Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 74, No. 140, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 2, 1974 Page: 4 of 12
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BR(
8ROWNWOOD BULLETIN
BERRYS WORLD
Tuesday .April 2, 1974
1 5 2
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.75
1913 1M
"Eat your heart out.'"
•List,
1958
&
4.91
1961
(
AVG 1.4
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Call your banker or your butcher with equal dignity Ask fo
GEDERAL TELEPHODE
I
A
s
GTE.
Witness charges Boyle
ordered assassination
1970
1971
1972
1973
1974
1934
1935
1936
1937
1954 0.54
1955 ' 1 31
1956 1 60
1957 0.77
1959 0.01
1960 3.94
1914
1915
1916
1917
1910
1919
GALVESTON. Tei (AP) -
Police believe a 2-year-old boy
Boy, 2, said
only witness
to drowning
WASHI
Wilbur D.
that he ai
quest for
er al milk
same tim
the natio
cooperati
financial
1972 pres
0.08
.05
.85
3.77
n
J
T
1
1938
1939
1940
1941
1942
1943
1944 :
1945
19M
1947
1948
1949
1950
1951
1952
1953
15
3.0
21
76
51
01
81
U
1888
1889
1890
1891
1892
1883
1894
1896
1887
1896
1899
1900
1901
1902
1903
1904
1905
1906
1907
1909
1910
1911
1912
.10
.75
2.85 ;
.76
49
3,85
161
3 09
»
2.59
32
180
2
5.63
110
155
T
230
35
54
200
2.00
58
05
20
30 <
T i !
r our Bigshot walnut Chest Phone.
i
3
1
1
TALKLOKE
TYCOON
2.AI
Stra
DALL
Democri
Robert
Week a
Univers
Americi
moral! t]
“Over
have a
placed <
of const
said In i
"The
legitima
depends
power
society'
said
“Man
places
confess
the in
Americ
Democ
depend
nfied pending notification of
next of kin, died when a tornado
roared through Campbellsburg.
Ky. Three businesses and
several homes were destroyed
there and 12 injuries were
reported
A total of 28 twisters swept
through a wide area including
Tennessee, Ohio and Mis-
sissippi in addition to Alabama
and Kentucky.
310
2.15
.27
45
Two killed
as twisters
rip south
By The Assoclated Press
Tornadic winds that swept
through areas of the Southeast
have left two dead. scores in-
jured and wide-spread ^uperty
damage
One of the dead was identified
as Willie MeCarey, killed
Monday night when his mobile
home was overturned by high
a winds north of Huntsville, Ala
McCarey s wife and three chil-
dren were hospitalised Author-
ities reported four other persons
• in the area were injured.
Another mobile home resi-
dent. who remained uniden-
--
E ,
6h
i MNO "VV
Am4e
a® me
s i
1 3.83
308
1 112
0.90
0.06
048
3.46
1.68
3.87
2.56
1.13
4.54
2.03
.09
0.25
.12
Ce.N
a
ggnwqe6.
•Ui C,
1962 0.05
1963 0.15
1964 2.84
1965 191
1966 ' 0.65
1967 0.23
1968 7.08
1969 0.19
J •
1908 46 1
was the only witness tothedis-
mla.TFPInDER "Did he mention who had victed of murder and sentenced Boyle wanted Mr Yablonski appearance of two persons from
BzalEEtd Press Writer given the order’" asked Special to death killed in Washington, D.C." a hotel fishing pier.
MEDIA, Fa. (AP) "Ohhh, Prosecutor Richard A Sprague GIly testified that aftnthe "Whz""asknd Spragea on The body of the woman, idem
-mi s ie=s --di
ei - K Bunker resumes =e
s= awg tolks In Panomo -a uma '
'r«-. « peretargereurorvattun PANAMA cm. Panama sass** has g?-
Boyle's murder trial came from Dstrict murdering Yablonski, (AP) - Ellsworth W Bunker. Charles F Moses, chief of Edriea , J ,
Paul Gilly, 40, a Cleveland > Margaret, and the chief American negotiator Boyle’s defense, told the jury of Thelittle boy was found early
house painter who has been Charlotte for a new Panama Canal treaty, nine men and three women that Monday by a hotelsecurity L
convicted of murder and sent U&e Yablonskis were slain as resumes talks today with Yablonski was murdered to guard on the corner of the pier __
tenced to death for the 1969 31 1969 in their Panamanian Foreign Minister prevent an investigation into near a car belonging to Vor-
slaying of Yablonski. rural Clarksville home in south- Juan A. Tack. nearly 81 million in union funds sburgh. Two fishing rods and _
Ethel Boyle also shook her ruram Pennsylvania. Boyle is Bunker arrived Monday and allegedly missing in District 19, reels with lines in the water
head vigorously after Gilly’s . murders was immediately flown to Con- which covers the Tennessee- were next to the pier rail,
testimony for the prosecution in wuodtrtn 57. Gilly's wife tadora island, 15 minutes from Kentucky soft coal fields.
Delaware County Common Hudd , vele 28, the capital, where the negotia- Boyle defeated Yablonski for Police said papers indictated
Pleas Court. Cleveland and William J tions are held. He is scheduled the UMW presidency three Mrs. Walker and Vorsburgh
Gilly, who faces cross-exam- Cleve and, and will to leave Friday. weeks Yablonski was both reside in Camden, Tex-- . .
ination today, said that "In the Turnblazer,, 52 Last month Secretary of State killed. In 1972, a federal judge The boy was turned over to the |k l I IHDnQ
summer of 1969" he met with presiden qofu"uDtstts par- Henry A. Kissinger signed an[ aside the election on grounds county welfare department and N eWS SerViCeS CndlOlS=
azthpsnarmnicssresmitapaggthbybiedsid.mr-igdaamaggengrezanuzorasasmstdatsassd"adtesmssartarSva ,
jg- -**• Arnai proposed leased line rates
"antedtabon""e------- ' Bv c AUteu Mon in extra costs to their sub- system called "H-Lo."
‘ ByJERRITBAWH scribers or provide reduced Under Hi-Lo, there would be a
switti Sixx’S*
ments that new leasedlne tele, nidspredd ' smaller cities and towns. There
phone rates proposed by the "“e FCChassaiditwiude- would also be a new charge for
Bell System would make news Jh whether t approve the each channel termination.
services too costly for many th date they AT&T contends the change is
small-city newspapers and ra ar^due to go into effect auto- necessary to relate more close-
diostations, maticany unless the commis- ly to actual costs of providing
the arningsatboutrh eaimpd to sionidecides they are illegal, as services it says the new rates
netitions filed Mondav by The the news services contend. are needed if the telephone
pestttcontedpress,united‘press American Telephone & Tele- companies are.to X^s t
Asocatn Reuters Limited graph Co.’s Bell System plans to compete with the offerings of
International Reuterstomtcd, w the current uniform na- newly authorized special com-
PowuJones, and the American tionwide mileage charge on pri- mon carriers over high-density
services in lines reserved by business- routes.
Publishers Association.mgces men for their exclusive use. It The AP petition to the FCC
They said the newsssseries would be replaced by a two-tier said ATT "shifted this
must pass on more than 84 mil- would be replace . enormous burden onto the news
------------- services ... to apparent igno-
Reform plan prevents s "25
_ ■ . the press of Hi-Lo before filing
early election returns endenortsessteda,khereis
Seisuhatonaness.im.km
could not be published or information on votes cast for AP said. This risk might be
broadcast undera campaign president before midnight, reasonable if the rates proposed
rrorm bill amendment adopted eastern standard time, on were necessary toa supporttcosts
bv the Senate election day. newly incurred by ATAT, but
The purpose of the amend- It was based on contentions the situation is that ATAT costa
ment offered by Sen. Henry L. that projections of winners on remain exactly the same as in
Bellmon R-Okla , and ap- the basis of early returns from the past.
proved by a 43-38 vote, Is to the East influence voters to "... While the dollar amount
prevent returns in the East other areas or deter them from of increases required per sub-
tom influencing voters in other going to the polls. scriber may appear to be rela-
oarts of die country to other voting Monday on the tively low, there is inevitably a
P More amendments to the con- bill, the Senate rejected 68 to 10 point at which news services
troversial hill continued to pile a complete substitute proposed will become prohibitively ex-
tnotdy,addingtola‘stackas by Sen Lowell P. Weicker Jr., pensive for ai substantial num-
ready submitted and not yet R-Conn. ber. subscribers, the AP
acted on. Weicker's substitute would said.________
The bill includes provisions have compressed all campaign-
for use of tax funds to finance ing, fund raising and ex- Al Hirt S
campaigns for federal offices as peditures into a 60-day pe nrnntf^d divOECO
well as limitations on contri- before the November elections. gramea doee
buttons and expenditures. He said this would cut costs NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Jan
Sen James B Allen, D-Ala., and was a better way to get at trumpeter Al Hirt has been
and other opponents of public campaign abuses than public fi- divorced from his wife of 31
financing have threatened a nancing. years and agreed to pay more
filibuster to block the bill’s pas- Opponents argued that Wei- than 894,900 in annual support
sage. cker's substitute would make payments.
A two-thirds majority would the campaign period so short Mary PatureauHirtlhad filed
be required to shut off debate, that relatively unknown chai- suit for legal separatiohalleg-
and Democratic Whip Robert C. lengers would have almost no ing that he abandoned, their
Byrd told newsmen the votes chance to unseat incumbents, home on March 21,1973, without
will be hard to get._________________cause___________
Mysterious object turns
out to be star, not moon
pasadexa.c.cam-a marimarahonaraznsrom suatnheuameszandimmsts
mysterious oblecttdetectedb hour. It was later discovered that
Mariner 10 hasturaedn He explained that quick cal- the object actually wasn't be-
a very hot star ra culations indicated that the ob- coming dimmer as Mariner
mMaragEncounteredabeat
tsssLuw-w
cury, which Mariner coincidence that fooled us," spokesman said temperatures
photographing. Broadfoot of Dunne «ld inside a vital equipment com-
th^KMptk National Oteer- He said that after the moon partment soared to 109 degrees,
the Kitt rT,‘ - Ariz said theory was announced at a news nearly 40 degrees above nor-
vatory near Tucson, conference Sunday "a couple of mal. The rise continued slowly.
Monday it r™,. bright young navigation "We can live with the tern-
constsstaninsrvuhent aboard n—a-”- perature"torthagrezenttimg.
Mariner which was sweeping . M|„. sine heerswereuncertainwhattem-
sacgnnsesrshre r ann a ni ckame‘31 yeoman perature_"ouW silence w«
mshere around Mercumaand spoerrattsandtneoverheating
had not been expected to detec founded in 1485, the corps and a power shortage might
stellar radiation, got its nickname in 1669 from . t Imnossible to bring the
Dr James Dunne. Mariner the visiting Grand Duke of makeimpoih noring the
nrolect scientist said the con- Tuscany commenting on spacecraft back for another fly
PrsSarsse when both Mercury their large daily ration nf by of Mercury next September
and the object grew fainter as beef as scientists had hoped.
1920 3.41
1921 90
1922 .61
1923 1.78
1924 .24
1925 .56
1926 i 3.71 j
1927 .76
1928 .37 ,
1929 ' 2.40
1930 .63
1931 3.02
1932 4.44
1933 1.65
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Fisher, Norman. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 74, No. 140, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 2, 1974, newspaper, April 2, 1974; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1572574/m1/4/: accessed June 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Brownwood Public Library.