Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 73, No. 295, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 26, 1973 Page: 6 of 18
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BROWNWOOD BULLETIN
1
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(
Father fighting for
6
)
treasurer; and Aaa Armstrong, president.
(Bulletin Photo)
In
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THERE'S
STILL TIME...
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To put away that extra
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LABOR LEADER SLAIN
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WE WILL BE
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PCITIZENS
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MEMBER
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A
OF A
See for yourself ... the
RELIGIOUS HOLIDAY
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Nalhatii
SEPTEMBER 27,1973
IN OBSERVANCE
1
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201
Fisk
TOP HONORS-Officers la the Banp High
School chapter of the National Honor Society
this year are Jamie Blair, left, secretary-
ANNUAL
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Ph.
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BROWNWOOD
F. D. I.C.
LANGTRY, Tex. (AP) - It finin’, especially near pay day." tripped through the dust of the
“I’m finin’ you $45 and a street to inspect the saloon and
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Beans justice faster than
his long-distance romance
By GODFREY ANDERSON the judging’” and the judge’s old six-shooter.
Associated Press Writer He was said to be “fierce for raised up her silken skirts and
Wednesday, lepta other M. 1973
SOVIET RIGHTS MOVEMENT
Judge Roy Bean, famed as the judge’s long-distance romance floods.
Law West of the Pecos, and was slow. Today the trim Judge Roy
Mrs. Langtry, the lovely and so- Although almost illiterate, he Bean Visitors Center stands on
phisticated Jersey Lily, great would sit up nights, painfully the site of the railroad depot,
friend of then reigning King penning letters by lamplight. It Texas Highway Department
Edward VII was a one-sided correspond- hostesses tell the old story for
What Judge Bean was doing ence. Mrs. Langtry never re- tourists who stream through all
Szecial •
I oLev,
SOLID, SOUND. SECURE
Rates on Savings and New Certificates
of Deposit at Citizens
ALL INTEREST COMPOUNDED DAILY
Regular Sevings
New Cerificates of Deposit.
S 50% 90 0A Y AUTOMATIC RENEWA..
2903 1MOMtGArOMaTENENEWAL
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There were rumors that Per
on, who won the presidency
Sunday in a landslide, might
take office immediately instead
of waiting until Oct 12
/ DfAAtONOS WATCHES
I FINE JEWELRY
Vuny»ody
W40IN.FiskPh.646 8707
7
1 1
V
planned to attend the General settlement. O’Neal, grade 4; Kathy Pappas book—an 1879 copy of the Re- platform of her green Southern around who doubt that Langtry
Assembly address by Brandt But he told them not to expect and Kevin Mayfield, grade 2; vised Statutes of Texas-before Pacific private railroad car, but was ever named for the Jersey
Very little substantive prog- the United States to bring forth Julie O’Neal and Todd Smith, him Judge Bean would say with no Judge Bean was there to Lilly as Judge Bean claimed,
ress has been made toward de- miracles." and he made no grade 2; Jayme Lewis and Jim heavy humor "Law book says greet her He died six months They say the Langtry thus hon-
veloping a new concept of U.S.- proposals for ending the Arab- Reynolds, grade 1; and Allison prisoner must stand before the earlier. ored was a construction fore-
European relationship during Israeli confrontation The Corder and Shawn Maxey, bar. You ain’t far from It here Mrs. Langtry heard a speech man on the railroad.
Kissinger’s meetings this week, meeting was boycotted by five kindergarten on the porch We’ll get on with of welcome, accepted flowers But that would spoil the story
U.S officials said discussions Arab delegations. ■
never met, were crusty old If justice was swift, the canyon washed out in flash
far from winning war
By WILLIAM L RYAN anxious to avoid argusing the drive began when the Kremlin society, not through overthrow rdme hit them hard in 1987,
AP Special Correspondent sort of protest outcry \jiat could was building its current policy of the existing system but arresting anywhere from 66 to
The Kremlin today seems to endanger its quest foHayor- of peaceful coexistence. through liberalization. several hundred. Many went to
he searching cautiously for a tant economic concessions from It has silenced the under- nt ssent had been impossible harsh labor camne on charges
safe way to snuff out what re- the United States and the West ground press, the cement that under Stalin’s one-man dicta- of trees™
mains of the Soviet civil rights This latest in a senes of repr- has kept a frail rights move- mchin h-i tn, . hriw time -Sentember 1965: Writers
movement; but while it haswon campaigns, launched al- ment together However, the thaw under Nikita S Khrush- YulDanleland Andrei Sin-
some battles, it is far from most.two. years ago, has Kremlin ran head-on into a chev, mot hopes were stirred. yavsky were arrested for hav-
winning the war. ...... wounded the movement severe- highly publicised challenge, . These hopes became some- ing written critically of the So-
it has moved deliberately, ly, but it remains alive. The situation unique in the history of what clouded in Khrushchev’s viet system Their writings had 1
Communist power, when it later years even though as late found their way to the West mm
turned its heaviest artillery on as 1N2 it had been possible for This was a benchmark case ■
the outstanding figures of the Solzhenitsyn to publish his ’’One since the harsh sentences the •
rights movement. Day in the Life of Ivan two drew led to open protests. •
, j e . , Stubborn voices, like those of Denisovich," an account of the One protest group calling itself ■
A A~kis eA, Andrei D Sakharov, the nude- horrors of a Stalinist labor SMOG, the Russian acronym •
---I•uY UT Da Dy son ar physicist, and Alexander I. camp. for "Word, Thought, Image, I
' Solzhenitsyn, the Nobel Prize- Depth,” issued a manifesto and •
HOUSTON (AP) — A dis- plied. winning novelist, refused to be it remained to Khrushchev’s even staged a demonstration in ■
traught Pensacola, Fla. father, "What about the boy?” silenced December. I
cauht between his religinn’ Snark Nked «Noh-ave The Communist party of Leonid I. Brezhnev, the Com- •
beliefs and state lawsbought sPAt too for the state to pro- couldn’t remain aloof t this munist party chiet, to stage • -April 1568: The chronicle of y
today to regain custody of his tect’" P challenge. But these stalwarts series of repression waves current Events appeared. This I
three-weeks nW inn Uken from CAnnaronti. not" tacv uM were not ordinary men. It would reminiscent of the Stalin era, underground, typewritten
himtwausnisronigonerfnom «GAppirenttynottb"unayssam not be as easy to deal with them The represston began in 1965 newspaper, circulated hand to
blood transfusions. statelaws"rheelBibleinterprets the way others had been dealt and cuminated.early UT hand in carbon copies, carried
"I feel outraged " Guy Lacy itself" with: shipment to insane with the wave that is still in names, dates, places, prison
a Jehovah’s Witness minister Doctors say the infant suf- asylums, forced labor or exile, progress. terms, types of persecution and
said in the juvenile court of fered from an RH blood def ect a Their towering reputations comminat , ug other information of interest to
Judge Robert Lawry. "I feel condition where a baby is born madea their voices too clearly ieThe communistapartusuppn dissi Xv It„appeared
lkeit reminds me of the Ges withRH positive blood, its hemrddissentersaresctentists healthy ten^Xs,” seemed arlevy,t"o months unti
tapo taking children. I feel like I mother has RH negative blood ‘ assenversare sen . • foarfilmhat somotine akin t . octoDer 1VI
don’t have any righto." and antibodies from the moth- writets, other intellectuals. In political somethin might August 1968 The Soviet-led
Lacy and his wife are seeking er’s blood attack and destroy relation tothe Soviet population PoltiSalyetOPPoSittontmight intaAusust 168:hessoytetrled
tn moin cetndg N mhir rhi? th. cniM "d Eind cone of 240 million, they are just a develop. Yet the more they sup- invasion of Czechoslovakia to
to regain custody of their child, the child s red blood cells. handfn1 pressed, the more the opposi- strangle a Communist oartv
whowas brought, cThegusualtreatmentois * ndstoricamy, Russians never tin appered to take definite iberlzation brougt ■ puu
dttef"habrasssept.shoavddya have been‘a revolutionary shape. protest demonstratonain Mos
blood transfusion in Florida. ada, attorney hired to defend people. In their vast land. Some milestones in the devel- nnthwo rdsnlrhezoung
When the Hams County Wei- the Lacys, said the hearing ehangeaunderzthesczarsahadto opment of political opposition: PoontatteygrrbmndyskaM,
fare Unit learned of the Lacy could be a landmark case be- 5* forced.by the very few who -1962-3: The Phoenix group, gon nePSlaomprosonedin ™
infant’s case, it won temporary cause it is one of only a few dared challenge absolute au- a small band of youngin- K‛GBincisiiancothesfelupon
custody and had the baby cases of this type to come to thority. . . tellectuals, launched the fore- “soEushing.up.to M they
transferred to Jefferson Davis trial. Today s.dissenters have pro- runner of the underground "m- shouted Theseuare.4 jews.
Hospital-«here he received two Howe said repeated moves by grams,,dreams, ambitions, mizdat"—selt-publication- heatant Soynet ""som
blood transfusions. government agencies to force bttle in the way of press, typewritten script passed were beaten, many arrested.
The hearing was scheduled to blood transfusions represent “a orsanization or cohesion Their hand to hand. —1969 A "Program for a
continue today. The child was continued direction of ani- demandsby"Vestrrnastandards -Eariv 1965 A Doliticai un- Democratic Movement" circu- _______________
placed in a foster home Mon- mosity against a minority group woldldneemrextreordinarm dergroundinLeningradformed lated underground it spoketor could have been the very first__________________________
J■- . ublic officials . panied by the violent clashes the All Russian Sociai Chris- those who wanted to dismantle pin-up romance, that story of round of drinks for the jury, frnd opera house
Ken Sparks, an assistant dis- Howe said he had represented with’anthYritv’sofomiiarint tian Union” with 10 charter the whole Soviet system rather the homespun frontier Judge that’s my ruling" he’d say, as Her recorded comment: "I
trict attorney, asked Lacy bow Jehovah’s Witnesses in similar wthauthority so familiar in the orofessional narvs than invest any hope in evolu- and the English socialite ac- the gavel smacked down and only wish I could have come
he would have felt if the child cases through the country “with and inteiectuais. The program tionary reform. It frankly tress, but it still drew almost another case was disposed of. sooner.”
had died from not receiving . very limited success." franLesrenk84csmngfvSome cdiedrorademocraticsystem, praised capitalism, denigrated 93,000 tourists here last year Sometimes he ordered the de- . Langtry entered a decline
transfusion, ever convince Alspokesman.at Jefferson Stalingterrible concentrate elected leaders accountable to Soviet socialism. and may do even better by this fondant to provide a drink for whenitlostitsifeline.therail
" DavisHospitalsaidthesinfant camps. After stalindiedin, anelected parliament and some -wngim Sakharov with . his pet bear, saying: "Bruno road,diverted elsewhere after
me that my child died from a was doing fine out might need a L, .2 .tanac ct.nc rL. PPIM18 -IV- DamaV‛,w--
lack of a transfusion," Lacy re- third transfusion soon. ^>me had hoped for a more open vaguely sociaiirt aims. The fellow sclentist Valentyn Tur-
mm---mm _ m • chin and historian Roi Medve-
_ Europe, Asia on mmunist party and Soviet
M2 ■ government urging response to
2822 mge a I the "legal and natural” desire
-412809 Kissiger aqenda presmtonlestuake men Spoke for
‛Kem "MMMh those seeking reform by legal losing his heart to such a raving plied. summer long
By KENNETH J. FREED Tuesday with the foreign minis- means through influencing the beauty when he had Mrs. Bean He had the name. The Jersey
Associated Press Writer ters K.B. Andersen of Denmark leadership, and five children around has Lilly, painted over the wooden ramas
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. and Walter Scheel of West Ger--never been explained. But a budding that was his combined weninrarosernaimirls
(AP)-Secretary of State Hen- many produced only one signifi- Rove I# ne med contemporary described him as saloon, billiard had and court- Wandcufrssoitesiddnisineiv
ry A. Kissinger gave some at- cant development - an agree- KOyaIY named having “more brass than a room The ininerant sign paint- handauffsisbesdenhisonel"
tention to Southeast Asia today ment for a meeting in the next bedstead" and women’s lib was er he employed mis-spelled ™T ,
tzahysssstamberetayaatR-Springs
Europe continued to be his state for Europe, and represen- RICHLAND SPRINGS (BBC) judge’s roving eye through an Roy Bean made the long trip tavein. Pc5P
primary concern. tatives of the European Com- _ Halloween coronation old picture published in the 11- east to San Antonio where he th.
Other than scattered refer- mon Market. representatives at Richland lustrated London News. He saw the actress on stage in one cactnessardon"“e "rxonino
ences, Kissinger ignored the In- They will try to draft a dec- Springs school have been wrote and obtained her photo- of her American tours He be- Ik4 * . ’ “7
dochina area in his first two laration of principles, but named in connection with the graph And hung it above the came obsessed with the idea of Tontru.ts. . dn. Mis
days in New York. Today he American sources said at least event to be held Oct 27. bar in his saloon. luring her to Langtry. tnEt sPiturIEstn 06
scheduled meetings with the one more meeting would be Representatives by grade Bean was a wool shipper out He build another wooden M “ “X ”
foreign ministers of Thailand needed, probably in Europe are, Ann Kennedy and Brian of Kentucky before he opened building and put a sign on it: mdsothemnranme y
and South Vietnam. next month. Cook, senior; Valerie his Texas saloon and became “Roy Bean’s Opera House.
However, the major part of McPherson and Edward Gib- the first Justice of the Peace in Town Hall, and Seat of Justice." The opera house still stands,
his schedule before returning to As if to underline the lack of son, junior; Kitty Simpson and the rugged fast-draw country And he hoped that one day she too. It looks rather dilapidated
Washington tonight was strong movement so far, the American Craig Higdon, sophomore; Kari west of the Pecos River would play there now and has been converted
evidence of his near-pre- officials said any decision on a Mask and Jodie Lewis, fresh- Never one to stand on formal- Finally, one letter which told into a frontier museum Ito at-
occupation with what he has European trip by President man; Chrystel Asher and ity, be dispensed his own brand Mrs. Langtry that the little dus- tractions are advertised as a
called a “new Atlantic Al- Nixon remains for the future. Hickey McPherson, grade •; of Texas justice from the bar or ty West Texas town was named two-headed calf, a six-legged
liance." Kissinger had an inconclusive Patricia Adams and Gary Cobb, from the porch outside, where for her did draw a reply. She lamb, a mummified Indian
He was to meet with West meeting Tuesday with Arab grade 7; Michele Morgan and cowboys could watch the agreed to visit “her” town next baby from prehistoric times,
German Chancellor Willy leaders in which he renewed Max Cox, grade 6; Susan Terry proceedings from their saddles time she was in Texas. and Roy Bean’s original phono-
Brandt and French Foreign U.S. offers to assist in opening and David Hulme, grade 5; Wielding a mean gavel, his When she finally made it, in graph
Minister Michel Jobert. He also negotiations for an Arab-Israeli Laura Skelton and Kevin six-shooter and his one law 1904, she stood on the back Of course, there are people
Peronists pledge war on guerrillas
BUENOS AIRES (AP) - Ar- on, was gunned down Tuesday killing memento after it hap- ment would meet “vtotonro
gontinapsedgranist gorement outsidetbisbrother-n-law’ssub pened and "id “ was the work »ith violence, whether from the
ttexist guerrillas it Hamed for The kiDers escaped but the But noohher evidence was put "htotet
the ambushsiaringof the na- government blamed the attack forward to show that the “We are at war with the
22es sass: e——
federation and a top confidant One radio station said an servative leaders of the The unions canoa ,
of President-riect June) D Per anonymous caller reported the movement as Rucci and who in strike
a...nn May killed another union lead- protest against the assasstaa-
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Fisher, Norman. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 73, No. 295, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 26, 1973, newspaper, September 26, 1973; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1575371/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Brownwood Public Library.