The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 76, No. 134, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 7, 1966 Page: 4 of 6
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THE ENNIS DAILY NEWS-Tuesday, June 7, 1966
Ansley Grant of Ennis President
Social News
Bardwell Ass'n Holding Reunion
Mrs. Willie Farmer purchasing,
and Mrs. Charles E. Cash, wegi-
The G. Hedricks
Entertain Their
Grandchildren
Mr. and Mrs. George Hedrick’s
two grandsons, George Hedrick
IV of Atlanta, Ga., who arrived
by plane Friday and Steve Hed-
' rick of Arlington, Texas, are
spending this week in the Hed-
rick home here. Tomorrow the
Hedricks will take their grand-
sons to Six Flags and later to
Fort Parker.
Week after next their three
granddaughters will come, also
for a week’s visit, as follow:
Laura Hedrick of Arlington, Tex-
as, Karen Dwyer of Claremore,
Okla., and Mary Linda Hedrick
who will fly from Atlanta as did
her brother for this week. The
Hedricks will also take the
granddaughters to Six Flags
while they are here.
Every year, the Hedricks host
their grandsons and their grand-
daughters in this fashion during
the summer.
BIRTHS
Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Del-
mere have announced the arri-
val of a son, Stephen Russell
Delmere, born at 2:58 p.m. Mon-
day at Ennis Municipal Hospi-
tal, weighing 8 pounds 7 ounces.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Vaughn Blakley of Ennis and
Mrs. Isabel Delmere of Fort
Worth. The baby’s father is in
the US Navy and is stationed on
the John R. Pierce ship. His mo-
ther, the former Rebecca Jean
Smith, is here with her parents
while he is at sea. The baby’s
godparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Good of Dallas.
CUSTOM MADE
RUBBER STAMPS
UPCO PRINT SHOP
BUDAI OIL CO.
Wholesale & Retail Butane
Gasoline and Oil
Dealers — Farm Bureau
Tires & Tubes
Fertilizers & Insecticides
Custom Plowing, Spraying
of All Types and Fertilizing
Phone TR 5-3412
We have anything a farm
er needs—except money
CASH
TO LEND
Homeowners Only
Home Need Not Be Paid For
* Use Money Any Purpose
* Consolidate Bills
* Low Rates — Fast Service
$1200 ... Pay 17.00 Mo.
$2000 ... Pay 30.00 Mo.
$3000 ... Pay 45.00 Mo.
* Arranged by Phone
* Collect Calls Accepted
TA 3-1630
DALLAS
FOR SALE
Lovely 7 Room Frame
House — wood-burning fire
place, built-in kitchen, two
car garage, fenced back yard.
Four Bedroom, 2 Story
House, close to town, good
location.
FOR SALE or LEASE: 8
room house in excellent con-
dition, floors carpete d, 3 car
garage, just 1 block from
Safeway store.
5 ROOM HOUSE, like new,
double garage. 1603 N. Pres-
ton.
Good 8 room house, 212
baths. Could be used as 2
apartments. Large lot, close
to town.
131 ACRE FARM FOR
SALE. Half bottom land and
half pasture.
280 ACRE STOCK FARM:
One of the best in Ellis Coun-
ty-
Other Farms for Sale.
GORDON HARKINS
Phone TR 5-7546 or TR 5-2281
-
HOSPITAL NEWS
Billy Rose
Barbara Aston
Mrs. L. L. Tompson
Mrs. J. G. Howell
Mrs. Charles Delmere
Rodney Collard
Mrs. Marvin Brock and daugh-
ter
Mrs. Lula Hellums
Billie Hunter
Anna Settle
Gloria Martinez
Mrs. Emmit Wickliffe and son
Mrs. Jay McGee
Mrs. B. F. Dent
Mrs. L. H. Eubanks'
Mrs. Tom Tolar
Evelyn Glaspy
Mrs. Charlie Hogge
Mrs. John D’Vorak
Diane Hart
IS RECOVERING
Harold Kelly of Fort Worth,
resident engineer of Lake Bard-
well, is steadily recovering from
a recent illness and occasionally
comes to the reservoir here now.
MRS. SMITH HOPES
TO BE HOME THURS.
Mrs. Clois Smith is convales-
cing nicely at Gaston Episcopal
Hospital, Room 232, following
surgery last Friday morning.
Latest report from her physician
indicates her return home some
time Thursday.
New Beef Cattle
Info Available at
Stockard Office
Two new beef cattle bulletins
I from Texas A&M University are
available at the office of County
Agent Uel Stockard. They are
titled “Nutrient Requirements of
the Cow and Calf” and “Feeding
the Cow and Calf.”
“According to the bulletins—
you must know the grazing hab-
its of a beef cow to fully under-
stand her performance,” said
Agent Stockard.
“Beef cows on pasture n o r-
mally spend’ 16 to 20 hours a day
grazing or ruminating. . Cattle
have two primary grazing peri-
ods. The first begins about day-
light and continues for 3 or
more hours. The other is during
mid-day with several short graz-
ing periods for a total of 1 to
3 hours. As a rule, no grazing
takes place from about 2 a.m. to
dawn.
“The cow must increase her
grazing work as the grass be-
comes more mature. She must
move some 1,000 pounds of body
weight about a mile daily while
foraging between 10 and 30
pounds of dry matter daily.
“A cow can graze only until
the rumen is filled—then she
must stop until enough rumina-
tion takes place to allow forage
to pass out of the rumen.
“The length of time grass re-
mains in the rumen depends on
the digestibility of the grass.
Young tender grasses move out
of the rumen at a faster rate
than dry mature forages. Thus,
consumption of green grasses is
high; consumption of mature
and weathered forage is low.
“Another interesting note—
A&M research shows as t h e
temperatures increases, the in-
take of forage goes down. This
may account, in part, for 1 o w
gains during the hot summer
months.”
ENNIS MOVING & TRANSFER
Nothing too large or small
Service Representative For
North American Van Lines
TR 5-2831 Nights TR 5-5777
EMPLOYMENT
Male & Female Help
PRODUCTION LINE
WORKERS
Male and Female
$1.82 — $2.02 Hr.
MAY 1966
HIGH SCHOOL
GRADUATES
Have you applied for your job
yet?
If you are ready for a career
see us. We’d like to talk with
you NOW! You don’t have to
go to DALLAS for the services
of a PRIVATE EMPLOYMENT
AGENCY!
Typists, office trainees, H.S.
Grads, to $240 mo.
Serving Ellis, Navarro, Tar-
rant, Dallas, Hill Johnson and
Kaufman Counties.
A-1 Texas
Employment Agency
101 DALLAS HWY.
Waxahachie, Texas
BEACH SCENE—Landing craft and Marines awaiting withdrawal after an operation create a momentarily peace-
ful scene in silhouette on a beach of warwrac od tt Nam
Individual Conf.
Session Held by
Methodists
DALLAS. (AP). — Methodist
ministers and laymen of t h e
church eight conferences in Tex-
as met jointly for the first time
last night in opening a four day
anniversary convocation here.
They split up with individual
conferences this morning and
scheduled another combined as-
sembly for the afternoon in
Moody Coliseum at SMU.
A communion and memorial
service at the start of the gath-
ing paid tribute to Methodist
ministers and their wives who
have died in the past year.
Church leaders and confer-
ences brought together at t h e
convocation include Bishop W.
Kenneth Pope, Central and
North Texas conferences; B i s-
hop Paul E. Martin, Rio Grande
and Texas Conferences; Bishop
0. Eugene Slater, Northwest
and Southwest conferences; and
Bishop Noah W. Moore Jr., Tex-
as and West Texas Conferences
of the Central jurisdiction.
Also attending is Bishop Paul
Galloway, Little Rock, Ark.
The joint asembly, largest ev-
er for the denomination in Tex-
as ,marks 200 years of U. S.
Methodist, the 100th
saries of the
North Texas
anniver-
Texas,
Central
and Northwest
Texas Conferences and the
50th anniversary of SMU.
More than 5,000 representativ-
es from 2,431 Methodist Church-
es over the state are expected to
register before the convocation
ends.
STORK ACTIVE AT
COMMENCEMENT
of
Mrs. Thomas Rusling
Rochester, New York, thought
she had everything timed neat-
ly. She took her final examina-
tions a week early and counted
on resting up a week before her
graduation from the University
of Rochester. But nature didn’t
go along with her. An eight-
pound, six-ounce baby girl was
born to Mrs. Rusling on Sun-
day, the day she was to have
graduated. And her husband
received her diploma for her.
TURTLE TALES REAL
IN EASTEX WATERS
TYLER.—Here’s a toast to the
East Texas turtle as a scale tip-
per. One weighing 130 pounds
was hoisted out of Hawkins Lake
near Tyler. A mere 95 pounder
required the combined efforts of
Mr. and Mrs. H. L. McDonald of
Kirbyville to land when it snag-
ged a set pole outfit. A monster
from Lake Tawakoni hit 97
pounds—just three pounds larg-
er than one from Caddo Lake.
TO HOIST WARNINGS
MIAMI, Florida — Weather
forecasters are preparing to
hoist gale warnings for the lower
Florida Keys as outer squalls
from Hurricane Alma started
to hit Key West, although the
storm center is still hundreds of
miles away.
CUSTOM MADE
RUBBER STAMPS
UPCO PRINT SHOP
South Highway 75
at S:
Any New LONE STAR BOAT Purchased
from me between now and midnight June 25th. 1966 will be at a
a saving you cannot afford to pass up if you plan to buy a boat
this year. See me about my special offer on Fishing Boats, Run-
abouts, Ski-Rigs, Cruisettes, Cruisers.
RALPH RUMBO
Police to Guard
Safety of Mrs.
James Meredith
NEW YORK—Police in New
York are reported keeping a
special eye on Mrs. James Mere-
dith, following the wounding of
her husband on his walk in
Mississippi. However, it is not
known whether a special guard
has been assigned to her. An
official at police headquarters
said the matter was confidential.
Mrs. Meredith, who is a junior
high school teacher, remained
at home.
The Vice-Chairman of Ameri-
cans for Democratic Action,
Joseph Rauh, has said that the
responsibility for the shooting
of James Meredith in Mississippi
rests on the doorsteps of the
FBI. Rauh said in a statement in
Washington that the ADA is
calling for immediate congres-
sional investigation of what it
called the FBI’s wholesale fail-
ure in the Civil Rights area.
Meredith is listed in good con-
dition at a hospital in Memphis,
Mississippi, where he was taken
after the ambush shooting yes-
terday. A white man, 41-year-old
Aubrey James Norvell of Mem-
phis, was taken into custody a
few minutes after the shooting.
Mississippi’s Governor Paul
Johnson said Norvell had admit-
ted the shooting. So far, no mo-
tive has been offered. Mean-
while, other negro.leaders say
they’ll take up Meredith’s march
through Mississippi, which was
aimed at getting negroes to reg-
ister for voting.
205 POUND
GAR RATESSimmet E .
2ND. BEST
TYLER.—Texas Parks and
Wildlife Department personnel
figure Jonah for time - wasted
when he concerned himself with
a mere whale—and the Texas-
sized catfish that measured nine
inches (between the eyes) wasn’t
really a braggin’-sized fish. Tex-
as has some really and truly big
ones, by gar—and Lake Sam
Raybunrn proved it recently.
Ross Fentral of Texarkana and
C. M. Middleton of Neches River
Inn were fishing below Sam
Rayburn Dam. They caught an
alligator gar weighing a mod-
est—modest for Texas—205
pounds. The world’s rod' and
reel record for alligator gar is
also a Texas fish from the Rio
Grandle River—279 pounds.
FOR SALE
Most Beautiful
Home and Grounds,
BEST LOCATION IN ENNIS
3 Bedrooms — 7 Rooms —
2 Full Baths — 5-Ton Gas Air
Cond’g. — Attractive Brick —
2-Car Garage — Room Inter-
com — Nicely Tiled — All
Electric Kitchen — Double
Patio — 2 Acres of Wooded
Landscaping.
Situated at 800 West Gilmer
Call R. C. Brainard (collect)
Omaha, Nebr. area code 402,
393-8110.
Also interested in leasing this
beautiful property to right
party.
Enjoy Life — Enjoy Owning
This Fine Home.
BOATS AND MOTORS
Launch Crew Is
Preparing for
Next Blast Off
CAPE KENNEDY, Florida—A
launch crew was at work on the
next flight today at Cape Ken-
nedy as the Gemini Nine Astro-
nauts were given an extensive
physical examination. The physi-
cal was the first item on the
agenda as Thomas Stafford and
Eugene Cernan got ready to tell
the experts the details of their
historic mission in space.
Space Agency officials plan to
question them extensively over
an eleven-day period.
The launch crew is preparing Weatherford. The son-law es-
the Titan Two rocket that is the
hoist Gemini Ten into orbit next
month. Astronauts John Young
and Michael Collins are schedul-
ed to start a three-day mission
July 18th. They plan to link up
with one agena satellite and
drive it up to an Agena left over
from the Gemini eight flight.
Collins is to take a 50-minute
space walk.
CAR-TRUCK CRASH
FATAL TO YOUTH
ATLANTA. (AP).—A car-truck
crash about 12:30 a.m. today kil-
led James Thomas McWaters, 19,
Route 2, Atlanta. It happened 2
miles west of here in Northeast
Texas on Hwy. 59. Officers said
the driver—Curtis Dill, Route 4,
Fort Smith, Arkansas, escaped
serious injury.
CATCHER HEATH
IS RECALLED
HOUSTON. (AP). — Catcher
Bill Heath of Houston’s Amarillo
farm club in the Texas League
is being recalled. Houston said
Pitcher Barry Latman—suffer-
ing from muscle spasms in t h e
back—is being placed on t h e
disabled list.
L&J
EXTERMINATING SERVICE
Complete Pest Control
CALL TR 5-2188
FREE TERMITE INSPECTION
FOR SALE
102 Acre Farm — 1 mile
from school on Ensign-Lake
Bardwell Road—water, natur-
al gas, electricity, fine invest-
ment.
Modern 3 Bedroom Home,
garage, floor furnaces on
Alexander St. by appointment.
Tidwell property, south
Dallas—fine location, priced
right.
17 acre farm on F. & M.
road, with good barn and
small house, easy terms.
6 Acres Land in Sonoma,
1 block of Creechville Road.
2 bedroom house, 403 So.
Sherman. $45.00 per month,
can handle with small down
payment.
Geo. H. Barney
Phone: Res. TR 5-7127
Business TR 5-7261
e
Ennis, Texas
Father and Baby
Son Are Killed in
Tex. Hwy. Mishap
WEATHERFORD— A father
and his infant son from Lancas-
j ter were killed last night when
a car pulling a boat collided with
a pickup truck west of Weather-
ford near Whitt.
They were Frank Chaffin and
the son, Timothy.
Mrs. Chaffin was taken to a
hospital in Dallas in serious
condition.
In the pickup truck were two
men from the Fort Worth su-
burb of White Settlement, Fred
Satterfield and his son-in-law.
Satterfield was hospitalized at
caped serious injury.
The collision occurred about
9 o’clock last night.
drignt future on the Nercepace fun
AIR FORCE
*FT Yw! am FORCE RECRUTE
INVOICE
RECEIVED
PAID
PERSONAL
RUSH
LINDY PENS
All Colors
Both Fine and Medium Points
FISHER PENS
All Colors
Both Fine and Medium Points
-O—
—O-
SCRIPTO, ESTERBROOK, PAPER MATE,
AND PARKER JOTTER PENS
Refill for all makes — Pens and Pencils "
—O--
Scotch Tape
Masking Tape
Brown Tape For Mailing
Telemate Sets
—0- -0-
Pencil Sharpeners
Tape Dispensers
Ink Sets
Marks A Lot
Index Card Files
Pencils
Ledger Leaves
UPCO Print Shop
“Distinctive Printing**
213 NORTH DALLAS STREET
PHONE TR5-3801
Ansley Grant of Ennis is pres-
ident of the Bardwell Homecom-
ing Association, which will hold
a reunion June 18.
The association has issued a
general invitation to all interest-
ed persons to attend the annual
affair—staged at Bardwell Com-
munity Center, at 6 p.m.
Those attending will bring
food for their families and
guests. Drinks and place settings
will be provided by the associa-
tion.
Kenneth Farmer is secretary-
treasurer.
I Committees for the June 18
event include Mrs. Bob Bruce,
Mrs. Edd Lewis, Bob Gailey and
Mrs. Grant, invitations; Mrs.
Pendell Wheatley, publicity;
CAR SAILS OFF
TEXAS SEAWALL
GALVESTON — A car sailed
off the seawall at Galveston and
landed on its top 15 feet below.
But not one of the eleven
persons in the auto received
serious injury.
Seconds before the car collid-
ed with another. The three per-
sons in the other car weren’t
seriously hurt either.
After all 14 persons had been
taken to Galveston hospitals for
examination following the acci-
dent yesterday, a patrolman
said:
“There was quite a bit of con-
fusion out there for a while.”
A. Williams
OPTOMETRIST
102 S. Dallas Phone TR 5-7651
, 4
CHECK LIST
STOCK RUBBER STAMPS
75c Each
THANK YOU
IMPORTANT
FRAGILE
AIR MAIL
HOLD
Check Holders
O— —O-
-O-
—O-
SCOTCH TAPE HOME DISPENSERS
pastel shades, make nice gifts - 98c
—O-
TYPEWRITER RIBBONS FOR ALL
MAKES TYPEWRITERS
% *
stration. J
Raymond Boswell is chairman
of the grounds and tables com-
mittee and Mrs. Lewis is chair-
man of the committee in charge
of placing food. 3.,
Mrs. Kenneth Farmer will be-
in charge of preparation of teas
and Mr. Gailey and Charles E.
Cash will supervise the icing and
pouring of drinks. J. E. Roach
has been designated to take
charge of the box for cash con-
tributions. *
INSTANT
CASH!!
(HOME OWNERS ONLY)
*
*
*
Consolidate All Your
Bills. 1
Home Does Not Have Po
Be Paid For.
4 Hour Approvals. "
* All Cash To You.
CALL
DAYS
LA 1-4740
NIGHTS, WEEKENDS *
EM 3-5842
Dallas, Texas
4633 N. Central Exp. ?
C.O.D. "I
CANCEL
FOR DEPOSIT ONLY
SPECIAL
SPECIAL DELIVERY
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Casebolt, Floyd W. The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 76, No. 134, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 7, 1966, newspaper, June 7, 1966; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1647487/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Ennis Public Library.