Cedar Hill Chronicle (Cedar Hill, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 51, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 2, 1970 Page: 3 of 6
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THURSDAY, JULY 2, 1 970
CEDAR HILL CHRONICLE
* CEDAR HILL CHRONICLE ★
^CLASSIFIED AD
★ Legal Notices Billy Graham
DEADLINES: In order to appear in the Thursday issue of The Chronicle, classified ads
of all types must be in our hands toy 5 p.m. on the Tuesday before. . . RATES: Up to 10
word, 50?; 3? per word above 10; Classified Display-70? per column inch net; Legal
notices, 15? per 9-point line; Cards of Thanks, $1 per issue (if of average length) . . .
Classified ads placed but ordered cancelled before insertion will not be run, but charge
witf stand.
PAGE THREE
PIANO TUNING
$a.oc
Evening & Saturday
Appointment
224-6036 or 339-0649
POODLE
GROOMING
Evenings & Weekern.
298-0666
★ Services * Misc. For Sale
FOR SALE—Piano, like new
N&N EXTERMINATING SER- sewing machine, miscellan-
VICE--Termite and pest eous items. Call 291-1740.
controll. Roaches, rats, fleas * r.
■Sales-Rentals
[TRAVEL TRAILERS
[8 & 10 ft. over cab
P. U. Campers
Sleeps 4-6 People
Fully Equipoed
•Cedar Hill Motors:
HWY 67 AX1-1441
Cedar Hill, Tex.
All Occasion
Flou)ers
By Sp ecial Order
and ants. Tre e spraying and
lawn spraying. FRE E inspec-
tion. For information call
291-4744 after 5 p.m.
House painting, inside or out.
Call 291-4927.
LEARN TO SWIM
Children and adults. Inter-
mediate and advanced. Alex
Louis. 298-2821.
WHITE'S Carpet Cleaning
1$ per sq. Ft.
White carpet a specialty
Bonded-Insured-References
on Call 24 hours
RI1-5225 or 298-2057
Want to do sewing in my home,
dresses, suits, slacks, child-
ren's clothes.
298-1117.
. STRAYED—Brown and white
male miniature chihuahua.
Contact after Sunday. 291-
1638. Reward.
For the Best Buy in bedding
see us. Ward & Bates, 320
N. Main, "The Little Store
with the Big Values, Open
Thursday till 9,
it Employment
The Board of Adjustment of
the City of Cedar Hill. Texas
will hold a public hearing
July 20, 1970, 7:30 P.M., City
Hall to hear a request sub-
mitted by R. C. Rountree for
a temporary permit for a mo-
bile home. Property in ques-
tion is described as follows:
Tract #1, Bluebonnet Addi-
tion, Abstract 1552, 229 ft.
footage on old Cedar Hill Road.
The owners of all property
within 200 feet of the above
described tract are as follows:
James Carrell. Joe Pezzullo,
T. Dickinson, and V. D.
(weddings a specialty) £: ^ Misc. For Sale
Joyco Murdoch
,
Micfmels
201-1427 6all After 3P.M.
For Sale By Cedar Hill School:
Sealed bids will be accepted
until Monday, July 6, 1970 at
7:00 p.m. for 4 basektball
backstops.
- Basketstops are now lo-
cated on tennis courts be-
hind High School Gym. To be
sold: Framework for 4
backstops, 2 goals and 2
back boards. Please file seal-
ed bids in Superintendent's of-
fice. The board reserves the
right to reject all bids.
COOKSONS J
► Automatic Transmissionsi
♦Exchanges *Overhauls
♦Repairs *Parts
♦Wrecker Service
298-5101
HWY. 67 ana
COCKRELL HILL ROAD
Opposite A-1 Trailer Co.
Opening For
HAIR STYLIST
My Fair Lady Coffures
Duncanville
298-3775
Wanted: Experienced man to
help lay hardwood flooring
G&H Flooring. 298-5587,
IMMEDIATE SPARE TIME
INCOME
Refill and collect money from
company established route.
New , high qualty candy ma-
chines. No selling. Must have
car, excahnge references and
have minimum of $1900 cash
for inventry. We want a
person aspiring to$800.00per
month. Write giving full de-
tails about yourself to:
North American Enterprises
525 Newhouse Bldg.
Salt Lake city, Utah 84111
★ Autos For Sole
FOR SALE]- Good used cars
and pick-ups. Midlothian
Motors, Midlothian, Texas.
Weaver.
Respectfully submitted
City Secretarv
Real Estate for Sale
Have small frame house in
Grand Prairie. Would like
to trade for small farm or
brick in Cedar Hill. Call;
291-1816 or Ed Rowan 748-
0324,
SMALL ACREAGE WANTED:
in Cedar Hill Area. Call 339-
6075.
★ Too Late
To Classify
BABYSITTING—
Haswell— 291-1663.
night.
Muriel
Day or
FOR SALE —
months old.
291-4637.
Heifer calf 3
$85.00. Call
NEW maple Bunk beds com-
plete with Bunkies. Special
$89.95 set. Ward & Bates.
320 N. Main the ''Little
Store with Big Values," Open
A A Thursday till 9,
Sims Drive-In
ALW LUSTER SHAMPOO
216 Houston St.
291-1639
Classified
Ads
are an
'investment
Not an
expense.
NOTICE TO
ALL PIANO TEACHERS
Please Come By
Our Store And
Leave Your Name
& Address for referral
of New Students
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
FOR THE FINEST INNEW
& USED PIANOS & ORGANS.
COME SEE US FIRST.
Your Home Town Dealer
PIANO WAREHOUSE
Of Duncanville
511 E. Camp Wisdom Rd.
FOR SALE--18 foot Texas
Made Tahiti Boat, 50 horse
power, Evin. Motor, and trail-
er $750. May be seen at Dil-
lard's Enco Highway 67.
We have a limited supply of
Fedders air conditioners at
special reduction prices.
Various sizes. Western Auto
Store, Midlothian, 775-3310.
Overflow from decorating
about to put me out of my
home. Have kingsize bed-
room, mattress and box-
springs sets, couches, chairs,
tables, lamps, dinning room
sets many other items, must
sell. 330-9891.
BETTY'S DRESS SHOP
424 Highway 67 - 291-1675.
Good Selection of Spring & Summer Dresses
Monday thru Saturday - 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.
WHITE AUTO STORE
Tower Shopping Center
Al t Rtijril Kratgtr
WIGS, WIGLETS, CASCADES & FALLS
STYLED IN MY HOME
One Day Service On Request - Reasonable Prices
ELAINE THORNTON 291-1878
Free pick-up & Delivery
•OOK KEEPING
SEKVtCE
2300 W. CLARENDON DR.
DALLAS, TEXAS, 75208
Buck Plummer's
Humble Station
ALL BRANDS OF MOTOR OIL
AUTO REPAIR ROAD SERVIC.
108 North Main 291-1919
♦
♦
♦
t
♦
♦
tdcui Hill Chmde
"COVERING SCENIC CEDAR HILL*-
TOWER CITY OF THE SOUTHWEST*
a
moeiATtoN
1970
PUBUCA
Uf SUBURBAN FUBLISHKKS
JYCE BROWN Executive Editor
la Faye>?oster Editor & Gen. Mgr.
Published every Thursday at Cedar Hin, "Itexas 75104.
The Cedar Hill Chronicle is an independent newspaper,
published weekly in the intei-est of Cedar Hill.
Any erroneous reflection upon the integrity and repu-
tation of any individual will be corrected if brought
to the attention of the editor.
Subscription Rates: By mail in Dallas or Ellis County,
$3.00 per year. Elsewhere in Texas or in continental
United States, $4.00 per year. No foreign country sub-
scription accepted except APO-addressed servicemen,
$4.00 per year. All subscriptions payable in advance.
Second-Class Postage r^iri at Cedar Hill, Texas.
ADVERTISING RATES
MAY BE SECURED ON REQUEST
CLARK
INSURANCE
Stop
Insurance
Worries
WE WRITE ALL KINDS
* Life - Fire - Health
* Automobile - Bonds
* Casualty - Business
291-1692 - 708 Cedar St.
f
I
For Your Drug
Prescription
And Cosmetic Needs
Remember
CUM® mil BK
291-1810
FREE DELIVERY
Holds Crusade
In New York
The crack of the bat
and the scream of the crowd
at the home of the world
champion Mets, Shea Stadium,
gave way to the call to rep-
ent as Evangelist Billy Gra-
ham opened a five-day evan-
gelistic Crusade there.
In his sermon— "The
Choice That Will Decide Am-
erica's Destiny"—the —51
year old preacher told a
crowd of 32,500 that America
was "rapidly sinking into ido-
latry."
"We are serving the god
of pleasure, money, and sex
while we are going, I believe
we are finished as a free de-
mocratic society."
The preacher spoke from a
platform decorated with artif-
icial shrubbery and flowers
that were placed on the base-
ball infield immediately in
front of second base. His
grayin hair waved in a light
breeze and his voice was oc-
casionally drowned out by air-
planes taking off from nearby
LaGuardia Airport.
Singer Anita Bryant, from
Miami, held a red Bible in her
hand as she sang the inspir-
ational song ''He Lives."
"That's my testimony to-
night," the tall red-haired
beauty siad. "Christ lives in
my heart."
Following Mr. Graham's
message, he invited members
of the crowd to "accept Christ
as your personal Savior."
"The decision you make to-
night will decide where you are
100 years from tonight," he
declared. Some 874 persons
responded by walking down sp-
ecially constructed wooden
ramps to the infield and track
area. As they moved for-
the 4,000 voice choir quitely
sang the Gospel hymn "Just
As I Am."
The current Crusade is the
third time that Mr. Graham
has conducted a major evan-
gelistic outreach in America's
largest icty. London is the
only other city that has ever
hosted threeeof Graham's ef-
forts.
1 In 1957, he spoke to 2.3
million people in the course of
16 weeks at the old Madison
Square Garden. Last June
he appeared at the new Garden
for 10 nights and to 280,000
people, nearly 1,000 of whom
made "decisions for Christ."
Although he rarely returns
to a city after only one year,
Mr. Graham said he made an
exception for New York at the
urging of local churchmen be-
cause of the city's massive
spirtual needs.
"Last year we only touched
the hem of the garment," he
said.
During the 1969 effort, the
Garden was over flowed every
night except one, but this time
Shea Stadium is equal to three
Maidson Square Gardens.
Each of the tiers of the mas-
sive sports stadium seats ap-
proximately as many as the
Garden.
Auto Crashes
Kill More
Than Wars
It has been said before,
but it's still a surprise:
crashes on streets and high-
ways have killed and injured
millions more Americans than
all the wars we have ever
fought.
An insurance company has
said it again in its 1970 com-
pendium of traffic accident
statistics. Bill Mauldin,
World War II's cartoon chron-
icler, illustrated the booklet.
It is called "Mauldin Draws
Another War," and so he has.
His drawings are alternately
funny and grim and if you
are old enough to remember
WWII, you realize Mauldin
hasn't lost his Willie-and-Joe
touch.
The company presumably
intersperses cartoons with fi-
gures to entice readers
through a statistical sermon.
As the company president says
in a preface: "He (Mauldin)
and we fervently hope the
statistics and the cartoons
combine to give you a mes-
sage."
So do we. In fact, we think
enough of our readers and
their well-being to suggest
that they take advantage of the
company's offer to write for
"single copies or quantities
free as long as the supply
lasts." The Travelers is in
Hartford, Connecticut, and
their zip is 06115.
wm/M
Wimmm m mm
I
AERIAL VIEW of Mountain View College shows the rapid progress which has been made in
recent weeks Phase I, located m upper portion of photo, will be readv for occupancy by ap
mf v, MSh,d6ntS ? September- "> Portion of photo, will open in IJly
th» t s complexes are connected by enclosed bridges which span a deep ravine
the most distinctive natural feature of the 210-acre campus. Applications for enrollment ^e
SoiseAve.a^d Knomile ^La™ COmlr """°r COllege' WhlCh iS IoCated ln 0ak Clift *
Sen. Tower Gives Report
This week the Senate has
engaged in debate regard-
ing the Constit jtional Powers
of the President as Comman-
der- In - Chief of the
Armed Forces to direct our
military policies.
To a degree I was de-
lighted to see so many of my
Colleagues taking an interest
in examining the intent of the
framers of the Constitution.
I wish this concern had mani-
fested itself much earlier on
some other matters that
vitally concern the American
people.
In discussing the intent of
the framers of the Constitut-
ion, I do think we have to
consider the contest of the
time in which the Constitution
was framed and was adopted.
I think thatbettercaseeould
have been made in those days
for more heavy reliance on
Congressional action as a pre-
dicate to the use of military
power than can be made now.
In the 18 th Centry, our Lines
of communication were not
what they are today. It took
a great deal of time to com-
municate from one part of the
world to another in those days.
The issue over which we
went to war with Great Bri-
tain in 1812 and already been
resolved in London but the
message had not reached our
shoes. It is probable that
if we had waited 30 days, that
war could have been avoided.
I think that a good case
could have been made in those
days for not taking precipit-
ate action by virture of the
fact that it ttok a great deal
of time to communicate across
the ocean. I thik, too, that
from the standpoint of tele-
graphing our punch to the
enemy, from the standpoint of
preserving the elevent of sur-
prise in a military operation,
we had a far different sit-
uation then than we have now.
I think we must look at our
current situation in the context
of one time in which we have
rapid, instant communication
with all parts of the globe;
in which our ships can vome
across the Atlantic Ocean
within 24 hours; when our
military forces are highly mo-
bile, and when we must view
everything that happens in the
international arena in a world
context. We must view matters
in light of the fact that there
is currently a polarization of
power in the world between the
Soveit Bloc on the one hand
and the United States on the
other. We cannot fail to un-
derstand that the Soviet Union
is an aggressor power, as is
Red China; that they do have
designs on the rest of the
world and that we must be pre-
pared to react quickly.
we in Congress have al-
ready recognized this.
When it became apparent
that the Soviets had designs
on other parts of the World,
we felt it necessary in our
own interest to maintain our
defense perimeter as far from
our own shores as possible
and as close to the potential
enemy's shores as possible.
The Congress must have un-
derstood, when we authorized
the deployment of american
forces in a state of combat
readliness all over the world,
that the chance was very good
that at some point in time those
forces might be committed to
some kind of belligerant act,
perhaps on very short notice.
I think the Congress was con-
cerned about tis and that the
Congress did deliberate on it.
We have two divisions and an
artillery brigade in Korea
now. They are authorized by
Congress to be there. We
have troops stationed in Wes-
tern Eurpoe. We have not
told the World thatalthough
our tropos are there, that in
the event of some Communist
military adventure we will not
use our troops until we have
had a renewed opportunity to
debate it thoroughly in Con-
gress.
I say that the Congress of
the United State s " has ac-
quiesced to what w are
doing in Southeast Asia. For
years the Congress has auth-
orized the procurement and
the deployment of weapons of
war and of troops in South-
east Asia. Therefore, I sub-
mit that the Congress has per-
formed its Consititutional fun-
ctions and that it has, in ef-
fect, aughtorize d the policies
the President is now carrying
out.
The Congress did not tho-
roughly discuss Presidential
actions in connection with the
Korean Conflict, nor the Pre-
sidential actions spread over
the decade of the 1960's in
South Vietnam. The Congress
did not attempt to tie the hands
of the President who is try-
ing to extricate us from South-
east Asia and who is trying
to reduce the level of our in-
volvement, we have those who
would stay the President's
hand;-
If we are to proceed on the
basis that the President has
no power to respond immed-
iately to a critical situation,
then we are rendering our-
selves impotent in the eyes
of the rest of the World, and
I do not see how we can then
purport to see a credible
deterrent to potential aggres-
sion.
I do not hink that in a cri-
tical international situation, in
which quick responses are re-
quired, we can afford to give
the President ay less power
to act than he now "has.
Mariage Licenses
Bobby Gray West, Box 389,
Midlothian to Jacqulyn Moore,
503 Lee St., Cedar Hill.
Our Barbershop in Harmony
with Our Old-Tim r- Values
0 Neals Barber Shop
706 Cedar
Gerald O'Neal
JOIN THE
SAVINGS
STAMPEDE
TO
BUFFALO
SAVINGS
YOUR ACCOUNT INSURED
TO *20,000.
*Vi% 0i Passbook Saviags
CEDAR HILL
FIRST BANK & TRUST
ledai Hill, lexas
Towor Shoppiag Coator
I
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Brown, Royce. Cedar Hill Chronicle (Cedar Hill, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 51, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 2, 1970, newspaper, July 2, 1970; Cedar Hill, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth480386/m1/3/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Zula B. Wylie Memorial Library.