 JULY 22 Saturday Night $5.50 $5.00 $5.00 $3.00 $2.00 Proceeds to U.S.

Olympic Committee Sponsored by the FORT WORTH FORT WORTH STAR-TELEGRAM CHAMBER of COMMERCE TEXAS CHRISTIAN UNIVERSITY If the world's leading maker of duplicators introduced a copier, wouldn't you expect it to be something special? It is. People who know the performance and reliability of Gestetner Duplicators (for more than 10 copies) have been asking why we didn't produce a Gestetner copier. We do now. The Gestetner C-10. Easy.

Fast. Compact. Economical. Crisp, clear copies. On bond -like white paper the size of your original, so there's no waste.

But our proudest claim is right on the name plate-Gestetner. GESTETNER CORP. 604 NORTH RIVERSIDE DR. FORT WORTH, TEXAS 76111 I'd like to know just how special your C-10 copier is. Name Organization Address City State Zip EST July 10 Data From NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE, NOAA, U.S.

Dept. of Commerce 62 COLD WARM Temperatures 90 Are Average For Area 90 82 70 80 90 WARM Rain Showers 80 1001 High Temperatures Expected FORECAST 90 For Daytime Tuesday SLIGHT CHANCE OF RAIN Forecast Fair, Warm Fort Worth and VicinityFair to partly cloudy and warm Tuesday through Wednesday. Slight chance of late afternoon and evening thundershowers. Low Tuesday night mid-70s. High Tuesday and Wednesday mid-90s.

Wind southerly 7-16 miles per hour. Probability of rain 20 per cent both Tuesday and Tuesday night. Sunrise, sunset, 8:39. Maximum temperature Monday, 93; minimum, 73. Maximum temperature this date, 106 in 1954; minimum, 59 in 1905.

Maximum precipitation this late, .88 inch in 1950., North Central Northeast Texas Fair to partly cloudy and warm Tuesday through Wednesday. Widely scattered afternoon and evening thunderstorms mainly east portion Tuesday and Wednesday. Low Tuesday night 70-76. High Tuesday and Wednesday 90-98. Northwest and Southwest Texas Partly cloudy and continued warm through Wednesday with widely scattered afternoon and evening thundershowers.

Low Tuesday night mid-60s Panhandle to mid-70s southeast. High Tuesday and Wednesday mostly in the 90s. South Central and Southeast Texas Partly cloudy and warm Tuesday through Wednesday. Daytime showers and thundershowers more numerous eastern portions again Tuesday and north portions Wednesday. Low Tuesday night 70-82.

High Tuesday and Wednesday 85-98. World Chess Duel Will Begin Today REYKJAVIK, Iceland (Reuter) Harassed organizers of the World Chess Championship Monday had to deal with a string of last-minute complaints from American Fischer, but were confident that the long -awaited duel with Boris Spassky could begin Tuesday on schedule (noon CDT), The temperamental Fischer, who only agreed to come to Iceland after a number of tough financial demands had been met, is now unhappy about the playing facilities. At the draw last Thursday, when the Soviet world champion won the right to make the first move, Fischer expressed disapproval of the chessboard and the overhead lighting. SPASSKY AND his entourage visited the hall Sunday and had only one complaint--that the board was a little too large. But at 1 a.m.

Monday, as Two Companies Will Sell Land To Texas Parks DALLAS (AP) A Dallas firm and a Tucson, corporation announced Monday have contracted to sell $2,154,000 worth of Texas coast lands to the State Parks and Wildlife Department. Frank A. Schultz, president of Planet Oil and Mineral said the company and its co-venturer, Horizon Sales Corp. of Tucson, have arranged to sell approximately 14,360 acres of land, including five and a half miles of beach frontage. The beach land is located between the intracoastal canal and the Gulf of Mexico south of Port Arthur.

The total sales price is subject to confirmation of the acreage involved by an onsite survey. the rest of Reykjavik slept, the 29-year-old challenger marched into the playing hall for a two-hour inspection and declared himself dissatisfied with almost everything. He reaffirmed that he would not accept the Icelandie marble board he wants green squares instead of black and went on to complain about the pieces, to demand that theuaudiences' seats be moved farther back, and that the platform set up for an American with sole rights to photograph the contest be placed elsewhere and at a different height. Icelandic officials said they would try to meet Fischer's demands but they were not sure whether it was possible at this late stage to make all the rearrangements. They said they did not think Spassky would find Fischer's complaints too objectionable.

THE ICELANDERS are taking all this fairly philosophically. The president of the host federation, Gudmundur Thorareinsson, on being quoted a local proverb to the effect that after one or two waves there is always a third, replied: "Here in Iceland, we are used to the breaking of the great Atlantic waves." One of the outstanding financial disputes appears now to have been settled satisfactorily. The Fischer camp had complained about the contract between the organizers and a U.S. impresario giving him exclusive rights to move-by-move coverage of the match. Iceland officials said one of Fischer's lawyers, Andrew Davies, had now signed a statement that he was agreeable to the arrangement.

Spassky appears to be more relaxed now than a few days ago he had a salmon-fishing break at the weekend but Fischer remains the favorite among the majority of chess experts here. TEXAS TV STATIONS for Tuesday 9) ABILENE 1:00 Days of Lives 1:30 The Doctors 2:00 Another W'rid 2:30 Peyton P. 3:00 Somerset 3:30 Movie 6:30 Convention 10:00 News 10:30 Tonight Show 7) AUSTIN 12:30 World Turns 1:00 Convention 4:00 Big Valley 5:00 Tell Truth 5:30 W. Cronkite 6:00 News Day 6:30 Convention 10:00 News 10:30 Movie 12:30 News 11) LUBBOCK 1:30 The Doctors. 2:00 Another W'rid 2:30 Peyton P.

3:00 Somerset 3:30 P. Junction 4:00 Movie. 5:30 NBC News 6:00 News; W'ther 6:30 Convention 10:00 News 10:30 Movie 12:00 News 13) LUBBOCK 2:00 Secret Storm. 2:30 Edge of Night 3:00 Guide to Love 3:30 Movie 5:00 My 3 Sons 5:30 News 6:00 News 6:30 Jerry Reed 7:30 Hawaii 5-0 8:30 Cannon 9:30 Have Gun 10:00 News 10:30 Movie 6) TEMPLE-WACO 12:30 3 on Match 1:00 Davs of Lives 1:30 The Doctors 2:00 Another World 2:30 Peyton Place 3:00 Somerset MY ANSWER Violence Inherent In All Humans By BILLY GRAHAM Q. along with many other Americans, am troubled about the violence and crime in our nation.

What is the basic cause of violence the kind that caused the young man to shoot Governor Wallace in our leaders about Are, curbing violence in our society? M. W. R. A. Violence is inherent in human nature, and regardless of legislation, will remain with us until the last man is in tune with God, and has a change of nature.

It cropped up in the first family when Cain killed his brother, Abel, and has been plaguing mankind ever since. We see inherent violence even in infants when they scream, kick and strike out to get their way. We see it in adolescents when they fight, paw each other, and inflict injuries on others. Though some of us are able to control the violence within our natures, it still lurks in our hearts, and like a coiled serpent can strike out at any time. The person who by hook or crook is able to keep his violent nature under control is accepted in society as a "lady" or "gentleman," but the seeds of violence are there and may germinate and mature at surprising times.

The person who is unable to control the violence within him is called a "criminal." The United States leads the world in crime, and each adult pays more than $500 a year in taxes to pay the crime bill in these United States. Sin in the human heart is the most costly of all diseases and, strangely, our legislators are doing little or no research in this field. It was inherent sin in the human heart which prompted God to give His Son as a panacea. "God commendeth his love toward us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us." Romans 5:8. 1972, by Chicago TribuneNew York News Inc.

Sales of Lumber Will Set Record WASHINGTON (A P) Lumber consumption in the United States in 1972 will set an all-time record of about 46 billion board feet, according to estimates for the year by the National Forest Production Assn. "The building industry accounts for between two-thirds and three-fourths of all lumber consumption in the United States with variations depending largely on the strength of home said NFPA Forest economist, Dr. John Muench Jr. Muench said that a domestic consumption level of 46 billion board feet would represent a gain of 20 per cent more than the 1970 consumption level, which was a relatively sluggish year for both housing and lumber. He attributed the bulk of the gain this year to the current housing boom.

Death Notices BULLINGER THEADOR J. BULLINGER, 58, 6820 Reeves, passed away Sunday at a local hospital. Retired security officer at Bell Helicopter. Survived by wife, Norma, Fort Worth: sister, Mrs. Loman Davies of Garland: three nieces and one nephew.

Rosary 7 p.m. Tuesday Robertson-Mueller-Har10 per Requiem, Mass a.m. Wednesday Mary Catholic Church. Rev. John Wolfe celebrant.

Interment Greenwood. Arrangements Robertson-MuellerHarper Funeral Home. 1500 924-4233. EVERETT MRS. VYRA KERSNICK, ETT, 5037 Byers, on Monday, July 10.

Survivors: Husband, Dr. Carl E. Everett; son, Richard Everett, Houston; parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ira A.

Kersnick; sister, Mrs. Joe M. South, niece, Mrs. J. D.

Walker; nephew, Joe M. South Jr. Friends may call at Harveson Cole Funeral Home, 702 8th Ave. until 11 a.m. Wednesday.

Services 1 p.m. Wednesday Ridalea, Presbyterian Church. Dr. Clifford W. Williams officiating.

Pallbearers: Dr. Roy Fisher, Dr. George Luibel, Dr. R. B.

Beyer, Dr. Clifford Dickey, Dr. W. R. Jenkins, Paul Bristow.

Entombment Greenwood Mausoleum. Arrangements Harveson Cole. FISHER ALBERT BERRY FISHER, 50, 1778 Lipscomb. Survivors: Wife, Elizabeth; daughter Mrs. Barbara Dow, Fort Worth; one arandchild.

Services 10:30 a.m. Tuesday, Owens-Brumley Chapel. Interment Laurel Land. Arrangements Owens-Brumley, 425 S. Henderson.

335-4557. FITZSIMMONS MONS, KENNETH 837 Boyd Azle. SurEUGENE FITZSIMvivors: Wife, Druecilla; brothers, Cleo, California, Charles; sisters, Mrs. Delorris Parks, Iowa, Mrs. Eloise Camp, Killeen, Mrs.

Ruth Benedict, Iowa. Services 2 p.m. Tuesday Shannon's North Chapel. Merrle Kina. Minister officiating.

Interment Boyd Cemetery. Arrangements Shannon's North, 624-2191. HOPKINS JOHN N. HOPKINS, 76, Joshua, passed away Monday. Survived by wife, Mrs.

Hazel Hopkins. Services 3 p.m. Tuesday Crosier-Pearson Chapel. Interment Caddo Cemetery. Arrangements Crosier-Pearson Funeral Home, Cleburne.

295-2322. KNIGHT CLIFFORD L. KNIGHT, 77, 521 Sarment, passed away Sunday. A resident of Fort Worth member over the 50 vears, he was a of Meadowbrook Church Iva; of brothers, Christ. Survivors: Wife, W.

Tahoka, Raymond, Winters, Gerald, Phoenix, Arizona; sister, Mrs. E. L. Marks, Tuesday, Winters. Services 2 p.m.

Meadowbrook Church of officiat- Christ. Minister Doyle Gilliam inq. Interment Rose Hill Cemetery. Arrangements Hugh M. Moore Sons, 4912 E.

Lancaster, Fort Worth. RESOLUTION PENDING N. Richland Wants Road Improvement NORTH RICHLAND HILLS City councilmen tonight will have a chance to speed up progress by asking for early improvements of Smithfield-Watauga Road. Councilmen plan to vote on a resolution requesting federal aid to build 20 miles of new roadway on the portion of Smithfield-Watauga Road extending from Saginaw to the Dallas Worth Airport. The state already plans for this improvement in its longrange projects to be undertaken during the 1980s.

City Manager Gene Riddle said he believed the improvement needed to come sooner since the road is used by many cities in the area. "We plan to ask for immediate approval of the project and if possible, request the new roadway be built in about two or three years," he said. Riddle said he expects other area city councils to pass similar resolutions. Speaking of the project cost, Riddle said, "We're talking about quite a bit of money. I couldn't say exactly how much it would cost." Balloons and Bombs In World War II the Japanese launched bomb-carrying balloons toward the West Coast of the United States.

MEDICAL MEMOS Word: Not 'Experimental' By H. L. Q. My doctor wants to do an "exploratory" operation. He admits he doesn't know what is wrong and says the only way to find out is to operate.

I don't like the idea of being a "guinea pig" and being experimented on. Isn't there some other way of finding out what is wrong? A. I don't know what your special problem is so I cannot advise you. However, getting an exploratory operation does not mean you are being experimented on. It may be the only way of finding out what is wrong.

Even when surgery is performed on something definite in the abdomen, the surgeon usually looks around, feeling with his fingers as many organs as possible to be sure that everything else is all right. Almost every abdominal operation includes some exploration. A high school boy had pain in his abdomen for many years. It was branded everything from imagination to Death Notices LEE GLENN AUDIE LEE, 65, 7833 Tacoma passed away Monday. Survivors: Wife, Mozell; sons, Jesse, Crowley, Michael, Weatherford; sisters, Eunice Lee, Nola Clairette; brother, George, Stephenville; five grandchildren.

Services 10 a.m. Wednesday First Baptist Church, White Set. tlement, Rev. Paul Miller officiating. Graveside services 3 p.m.

Clairette Cemetery. Arrangements Barrow-Rutledge Funeral Home, Hico. MARTIN JOHN J. MARTIN, 59, Box 14, Bedford, passed away Saturday. Retired carpenter of Hurst-Euless-Bedford school system and a Methodist.

Survivors: Wife, Neva J. Martin; son, Dane J. Martin, both Bedford. Services 4 p.m. Tuesday, First United Methodist Church of Bedford.

Rev. Jim Scott and Rev. Jay Darnell officiatina. Interment Bedford Cemeterv. Arrangements Hugh M.

Moore Sons. 1219 N. Davis, Arlington. 275-2711. McCLAIN MRS.

LAURA FRANCES McCLAIN, 98, 3713 Marks Place. Survivors: Sons, J. Houston, Howard, Graham; daughters, Mrs. R. L.

Henderson, Alvin Turner, Fort Worth, Mrs. G. E. Sadlin, Odessa; seven grandchildren; ten great-grandchildren; four, great-great-grandchildren. Services 12 noon Tuesday Owens-Brumley Chapel.

Interment 3:30 p.m. Medlen Cemetery, Young County. Arrangements Owens-Brumley, 425 S. Henderson, 335-4557. tinent to the particular occurrence." Wonder no more.

IT DIDN'T happen. What did occur on that April morning in 1897, in Aurora was nothing. Presumably the roosters gave their alarm clock calls, the cotton gins whirred and people went off to work on the railroads, which is what most Aurorans did then. There were, though, newspaper stories, which said that shortly after dawn a metallic, cigar-shaped space ship piloted by two beings from Mars flew in from the East. It sailed over the town and crashed into Judge Proctor's windmill and destroyed his favorite flowerbed.

The Martians were killed and given a Christian burial in the Aurora cemetery. A week later a couple of men in Aurora admitted they had manufactured the whole story. Nothing at all happened. They had snitched the idea from the spat of space ship sightings going around the country. For most of early 1897 America was told of UFO antics.

Mostly the reports centered on Mid-America. Iowa seemed particularly plagued by Martians and space ships. One farmer said space ship aliens had stolen his favorite cow. A Kansas man claimed Martians had tried to get him with a big anchor, probably much as a fisherman angles for a bass. TEXAS HAD other stories.

Near Atlanta a man said he actually talked to the Martians and went on board their space ship. He said they gave him religious tracts and together they sang "Nearer My God to Thee." After all of these stories had been published, a gang of railroad men admitted they had spread the spaceship word up and down MidAmerica. Just as a joke, they said. OK? It was a hoax. But there remains those who simply are sure 1897 was the Year of the Martian.

They keep asking. A Texas Tech professor once investigated the Aurora crash. He went over the supposed crash site with a metal detector and found only old license plates and horseshoe nails. No bits and pieces of space ships. He interviewed residents of Aurora who were there on that April morning.

All said nothing happened. He researched cemetery records. No Martian burials. A national magazine-now defunct sent in a team of writers and researchers. They found nothing to support the space ship story.

One man, who was a boy of 8 or 9 years in 1897, was offered a substantial sum of money by a writer if only he would say, "Yes, a space ship crashed in Aurora in 1897." He refused because, he said, it was not true. YOU HAVE my word that if Aurora was indeed the site of an actual Martian-driven space ship disaster, Holiday Inn would have one of its motels on the site, billboards would point the way to the alien graves and you and everybody would be paying $2 a head just to look and purchase plastic replicas of the space ship or plastic ash trays with pictures of Martians on them. Because the supposed crash site has nothing but mesquite and gravel and you may look at it without paying anything you may be assured no Martians ever did anything in Aurora. Your IUFOB motto, I see, is "Man fears what he does not understand." Nice maxim. I know you'll sleep better now knowing Aurora is free of Martians and space ships.

MYERS JOHN WILLIAM MYERS, 81, Mineral Wells, Texas, passed away. Sunday in Mineral Wells hospital. Born in Tyler, Texas, former resident of Oklahoma City. Member of Bricklayers Union No. 1 in Oklahoma.

Survivors: Sisters, Mrs. Verna Buckland, San Dieqo, California, Mrs. T. F. Thomas, Fort Worth, Mrs.

Charles Conner, Houston; brothers, T. F. Mvers, Tyler, Ralph Myers, Fort Worth, Ross Myers, Goodrich, Texas, Doyle Staples, Oklahoma. Services, 2 p.m. Tuesday Robertson-Meuller-Harper Chapel.

Interment Rose Hill. Arrangements Robertson MuellerHarper, 1500 Eighth Ave. 924- 4233. WILLIAMS JIM M. WILLIAMS, 57, Brazos Point Community, passed away Monday, Survivors: Wife; sons, Leonard, Burl, Fort Worth, Donald, Cleburne; daughter, Mrs.

Betty Gross; sisters, Mrs. Opal Hall, Mrs. June Elliott, Mrs. Mary Vaughan; brothers, Jack, Billie Williams. Kopperi: nine arandchildren.

Services 4 p.m. Tuesday Brazos Point Church, Rev. Virgil Pace officiating. Interment Brazos Point. Arrangements Brister-Lawson Funeral Home, Meridian.

Florists, Cem'ty Lots 01A MARKERS-2 weeks delivery. Monuments. 332-2689. GORDON BOSWELL FLOWERS 12300 CAMP PENNSYLVANIA, BOWIE, 738-9287 332-2265 BALCH'S FLOWERS, INC. 292-2291 924-2291 Legal Notices AUCTION-In accordance with the warehouse lien laws of the following lots of household furniture will be sold at public auction by Bennett-Bradford Van Lines Inc.

at 4009 E. Loop 820 Ft. Worth, Texas. W.E. Kelly, lot 1480-130, $958.14.

Beginning at 9AM, Julv 22, 1972. Inspection hour before sale. I WILL NOT be responsible for any debts contracted by anyone other than myself on or after this date. Charles A. Harvey.

Rt. 12, Box 672. Lodge Notices Worth, Masonic Temple, 1100 Henderson, on Thursday and Friday, July 13-14, 1972. FOR INFORMATION CALL 748-9196, Dallas. THURSDAY, JULY 13-5 to 7 p.m.

Registration of candidates. FRIDAY, JULY 14-7 to 7:45 a.m. Registration Candidates 7:45 a.M. CEREMONIES Members Visitors recognized by S.C., S.J., U.S.A. welcome.

Joe B. Motley, 33rd Degree-Venerable Master W. E. Peters, 33rd Degree-Wise Master John R. Wallace, 32nd Degree-KCCH Frank B.

Webber, 33rd Degree-Master of Kadosh Dave Crowder, 33rd Degree-Secre- REUNION FORT WORTH DALLAS SCOTTISH RITE BODY Special Reunion to be held in Fort tary. RIVERSIDE LODGE NO. 753 Meets Tuesdav night, 2201 Higgins Lane, 8 p.m. Visitors welcomed. 6: Kuykendall, Secy.

RIDGLEA, 1341 LODGE Called meeting Tuesday 7 p.m. gree. to Dinner confer 1 6:30 FC p.m. DeMembers urged to attend. Visitors welcome.

Pat Tomlin, W.M. Gene Buckner, Secy. WHITE SETTLEMENT CHAPTER NO. 1053 Regular stated meeting 7:30 p.m. Tuesday.

Members urged to attend. Visitors welcome. Daphna Bridgewater, W.M. Ella Chambers, Secy. ARLINGTON HTS.

LODGE NO. 1184 Stated meeting Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. Members urged to attend. Visitors welcome. G.

R. Clayton, W.M. H. R. McDaniel, Secy.

DEER CREEK LODGE NO. 510 Stated meeting Tuesday to 7:30 p.m. attend. Members Visitors urged welcome. Kenneth F.

Masters, W.M. Luther R. Carmichael, Secy. JULIEN FEILD LODGE, NO. 908 Stated meeting Tuesday 7 p.m.

All members urged to attend. Visitors welcome. Max L. Spillar, W.M. Robert L.

Miller, Secy. TABERNACLE LODGE NO. 1195 bers Will Tuesday hold urged 7:30 to stated p.m. attend. meeting Mem- Visitors welcome.

Programs KRBC-TV (Channel 7:00 Today 9:00 Dinah's Place 9:30 Concentration 10:00 Sale, Century 10:30 Holl. Squares 11:00 Jeopardy 11:30 Who, What 11:55 NBC News 12:15 Sandy Chappel 12:30 3 on Match KTBC-TV (Channel 6:55 Farm 7:00 News 8:00 C. Kangaroo 9:00 Lucy Show 9:30 3 Sons 10:00 Family Af air 10:30 Love of Life 11:00 Wh. Heart Is 11:30 Search 12:00 W. World KCBD-TV (Channel 6:30 News 7:00 Today, 9:00 Dinah's Place 9:30 Concentration 10:00 Sale, Century 10:30 Holl.

Squares 11:00 Jeopardy 11:30 Who, What 12:00 News 22:15 Closeup 12:30 3 on Match 1:00 Days of Lives KLBK-TV (Channel 6:30 Farm News 7:00 News 8:00 C. Kangaroo 9:00 Lucy Show 9:30 to Know 19:00 Family Affair 10:30 Love of Life 11:00 Wh. Heart Is 11:30 Search 12:00 News 12:30 World Turns 1:00 Splendored KCEN. Guiding (Channel Light. 6:45 RFD-6 7:00 Today 7:25 Newswatch 9:00 Dinah's Place 9:30 Concentration 12:15 Cthy's Corner 3:30 Big Valley 12:00 News 4:30 Perry Mason 5:30 NBC News 10:00 Sale, Century 6:00 Newswatch 10:30 Holl.

Squares 6:30 Convention 11:00 Jeopardy 10:00 News 11:30 Who, What 10:30 Tonight Show KWTX-TV (Channel 10) WACO 7:00 News 12:30 World Turns 8:00 C. Kangaroo 1:00 Convention 9:00 Lucy Show 4:00 Password 9:30 Mv 3 Sons 4:30 Bewitched 10:00 Family Affair 5:00 Gen. Hospital 10:30 Love of Life 5:30 News 11:00 Wh. Heart Is 6:30 Convention 11:30 Search 10:00 News 12:00 Ten Acres 10:30 Movie KFDX-TV (Channel 3) WICHITA FALLS 6:35 RFD 3 1:30 The Doctors 7:00 Today; W'ther 2:00 Another World 7:30 Today 2:30 Peyton P. 9:00 Dinah's Place 3:00 Somerset 9:30 Cnocentration 3:30 Daniel Boone 10:00 Sale, Century 4:30 Perry Mason 10:30 Hall.

Squares 5:30 NBC News 11:00 Jeopardy 6:00 W'ther; News 11:30 Who, What 6:30 Convention 11:55 News; W'ther 10:00 News 12:30 3 on Match 10:30 Tonight Show 1:00 Day of Lives KAUZ-TV (Channel 6) WICHITA FALLS 7:00 CBS News 2:00 Secret Storm 7:30 Zoo Review 2:30 Edge of Night 9:00 Sesame Street 3:00 Guide to Love 10:00 Family Affair 3:30 Lucy Show 10:30 Love of Life 4:00 My 3 Sons 11:00 Wh. Heart Is 4:30 Green Acres 11:25 CBS News 5:00 Truth 11:30 Search 5:30 W. Cronkite 12:00 News 6:00 News 12:30 World Turns 6:30 Convention 1:00 Splendored 10:00 News 1:30 Guiding Light 10:30 Movie KSWO-TV (Channel 7) WICHITA FALLS 8:30 W. to Know 2:30 One Lite 9:00 Movie Game 3:00 Love 9:30 Man Trap 3:30 Movie 10:00 My Children 5:00 News 10:30 Bewitched 5:30 Rifleman 11:00 Password 6:00 News, W'tber 11:30 Split Sec. 6:30 Mod Squad 12:00 Profile 7:30 Marcus Welby 12:30 Make a Deal 8:30 Convention 1:00 Newlyweds 10:00 News 1:30 Dating Game 10:30 D.

Cavett 2:00 Gen. Hospital nervousness. The pain was so great he often walked doubled over. A surgeon recommended an exploratory operation, acknowledging the fact he did not know what was wrong. During the operation it was immediately apparent what the trouble was that caused so much pain.

It was a long bit of scar tissue from a childhood appendectomy which was pressing against a part of the bowel like a tight rubber band. When the scar was snipped with a scissors the intestine bounced back to its normal size as if it could breathe again. The scar was not expected but the surgeon knew something was wrong. The exploratory surgery produced a dramatic cure. If nothing is found during such an operation, it does not mean that the surgery was in vain.

At least it gives the assurance that there is nothing serious in the abdomen which should be removed. The assurance is worth the trouble of the surgery. J. W. Glass, W.M.

A. J. Tawater, Secy. A TARRANT COUNCIL CHAPTER NO. NO.

349 416 Stated meeting Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. Council will meet at p.m. All Chapter Masons invited. Visitors welcome. W.

O. C. Harris H. L. Davenport, STATED meeting Fort Worth Chapter No.

681 O.E.S. Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. Visitors welcome. Neva Mae Evans Cherry, W.M. Utilla Longguth, Secy.

SOUTH SIDE, LODGE NO. 1114 Will hold Floor School of instruction Tuesday 7 p.m. Members urged to attend. Visitors welcome. Ronald J.

Coontz, W.M. Robert Routh, Secy. HANDLEY CHAPTER NO. 617 OES Stated meeting Tuesday, 8 p.m. Members urged to attend.

Visitors welcome. Lou Hossack, W.M. Virginia Walker, Secy. SOUTH HILLS LODGE NO. 1389 Called meeting Tuesdav FC 6:30 p.m.

Dearee. Work in Members EA urged to attend. Visitors, Lewis Rives W. M. seCy.

SPECIAL Conclave, worin Commandery No. A ple. 19. Confer All Tuesday Order Sir of Knights 6:30 the Tem- p.m. welcome.

H. E. Farrell, Comdr. Dale Heard, Rec..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Fort Worth Star-Telegram
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Fort Worth Star-Telegram Archive

Pages Available:
9,058,788
Years Available:
1902-2024