Panola Watchman Sunday Review (Carthage, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 15, Ed. 1 Sunday, February 24, 1974 Page: 2 of 10
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A 2—WATCHMAN SUNDAY REVIEW Cartiw^. Tem. Fehnwy M MM
Wright Patman
The Washington Scene
TME FEDEMAL KMEItt'E-
A PUWEM GKAB Inter our
traditional dual banking
»>Uem nalMMial bunkx are
regulated by Feteral utticiah
while state banka are primarily
within the juriadM-tiori of Mate
agencies A flagrant example of
bureaucratic a e I f -
aggrandizement ta now under
w>) by the Federal Keaerve
'Fed* to get al) Mate bunk*
direct!) under the t*iumb of the
provite for an audit of the Fad
by the independent and high!)
respected General A croon) mg
Office The wiuation boils down
the Congress or the American
OBITUARIES
Mr*. Mullin* Mr*. Baldwin
Funeral services for Mrs
Maude Gray Mullins, 85. of
Tatum were held Friday. Feb
22. at the Tatum United
Methodist Church with the Rev
Cliff Bailey and the Rev R 0
Sullivan officiating
Burial followed in the New
Prospect Cemetery
Mrs Mullins, a housewife and
member of the Tatum United
Methodist Church. died
Thursday Feb 29. at Panola
General JfospHa)
Survivors include four sons,
Haywood Gray of Henderson. J
Langston Gray of Jacksonville.
Ha , and Joel Gray and John W
Gray, both of Tatum; one
daughter. Mrs Mildred
Cochran of Henderson; two
brothers. Claude Williamson of
Henderson and Jess Williamson
of Dallas, four sisters, Mrs Ed
Beal) of Henderson. Mrs John
Nash of Tatum. Mrs Evelyn
Gray of Longview and Mrs
Reuben Honeycutt of Overton;
eight grandchildren and one
greatgrandchild
Funeral services for Mrs
Amanda Pearl Baldwin 77, of
Gary were held Friday. Feb
22. at the New Hope Baptist
Church in the Woods dem-
mumty with the Rev James E
Thompson and the Rev.
Rayford Crowell officiating
Burial followed in the Woods
Post Office Cemetery under the
direction of the Hawthorn
Funeral Home of Carthage
Mrs Baldwin, a housewife,
died Thursday. Feb 21, at her
daughter's home in Carthage
Survivors include her
husband. Lester Baldwin of
Woods Community; two
daughters. Mrs. Thomas
Brannon of Carthage and Mrs
Raymond Risinger of Lake
Charles. La ; two brothers,
Thomas Echols of Hermleigh
and Perry Echols of Ira, one
sister. Mrs Walter
Wedgeworth of Carthage, four
grandchildren and two great-
grandchildren
Natchez PUgnnuN
WITH
I AVI Lt i"
Deiiingram uordtns
ond HOME
In coopnrrion with Continnntil TnHwsyt founUnc.
tfeservsr ’’’WW"
ME. Htnpifol-MMMl
In the Sheraton Crest Bldg.
DAYIMdfT SAVING TIME:
As reported us earlier
newsletters. I voted agamet the
Deyi^M Saving Tune Act since
1 frit that the small amount of
fust reportedly saved did Mt
justify the massive in-
convenience involved Even
some of those who voted for the
Act are now having second
About tbi> low. m4 I
hwy# wtfrqwikWMd icgMtatJOS Ip
repeal Daylight Saving Time
FEDERAL EDL'CATIDN
FLNDB; Last week, the House
approved a measure, with my
Mf <xig andfl support to
permit school districts to carry
over to the next school year
unused Title I funds ap
propnatad for the 1974 fiscal
year, together with previously
appropriated funds un Bounded
by the President and only
recently released by court
order This will allow the wisest
expenditure of funds In fact. I
favor making the carry-over
provision permanent
ENERGY FROM OIL
SHALE: U S oil Miele deposits
mnia^ an eetimeied 400 billion
barrels of oil - about the
equivalent of the known world
reserves of oil, but extracting
this oil involves complex
economic, technological and
environmental questions A
well-documented report
prepared by the ConartMional
Research Service, “Energy
From Oil Shale," <M pages)
describes the promise and
problems of developing oil shale
resources Single copies of this
report will be sent free to
constituents upon request to my
office.
WASTED OCTANET About a
third of all cars io the U.S.
perform well on gas with an
octane rating ol about 87 but 95
percent of the gasoline refined
last year bad an octane rating of
V or above. This represents
considerable waste since a
reduction of one point io octane
means that at least 2 per cent
more gas can be squeezed out of
a barrel of crude oil. It is
believed that more precise
calculation of octane needs
would save 3.3 billion gallons of
gas a year - 31 per cent of the
predicted "shortfall." There is
some disagreement about these
figures, but the situation
deserves closer study and I
favor legislation to insure the
most efficisnt possible use of
existing oil supplies.
PENSION REFORM: Over 30
million employees (almost half
of the private nonfarm work
force in the U.S.) are covered
by private pension plans. Those
programs have assets totaling
more than 1110 billion, but
unfortunately, because of
mismanagement, poor plan
ning, and occasionally outright
fraud, many retirees are robbed
of the benefits to which they are
entitled. Legislation to protect
pension holders by providing
reasonable standards for ad-
ministration and regulation of
penaion plans has been reported
favorably from the House
committee studying this issue
and will be a top priority item in
this Congress Prospects for
approval are good, and I will
support this legislation, and
vote for it to be made effective
immediately upon enactment.
APPLIANCE COSTS
The Association of Homo
Appliance Manufacturers
points out that it takes leas than
half as many hours of work to
'earn" a now applicants today
as it did in im
FRED HUDSON, Jr.
P. 0 Box 393. Center Toxas 73933 713-999-SMI
Candidate For US. Representative
CONGRESS
Ottico Currently Hold By Wright Patman
EDUCATION:
OCCUPATION
Center, Toxas. High School; University of Toxas: BBA.
Highest Honors, Harvard law School: III. with Honors
Attorney at law; Lifetime Hardware Merchant;
President. Sabine Valley Savings A Loan Association
PUBLIC SfRVICE
Two Terms. District Attorney, Shelby (Center ) A Panola
(Carthago) Counties. U.S Navy, World War II
PCRSONAl
Married to Kathleen Covington, Four Children. Methodist,
lifetime Resident Center. Shelby County
FRED HUDSON. Jr.. QUALIFIED FOR CONGRESS
(Pel Adv PM by Fred Hudson, Jr P O. Box »3 Center, Texas, mui
TJMh FA VOMITED—Mcteme CopriaAd, School durwg M assembly held bet week
left, and Maroh Odom were namedeigiiU) at the schooL
grade favorites at Turner Junior High
Bishop Wins Leadership Award
Jamia Bishop. 17-year-old
senior at Beckville High School,
has been named Beckville’s
1973-74 Betty Crocker Family
Leader of Tomorrow
vofPpfiHhon with other seniors
at the school who participated
in a written knowledge and
attitude exam administered
Dec 4 She is now eligible for
state and national honors and
will receive a specially
dsmgned award from General
Mii| a Ine t o ol the
educational scholarship
program
This year. 7S3A74 students
from 14.443 schools were
enrolled m the Betty Crock**-
Searrh which. for rhe second
year, included eenfor hoy*
Since th* pngren began in
1954, approximately nine
million students have par-
ticipated and scholarship
awards total more than W
million,
JAMAMA’SGhF
The Caribbean isfond-natrnn
of Jamaica had a gross national
14) per cent over 1971. according
to the Jeneiee Industrial
Iteveloonient Coro
Ren jamin Franklin was ben
in Boston on Jan 17. I7M
HotneGarden Craze
Sweeps C
“Mere and snare home
gardeners are doing <heu
Brog out mdbmr back yards <
uhsrmer they caa find
tfnte" »*ye Bam Cotner
M^etatte apeoahtt for the
Texas Agnadturai Fat meme
ne gardening boom »
^dmnciy «n. as Cotner otas the
fount GadswfMI Meow that
three mdfom mere Americans
foek up gardanmg latt MW
oanp-red to wn bgune Be
pfol alee dbows that four out of
ovary mefamdieoieiheUB .<
About 27 mdfom leeubee have a
heare vqgetaMe garden
IHiy then sudden spurt to
rmurn to Mother Nature to tW
the sod. to bveedf *e fond*
Rs a matter of erne wire
for most fomdms. *' pemta out
Cotner “The increase H> foed
pnero during (he past year has
ham a major factor fo Mt
mushrooming inlerest in
gardening Moot gardeners
dkouid be able to save from «3N
to MWa year on their grocery
biMs
“And no one can deny the
improved flavor and frmhnres
of home grown vegetables Phis
they 're available whan yau
want them." contends Cotasr
The current tertdizer dwrtage
as well as a shortage of com-
mercial seed may keep down
e/fmmereiel vegetable
proiuetion in teme ereee tbit
yenr"
Gergenmg cen elee piey ee
B«gm wxh a aiMdl gfot,"
advuro Cotaor. "and if you and
your fomdy neeBy have the
-A man mir t*AdB mAbWAVM
Was v«
ApfotMfartbyMfortaan
predare ptawyaf vogatahiea for
G heui^siihri
that time aad work are m-
vaivad. so den t go overboard
aJbu iNsly tkw thtn^tt
you and your family enjoy meet
and thoee that reel the moot at
the supermarket .*’
Texans are biassed with a
good climate and a long
JETOWMX ftRMOO thM mafrww
gardening even more
prelueble. adds the eMtiaiiat.
Spring and fnll garJhna cm
produce an abundance of fresh
vegetables
aonoMom
PRICES fiOOD THROUGH SUNDAY
1.13
12 or.
II er.
99<
Regular
CARE
FOR YOUR
LOVELY
SKIN
Regular Price 3.25
took
89<
73<
5’g
Regular P»iSo IM
Regular Price l.ll
KEN TURNER PHARMACY
I
1
11111
IE3K3XiS.!:iIS3
5
sgular
714
Gillette
ihai n
Original A Groaioloos
Regular Price I 09
Regular Price
I.W
MANS
SHAVIN
a wcnaouRu
79
14 or
Regular Price
1.37
BAYER
A b PI H I N
JENKINS DRUG
IM I. SbMbb . Hl. A934S01
CARTHAGE DRUG
ill X. St. M«ry ■ Sb. 413 3111
7 er.
Pss»t
Shampoo
Regular A Oily
1,09
Regular Price 1.75
. IK
1 IK1
i AH
H )K
DRY
■KIN
ARE
•vmjmW'F-
w
ion
I Hl I
-i I'ltM M KI
MA/’
66<
Regular Price I 25
1.25
Regular Price 2.25
Eli
1.75
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Stevens, Jim. Panola Watchman Sunday Review (Carthage, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 15, Ed. 1 Sunday, February 24, 1974, newspaper, February 24, 1974; Carthage, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1195727/m1/2/?rotate=180: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sammy Brown Library.