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Northwest Arkansas Times from Fayetteville, Arkansas • Page 5

Location:
Fayetteville, Arkansas
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

ARKANSAS TIMES, Fay.tt.vrtU, ArianMt, Monday, Bectmber 4, T967 Obituary Hunts vllle George Kllgore, 91, of St, Paul, died Dec. 1 at a Fayettovllle hospl tal. He was born Feb. 1876 at St. Paul the son of Dan and Mary Prater Kilgore and was a farmer.

Survivors are five daughters, Mrs. Bertha Moore of Norman, Mrs. Golda Williams of Fayetteville, Mrs. Georgia May- cs of St. Paul and Mrs.

Gladys Robinson of West Fork and Mrs. Pauline Kozak of Huntington Park, 17 grandchildren and 15 great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be at 2 p. m. Tuesday at the St.

Paul Bible Church with burial in Riverside Cemetery under direction of Brashears Funeral Home. Continued From Page 1 Farminglon Primer Begins Operation DIVER SHOT FOR 'GATOR Alfred Ebbrecht, 71, of Route 2, West Fork, died Sunday in a local hospital. He was born June 3, 1896 at Jefferson City, veteran of STATE an extra lane at the Intersection and requested property owners to provide the needed land on the east side of College. Herbert Hatfield, one of the property owners, suggested thai an experiment be made with the signal lights at the intersection before permanent steps were taken to widen the highway. City Manager Gerald Fox said today the Highway Depart ment has been consulted on the advisability of trying a "lagging green light" experiment at in tersections, but that the 11 board has made no decision on Mo.

and a a World War I. Survivors are the widow, Mrs. Frances Ebbreeht of the home; one daughter, Mrs. John Buss of West Fork; two brothers, August of Alchinson, a Henry of St. Joseph, one sister, Mrs.

Arthur Gilkson of Horton, Kan, and five grandchildren. Funeral service will be at 2 p. m. Wednesday at Moore's Chape! with burial in National Cemetery. Springdale Dewey Dallas Fultz, 64, of Route 5, Springdale, died Saturday in the Springdale hospital.

Born April 8, 1903 at Osage, he was a farmer and a member of the Free Holiness Church. Survivors are the widow, Mrs. Macy Howerton Fultz of the home; one son, Doyel of Houston Tex; three daughters, Mrs. J. D.

Baker of Houston, Mrs. Murrell Hardcastle of Lowell and Mrs. Jack McBroom of Tulsa; three brothers, John of Green Forest, Newell and Jess, of Osage; three sisters, Mrs. Neva Collins of Green Forest, Mrs. Mollie Cooper of Springdale and Mrs.

Tilda Armer of San Miguel, Calif, and six grandchildren. Funeral service will be at 2 p. m. Tuesday at the Mountainview Free Holiness Church with burial in Friendship Cemetery under direction of the i Funeral Chapel. way or the other on the sub ject.

BURGLARY iloor and dropped down into th container, Spencer said. Ritchie had started toward front of the building whe the youth's head appeared ove better, superintendent said. the side of the trash container with the pistol pointed at the assistant chief, Spencer a i ustry In small towns of less 50,000 and by providing 11 educational facilities Farmington! hlch will encourage people to lay in these areas, rather than in the urban areas. Comparing the $2.06 billion pent annually en the poverty rogram, with the $2.5 billion pent every month on the war Vietnam, Brooke warned hat unless Americans "realize hat this (the poverty program) a war that is worthy of our commitment, a a American people have not made a total commitment, what we lave seen in the past will con- "I paint a dismal picture for you tonight," Brooke apologized after mentioning the Middle East arms race, the military coupe in Greece, the NATO and pound devaluation problems of Europe and the strife and discontent in Africa, "But this is the way the world is, a world in which you will have great influence." With all our great technology nd a affluence, the MARSHALL, Tex. (AP) I diver in a spearllshing contest FARMINGTON The Farm- was fatally shot Sunday by a ington Primer, for all children duck hunter who apparently who will bu six years of age be-mistook him for an alligator fore Oct.

1, opened this morning according to police. The diver, Jim Clark, 35, The will belshreveport, had surfaced operated in conjunction with by a slump on Caddo Lake nca school facilities, George Led- where the hunter was in a boat Contest officials said the area Tuition will be $1 per day a aS ln and lunches will cost 20 cents, Thc fees may be paid by parents working for the school and by flags to caution boat- and water skiers tnat a div- was below the surface. Springdale Woman Killed In Car Wreck Springdale Mrs. Salley, 41, of 714 Morrison Place died In an automobile accident four miles south of Pineville, Mo. at 4 p.m.

Saturday. She was born April 25, at Spiro, Okla. and was a Baptist. Survivors are the husband, Glen Satley of home; one daughter, Mrs. Eva Sue O'Kel- Circuit Court Ruling Reversed Ledbetter said that sponsors are The name of the duck hunter being found for all children who was wiUihcld pending further ly of Orange, one slep- L1TTLE ROCK (AP) The Arkansas Supreme Court today reversed a remanded a Washington County i i Court ruling by holding to be constitutional a state law that defines "authorized emergency vehicles." The trial court had ruled in favor of Clint Walden and his employer, Campbell Bell, following an ace: dent in Fayetteville in whic Walden's a struck a ambulance driven by Harol Ray Hart.

The Fayettevil! sons to hospitals. Hart hud hit ren on when he proceeded trough a red light while taking patient to a hospital. chief of police testified that In can't afford the fees. The Farmington School Board Hy officers, has granted permission children to i school buses and stipulated that all who at-1 lend must be insured under the) student insurance plan. Ledbetter said that no regular! school money will be spent the program.

"The students will attend investigation by Harrison Coun-Y 6 TM Carter of Tulsa; 6 'brothers, Ralph Pearson of son, James Glendell Safley of ambulance was considered Orange; one step-daughter, Mrs. emergency vehicle because Linda B. Ertsche of Westminster, her mother, Mrs. 4-H Bonqutt MY, Okla. Medals, bonds, certificates and awards will be presented to outstanding 4-H members at Delaware County's annual 4-H Club achievement banquet to be held Thursday night at the Jay High School cafclorium.

Duanc Lester, county extension agent, and Miss Mae K. Bell, extension home economist, Postmaster For Wheeler Sought U.S. Civil Service Com during school mission, tas announced that it The program will Tulsa and Thurtnan Lee Carter Ben ton; two step-brothers, Ed Carter of Dardanelle and Swing Carter of Hammond, two step-sisters, Geneva Young of Little Rock Mrs. Yeta Price of Fayetteville and grandchildren. Funeral service will be at 2 for m.

Tuesday at the i i with burial in Ritchie reacted by firing two shots. Spencer said Scott dropped his pistol after the shots were fired and slumped over in the container with his arms hanging over the edge. He did not offer any resistance when pulled the container. The police chief said two duf- bags containing nearly $1,900 in worth of cameras, watches lighters and other items were found near the trap door. In addition, he said taken from two cash registers was fount in the basement.

Blaze Destroys Thompson Home CAVE SPRINGS Fire destroyed the two story frame home of the Amond Thompson family early Sunday. Fire departments from Cave Springs, Bentonville and Springdale answered alarms to the blaze shortly after 2:30 a. m. Reports indicated the home, located about two and a half miles north of Cave Springs, was a total loss. Neither estimate of value, ALLIES munists about miles north ward.

At nightfall, there was still moderate to heavy contact U.S. headquarters said the al lied troops also took five prison ers and captured 42 weapons. One of the Communist attack on U.S. installations was on the main Army headquarters a Long Binh. A second was a few miles from Long Binh, and a third was.near an American division headquarters.

U.S. Marines turned the tables on the Communists when they ambushed a column of 25 enemy troops two miles southeast of Phu Bai, headquarters of the 3rd Marine Division. The Marines killed five of the enemy in the brief firefight Sunday night arid captured four weapons. One Marine was killed and four wounded. ireatest need in the world to- lay is the need for human un- lerstanding.

Brooke said man las not been able to learn to ive with his fellow man. "I don't believe in black power, or in white power, either. I do believe in political power," Jrooke said while urging i audience to participate in the 1968 elections. "I'm very much in favor ol a two party system, not because I am a Republican, but Because I believe that debate and dissent are healthy," the Massachusetts senator said. Ending on an optimistic note, Brooke said he believes we will make progress; that he has seen evidence of a more intelligent, discerning electorate.

He said that he was very much encouraged because the younger generation believes in a foreign policy which discounts the theory of the inevitability of war. Brooke was asked during a question and answer period which followed his speech what reading groups in primers and 61 ear some classes at school desks Competitors for the postmas- just as children did before the ter vacancy at Wheeler must minimum age limit was made have at least one year of experi- law," Ledbetter explained. ence. (education above high After the first of the year school level may be substituted plans are being made to start for six months of experience) a group in "pre-primer" for showing that they have the GLENDAL Calif. (AP) children who will be five years ability to maintain simple re- er immi Rodgers was of age before Oct.

1. Several cords of accounts, or that reporled we enougn to make parents have indicated they has given them a knowledge of telephone caUs frorn his hospital favor this innovation, the super- postal procedures. Singer Suffers Skull Fracture intendent said. Mrs. Helen Cheatham bed today, although his manag Applicants, who will be given I said he is still "in very sen a wr jtten test, must show that ous condition." Mrs.

Dorothea Coleman a they are of good reputation, and "He insists on making tele- teaching the classes and anoth- that mey can meei and deal phone-calls to friends and they er teacher will be employed if with public agreeably and are letting him do it rather than needed. nor cause of determined. fire have been Club Has Minor Fire Fire of undetermined origin broke out in a storage room off the kitchen at the Fayetteville Country Club Saturday night, according to a report by tiie Fayetteville Fire Department. An employee of the Country Club discovered the blaze about 11:45 p. m.

Two pumpers re sponded. No estimate of the damage was made, but loss in the fire was limited to dishes and glassware In the storage area. BROOKE es and job opportunities. "Seventy per cent of the pec- le in this country live on one er cent of the he stated. We need to halt the a ixodus from the rural areas to he urban areas, he said.

This an be accomplished, accord- ng to Brooke, by locating in- The Times Is Best Buy For Your Advertising Dollar DEMPSEY-TEGELER Five-Year License Plates Go On Sale LITTLE ROCK (AP) State Revenue offices around the state will begin selling the new five year motor vehicle license elates this week. Herbert Reinhardt, coordinat or of the state Revenue Depart ment's motor vehicle division said the 450,000 new plate would be white with red letter and numbers. They may be purchasee through Jan. 30. Motorists will be permitted keep their new tags for al leas five years, even if they sell trade their cars.

The license fe still will be paid annually. Reinhardt said the new sy tern should save the state mor than $750,000 since it won't I quire the purchase of new plati leach year. he thought of Sen. J. William Fulbright's charge that the Republican Party was not offering opposition to the administration's policies and that a two party system did not exist, in actuality.

Brooke responded by inviting ulbright to campaign for a wo-parly system, beginning in rkansas. He explained that the eason many Republicans do ot criticize the President's pel- is they sincerely agree with and feel criticism should not voiced unless it is valid. Those who do disagree with he President's policy, Brooke are few in number and, until this year, faced a Presi- ent whose power was virtual; unlimited. Mack McLarty, president of iie student body, introduced Brooke. McLarty and the slu- ent chairmen of Symposium 68 sat on the speaker platform.

Tie University administration vas not represented on the jlatform. Bill Lawrence, i i a Four Persons Hurt In Hwy 62 Wreck Four members of a Prairie Grove family were injured Saturday afternoon when their small car went out of control on slippery Hwy. 62 of Prairie Grove. Injured were Bill Carnahan, 16, driver'of the car; his mother, Mrs. Mildred Carnahan, 43, and his two sisters Mary Jane, 20 and Katherine, 12.

Mary Jane was released after treatment in the emergency room of Washington General Hospital. The other injured are in good condition today. The injured were brought to the hospital in a Luginbuel ambulance. State trooper Tommy Williams investigated the mishap. effectively.

They must have re- get all worked up over it," aaic within the delivery of Seymour Heller, Rodgers' man the post office for one year immediately preceding the closing date of the examination, and must also be 18 years of age at that time. Persons over 70 years of age cannot be appointed. Further information about the examination requirements may be obtained at the Wheeler post office. the 33-year-olc be hospitalizec City Vehicle Tax Backed By Group The steering committee of the Concerned Citizens for an Informed Fayetteville went on record Sunday as favoring a proposed $5 vehicle license tax proposed last week by the city's Board of Directors. The campaigned against a $1.6 million issue defeated by Fayetteville voters last month.

In other business, the committee named Wesley Gee to replace the late N. J. Foltz as co-chairman of the committee and added Steve Cummings and J. E. Metcalf to the committee.

Burglars Get $400 In Country Club Break-In ROGERS Approximately $400 in cash and coins were taken from the Twin Cities Country Club in a weekend burglary. According to club spokesmen, entry to the club was gained sometime i a night by breaking a rear window. Reports indicate the office was ransacked. Loss included $178 in halves; $212.90 in other cash and coins; two cases of beer and several bottles of liquor. Investigation is being handled by the Benton County Sherff's office.

ager. Hospital officials refused to comment on Rodgers's condi tion. Heller said singer could "anywhere from a week or tw to a couple of months." Rodgers was found unconscious and beaten along a freeway early Friday. He suffered a skull fracture. He had apparently been attacked with a blunt instrument during a robbery attempt, according to his physi cian, Dr.

William L. Donham. Heller said Rodgers has no recollection of lost the whole day." He said the only thing that remains is impression that he was hit with a tire iron." analyst for ABC News, a ormer governor Orval Faubus will speak tonight at 7:30 in Barnhill Fieldhouse. Woman (mured In Two-Car Collision Cathy Mace, 20, of the Skull- creek Apartments is in good condition at General Hospital today from injuries suffered NEW YORK STOCKS Opening Furnished by A. C.

Edward! Son Alcan Am TT 24iilIBM 50'tllntl Harv 46 JJ Penney Ark La Gas 4 IKerr Me Boeing IKals Alum 47 Ward 91 INorthrop 38 Nathan Wise Dies PHOENIX, Arix. (AP) A man who rammed his car into Justice Department building in Washington four years ago and held officers at bay with a take bomb died at his home Sunday. Nathan Wise, 38, former operator of a South Phoenix discount store, drove his sedan up several steps of the building on Feb. 13, 1963, to demand an interview with FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover.

Broken Gas Line Disrupts Service SPRINGDALE Gas service was disrupted in a small area here Sunday night when a 1.25 inch gas pipe was broken in the 400 block of Campbell St. Two engine companies of the local fire department layed down a special chemical in the area while fire chief Mickey Jackson plugged the break. No fire resulted in the break which is believed to have been caused by a vehicle striking a gas meter. shortly after noon Saturday. Miss Mace was a passenger in a car driven by 21-year-old Patricia A.

Bray of 34 S. Sycamore St. which collided with a vehicle driven by Sykes Harris 21, of 1900 N. Garland at the interesction of Gregg and Elm Streets. Neither Harris nor Miss Bray were injured.

Camp Stum 3 0 I a A Air 24 Cent SW (Phillips Chrysler IHalston Chi Musi Comm Oil IStd Oil NJ Comsat 49 ISper Rand Cro Coll 50 ISwnnk Edo Corp 37 JTexaco Emer Elcc Corp Fortl Airc Front Air lOTalVSctor Gen Analine 20 3 Gen Mot Ceo Pac Steel Gr West Fin 11 lilWcst'house Gulf Oil Ark West Gns Porter Rocket Research Shakespeare Std Register Tyson Foods United Ins Ainer World Svc Lite Averages Inds Hails .91 Utils AS Vol. 3200 knew it was used to take pe HOWE-SAVOY BIBLE CHURCH HIWAY T6 WEST Announces DEEPER LIFE REVIVAL SERVICES DECEMBER 3rd thru 10th 7:00 P.M. NIGHTLY Evangelist: Rev. Marvin M. Eck Song Leader: Lonnie Luther WELCOME Tools Stolen SPRINGDALE Tools valued at $40 were taken from a pickup truck belonging to Bob Tankersley of 615 David St.

lalo Friday night. Police reports indicate the pickup was parked in front of the residence at the time of the theft. Injured In Wreck SPRINGDALE Harvey D. Martin, 22, of Elm Springs, was i a i a condition at Springdale Memorial hospital today after being injured in a one-car accident Saturday night. The accident occured at 10:25 p.m.

on Hwy. 71 south near the Trade Winds Motel. Martin was reported to be suffering from shock and multiple injuries. Monuments Rely On An Old Ei(abllihcl Firm HANKINS Monument Co. Hwy.

71 South HI 2-2081 SERVICES Vt on a FUNERAL HOME, INC 117 NORTH COLLEGE AVE LAIN, Alltn M. pending. LAIR, Allen M. 2 P.M. Tuesday, Chapel Nelson's Funeral Home, Rev.

David E. Johnson officiating. Interment: National Cemetery. JOMIS, ponding, Mri. Iv.lyn pending.

HOW MUCH YOU MAY SAVE ON YOUR CAR INSURANCE WITH STATE FARM1 URBAN D. HOLLAND, AGENT 22i N. Block ill 2-853Z STATE FARM MulullAutefflOtlll InliinncifofMin Hmw OIIKn Waif When you require a marker for the final resting place of a beloved family member, turn confidently to Nelson's Memorial Marker Company. here you are assured that all merchan- dise is of the finest quality available in its price range We will provide you with a marker that properly expresses your a price well within your meani. FUNERAL HOME, INC.

117 NORTH COLLEGE AVENUE A I MIMIC r. TM enn IM oetoiM KAI.

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About Northwest Arkansas Times Archive

Pages Available:
145,059
Years Available:
1937-1977