The Fort Hood Sentinel (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 23, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 10, 1985 Page: 2 of 48
forty eight pages : ill. ; page 30 x 19 in.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
A2
By WANDA HONEYCUTT
“A great roaring was heard
afar off and coming nearer and
nearer door steps and house
tops began to be crowded with
breathless listeners. All conver-
sation was carried on in a low
voice and consisted little
more than brief hurried ques-
tions and answers the heavens
gathered blackness and a hur-
ricane fire swept over the
city carrying cinders and blaz
$26M
S iz
15x7
THE FT. O O SENTINEL sd a O to 1 0 1 9 8 5
The Fort Hood Sentinel
Is Your Newspaper
merchants with advertising
in th Sentinel ake it possible.
5520 E. HWY. 2410
KILLEEN TEXAS *817/699-7623
723 S. GENERAL BRUCE DR.
TEMPLE TEXAS. 778-5812
STORE HOURS: 8:30 A.M.-5:30 P.M. Mon.-Sat.
FREE MOUNTING AND VALVE STEMS
TIRES MOUNTED WHILE YOU WAIT!
SALE ENDS SATURDAY
P155/80R/13... 29.41
P165/80R/13... 31.48
P175/80R/13... 32.33
P185/80R/13... 33.99
P185/75R/14... 37.43
P195/75R/I4 ... 38.28
P205/75R/14... 39.59
7Fire drills save lives7
ing fragments wood far into
the country.... ’’This excerpt is
from “History of Firefighting in
America” by Dennis Smith.
IN MEMORY of those who
died in the Great Chicago Fire
of 1871 Fire Prevention Week
will be Oct. 6-12.
The fire left 250 persons dead
and 100000 homeless.
One third of the city was des-
troyed with 17450 buildings
burned beyond use.
TEXSUN
VJ* & a ttery
I W *f om an
STEEL BELTED
RADIAL
NEW TOUGH
DESIGNED FOR
PERFORMANCE
$2941
EA. P155/80R/13
with exchange
PRICE EA. SIZES PRICE EA.
P215/75R/14... 42.80
P205/75R/15... 42.88
P215/75R/15... 44.61
P225/75R/15... 47.29
P235/75R/15... 49.54
'BH&GCo..inc.
4 PLY POLYS
P155/80B/13 19.88
P165/80B/13 23.90
P175/75B/13 25.80
P185/75B/14 28.72
P195/75B/14 29.37
CYLINDERS REBUILT $12 88
1 WHITE SPOKE
WHEELS
EA.
15x8 WIRE
[PTIONAL VALUE
IM POLYESTER
BELTED
[XTRA
8
AFETY
$-j Q88
EA. 15580D-13
with exchange
SIZES PRICE EA. SIZES PRICE EA.
P2Q5/75B/15 30.34
P215/75B/14 32.79
P215/75B/15 34.16
P225/75B/15 36.17
P235/75B/15 37.84
W
®BH
&
BRAKE SPECIAL FRONT END
YOUR CHOICE ALIGNMENT
$498° $088 1
FRONT PADS-ROTORS
TURNED IF NEEDED
OR FRONT END
REAR SHOES REPLACED
MOST AMERICAN CARS
& TRUCKS MOST PASSENGER CARS
$4288
Your Choice.
GCo.. Inc.
WITH PURCHASE OF 4 TIRES 1
ALIGNMENT
COMPUTER
WHEEL
BASKET WHEELS
BALANCING/set
EA.
of
FOUR
a
HEAVY
DUTY
SHOCKS
$ 4 4 8 8
3 Sizes. MOST CARS 8 TRUCKS
The theme of this year’s fire
prevention week is “Fire Drills
Save Lives.”
The Fort Hood Fire Depart-
ment will be treating the Fort
Hood child care centers kin-
dergartens and first graders to
rides on afire truck. There will
be afire prevention display at
the Post Exchange Sat. 10 at
9 a.m. with free hand-outs on
fire prevention.
“MILLIONS OF dollars are
The Sentinel offers adver-
tisers complete coverage of
Fort Hood. The Sentinel is
written by and for the milit-
ary and for civilian person-
nel at Fort Hood and their
families.
im
Coming Soon To Fort Hood & Killeen
Inexpensive
lost due to fire. The earlier we
can educate our young people
the better. We want to teach the
young that ‘Fire can be your
friend or your foe’ Gary Ham-
erschm idt chief inspector
explained.
THE PRIMARY causes of re-
sidential fires are many:
Careless smoking.
Electrical wiring.
Heating/cooking.
hildren playing ith
matches or lighters.
Open flames and sparks.
Flammable liquids.
Suspected arson.
Chimney and flues.
Lightning.
Spontaneous ignition.
Those interested in more fire
prevention tips or who have
specific questions should visit
the displays at the PX or call
th ort Hood Fire epart-
ment 287-3908.
me
Built To Stay That Way
DELIVER
FRIED
CHICKEN
FREE
4-Doors
Station Wagons
Hatchbacks
HOTLINE
Starting as low as
*6
World
News
New Shipment of
Subarus. Just Arrived!
Stock #3657 Hatchback Red 4-Speed Radio & Air
E tR O E
FORD-SUBARU
Sooner or Later Your Favorite Car Dealer
W.S. YOUNG at RANGIER •KILLEEN 9526-0511
BONN West Germany The United States opened an
intensive series of consultations with its allies Oct. 7 on how to
respond to the Soviet Union’s latest arms-control proposals in
advance of the November summit between President Reagan and
Soviet Leader Mikhail Gorbachev. In an interview after the
closed-door meeting Richard Perle U.S. assistant secretary of
defense for international security policy said he heard no urgent
appeals from the allies to change American negotiating positions
in the wake of Moscow’s proposal to cut in half the number of
nuclear weapons that can strike Soviet or American territory.
ABOARD THE BALNY Off Mururoa Five French
navy ships and three Greenpeace vessels protesting France’s nuc-
lear tests are maneuvering warily off Mururoa Atoll but have
taken no actions. Jonathon Castle captain of the Greenpeace a
converted tugboat said the protesters could remain at sea for one
or two years if necessary. The Greenpeace replaced the Rainbow
Warrior which was the environmentalists’ flagship until French
espionage agents sank it July 10 while it was docked in Auckland
New Zealand.
PONCE Puerto Rico An avalanche of mUd crushed a
hillside neighborhood in southern Puerto Rico early Oct. 7
crushing at least 24 people and raising the death toll from flooding
islandwide to at least 60. At least 275 houses were smashed be-
neath the tons of mud that engulfed a hillside in the Mameyes
Portones neighborhood of Ponce between 3 and 4 a.m. police
said. Puerto Rico Gov. Rafael Hernandez Colon declared a state of
emergency and activated the National Guard across the island.
This information was taken from AP UPI and other news
sources.
A E N E A W A E N E S S
Ml 8 8 1 NO O N O S A S OR I S AND
PUNCTURES ON POL CON TAIN ERS WI LL
CAUSE CONTAM INATION WASTE AND
O IO N KEEP POL O N TAIN ERS
S E IC E A E AND TIGHTLY O S E
""Energy Economics Environment*
Critical Choices Ahead
(plus T.T.&T.)
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Fort Hood Sentinel (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 23, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 10, 1985, newspaper, October 10, 1985; Temple, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth309727/m1/2/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Casey Memorial Library.