The Waco Times-Herald from Waco, Texas (2024)

THE WACO TIMES-HERALD Two Two Ft. Hood Men Arraigned In U.S. Court U.S. Dist. Judge Jack Roberts placed Arthur W.

Khalar, 22, of Ft. Hood on probation in federal court here this morning for smuggling marijuana into the U.S. from Vietnam last June. Khalar entered a plea guilty to the offense when arraigned Oct. 21.

He was granted probation under the Youth Corrections Act. Probated sentences under the act are for terms of from four to six years. Alan Ray Hardwick, 26, also of Ft. Hood, was to be arraigned this morning on an information charging him with selling marijuana and receiving and concealing two capsules of heroin. The arraignment was postponed, however, until his case can be presented to a grand jury.

Hardwick was charged with the offenses in an information filed last Friday by of Asst. San U.S. Atty. Reese Harrison Antonio. An information is an accusation of criminal offense by a public officer.

One is filed in lieu of a grand jury indictment. refused to enter a Hardwick plea on the basis of the information and asked that his case be referred to a grand jury. He remains in McLennan County jail in lieu of $2,500 bond. Shirley Ann Davis, 18, of Temple was to be sentenced here this morning for possession of a stolen U.S. Treasury check.

But due to a mix-up she went to Austin instead of coming to Waco. Judge Roberts will sentence her at 4 p.m. today in federal court in Austin. Blaze Damages Private Club Fire early. Sunday heavily damaged Red Lion, a private club at 424 Lake Air.

Assistant Chief W. Neal of the Waco Fire Department said five units were sent to extinguish the blaze, which erupted about 1:30 a.m. "It looked like someone might have entered it before we got there," Neal said. Detective Wayne Edwards of the Waco Police Department said Sunday night, "It seems to have been a burglary." Investigating officer Robert Frost said a juke box was broken into after someone parently entered the building neapthrough an air conditioner duct on the roof. FLAG LAPEL PIN 25c EVERY HOME SHOULD FLY THE AMERICAN FLAG THANKSGIVING DAY THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26 EVERY HOME AND BUSINESS CAN FLY THE AMERICAN FLAG! FLY THE FLAG ON THESE NATIONAL HOLIDAYS! encourage the display of the American Flag NEW YEAR'S To DAY January 1 on every national holiday and LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY a patriotic occasion, February 12 we offer, as a public service, the following Ameri- WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY February 22 can Flag Kit: ARMY DAY April 6 EASTER SUNDAY (Variable) 3' 50-star American MOTHER'S DAY high quality, washable, color-fast Flag; Second ARMED Sunday FORCES in DAY May cotton.

Third Saturday in May jointed gold-metal MEMORIAL DAY pole May 30 (Half staff until noon) FLAG DAY Eagle pole ornament June 14 INDEPENDENCE DAY Halyard July 4 First LABOR DAY. Monday in September Permanent-finish metal house CITIZENSHIP DAY bracket with screws September 17 COLUMBUS DAY October 12 Instruction folder NAVY DAY October 27 Storage carton November VETERAN'S 11 DAY A Service Of The Fourth THANKSGIVING Thursday in DAY November WACO TRIBUNE-HERALD December CHRISTMAS 25 DAY SPECIAL PRICE WACO TRIBUNE HERALD Please send me American Flags at $4.00 per Kit. P.0. BOX 11.00 Enclosed you will find RI CHECK MONEY ORDER WACO, TEXAS 76703 ONLY 340 CASH in the amount of picked up at our Make checks or money orders payable to Waco Tribune-Herald office NAME ADDRESS Drop in at our office Monday through Friday, 8:30 a.m. to CITY.

5:00 p.m. for your American Flag Kit, or mail this convenient coupon. REN Page 8-A-Waco, Texas Production To Resume At Gen-Tire replace those damaged by the explosion and fire. No injuries were reported and no official estimate of the damage had been made by late Sunday, Wiggers said. Normal shift rotation will begin at midnight tonight with employes rotating on a counterclockwise schedule, Wiggers said.

He said the first shift will work the third shift, the second shift the first shift and the third shift the second shift. Individual exception to the start-up schedule will be notified by today, Wiggers said. General Tire and Rubber Co. will resume production at midnight tonight after a layoff to repair damage caused by a fire and explosion last Tuesday. Warehouse and shipping department employes began reporting 1 to work at midnight Sunday.

John Wiggers, plant personnel manager, said electricians have working night and day inbeen stalling new transformers to Nikita-Stalin CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE Brezhnev and Alexei N. Kosygin. Ralph Graves, managing editor of Life, said the magazine had spent a year verifying the authenticity of the manuscript. "We had to be sure that what we was not a fabrication, had Graves wrote in a foreword. He said the editors expected a repudiation from Moscow.

Now 76, Khrushchev has had heart trouble since last June and has been hospitalized twice recently. He lives in seclusion in a villa 15 miles from Moscow. Khrushchev, according to the publication in Life, says Stalin's excesses, "unpleasant as they may be," must be spelled out for "the self-purification of our party." "What I say is not slander, and it's not malicious gossip As a witness 1 to (the Stalin) years, I address myself to the generations of the future, in hope that they will avoid the mistakes of the past." "The recollections also express concern because "a few of our influential military leaders are trying to whitewash Stalin and put him back on his pedestal They're trying to prove that if it hadn't been for Stalin, we would never have won the war against Hitlerite Germany. Monday, Nov. 23, 1970.

SHADOW SHADOW MISCHIEF Univarsal 1970 Rouser tradition of not exceeding per cent in increases in category of auto insurace. If the board upholds this dition as it is expected it would cut the reaction increase back to 18.6 per according to Angus McDonald, re- chief casualty actuary for North board. Ameri- Under the old rating against which excluded investment sup- income the proposed to- would have been 11.6 for passenger automobiles, Viet- below the proposed increase, Viet- staff reported. it The "average" driver board terms is over 25 of age but under 65, who not use his car for and has no driving youngsters business, below age 25. forces Premiums are computed within pro- geographical regions within state.

The insurance industry for an average increase of the per cent for medical payments insurance and a 38 per increase on comprehensive coverage. Industry requests were sented by Dallas attorney David Irons, who told the board the delay in rates will cost the industry approving million on private passenger premiums alone this year. He added that the delay last increase year until in not the granting, the year cost the industry $6.5 million. Rates usually are board in September, set by the but they were delayed this year as the board wrestled with the controversy earnings of including investment and of letting the industry make a fair profit on auto underwriting alone something the industry says has been a money loser for 10 the past years. the Underwriting profits allowed industry in the staff recommendation was 4.7 per cent.

MARKET REPORT Waco Market Waco Prices Steady markets steady, Hogs No. 1 butcher hogs Grains oars Grain sorghum $1.80 at 70c wheat $1.24 per 100 bu. Pecans Native pecans 32c papershells depend on 10 1 quality large Small 30c medium Eggs 39c dozen. 35c CHICAGO CHICAGO (AP) LIVESTOCK slaughter steers steady 10 USDA--Cattle 50 heifers steady; slaughter steers yield prime grade 3 28.75-29.25; high choice and lbs vield Ibs 28.25-28.75; choice grade 2 to 4 mixed good and choice 27.25-27.75; 27.50-28.50; 1,100 26.00-27.25; Ib high slaughter choice and prime and 4 27.50-28.00; heifers yield vield grade 2 to choice mixed good and choice 4 26.00-26.75; 26.75-27.50; 24.00-26.00. Sheep none: no market test.

FORT FORT WORTH calves 1000; WORTH steady; (AP) cows Cattle LIVESTOCK 17.50-19.00; canner 14.60-18.00. 17.80-20.00; 39.25; Feeders: 330-400 choice Ibs 250-300 lb steers 38.00- 465-510 Ibs 31.50-33.10; 34.60-36.75; good 450 lbs 32.00; 32.00-34.60; choice 460 lbs 31.25; 460-515 lbs 28.80- 240-380 310-425 lbs 29.50-32.10; 260-325 lb 420-440 heifers lbs 33.50-34 30.00; 450-500 lbs 28.00-29.25; 29.00- 27.25-29.40; good 350-400 heifers and 540 lb 26.20; choice 310-435 stock cows 26.50; choice 31.90-34.10; bulls 31.00-33.50; 35.00-37.00; choice 400-450 stock 23.00; good 17.70-20.70. Hogs 400; steady: 2-4, 225-260 lbs steady; 2-3, 430-690 lbs 13.00-13.50. 16.00; Sheep 150: steady except bucks 1.00-2.00 lower and feeder lambs and to 50 lower: good and choice 6.00-6.50; lambs 25.00-26.00; bucks 6.00-7.00; good and choice wooled lambs 22.00; buck lambs 12.00- good 7.50-8.00. and choice solid mouth breedewes Lloyd Priest Says: "Service is our middle name" And we answer when you call our name -middle or otherwise.

Makes no difference what kind of air conditioning you have- our men are trained air conditioning experts and know how to coax it to give out with its very best. We feel this makes us a great many friends. And after all--friends make the very best customers. LOCHRIDGE-PRIEST, Inc. LENNOX AIR CONDITIONING AND HEATING 225 LAKE AIR DRIVE-772-0670 (Cold Spell CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE wave moved into the Sunday and this morning.

In Valentine, Neb. the ry reached 61 degrees before it fell to 19 Winds off Lake reached 75 to 92 miles an Sunday, Gusts of 50 miles hour were common the region. Homes in Southwest Rapids, Iowa, were heat and electricity to ward the 20-degree weather high winds toppled a large onto a transformer pole day. An Iowa Electric and Power Co. spokesman about 300 homes were about an hour.

High winds near downed Commonwealth tension lines, service on three South terminating Railroad trains between Chicago and South The downed lines telephone communications power. The cold air passing over waters of the Lakes resulted in heavy squalls in some areas. a foot of snow expected to accumulate in Cleveland area today. Snowfall Sunday ranged from four inches in the Mississippi Valley. Much of the severe weather located around the aand Southern Plains, began moving into Northwest and South night.

Snow and freezing rain pelted Pacific Northwest warnings up for Columbia River gorge. Gale were posted along Coast. Hardy Hay Sr. Dies in Kansas Former Robinson res id ent Hardy N. Hay Sr.

of Overland Park, died Sunday Overland Park. He was 88. Funeral services are pending at Compton-Waltrip Funeral, Home. Mr. Hay was a retired dairyman.

He was born in and lived most of his life Eddy in Robinson. He moved to Kansas nine years ago. He was a member of Robinson Presbyterian Church. Survivors include his son, Marine Corps Col. (ret.) Hardy N.

Hay Jr. of Overland Park. one sister, Mrs. Essie Tankersley of Fort Worth; three brothers, Harold Hay of Route Waco, George Hay of 3916 Sleeper and John L. Hay of Cklahoma City, and three grandchildren.

Smith to Get Copy Of 'Capitols of Texas' Gov. Preston Smith will receive a copy of "Capitols of Texas' published by Texian Press in formal presentation Tuesday at 2 p.m. in the capitol rotunda. Robert E. Davis of Texian Press, a member of the Texas Library and Historical Commission, will make the presen- tation.

Gov. Smith wrote the preface to the book. Seven Texas historians contributed articles on buildings at Washington-on-the-Brazos, Columbia, Houston and Austin. These cities have served as seats of government for Texas since independence was declared in 1836. Friends' Book Sale Breaks All Records Book sale by the Friends of the Library Waco-McLennan County went over the top and set another record by bringing, in a total of $1,421.20 by closing time Saturday afternoon.

This is $149.15 more than last year's sale and represents many more individual books sold than last year. The 1969 figure included $300 paid for one set of bound periodicals. The biggest day of the sale Mrs. Neal, 84 Dies; Funeral Set Tuesday was Saturday when virtually all books were priced at 10 cents each. Buyers boosted the Friends' coffers by nearly 5,000 hardback a paperback books, Mrs.

Dorothy Progar, assistant library director, says old magazines moved slowly and the Friends may not include them in next year's sale. Most books in the donated by local citizens. Proceeds go to supplement and enrich library facilities Indochina Indochina CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE launched a counterattack in a mountain pass to retake two government positions on Highway 4 which were seized by Communist units Sunday. The newsman, who was not identified, apparently fell into Communist hands as he accompanied Cambodian troops on a 45 miles northeast of Phnom Penh. Mrs.

Daisy Pearl Neal, 84, in raids described by the ring of Route 7, Waco, died Pentagon as retaliation for the morning in a local hospital. shooting down of an unarmed Funeral services will be held American reconnaissance plane at 2 Nov. 13. p.m. Tuesday in ComptonWaltrip Chapel with Rev.

J. W. U.S. communiques said the Sellers officiating. Burial will be planes attacked North Vietnain Chapel Hill Memorial Park.

mese antiaircraft bases below Mrs. Neal was born in Lorena the 19th parallel. Communist and had lived in the Central accounts said the raiders hit Texas area most of her civilian targets and struck She was a member of the above the 19th parallel near the life. Asbury Methodist Church. In Hanoi-Haiphong area.

She is survived by a daughter, Cambodia, action was Mrs. R. L. Wallace of Route reported on two fronts today 7, Waco; two sons, George and another newsman was Harold Neal of Lorena and Lt. reported missing and feared Col.

Wendell Warren Neal captured by the Viet Cong. with the U.S. Air Force in Cambodian infantrymen reGermany; a sister, Mrs. Maud ported killing 55 Communists Marrs of 2219 Flint; two by sinking four Communist brothers, Dolpha Warren of driver boats in an ambush less Route 2, McGregor, and Olpha than 15 miles northeast of Warren of Killeen; 12 Phnom Penh. grandchildren; and five great- South of Phnom Penh, a task grandchildren.

force of 3,000 Cambodian troops Dies at Grid Game OAKLAND, Calif. (UPI) Funeral services will be held Wednesday for Ivan C. Sperbeck, 62, attorney who suffered a heart attack while attending a football game between Stanford and California universities. HYANNIS, Mass. (UPI) --As in the past seven years on Nov.

22, Mrs. Rose Kennedy was in St. Francis Xavier Church for a memorial service in the Cape President John F. Kennedy. Mrs.

Kennedy, who attends church daily, was the only family member present at the memorial mass for her son, President John F. Kennedy. In Brookline, a suburb Boston, more than 200 -persons visited the three-story home at 83 Beals Rd. where Kennedy was born. "We always have family groups on Sunday, but never like this," one National Park Service guide commented.

WATER WEIGHT PROBLEM? USE E-LIM Excess water in the body can be uncomfortable. E-LIM will help you lose excess water weight. We at GIBSON PHARMACY recommend it. Only $1.50 Gas Range FALL SALE! See all the great new 1970 Caloric gas ranges now on your local Lone Star Gas Company sales floor! Caloric Model J-275 30-inch Eye-Level double-oven gas range SALE PRICE $337 Caloric Model J-071 30-inch freestanding range SALE PRICE SAVE $225 on all other model gas ranges See the great line of gas ranges on local Lone Star Gas Company your during Lone Star sales floor. financing available -Nov.

Lone Star Gas Company 4 JFK Memorial CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE JOHN B. BLACKWOOD Former City Employe Dies Funeral services for John B. (Pop) Blackwood of 1323 North Twelfth will be at 2:30 p.m. Tuesday at Wilkirson and Hatch Funeral Chapel with Rev. A.

C. Lane and Rev. Danny Lane officiating. Burial will be in Waco Memorial Park. Mr.

Blackwood died Sunday night at his home. He was 80. He was born in Richland Springs and moved to Brownwood as a child. He worked for the City of Waco sanitation department from 1930 1 until he retired in 1953, after the tornado Mr. Blackwood was a member of Faith Tabernacle Church and was a veteran of World War I.

He had ill several weeks. Survivors include his wife; daughter, Mrs. Polly Sherill of 1323 North Twelfth; one brother, Monroe Blackwood of Grapeland; two grandchildren, and nine great-grandchildren. Woman Pastor CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE minister said after the ordination women "generally tend to be more sensitive to and at the same time are particularly interested in practical details." The new minister was born Pittsburgh and was graduated from Chatham College there and the Gettysburg seminary. Her way to becoming a minister was opened when the Lutheran Church in America altered its constitution last summer.

The LCA is the largest of the three Lutheran bodies in North America, with 3,148,234 members. The American Lutheran Church, with 2,575,000, voted last month to make the necessary legal, changes to allow women ordained. Yet to take such a step is the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod. 22, in 11-23 Bomb Raids CONTINUED FROM PAGE that the "protective missions," were in retaliation for attacks on unarmed U.S. connaissance planes over Vietnam and to protect can pilots flying strikes North Vietnamese military plies moving through Laos ward South Vietnam In Paris, the North namese delegation to the nam peace talks announced will boycott Wednesday's planned session.

The raids drew congressional criticism in ington where antiwar seek to reopen debate on dent Nixon's South Asia gram. Chairman J. William bright of Senate Foreign tions Committee described bombing raids as "very ominous." imply the administrastill seeks military victory rather than a negotiated settlement, the Arkansas Democrat said. Sen. George D.

Aiken of mont, ranking republican on committee, told a home state newspaper he was surprised Nixon did not consult key congressmen before the weekend strikes. He hinted at Capitol Hill retaliation. The bombing came as many Democrats were still rankled over Nixon's request week for $155 million in new for Cambodia. Senate MaLeader Mike Mansfield Sunday the weekend raids to an increased, not lesser, role in Indochina. Although Friedheim said the primary reason for the raids a response to the shooting of an Air Force reconnaisplane Nov.

13, Friedheim clear Laird was also disby the shellings earlier month of Saigon and Hue by Viet Cong and, adding a new by the failure progof the Paris peac talks. Car Insurance CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE history of car accidents and damage claims. For the entire state, an average 23.4 per cent increase in auto insurance premiums was recommended in a staff report to the State Insurance Board. The recommendation, prepared by the board's technical staff, was 4.3 per cent below that sought by insurance industry representatives. Both proposals were outlined during hearings here.

The three-member board will 3 not act immediately on new rates, which will be effective Jan. 1. Ned Price, chairman of the three-member insurance board, said public hearings will be held ter Houston and Dallas before final action is taken on new rates. No date for the hearings immediately set. Insurance board actuaries Ibs based their recommendation on lb new formula authorized by board which brings all the cows insurance companies income sows including that from investments into the formula.

ewes In coming up with its recomewes mendation, however, the technical staff broke board 16.00; ing for 25 high any tra- town to Ind. proposed out cent, and the warm formula than far increase private a the nine in years does was Lakes but East, in- Sunday 40 the the blizzard asked 21.2 warnings cent Midwest mercu-1 hour Prass an Cedar without off atter tree SunLight said affected Chicago Edison Shore downBend, burned the Great snow More was the to Upper Great the not know until they reached home the president had shot. "We turned on the television and stayed in front of it three days," Matamoros said. "This was dead." Mayor Erik Jonsson recalled the remorse of the at the time and said: "All of were caught up in the first four days in a way which I hope will never happen again in the United States." The memorial service for Kennedy, led off by the mayor, was organized by the Dallas Council of Churches executive director, the Rev. Louis A.

Saunders, who officiated at the funeral in Fort Worth of Lee Harvey Oswald, Kennedy's assassin. The memorial service was followed immediately by one by the Knights of Columbus and then another by a group of about 25 teen-age Jewish youths from B'nai B'rith. Two huge wreaths of chrysanthemums -one white and the other of bronze flowers -were placed on the raised dark gray marble slab, which is the only object inside the shell. Kepnename is written on each end in gold letters. Other flowers were strewn around the marble and visitors for the most part avoided walking on depressed area of concrete which the marble rests.

Rose Kennedy Attends Mass sance made turbed this the element, ress pounds' lower; and prime good 950- grade good 1500; cut- Ibs 800 Ibs.

The Waco Times-Herald from Waco, Texas (2024)
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