Sulphur Springs News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 107, No. 177, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 28, 1985 Page: 3 of 42
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US No. 1
Russet Potatoes
5 Lb. Bat
69*
*1.39
HC*
39*
I
Snuggle
Fabric
Softener
33 oz.
Delsey
Bathroom
Tissue
2 roll pkg-
59‘
Parade
Pure Cane
Sugar
5 lb. bag
J
IL
*1.49
‘2.49
‘1.79
1
1C'5.
‘1.57
<*
/
‘1.49
89‘
‘1.79
081*1
Homegrown
Watermelons
28 lb. a»g.
Kraft
Barbecue
Sauce
18 oz.
Kraft
American
Cheese
12 oz. singles
Country
* Sausage
2 lb. raM
‘2.49
USD* Choice
Sirloin
Steak
Lipton
Family Size
Tea Bags
24 ct
lit
Peanut
Butter
18 oz.
Docker
Quality
Bacon
lb. pkg.
Crisco
Oil
48 oz. bottle
Surf
Laundry
Detergent
49 oz. Giant
Size
‘1.79
<1
A 3
Kleenex
Facial
Tissue
White and
Assorted Colors
250$
99‘
Jip
Show boat
.Pork
n’ Beans
15 oz.
4 ta‘1
‘2.49
Super Special!
Oscar Mayer
Beef
Franks
Kez. pkg.
99‘
DECKE^J
says that won’t happen,” said Anne Salvation Army shelter there.
"You’re only going to make the
problem worse if you have no place
for them to eat and sleep,” she said.
The task force recommendation
Wynne wants the council to quickly
make the “tough decision” and pick a
site.
"If the Salvation Anny does not get
a new home in fairly short order, I
would not be at all surprised if they
say to the city, We’re getting out of
the’transient business and it’s now
your problem, ” she said.
“The city has been getting off light
for lots of years, having the Salvation
Army take care of city problems,”
goes to the city council Thursday. Ms. Ms. Wynne said.
There is a hint of frustration in
Kingsbury’s voice as he talks about
the brick walls into which the
Salvation Army has run.
“Everybody is saying we are doing
a great job and everything, but just
not in our neighborhood,” he said.
Wynne, the lawyer who has led the
task force.
“I expected the neighborhoods to
react as they did. That’s a very ap-
propriate response. A shelter for the
homeless does not belong in a
neighborhood.,” she said. “But I’m a
little disappointed Sixth Street didn’t
try to get better educated before they
took out full-page ads.”
The transients, according to Ms.
Wynne, will gather downtown
regardless of whether there is a
&
Sunshine
Krispy
Saltine
Crackers
16 oz.
Johnson’s
Baby Wash
Cloths
72 count
♦2.49
Post
Raisin Bran
20 oz.
Family Size
‘1.88
RaiSIN
BR3N
89‘
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■ i
CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH
130 Lee St. Pastor A. Glenn Artt Sulphur Springs
Sunday Morning - 10:45 AM - July 28
ir
Monday thru Friday Evening - 7 PM - July 29 - Aug.
Nursery Provided
FALL TSIKA tvwgd.MX
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£
THE CALVARY SINGERS Spm<u»l LniertainmeiH
Prices Effective Sunday Thru Wednesday
Featuring
Praise and Worship Conference
Custom Cuts And
Freezer Beef Are
Always Available In
The Butcher Shop.
mpdct
USE YOUR IMPACT
CARD INSTEAD OF
CASH OR CHECKSI
Home Owned and Operated By The McClendon Family
QUICKY FOODS
Gilmer St. at Radio Rd.
We Welcome Food Stamp Customers!
PprK O
Beans
tag
SINGLES
Z3
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QUICKY QUICKY QUICKY QUICKY QUICKY QUICKY QUICKY QUICKY QUICKY QUICKY
* ■■■■■■■■mm■■■■;
bordered by East Seventh, East
Sixth, Trinity and Red River streets.
Merchants along Sixth Street —
also known as Old Pecan Street —
picked up where the neghborhoods
left off. The strip has undergone
amazing transformation in the past
seven years, going from a skid row-
booze, is not the place into which to
funnel transients, according to
Hannah, owner of the Headliners
East restaurant.
“These are people with alcohol
By KEN HERMAN owners are allowing the shelter to
Associated Press Writer remain until a new site can be
AUSTIN (AP) - Merchants along arranged
Austin’s Sixth Street, a Bourbon
Street-like strip of clubs and bars, say
moving the Salvation Army shelter
one block closer could be a threat to
safe partying.
The new downtown site was
recommended by a city task force
after neighborhood associations
successfully fought off plans to move
the facility away from downtown.
After 57 years on Second Street, the
Salvation Army has outgrown its
beadquarters. It’s ready to move, but
study, recently recommended a
it’s been unwelcome every place it’s portion of a two-block downtown area
looked.
„ “There’s an unknown fear,” said
Ron Kingsbury, the Salvation Army
program director. “People are really
concerned about the transients but
they do not understand the tran-
sients.”
In 1978, when Kingsbury started
working in Austin, 10,000 meals were
served at the Second Street kitchen.
Last year, more than 112,000 meals
were served. Unemployment is low,
construction jobs are available. The
jobless are heading to Austin.
“When they are taking a look for a
new place to start, everything leads
to Austin,” said Kingsbury.
The Salvation Army sold its Second
Street location. A high-rise office
building will be built, but the new
the city’s
requirements.
Next, land was donated in the
Montopolis area, a low-to-middle
income area of Southeast Austin. The
neighborhood nixed it.
The city appointed a task force
A tract on South Congress, a few
miles south of downtown, was pur-
chased by the Salvation Army. It was problems. This is a street with high
properly zoned, but got caught up in pedestrian traffic. It’s a great op-
“compatibility” portunity for them to panhandle and
reinforce their habits,” he said.
Kingsbury says the transients do
not increase the crime rate. Some
drink, he said, but so do non-
transients.
“The problem they have, maybe, is
that, after 13 weeks of hearings and public intoxication. They are
drinking out in the open where
everybody else does it in their home,”
he said.
The windows of Henry’s Memry’s,
a vintage clothing store on Sixth, are
covered with signs protesting the new
downtown site.
“Do you want to be able to have
dinner in safety? Do you want to be
able to party in safety? ” the signs ask
like area to a trendy, jam-packed passers-by.
night spot. The chairwoman of the task force is
“All of downtown is spoken for upset by the Sixth Street reaction. It
now,” said Fred Hannah, president of makes no sense, she said.
the Old Pecan Street Association. “Nobody on our task force would
“And the plans were made on the ever do anything they thought would
assumption that the Salvation Army hurt Sixth Street. Sixth Street is now
was going to leave downtown.” two-and-a-half blocks from where the
“We don’t think San Antonio would Salvation Army has been for more
put a shelter near its riverwalk,” he than 50 years. We are moving it one
added. block closer. That one block cannot
Sixth Street, with its crowds and equal financial ruin. Common sense
CONSTRUCTION
CUSTOM HOMES
STAN RANDALL
485-4771
ALL[SEASONS
885-9162 1
"Yew Tree, Ted I LtaKApo Specuhsf
EstothshW IR im
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Tk» Newi (USTS No 144 $60) (ISSN 0745 -642$) pvMKKW daily •■<•?« Saturday Now
Vo«f • Day Ir4op>r4»RCO Day lofcor Day TNaabtfiving aad Chriafmat by The Echo FuMithinf
'omyany at 401 Church Stroat Sulphur Sprirtga Ta 75482 T elaphone 2141 805 8463
Subscription Netos Oy carrier *4 50 per month or *52 00 per year By carrier I rural $5 00 per
rro th or $54 00 per year Oy AAail Ir Hophins County *24 50 For six mo nth i *52 00 one year by mail
elsewhere *29 00 For six months ’ 56 00 one year (ell cash in o4vor(R )
Second CUu «■>!«(« mN at SoNNm S*nap Ti 75482
Postmaster: Send address changes to The News-Telegram,
P.O. Box 598, Sulphur Springs, Tx. 75482.
' NruiB-Srlegrant
Clorhe Keys Editor and Publisher
Dove Hillsomer Monogmg Editor
Jbhme Mordgro»e Advertising Monoger
Guy Felton « Produr tion AAonogw
Jim butler Controller
Jomes Ellis Cir<ulo’<on Monoger
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Austin merchants oppose Salvation Army shelter
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Airman of the month
use
—U.S. Air Fore* Photo
components as a DOS disk, a monitor.
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from
CONSUMERREPORTS
the other dot-matrix printers The
daisy-wheel printers took even long-
er, about 90 to 120 seconds
The ThinkJet was also the quietest
W
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Of
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(c) 1984, Consumers Union
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )
THE NEWS-TELEGRAM. Sulphur Springs, Texas, Sunday, July 24, 1985—A-3.
r
the squadron's airman of the month for July.
He served seven years active duty and has
been an Air Force reservist for three years.
He and his wife Vivian and two children,
Julia and Richard IV reside in Sulphur
Springs.
By the Editors
of Consumer Reports
/AY
xair
i>.-. ■ ■
The
,»■ and
-DIXIE
Ml 1
st
M ;g
entry-level 64K ver-
ik-dnve, and a I28K
model with built-in disk-drive
The PCjr has a new typewriter-
they tested — dot matrix or daisy
wheel. It zoomed through their 170-
word test letter in 18 seconds, com-
-
k I
tion keys ------------
The PCjr has only one disk drive
and IBM itself doesn't offer a second
disk drive. Third-party manufactur-
ers are offering a second disk drive
but they are expensive. That could be
a problem if you wanted to use some
of the larger business programs that
require two drives.
However, the computer is equipped
with two cartridge slots. (Cartridges
are small compact packets that con-
tain programs permanently printed
for around 82,000, but the components
are usually discounted.
The new PCjr computer is avail-
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Technical Sgt. Richard B. Crowson III
checks an ammunitions load as part of his
job as a minitions systems supervisor with
the 301st Tactical Fighter Wing's Con-
solidated AJrcraft Maintenance Squadron at
Carswell Air Force Base. Crowson, a 1973
graduate of Sulphur Springs, was selected as
If you own a computer, or have
already know something about daisy- — boldface and draft. Although the
have you heard about the latest entry par with the better of the dotmatrix sion without disl
in the crowded printer market — the
‘ drjet printer? „
c0”du5tln8 tests on 20 dot- mode did not print a comparably dark style keyboard with 62 sculptured
1 keys. The electronics engineers found
in their tests, the engineers found the keyboard layout convenient and
■ easy to use for data entry and typing.
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and daisy-wheel printers impression
. r 1..- In IZ.-L 11_____O1______2____J
tronics engineers took a close look at that the print heads clogged intermit-
th* Hewlett-Packard ThinkJet. It’s an tently, sometimes after only a few its number keys can double as'func-
tnk-jet printer that, in some respects, dozen pages. Although they could usu-
proved to be the overall standout ally clean the head with a paper clip,
performer It lists for >495 they found the problem to be annoy-
Ink-jet printers form letters by ing and time-consuming
squirting tiny drops of ink stored in If you’d like to get the very best
the back of the print head through a print quality from the ThinkJet, you’ll
matrix of holes directly onto the also want to buy special paper that,
page. When the ink runs out, you sim- depending on the source, may cost
ply snap out the entire print-head unit about 20 percent more than regular
and snap in a new one, which costs paper The printer has a continuous
about |8 paper-feed mechanism and it also can
The engineers said the ThinkJet handle single sheets But the roller is
was the fastest of all of the printers only 8 1/2 inches wide, which is too
narrow to fit business-sized enve- .
lopes With this machine, you’ll have on chips They were first used in
to print separate labels or address Atari and Coleco game machines.)
pared to an average of 65 secondsjor envelopes by hand Consumer Reports' electronics
A computer system assembled engineers say that the cartridges
around IBM’s new PCjr computer is have certain advantages For
well-suited for small business uses instance, they're less fragile than
It’s also a capable computer for floppy disks or tape cassettes And
— squirting ink almost noiselessly almost any conceivable home use they load instantly; you just snap a
instead of physically striking the The IBM PCjr computer system cartridge into its slot and it’s ready to
print platen Other advantages assembled by Consumer Reports’
include its compact size (it takes up electronics engineers combines the
about as much space as two cigarette PCjr computer with such necessary
cartons lying side by side) and its
Ink-jet prints fast .-----
weight (less than 8 pounds) Hewlett- printer, printer adapter and cable,
Packard also produces a battery- and a programming language
powered version for those who need cartridge. The complele system listed
to print on the go
The ThinkJet prints in two modes
matrix i r
recently, Consumer Reports’ elec-
the Hewlett-Packard ThinkJet. It’s
certain advantages
capable computer for floppy disks or tape cassettes. And
21" they load instantly; you just snap a
been shopping for one, you probably
wheel and dot-matrix printers. But quality of the boldface mode was on a able in both an enti
printers, it used more than twice as
much ink as the draft mode The draft
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Keys, Clarke. Sulphur Springs News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 107, No. 177, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 28, 1985, newspaper, July 28, 1985; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1292271/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.