Sulphur Springs News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 102, No. 153, Ed. 1 Friday, June 27, 1980 Page: 13 of 14
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Hopkins County Area Newspapers and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Hopkins County Genealogical Society.
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THE NEWS-TELEGRAM, Sulphur Springs, Texas, Friday, Juna 27,1980—13.
DEATHS
Nell Tittle
Funeral arrangements are
pending with Murray-Orwosky
Funeral Home for Mrs. Nell
Tittle, 81, of 1317 Lakeview Dr.
Mrs. Tittle died at 2:40 a.m.
Friday in Hopkins County
Memorial Hospital.
Ima Norman
Services for Mrs. Ima Ruth
Norman, 74, of 133 East Park St.
are pending with the Tapp
Funeral Home.
Mrs. Norman died Friday
morning at Citizens General
Hospital in Greenville.
Duane Osborn
-
Funeral arrangements are
pending at the Tapp Funeral
Home for Duane Osborn, a
former Sulphur Springs
resident.
Mr. Osborn died Friday
morning at a hospital in
Shawnee, Okla.
Lue Spigner 9
Mrs. Lue Annie Spigner, 106,
died at the family home at 3:30
a.m. Friday in the St. Mark
community, Pickton, Route 1.
Arrangements are pending
with White Funeral Home in
charge.
market
report
MISHA HAS DEFECTED! The stuffed bear that symbolized the Moscow Olympics now
sports a red, white and blue T-shirt emblazoned with “U.S.A.” and a hockey player (to
commemorate the U.S. hockey team's Winter Olympic triumph). American manufacturers
of the bear made the transformation after their sales slumped as a result of the U.S.
boycott of the Moscow Games.
Mulligan stew
Guggenheim palazzo
evokes mixed emotion
Wall Street
NEW YORK (AP) - The
stock market lost more ground
today in the wake of Thursday’s
late selloff.
Declines outnumbered ad-
vances by close to a 2-1 margin
in the mid-day tally of New
York Stock Exchange-listed
issues.
The Dow Jones average of 30
industrials, off 4.09 Thursday,
dropped 3.59 to 879.86 by
noontime today.
Oil issues were mostly lower
despite announcements
Thursday of an oil and gas
discovery in the Beaufort Sea in
the Canadian Artie and a gas
find in southeastern Wyoming.
Standard Oil of Indiana
dropped IVb to 60%; Conoco lVi
to 54%, and Mobil % to 73.
The NYSE’s composite index
lost .19 to 66.25. At the American
Stock Exchange, the market
value index was up .69 at 295.06.
Volume on the Big Board
totaled 14.89 million shares at
noontime, down from 19.82
million at the same point
Thursday.
Gold
By the Associated Press
Selected world gold prices
Friday:
London: morning fixing
$631.50, up $7.00; afternoon
fixing $637.50, up $13.00.
Paris: afternoon fixing
$633.62, up $12.47.
Frankfurt: fixing $635.72, up
$10.75.
Zurich: $636.00 bid, up $13.00;
$639.00 asked.
New York: Handy & Harman
late morning $637.50, up $13.00.
New York: Engelhard selling
price late morning $637.50, up
$13.00.
New York: Engelhard
fabricated gold late morning
$659.81, up $13.45.
Business Cards
ALLTYPES PRINTING
Fast Dependable Service
Phone 885-8663
THE ECHO PUBLISHING CO.
PONDER’S
MOWER'S l SAW SHOP
Briggs A Stratton
Authorized Swvici Center
m LimUDriw_M5-W3
Electronic Cakulatore
Cash Registers
Sales Service
Kyle Graver Business Machines
2» ante a»»*4
COOK'S
EXTERMINATORS
•Termiting 'Past Control
•Pretroating ‘Fogging
O. R. COOK
By HUGH A. MULLIGAN
AP Special Correspondent
VENICE, Italy (AP)-There
are the Picassos, of course, and
the Klee, the Chagall, the Dalis
and other modern masterpiecs,
but it is the front and back
gardens that evoke the greatest
reaction from visitors to Peggy
Guggenheim’s famed palazzo
on the Grand Canal.
The back garden brings a
gasp, a sigh and sometimes
tears.
The front garden brings a
gasp too, then a giggle and the
inevitable click of camera
shutters and flurry of flash
bulbs.
In a quiet corner of the back
garden is her grave — she died
last Dec. 23 at age 81 — and the
inscription: “Here rests Peggy
Guggenheim.”
Close by appear to be more
graves and the inscription:
“Here lie my beloved babies,”
followed by 13 names and dates.
Tourists are numbed, stun-
ned, some even weep openly, at
the thought of her beloved
babies all dying so young, most
in their infancy, until the
thought occurs or someone
(usually one of the guards)
whispers that these were her
dogs.
The front garden, right on the
Grand Canal, features the
famous bareback (and fro...)
horseman called “The Angel of
the Citadel,” a bronze by Italian
sculptor Marino Marini.
Collector Guggenheim tells
about it in her delightful
autobiography, “Out of This
Century.” She went to Milan to
borrow a Marini work for an
exhibition in her garden but
“ended up buying the only thing
available,” the horseman.
Educated in Europe, she
became a friend of James
Joyce, Ezra Pound and Isadora
Duncan during the ‘20s, when
she adapted her highly in-
dividual lifestyle.
In 1938, with the help of her
artist friend Marcel Duchamp,
she opened a gallery in London.
“Without knowing it,” she
confesses to having started up
her collection by buying up the
works of artists who did not sell
just to console them.
At the outbreak of World War
II, she set out for Paris to
borrow enough modern art to
start a museum, but ended up
buying everything in sight: “I
put myself on a regime to buy
one work of art a day.”
With the German invasion
imminent, the Louvre changed
its mind about storing her
collection of cubists, im-
pressionists, surrealists and
other moderns: “They decided
The first British settlement
in Australia, in 1788, was a
penal colony at Port Jackson,
now Sydney.
RobortCook
Jarry Cook
8*5*039
.............-W1 .
CE CASE PLACE
702 Culver St. Commerce, Texas
YOUR FIRST STOP
Liquor ‘Beer ‘Wine
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MICHIW
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OPEN FRIDAY &
SATURDAY NITES
UNTIL 12 MIDNITE
MICHEL0B BEER
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Case of 24 1#
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Fridi) t Saturday
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‘The Fitness Fact Book ’
From rackets to stairs
it was not worth saving.” The
canvases were first stored in a
barn near Vichy, then spent
weeks on a railroad flatcar
awaiting safe passage to
Grenoble. They were then
shipped undercover to the
United States. e
Left in her will to the Solomon
R. Guggenheim Foundation in
New. York, which will maintain
the palazzo, they are an Italian
treasure as well as one of the
great monuments to modem art
anywhere in the world.
A remarkable woman, Peggy
Guggenheim. She might not
have known much about art
when she started out, but she
knew what she liked, and loved
it like her beloved babies.
Cash Grain
CHICAGO (AP)-Wheat No.
2 hard red winter 3.99%n
Friday; No. 2 soft red winter
4.24%. Corn No. 2 yellow 2.75V«n
(hopper) 2.73V«n (box). Oats
No. 2 heavy 1.94n. Soybeans No.
1 yellow 6.32%n.
No. 2 yellow com Thursday
was quoted at 2.76n (hopper)
2.74r. (box).
By Theodore Berland
(13th of 14 parts) ■
Is tennis or racquetball the
better exercise? And what
does roller skating do for the
body? The answers can be
found in this continuation of
our evaluation of popular
sports and exercises.
Again, each activity is
awarded frbm zero to five
points overall and in each of
nine categories: 1-A more effi-
cient heart. 2- A slimmer,
firmer body. 3-Bulging
“macho” muscles. 4-Greater
strength. 5-Power and endur-
ance. 6-Flexibility and supple-
ness. 7-Improved sports skills.
8-Convenience. 9-Sociability.
For more advice on getting
into shape, order a copy of my
“Fittjess Fact Book ” Send
$195f plus 50 cents postage
and handling to "Fitness Fact
Book” in care of this newspa-
per, P.O. Box 489, Radio City
Station, New York, NY 10019!
-RACKET GAMES-
’ A number of games involve
hitting a ball with a hand,
paddle or racket so as to
outsmart an opponent. Tennis,
like table tennis and badmin-
ton, is a mildly active varia-
tion of this activity.
Far more vigorous is hit-
ting a ball against the walls of
a little room, whether that
ball is propelled by a hand
(handball), paddle (paddleball)
or racket (racquetball and
squash). Handball offers lots
more running; paddle and rac-
quetball offer lots more arm
action.
The more competitive any
racket game, the more it does
for your heart and weight. A
singles player works harder
than a doubles player.
Ttnnlt
H«art-2. Slimming-2. Muscle
building-1. Strsngth-O. Endur-
ance-1. Flezibility-1. Skillt-4.
Convenience-?. Sociability-3.
CALORIES PER MINUTE:
Doublas-6. Singlet-7.5.
OVERALL SCORE: 1.7S.
Psddlaball-Handball-
Squath-Racquetball
Heart-4. Slimming-2. Muacla
building-O. Strangth-2. Endur-
ance-3. Flexibility-1. Skills-2.
Convenience-3. Sociability-3.
CALORIES PER MINUTE:
Paddleball-9. Handbali-squash-
racquetball (social)-10.5.
OVERALL SCORE: 2.22.
-ROPE SKIPPING-
One of the best and most
vigorous exercises, rope
skipping has some hazards for
ankles and feet. It provides
limited joint movement and
muscle development, restrict-
ed mainly to the calves with
some thigh involvement.
But it is great for your
heart, slimming and endur-
ance.
You have to be somewhat
y"’
fit when you start You have
to warm up. And you have to
develop — or renew the
skill of twirling and jumping.
Rope skipping should be(
complemented by arm or tor-’
so sports or exercises
Haart-S. Slimming-5. Muacla
building-1. Strangth-2. Endur-
anca-5. Flexibility-2. Skilla-3.
Convaniance-5. Sociability-1.
CALORIES PER MINUTES (120-
170 turna per minute): 12.
OVERALL SCORE. 3.22.
-SKATING-
Recreational ice skating
and roller skating are all-
around mild exercises Both
are good for building fitness.
Emphasis again is on the
legs, so skating should be sup-
plemented i with upper-body
exercises.
Heart-2. Slimming-1. Muacla
building-1. Strength-1. Endur-
ance-2. Flexibility-2. Skilla-4.
Convenience-1. Sociability-2.
CALORIES PER MINUTE: Ice
akating (10 mph)-6.6. Roller
akating (9rqph)- 7.8.
OVERALL SCORE: 1.7*.
-STAIR CLIMBING-
The cheapest, most conven-
ient exercise equipment for
many people is a flight of
stairs.
Stair climbing is more well-
rounded than jogging or cycl-
ing because you exercise the
quadriceps at the front of the
thigh when lifting your body
up the stairs and exercise the
hamstrings at the back when
going down. As it does nothing
for the torso and arms, you
still need other exercises.
Heart-3. Slimming-2. Muscle
building-1. Strength-1. Endur-
ance-2. Flexibility-1. Skills-0.
Convenience-5. Sociability-0.
CALORIES PER MINUTE: 130-
pound person-6. 165-pound
person-*.*.
OVERALL SCORE: 1.67.
(NEXT: More ratings)
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I
sulphur
-graphs
MONEY THE hard way is a
new gimmick being added to
the Sulphur Springs Rodeo
beginning next Wednesday
night. It’s a fan participation
event, with adults on the first
night and teenagers the second,
being invited to retrieve a
string from a bull’s horns while
it charges around the arena.
It’ll be worth $100 for the lucky
adult and $50 for the successful
teenager. Other special events
are set during the four-day
rodeo.
■ 45
MR. AND Mrs. Jean Rawson,
of Sulphur Springs were in.
Dallas Friday to visit Fay
Maurice Brady, a surgical ,';
patient in Baylor Medical ,
Center.
RICHARD PAT Peterson of
Cooper has been dismissed
from McCuistion . Medical $
Center in Paris.
RAY MOSS will be the
teacher for Everyman's Bible
Class at First Christian Chui ch
Sunday morning.
CAROLYN GOODMAN of "'1
Sulphur Springs has been ad- (>
mitted to Citizens General,.-
Hospital in Greenville. .
MRS. F.W. Frailey was ex-
pected home Friday afternoon
from Dallas, where she has
been receiving medical
treatment in Baylor University
Medical Center for about ten
days. Her condition is im-
proved.
MR. AND Mrs. Don Hinton of
Route 2 announce the birth of a’
daughter at 7:51 a.m., Thur-! !•>
sday, June 26 at Hopkins County
Memorial Hospital.
MR. AND Mrs. Tommy!'
Clayton of 316 Calvert announce O
the birth of a son at 7:20 a.m.! !•
Thursday, June 26 at Hopkins
County Memorial Hospital.
PAMELA ELAINE Bunch,
daughter of Randy and Lucia
Bunch, has been selected as a
state finalist in the Baby Miss
Texas Pageant. She will
compete in September with
other four and five-year-old
children at the Hyatt Regency
Hotel in Houston. Her parents
are hoping to find local spon-
sors.
- ’-"A*
THE PALMER family/,
reunion is scheduled Saturday...
in the Wesley Union Methodist
Church fellowship hall. The
building will be open at 4 p.m., .■
with supper to be served at 7:30.. • -
Barbecue and beans will be
provided, with relatives and
friends to bring salads or
desserts.
Social Security aided
WASHINGTON (AP) - A
House subcommittee agreed
Thursday to a measure
designed to buttress the
financially troubled Social
Security System for two years.
The action came on a motion
by Rep. Joseph L. Fisher, D-
Va., to approve a small shift of
Social Security tax revenues
from the disability insurance
fund to the old age and sur-
vivors insurance fund in 1980
and 1981. The extra money,
some $9 billion, would help the
system through about the
middle of 1982, according to
proponents of the plan.
Last week, the trustees of the
Social Security system reported
that the system’s financial
health was “quite fragile in the
immediate future” and said the
program’s largest trust fund,
the old age and survivors in-
surance, will run out of money
in 1981 or 1982.
The system’s two other funds,
the disability insurance and
hospital insurance, are
financially sound, the trustees
said.
The Carter administration
has asked Congress to change
the current law so that the three
funds could borrow money from
each other.
Seven members of the House
Ways and Means social security
subcommittee unanimously
approved Thursday’s action.
MEMBERS OF a jury
commission met Friday to draw
names of prospective grand
jurors. The panel selects 20
names from which 12 will be
chosen to serve as the grand
jury for the next six months
starting In July.
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Keys, Clarke. Sulphur Springs News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 102, No. 153, Ed. 1 Friday, June 27, 1980, newspaper, June 27, 1980; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth823789/m1/13/?rotate=90: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.