Stephenville Empire-Tribune (Stephenville, Tex.), Vol. 102, No. 35, Ed. 1 Friday, March 26, 1971 Page: 3 of 8
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Before the Guests Arrive
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Advertising Promotion
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BUSINESS SERVICE DIRECTORY
SECRETTAPES
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Daily Empire
14,00,
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has Ns
perior to the rights of the public. IP
The taking of fingerprints to a
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decorating, water systems.
labor.
Easy awatMy team. See us. X
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965.59
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DIE JEWELRY
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HICO — Graveside services
■era haM far Kari Hamuuilleh-
midt, 81, at Oakwood Cemetery
in Austin Sunday, March n.
poor,
peg
3
35 ,
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2
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Per Year $14.00
PPer Month 1,25
HAMIIYos
LAW ) HR
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DR. PHILIP L. PRICE
OPTOMETRIST
Austin, where ha waa
to abstract and title I
He was a member at the
Univeratty United Methodist
Church in Austin.
Surviving are his wife, Mrs.
Mittie Schmidt of Hico; three
6
ding a room,
tag, painting.
&
ithas
Y<
the
Burial waa
Mr. Rentroe died March 20
Muskie Again
Up-and-at-'em
51
DOMESTIC - MUNICIPAL
”,
"01S9s <
SILVERWARE
BUarantiid.
HATCH REPAin ~
DR.SAM H.DANIEL
CHIROPRACTOR
135 N. Columbia
Phone 965-5310
Stephenville. Texas
B*
l
shouldn’t tolerate.
MILITARY BEARDS
Hico, Mrs.
Austin, and Mrs.
7,‘5
Darwin Ellis. ....
John McCloskey. .
Charles Parneli. . .
Elaine Long. ....
Eddie Lewallen . .
them strike benefits v
Eventually, the par
rary ban on all strik
*‘ :
Service
★ Auto-Fire-LMe
★ Loss of time • Hospital
0. Over 10 mt tm
om Hamlton,
Renderingco.
Windle Graham
Phone 965-5202, Stephen
780 Alexander Road
I’m also capable of love and compassion
le Frost appearance, a full 90 minutes, unfolds the
Muskie thought processes as applied to a broad range
I I
I
I
I
tarnations strong liberals cherish’ If voters decide it-is
rationality and they khe it, then Ed Muskie may be the
one who soon will be keeping the others honest
(MEWSPAPER eureneRisE ASSN )
-1
5
aor charge made of employees to assure them our "pseudofolliculitis." Because it
to opposing the allegation were "false" and ia impervious to medication and
of the —T* - • -—" ------
MEAT PROCESSING
for Home Free lore
LIITHEMACK
IM I MT.
1105 w Lawg m. Phone 5-5116
power amon
crease in buy
Don Mets gar
Agency
s, Mrs. B. F. Thomas
Mrs. J. A. Martin of
Christi, Mrs. William
ofRedOak,N.C.,and
I
ament was forced to vote a tempo-
to. There the situation remains at
against Harold. Mying he could
. . • ........Editor no more withhold his finger
.....Managing Editor prints than he could mask his
......Society Editor . ,
B was oar mention of the Pentagon circles. This to a form
exact date that seemed to upset of censorship that the public
i
18
—» i .........-
For the Very Best
DRY CLEANING
STILL CLEANERS
563 N Clinton Phone 5-3717
Cash & Carry Discoteu
include Bn bombing and mining who dares to mention these your average earnings over
of Haiphong harbor. classified facts outside of a period of years.
s
. By DON OAKLEY
humiliation to which a possibly
I person must submit for
daughters, Mrs. W. F. Hafer of
‘Wenzel of
IGATION -
present.
it ma;
themselves. Thereupon, already growing beards in
Assistant Defense Secretary defiance of regulations, and the
Begor KoBoy gave up trytog to brass hats are having a devil of
PHILCO
APPLIANCES
BLACK & WHITE TV
AIR CONDITIONERS
Refrigerators radios
color TV
FREEZERS STEREOS
WASHER DRYERS
HEFLEY’S
Authorized Philco Dealer
Sales and Service
965-4815 '
hoPe
Bosque County and in Corpus
Christi before moving hare sis
years ago. He was a member of
the local Baptist Church.
Survivors are his wife, Mrs.
Sweden: A T
. I
1A Im,
Washington's "In" Sport:
Hunting Anderson's Tipsters
Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Sunday
Morning, by
THE ERATH PUR BUSH ERS, INC. *
Published and Second Class Postage Paid at Stephenville, Tez.
76401. Telephone 965-3124, DO South Columbia
"Sd.
fe
.9
FOR SALE
Stock Tveughs
Cittern*
TUNNELL SMEET
METAL SHOP
660 Lingleville Reed
EL^Ttic SewER
-SERVICE
Day or Night
t toIHNUM
T$
J
6 • -
of issues It is must listening for anyone trying to gauge
the 1972 outlook Some of the senator s answers are
peculiarly fascinating They begin in tones of caution
and end up as fairly strong pronouncements Are we
listening to fuzziness, or the slow gyrations of a rational
BRUCE BIOSSAT
mags --eme
Submersible pumps and
unions, having to pay
nkrupted the union.
..........raw
Y-.
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WOLF
DRILLING
ROTARY
' 8p g •» 4 -,g
Complete Drilling Service
a dubious proposition to compare a KH, ntw H-am2al a natiwa Af
e thatismorethan2o Emesarger. dmanzeoElhavded
lation, immensely more diverse and -n- - - -
ent history.
some Swedes from boasting, with
ow far their country has come in
eminding the United States how far
-MO on
.. <» that
gooFNn
Oulitr&Sevie
Stephenville Generel I
Business Service M
STENOGRAPHIC SERVICES!
Reports Posters
Typing Canto
1437 Lingleville Rd. 968 32142
DoodAnimalserieniim
A* Meu M vou"
The issue was merely the bread-and-butter one of trying
to keep ahead of the tax and inflation spiral.
At one point the government threatened to break the
strike by locking out some 5,000 army officers, who are
permitted to organize in Sweden. Since they formed the
largest bloc in one of the striking i *
on has come so far so fast that it
, _________, spell to asaass just where it stands
at this juncture in its history.
It could also be that it needs to reassess the very direc-
tion in which it has been heading.
pump jock Motors
in Stock \
sge
6■ », „0
• '
Looun.
s /
INSURANCE
Lala Gist Renfroe; four
Tel. 9655967
ms"nbe
mg
Aa
1; 2022618
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Thus both blue-collar and white-collar are restless. Add
to this situation the worst inflation in the country’s his-
tory, and you’ve got trouble
The trouble erupted in February in a series of strikes
that merged into one big strike involving teachers, doc-
tors, dentists, engineers, judges, train dispatchers, senior
civil servants and white-collar municipal workers. Not
only was the normal life of the country paralyzed, but the
whole concept of the egalitarian-welfare state was called
into question
“The organized welfare state has gone mad,” said world
famous economist Gunnar Myrdal. “It's become a class
struggle with academics and civil servants seeing the
lower classes creeping up on them and not liking it at
aB.”
Strikers denied that class-consciousness was involved.
_ . nalicious.” ♦ to seriously aggravated by
local police. We offered, therefore, to shaving, it can best be treated
1 qn Rat rhie Ahieetihn fen was —a... akua Ag ---^1- -A , —ATswn m 6----r-A
’ ’ ’ 1,58 MMiM 4 for "Smtt Shdppbaemamy
WASHINGTON (NEA
Sen Edmund Muskie is moving well again, even as
belated reports of his admitted late-winter slump are
still filtering in. He had two very good days in New
Jersey and New York.
After that tame performance in Pittsburgh in mid-
February, he tailed off some more And then he got
smacked with that poll which showed him off seven
points as the leading Democratic presidential contender.
Muskie, however, is not given to sitting around. He
read two harsh accounts of his Pittsburgh venture and
said simply: “I deserve them.” It was not his first hard
self-appraisal of the year. He chided himself for mistakes
on his January trip to California
Distinct change for the better was" quickly evident
when he rose to speak in Camden, N J., at a victory
dinner honoring Sen. Harrison (Pete) Williams, who was
re-elected last fall
The speech had more and better specific content. He
zinged President Nixon for alleged failure of leadership,
declaring that the incumbent offers America "the voice
of the manager, not the leader ” Muskie added:
“I do not accuse the administration of not caring. But
in my judgment what it cares about, and what this coun-
try needs, are two different things” .
What put this speech so markedly higher on the scale
than the Pittsburgh misfire was tone This came partly
from the improved content and the smoother tooling, but
mostly from Muskje's delivery
Recently a top Democrat said: "Muskie's real. He’s not
a made-up mas. ’ The Camden utterance gave strong sup-
port to that notion. A whole man was up there talking-
not a mere pelitical figure spouting contrived phrases
with nicely arranged pauses and varied inflections.
Virtually all of the busy Democratic contenders are
telling their listeners these days that America needs,
more than anything, a quality of leadership that will
draw people into common bond and diminish their
crippling fear and distrust. This is how Muskie said it
“Americans want to be told they are one people, and
they want to hear it from the highest leadership in the
land They want to be told they don’t have to fear living
with one another, and they want to hear it from the
highest leadership in the land.”
Simple, inspirational stuff Yet it had an emotional
charge in it that raised it beyond sermonizing. And it
was pure Ed Muskie, the kind of thing that made his
campaign utterances of 1968 seem a gust of fresh air.
A common view in this town is that rival Sen. George
* McGovern’s hard-hitting antiwar barrages are “keeping
Muskie honest” and driving him to less-equivocal posi
tions. Maybe so But the strong evidence from his own
postmortems on his efforts is that he measures Muskie
against Muskie—not against McGovern or anybody else
You can tell Muskie to be his best self, but you can't
tell him to be somebody else That goes for charges
about his caution—and his now publicized temper Taping
a David Frost show, for Wednesday, March 31, airing,
he says of that temper:
“Of course, I can get angry, sometimes with reason,
sometimes without reason I can be petty, too But I
> • • • • ...... Per Month JO face or cover up a tattoo.
. . . , ..... Per Month JO “The wham does not testify,"
Mail ia Erath County said the court. "The facts speak
................A. $10.12 for themselves."
""8*50 Generally speaking, courta
2 M have agreed that forced finger-
। m printing to not a violation of the
A Fitth Amendment.
5-0 But another objection has also
■ 1g
Again last December, we America’s beleaguered
toldhowthebossesof the armed military brassisnow faced with
terrt radio • TV - publications a new disciplinary problem
empire sang songs, cracked which has literally broken out at
bathroom jokes androared with Air Force bases across the
Eyes Examined -Glasses Fitt
Across Street from Miller Stud
Phone 5 4813
245 W. College Su
r as they decided whom country.
nt Christmas time. The I‘s a painful, pimply akin
called
v‘g
• W 4 V
2 ‘T—
1% M
8 -
Stephenville, Daily and Sunday. . . .
Stephenville, Daily Only,
n per C
state employesmtil—omz
Moreover,'to pay for a myriad of free welfare services,
Swedes have seen the average income tax soar to 40 per
cent. There is also a 17 per cent sales tax on most con-
sumer items.
n7-~-_
eSndru
5- 15'7/
1971
mlg
formation. Hoover, happily assigned disease are required to carry a
The bloodhounds are now agents Leslie Chisholm, copy of their shaving waiver,
loose again, searching up and William Crowder and James But his has merely
E r-____down Pentagon corridors for Ott, Jr., to the investigation. aggravated the problem
Forced Fingerprinting our trail, growling menacingly The 76 - year - old FBI chief is because three extra file copies
fra- » traffic Uf*is-*. at anyone who might have been sore at us for using some of his must be made of the shaving
Harold objected strenuously to am talking to us. own techniques to investigate waiver, and this has caused a
being fingerprinted. He finally Ths brass bate want to know him. backlog of paperwork,
gave to. but only under protest, hew ws found out that Air Force A contest has now developed Moreover, the waivers are good
Shortly afterward he filed suit rainmaker have been seeding between us to see who can find for only three months st which
against the city, demanding tha the clouds over the Ho CM Minh out the most about the other. At time they must be renewed,
hisaprints * , ToXe". 4. tra network during the wet this point, I contend that my file causing more red tape and
hr nzkt t“Knur hcorin, seasons on Hoover is more illuminating paperwork.
•TAtWasA violtion of my cX This novel attempt to than his file on me. The disease is caused by
rtitutional rights. According to produce cloudburststo wash out The Pentagon’s inspections dose - cropped beard hairs
the Fifth Amendment, no one the trails, we reported, was chief himself, W. Donald kinking and digging into the
shall be forced to be a witness known by the secret lode name Stewart, is handling the in- skin. If the beard hair to allowed
against himself." "Intermediary - Compatriot.” vestigation of us assisted by his to grow, the hairs extend and
However, the court ruled Only a few biMdsri were sup- sidekick S. J. Cardice. We have dislodge from the skin.
posed to know that, and ths questioned Chisholm, Cardice One Air Force doctor,
brass would dearly like to find and Kelley about the probe. AU Willard Stock, thinks an airman
out who blabbed. declined comment. Chisholm prone to pseudofolliculitis
Thore to also outrage on the would reveal only the spelling of should shave lightly with a
Pentagon's outer "" ring, his first name but refused to say double - edge razor. The soldier
which the top brass inhabit, how his last name is spelled.
over our story about the con- The force, however, has its after shaving, according to the
tingency plane to bomb North serious undertones. The Pen- doctor, but his “commander
Vetnam. We reported that the tagon seeks to control the flow will have to accept this.”
plans, transmitted to the of information to the public by -----------------------------
Pentagon test October IT and dassifying an embarrassing The amount of your social
kept constantly up to date, facts, then intimidating anyone security benefit is based on
2 '
B 4'
Water Well DriWling
Call 965-510
23 Years Experience In
Around Braith Ca.
Tommy (Rted)Mey
RI lay’s Dritline
LOANS AVALLABLE
For repairing year home, ad-
HICO — Funeral services
were held for Grover C. Ren-
troe, 7, Justice of the Peace of J
Preinct 3, Hamilton County, 6
1 Fur
B(
W % "T ■
..a
2r2 D 4
untries may not fairly be compared,
’ have something to team from the
—If not how to achieve perfection,
some of the pitfalls along the way
ten was one of the moot backward
ithliteso miserable in a land of
ky soilethat fully one million out of
3 cegue 4 den#ni
-
atn.A
T/ . N.
.L
STEPHENVILLE EMPIRE TRIBUNE & STEPHENVILLE DAILYEMPIRE
— ----—--.
enforce
corrected upon being brought to the attention ot the Publister.. mantthgsaudee,sdi
The liabiUty of The Stephenville Daily Empire - Stephenville nimithti.nAnaisPo
Empie-Tribune and its publishers for any error in any nd* “n"
vertisements is limited to the cost of such advertisements, •
Aay publication or reproduction of advertising or any other L
copied matter appearing to the pages of either the Daily Empire innocent
Empire-Tribune without written permission of the publishers
■ ' ' - 3. ,
of Dallas; and six grand-
chAdran. By JACK ANDERSON deny the story and ordered an a time figuring out which
WASHINGTON - investigation instead to beards are forbidden and which
Periodically, the Pentagon tries discover where we got the are by doctors’ orders.
to scare off our news sources by tapes. It has become so confusing
- unleashing its bloodhounds to He has now called in the FBI at Pease Air Force Base in New
fold out where we get our in- whose director, J. Edgar Hampshire that airmen with the
STEPHENVILLE MPIRE-TRIBUN
vo and
Stephenville Daily Empire
Per Year in Advance. ,
Per Six Months. ....
Per Three Months. . .
Per Month in Advance.
Per Year Sunday Only
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Per Year. . . ......
Per Six Months. ....
Per Three Mouths....................
Per Mouth. . .........................
SCBSCRIPTON RATES - Outside Texas la U. S. A.
; ' ‘ 1
' kpspi,
_
—g Obituary
Renfro^^^
- 2 1 d.o—:
Stephenvi
SL’BSCRi;
garage, including
napiz
SUNDAY COPIES, .. .20c
BACK COPIES......10c
SDSGLE COPIES. ....10c
SUBSCRIPTION RATES - By Cantor Delivery
Stephenville, Daily and Sunday.
? 412 2napr22 ■
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lalphrus officiated.
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FRIDAY, MARCH
The resuit is that the real income of those in he upper A. Holmes of-
years, there was a seven per cent net decrease in buying March 16, in the Village Nursing
but a seven per cent in- Home here, where ho had lived
the past eight months. He was a
native and lifetime resident of
ne
er
M2 24"
Cowmows»
CowGF$$
a ■ 2-*
.e, "
, ,*0-: -
: 04,5
Mrs. * K. Miller of Irving; a
Motor, Mrs. Cari Keese of
Brownwood; throe brothers,
Bailey Renfroe of Sonora,
Curtis D. Renfroe of Soquel,
Calif., and E. C. Renfroe of Port
Lavaca; nine grandchildren
and one great-grandchild.
Schmidt
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industriaf revolution, coupled with
and management-labor leadership,
’ into one of the moot advanced
i, the goal of these leaders has been
ciety, to reshape the social
vealthy few on top of the many
ultimately erasing traditional
C A so-called “solidarity prn-
gave preference to low-income
Sweden has been busily building a
2,
lebA,609
2920 J
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McCleskey, John & Parnell, Charles. Stephenville Empire-Tribune (Stephenville, Tex.), Vol. 102, No. 35, Ed. 1 Friday, March 26, 1971, newspaper, March 26, 1971; Stephenville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1483418/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Dublin Public Library.