The Hopkins County Echo (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 105, No. 39, Ed. 1 Friday, September 26, 1980 Page: 4 of 4
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■Saltillo news
(ran several days visit Id
Qticuo with bis rater. Mr.
Knapps sister, Mrs. Marie
Jarog at DsBss and his step-
father, Frank Hondo of
Artegton, visited a few days
last week with him and Mrs.
Knapft. Robert Fletcher of
Dallas sprat the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs. Knapik.
Mrs. J.W. Mattingly of Mount
Vernon and Mrs. Carl Roberts
were in Longview Monday for
an eye checkup. They both
received good reports.
Mr. and Mrs. Oivis Adams
and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Cole of
Wimsboro visited Mrs. Estelle
Vetter and Mrs. Ethel Tate
Wednesday night.
The W.M.U. of the First
Baptist Church met last
Monday for a covered dish
Umcheon and a study program
on state missions. There were
nine present.
Mrs. Thommie Jean Roberts
and son David of Sulphur
Springs spent Sunday with her
mother, Mrs. Mary Screws, and
grandmothers, Mrs. Lillian
Broughton.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Rhoades, Bobby and Mitzi,
spent the weekend in Royse City
with Mr. and Mrs. C.A.
Stoveall.
Nelta news
The Rural Progress supper
Thursday night was well at-
tended in spite of the weather.
Robby Bland of Odessa was the
only visitor. The monthly
suppers are every third
Thursday and all residents are
welcome to attend and bring
visitors.
:. Robby Bland of Odessa sprat
last week here with his parents,
Robert and Sue Bland.
Elvis and Lucille Neal at-
tended the Neal reunion in Dike
Sunday before last.
Ronnie Whitlock has been
home from Baylor Hospital for
a week now. Ronnie had
surgery done to correct a back
problem. He is doing very well
and enjoys his morning and
evening walks to his in-laws,
Billy and Alice Flippin, and
back to his trailer. He is ex-
pecting to be back to work
sometime in January.
Nickey Sudduth and friends,
Rick Mallintos and Philip
Blauth, all of Dallas, visited
with Dale and City Beale on
Saturday and Sunday.
Jennifer Beale spent Friday
with her grandparents, Gene
and Mari Beale, in Sulphur
Bluff.
Several residents from here
attended the Fall Festival in
Sulphur Springs. Cindy Beale
and Debra Moore won high
honors in the Household and
Arts Division.
Sylvia and Robin Petty and
friend Dana, all of Irving, sprat
Friday night and Saturday with
Billy and Alice Flipping.
Ride and Grace Shrode of
Dallas visited with Arby Wilhite
and attended services at the
Church of Christ Sunday.
Jerry Bassman is in
Memorial Hospital with back
trouble.
Amanda Bassham, daughter
of Kimberly and Mark
Bassham, celebrated her first
birthday in the home of Robert
and Sue Bland. Also present
were Mr. and Mrs. Winnie, Mr.
and Mrs. Gary Tubb and Cory
and Tony Bassham.
Mrs. T.M. Long of Clarksville
is spending the week with the
Billy Don Hayes.
Roberta Flippin, Maxine
Johnson and Jan Bartley were
in McKinney on Thursday.
Visitors with Susie and
Clifford Clark on Sunday were
Albert Clark and Corneice
Parsons of Paris and Gary and
Sara Stevens and daughters of
Commerce.
Mary Grant of Hideaway
Lake visited with her mother,
Azlee Davis, on Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sears
and children of Sulphur
Springs, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Williams and Bubba of Terrell
and Mr. and Mrs. Dwight
Rawson of Tira visited with
Doug and Sara Williams on
Sunday.
Jason Moore won second
place in ice cream and cookie
eating contests at the Fall
Festival. Steve Williams won
third place in the cookie eating
contest, and Gene Williams
ew««f place in die ice cream
eating contest in their age
categories.
Mrs. Velera Loving and Mrs.
Bonnie White were luncheon
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Weldon
Payne Jr. in Weaver.
Mrs. Corine Bills of Sulphur
Springs visited Mrs. Juanita
Horne Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Louie Griggs
and Mrs. Mary Ware of
Stockton, Calif, visited Mrs.
Estelle Vetter and Mrs. Ethel
Fate last week. Mr. and Mrs. Bo
Wafford and daughter Lynette,
grandson Jay Hammond of
Mount Vernon, Mr. and Mrs.
Griggs, Mrs. Ware and Mrs.
Vetter were supper guests of
Mrs. Fate Tuesday night.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Conley will celebrate their 50th
wedding anniversary at their
home in the Old Saltillo com-
munity Oct. 5. Hosting the
celebration will be their
children, Mr. and Mrs. Bobby
Conley, Mr. and Mrs. Rex
Norris, Mr. and Mrs. Georgie
D. Payne, and Mrs. Lucille
Brown. Mr. and Mrs. Conley
were married Oct. 2 in Saltillo.
Mrs. Conley is the former
Ovetta Carey. They have three
children, Bobby Conley of
Lindlen, Barbara Norris of
Daingerfield, and Georgie D.
Payne of Plano.
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Monroe
attended the Castle family
reunion at Purley Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Loy Orren had
dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Cowser in Winnsboro Saturday.
Mrs. Jewel Penn and Mrs.
Velmer Flowers visited several
days last week in Duncanville
with Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Stoddard.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Carr, Mr.
and Mrs. Horace Fuller, Mr.
and Mrs. Clovis Adair and Mr.
and Mrs. Loy Orren attended an
invitation of the O.E.S. in
Commerce Tuesday night.
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Rose at-
tended a birthday party for Mr.
Rose’s cousin in Clarksville
Saturday night.
Mr. and Mrs. J.D. Simpson of
Wills Point visited last week
with Mr. and Mrs. Will Mat-
thews.
Mr. and Mrs. Clovis Adah-
attended the funeral of Mrs.
Myrtle Skynitz in Mesquite
Monday. Mrs. Cathey Bell and
son Allen of Mount Pleasant
also attended the funeral. Mrs.
Skynitz was the grandmother of
Mr. Bell.
Mr. and Mrs. E.A Hastings of
Saltillo were joined by Mr. and
Mrs. T.C. Skeen and Clifford
Skeen and family of Nelta,
Alton Attaway of Sulphur
Springs and Mr. and Mrs. B.W.
Autumn wedding set
Mr. and Mrs. Darel D. Crump, Sr. of Sulphur Springs announce
the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter,
Lynna Darlene to Marcus Craig Pounds of Sulphur Springs.
Pounds is the son of Senior Master Sgt. and Mrs. Robert Kramer
of Omaha, Neb. The ceremony will be held Oct. 2S at 7:30 p.m. in
the Shannon Oaks Church of Christ. Friends and relatives of the
couple are invited to attend the wedding.
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Silver anniversary
Mr. and Mrs. Billy J. Horton will celebrate their 25th wedding
anniversary at their home in Ridgeway on Sunday, Sept. 28 from 2
p.m. until 4 p.m. The fete will be hosted by their children. Friends
are invited to join in the festivities.
Skeen of Sulphur Bluff for a
country and western musical at
tiie home of Mrs. Ale an and
Harold Don Skeen in Sulphur
Bluff Sunday afternoon.
Mrs. May Henley and son
Mike of Mount Vernon visited
Mrs. Delia Odom Monday af-
ternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Roberts
attended the funeral of Mr.
John Whitt in Mount Vernon
Sunday.
Mrs. Dessa Wardrup
returned home Sunday from
Odessa, where she visited Mr.
and Mrs. Alvis Little and Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Little.
Dorriece Shuptrine visited
Modena and Noble Horn
Monday.
Michael Dodd reports he was
lucky enough to interview
Brenda Lee and Jacky Ward
backstage at the Civic Center
Saturday night.
Helen Weir is busy painting
her Gingham Goose gift shop
this week.
Beulah Smiddy, Lucille,
Noble and Modena Horn visited
Jan, Chip, Tiffany and Delayne
Vaughn Friday night. Modena
and Noble were at Mary and
Dwight Rawson’s Saturday
night.
The Ernest Shaw family were
in Oklahoma for a family
reunion over the weekend.
Lillian Brice and the James
Brice family visited Doug and
Glynna Brice in Dallas Sunday.
Lois Weir visited her sister,
Nellie Young, in Cooper
Saturday.
Mary Dee and Claude Brice,
Peggy and Shaunda Brice and
Katherine Brandenburg at-
tended the stew cook-off at
Sulphur Springs Saturday.
Claude and Mary Dee also
stayed for the Jacky Ward and
Brenda Lee concert Saturday
night.
Joe and Mary Lou Jeter spent
Tuesday night with his parents,
Leslie and Beulah Wester, and
attended the funeral of Joe’s
cousin, Lorene Carrington, in
North
Hopkins
news
Jesse Hooten of Sulphur
Springs recently went to visit
relatives in California. He was
hospitalized there following a
heart attack and is seriously ill.
Mr. Hooten is an uncle of Mrs.
Marya Estes and father-in-law
of the former Katherine
Ferrell.
A large number from this
area attended the Fall Festival
in Sulphur Springs last week.
Laurie and Brian Zim-
merman of Irving spent the
weekend with Verda and
Francis Withrow.
Mrs. Ethel Butler of Com-
merce has just returned from a
two weeks visit with LaVelle
and Paul Collins and Ruby
Luttrell in Fort Worth.
Dawn Dickey of Martin
Springs spent the weekend with
her grandmother, Pauline
Evans.
Judy Taylor of Emory and
John Earl Martin were united in
marriage Sept. 15 in Quitman.
Three-year-old Chaunsey
Taylor and the Martins reside
in their mobile home here.
Mrs. Chrysteen Decco came
home Saturday from Kilgore,
where she has been assisting
her sister and niece during
illness.
Mrs. Mabel Chapman of
Sulphur Springs, mother of
Mrs. Ruth Long, is a patient in
Memorial Hospital.
Imogene and J.B. Williams
went to Wills Point Monday for
a few days visit with their
daughter, Becky Mayfield,
Harvey, Jeff and Daniel.
Hazel Glossup and her
mother, Nona Edmundson of
Como, visited Elizabeth Vaden
Sunday afternoon.
Verdis France of Sulphur
Springs, Harriett McClendon of
Commerce, Rosa Jones and
Uvonne Chester spent Monday
with Mrs. Ethel Butler in
Commerce.
Marsha Whitrow and Richard
Crouch spent Saturday visiting
Marsha’s mother in Garland.
Iona Lawson remains a
patient in Memorial Hospital.
Sulphur
Bluff
news
Tira news
Cooper Wednesday. Linda,
Karyn and Kelly Lawrence
spent the weekend with the
Westers and the girls attended
church here Sunday. Peggy and
Charles Deaton visited the
Westers Sunday.
Oleta and Richard Bearden
honored their nephew, Danny
Evans, with a birthday supper
Friday night. Attending were
Gene, Marvin, Danny, Debra
Evans and their two daughters.
Oleta and Richard ate supper
with Gene and Marvin Sunday
night.
J.E. Weir visited Harmon
Weir and Mamie Sullivan
Several ben attended the
FaQ Festival activities during
the week at the Civic Center.
There for the awards presen-
tation of the County Rural
Progress were the community
chairman, Delbert Hays and his
wife Dorothy. The community
dub won the purple plaque and
check for $40. The community
had a very successful year and
has plans for another good year.
The community missed First
Monday lunch on Labor Day but
will be serving again on First
Monday in October at Com-
munity Center.
Rosie Huie went home with
her sister, Sallie, and Alfred
Huie of Cedar Creek for several
days. She was home for a couple
Thursday.
Harold and Mary Weir of
Arlington brought his parents
home Friday and spent the
night here. Addie Mae has been
ill at her home the past few
days.
Gay Lou Haley, Betty Sue and
Greg Johnson spent the last
weekend with the girl’s mother,
Mildred Chapman. They also
visited Zora Davis on Sunday.
Miles and Minnie Bell
Hargrave and Mildred Chap-
man ate lunch with Melba
McKinney Sunday.
Frances Robertson visited
Weir relatives here last week.
of days before going with
another sister, Maggie
Banister, to help her move from
Dallas to Commerce. Maggie
brought her home today.
J.R. and Mary George
Nugent are proud to announce
the arrival of their first grand-
child. She arrived Sept. 12. Her
parents are Georgia and Dennis
Ransone of Silver Lake, Kan.
Mary George and her mother,
Pauline Stone, left last Wed-
nesday for Kansas to visit the
new baby and her parents. They
reported early morning tem-
perature there once was 40
degrees. They returned late
Monday.
Sybil and Doug Hastings of
Saltillo spent Sunday with her
parents, Barney and Alma
Skeen. In the afternoon, they
visited Aleen and Bubbles
Skeen. Others there were T.C.
Skeen and family and Alton
Attaway of Sulphur Springs.
The men enjoyed making music
for the group. Aleen is much
improved these days.
The annual Deaton family
reunion was held Sunday in
Community Center, with a
large crowd attending. Several
friends visited with them in the
afternoon. They gave an $80
contribution to the Center.
Jack Philbrick is home,
improving nicely, following
surgery in a Paris hospital two
weeks ago.
Echoettes
CODY GREER of Sulphur
Springs, who had gone to
Houston for eye surgery, suf-
fered a light stroke and was
admitted to Southwestern
Medical Center over the
weekend. His son, Cody Greer
Jr., said that it was expected
that his father might be
removed from intensive care to
a private room early in the
week.
Dike news
++*+*+*****+*•
Mr. and Mrs. James Bailiff of
Brownwood visited his sister
and husband, Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Lynn, recently.
Mrs. Marie Johnson and Mrs.
Marine McMullin of Sulphur
Springs visited Mrs. Myrtle
Mills Sunday afternoon.
Rod Bartley of Monticello and
Mr. and Mrs. Wade Bartley,
Clay and Cara, visited Mrs.
Teence Bartley Sunday af-
ternoon.
Mrs. Christine Rodgers, Susie
and Jeffery of Bedford visited
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Burkham Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs.
Russell Obert and children of
Fort Worth spent the weekend
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Ray Lynn.
Mrs. Mary Carley visited
relatives in Denton last week.
Marcia and Marty McKinzie
showed calves at the Fall
Festival last week. Others
showing cattle were Shawn
Nowlin, Randy and Tammy
Neal, and Amy and Melinda
Deaton.
Mr. and Mrs. Herman
Burkham and Mrs. Ruby
Hargrave visited Mrs. Faye
Little of Commerce Sunday
afternoon.
There will be a wedding
shower Wednesday, Oct. 1, at
7:30 p.m. at the Dike Com-
munity Center for David Tubb
and Stephanie Keller. Everyone
is invited.
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Hargrave
and Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Hargrave of Daingerfield had
supper with Mrs. Ruby
Hargrave Monday night.
Mrs. Hester Stewart is home
after a week’s stay in the
hospital. She is improving.
The Dike 4-H Club will hold its
regular meeting Wednesday
night at 7:30. All members and
leaders are urged to attend.
Lesa and Jud White were
honored with a birthday party
Sunday at their grandparents’
home. Attending the party were
Jan, Clay and Cara Bartley,
Teence Bartley, Patsy, Randy
and Tammy Neal, Gladys and
Billie Neal, Elizabeth Hoag,
Kelley Joslin, their mother,
June White, and grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Durwayne Irwin.
Mr. and Mrs. Junior Neal and
Debra returned Saturday from
Abilene, where Debra par-
ticipated in the State 4-H
Fashion Revue.
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ARBALA’S ANNUAL Senior
Citizens Day will be held
Thursday, Oct. 2 at the Arbala
Community Center. The
programs will begin at 10:30
and a basket lunch will be
spread at noon. Die group
issued a special invitation to all
former residents.
THE MASTERS Four of
Dallas and the Shilohs of
Oklahoma will be featured in
the free gospel singing at
Bartons Tabernacle six miles
west of Gilmer in the Latch
community Saturday night. The
singing will begin at 7:30 p.m.
HOMECOMING WILL be
held at Tyler Junior College
Nov. 8. Carl Trimble, president
of the Alumni Association,
announced the theme of the
homecoming is “Yesterdays’
Memories” honoring the
football and basketball teams of
1966,1967 and 1968, with special
emphasis on the entire class of
1966.
Syndicated sound
MR. AND Mrs. -Ronnie
Strickland of Cumby announce
the birth of Amanda Renee at
Hopkins County Memorial
Hospital on Sept. 16 at 4:53 p.m.
She weighed six pounds, and is
the granddaughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Buddy Cline and Mr. and
Mrs. James Neal Strickland of
Cumby. Great-grandparents
are Mildred Cline of Royse City
and Mrs. R.L. Strickland of
Cumby, Mrs. Loyd Bays of
Sulphur Springs and Woodrow
Bland of Brashear. Great-
great-grandmother is Mrs.
Sarah Cline of Corsicana.
Syndicated radio commentator “Tumbleweed" Smith, whose
programs feature vignettes of Texans and Texas heritage, tapes
the "real" sound of hand-milking in a tin bucket during one of
five interviews of Hopkins County residents recorded during the
Fall Festival. Doing the milking is Chamber of Commerce
Agriculture Committeeman Herb Flora.
Rescue effort
saves tot's life
MR. AND Mrs. George Cath-
cart of Golden, Texas announce
the birth of a son on Tuesday,
Sept. 23, at 11:23 a.m. in
Hopkins County Memorial
Hospital.
**********
Stew sale raises $2,000
vwwvws
“We rained more money than
]jgt year and had more stew,”
said Chad Cable of the results of
tin World Champion Hopkins
Comity Stew Cook-Off, spon-
sored by the Chamber of
Commerce.
“R’s growing trigger every
year and we really appredate
the support ot the people that
came out and especially the
sponsors of the stew cookers,”
Cable said.
Chamber of Commerce
figures indicate that ap-
proximately $2,100 was made on
the sale of the stew and that
figure includes the $350 raised
in the auction of a quart of stew
from each of the first three
winners.
Bowls of stew were sold until
everyone had a chance to
partake of as much as possible
of the 44 pots that were cooked
and then quarts were sold until
the stew ran out.
Last year, the Fall Festival
event raised only $900 from the
sale of the traditional stew.
Winners in the stew cooking
contest received a trophy or
plaque as well as a check for
their efforts.
Although some expenses are
still to be taken out of the in-
come from the stew cook-off, a
Chamber of Commerce
spokesperson said that the
$2,100 figure should stand firm.
Three-year-old Casey Wyly of
628 Mulberry received minor
injuries Sunday afternoon when
he fell through rotted boards
into an abandoned well in the
back yard at his residence.
According to Sulphur Springs
Police Sgt. Robert Mercer, the
child fell through the boards
into the well about 12:35 p.m.
Sunday.
“Luckily his mother
(Virginia Wyly) was back there
and saw him,” Mercer said.
Casey’s father, Ottis, ran to
the well, tied a heavy duty
electrical extension cord
around himself and jumped into
the well. He supported the child
until Mercer and members of
the Sulphur Springs Fire
Department’s Rescue Unit
could arrive.
Firemen dropped a rope to
the father, who put it around the
child. Casey was pulled up
about 15 feet to the top of the
well and was taken to Memorial
Hospital.
The rope was then dropped to
the elder Wyly, who was also
pulled up.
Mercer said that it was
unknown how deep the water in
the well was but that Wyly
supported himself and the child
by putting his feet against one
side of the well and his back
against the other.
The policeman reported that
the walls of the old well con-
tinued to crumble as the father
supported the child.
Hospital officals said that
Casey was treated and
released.
MR. AND Mrs. Fransico
Martinez of Commerce an-
nounce the birth of a daughter
on Tuesday, Sept. 23, at 6:41
p.m. in Hopkins County
Memorial Hospital.
TOMMY MATTHEWS an-
nounces the arrival of a sister,
Nikki Nichole, at 3:21 a.m.
Friday, Sept. 21, in Memorial
Hospital. Parents are Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Matthews of
Sulphur Springs. Grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Odell Mat-
thews of Sulphur Springs and
Jodine Ballard of Sand Springs,
Okla.
MR. AND Mrs. Mike Adair of
Mount Pleasant announce the
birth of a son, Dustin Michael,
on Sunday, Sept. 21, in Dtus
County Memorial Hospital. He
weighed eight pounds. He has a
brother, Chris, age 3. Grand-
parents are Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Adair of Sulphur
Springs.
MR. AND Mrs. Barry Mc-
Farland of Sulphur Bluff an-
nounce the birth of a daughter
on Sunday, Sept. 21, at 8:38 a.m.
in Hopkins County Memorial
Hospital.
MR. AND Mrs. Barry Klinger
of Bedford announce the birth of
a daughter, Lauren Elizabeth,
on Monday, Sept. 22. She
weighed five pounds, 13 ounces.
She is the granddaughter of Dr.
and Mrs. Ben Derryl Wood of
Sulphur Springs and Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Klinger of Reading,
Pa. She is a great-
granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Ben Wood of Sulphur Springs
and Joe Valek of Ennis. Die
mother is the former Catherine
Ann Wood.
TONY GENE SMITH has
accepted employment as an ag
teacher at Carlisle High School
in Rusk County, near Hen-
derson, and has assumed his
new duties.
O.B. SINCLAIR, director of
transportation for the Sulphur
Springs school district, reports
he has 22 routes operating this
year. They transport about one-
half of the students enrolled in
the system.
MRS. HURLEY Pogue, who
has been a patient in Baylor
Hospital, Dallas, was
dismissed Friday to her home
in Sulphur Springs.
FIRST BAPTIST Church
announces that the “Early
Bird” worship services at 8:30
a.m. will continue indefinitely
through the fall and winter.
DIRECTORS OF the Peoples
National Bank elected Mrs.
Nancy Reynolds as an assistant
cashier Thursday night. She
will retain her present duties as
head teller. Mrs. Reynolds has
been with the bank for about
five years.
HI-KING Klub members
have held two recent meetings
to formulate plans for the year
and discuss fund-raising
projects. They participated in
the Fall Festival with a pie
throwing booth. On Saturday,
Sept. 27, they will hold a
country and western dance at
the Civic Center livestock
arena from 8 p.m. to 1 a.m.
PETITIONS ARE reported
being circulated in both Delta
and Hopkins County seeking
restoration of a bridge over
South Sulphur River which
collapsed about a year ago. The
bridge is just north of Peerless.
The area in which the bridge is
located would be covered by the
proposed Cooper Lake. Some
interested citizens are won-
dering if the Corps of Engineers
would erect a temporary
Bailey’s bridge to serve the
route now completely blocked.
HAROLD REEDY, manager
of the Borden plant here, says
his establishment regularly
uses a charcoal filter to im-
prove the condition of the city
water. The filter has required a
lot of extra cleaning in recent
weeks, he added.
NEARLY 100 ballots were
returned in the first day’s mail
following distribution of
nominations for directors of the
Hopkins County Chamber of
Commerce. Presient David
DuPriest said, “This may be
our greatest ballot-response in
memory.” There is a possibility
of nearly 600 votes cast from
members. The ballot deadline is
Monday, Sept. 29.
MR. AND Mrs. Max
Gilbreath of Quitman announce
the birth of a son on Tuesday,
Sept. 23, at 11:48 a.m. in
Hopkins County Memorial
Hospital.
RHONDA CORNELIUS,
supervisor of the intensive care
unit at Memorial Hospital, is
the wife of Dennis J. Cornelius,
who heads up the local Texas
Employment Commission
office. The family resided in
Paris before moving to Sulphur
Springs. In Paris, Mrs. Cor-
nelius, a registered nurse, was
involved in in-service training
with McCuistion Medical
Crater.
JOHNNY POTTS, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Randall Ashby of
Baytown, formerly of Sulphur
Springs, departed Sept. 17 for
Ft. Jackson, N.C. to enter basic
training in the U.S. Army.
KAREY BRICE and Cal
Brim, students at the
University of Texas in
Arlington, were here to attend
the wedding of Symantha Hath-
cox and Steve Murray Saturday
night Miss Brice’s guest is
Miss Kate Haggergy, also of
UTA.
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Keys, Clarke & Woosley, Joe. The Hopkins County Echo (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 105, No. 39, Ed. 1 Friday, September 26, 1980, newspaper, September 26, 1980; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth781001/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.