The Altus Times-Democrat (Altus, Okla.), Vol. 42, No. 275, Ed. 1 Monday, November 18, 1968 Page: 2 of 8
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2 The Altus (Okla.) Times-Democrat, Monday, November 18, 1968
KI/"
Football Standings
-
n 4
" 2-
Western Division
L
hr ■ he
New Orleans 3
L
A’
Pittsburgh
2
.t
Central Division
Short Stories
Los Angeles 20, San Francisco
New York 7, Philadelphia 6
It
HOLLYWOOD (AP)
Jan. 9 and may make some pro-
tigations into the cost of auto re-
irs.
dren.
this may be the beginning of the
The Altus Times-Democrat
AVIATION
have.
Jackson and adjoining counties
mans.
I
Vietnamese 51st Regiment’s 2nd
night. Sunny and not so cold Battalion. Assault forces
A
Opens Daily 12:45
<7"
8
ow
WO’
TODAY thru WED.
SERVICE
672
Opens 6:30 Starts 7:00
i’
$
mi
American Motion Picture
Made in Czechslovakia
Western Conference
Coastal Division
CITIZENSHIP IS A
TWO-WAY STREET
Maximum
Minimum
$9.60
$13.00
$18.00
seemed impossible, going into
Russian-occupied Czechoslova-
$4.80
$9.00
$15.00
.818
.800
.800
.400
.273
Cleveland
St. Louis
4 0 .600
5 0 .500
5 1 .444
6 1 .333
.700
.455
.333
.333
.100
Tice Services
Set Tuesday
HOLLIS — Funeral services
for Mrs. Minnie L. Tice, 93,
will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday
in the Coley Memorial Chapel
Dallas .....
New York
Washington
$1.80
$5.40
$10.80
$23.40
The Weather
Altus Vicinity: Fair and
colder Monday and Monday
night. Warmer on Tuesday.
Weather data for the Altus
area for the past 24 hours:
Kansas City
Oakland
San Diego .
Denver ..-
Cincinnati
2 0
2 0
2 0
6 0
8 0
1 0 .900
1 1 .889
5 1 .444
8 0 .200
9
8
8
4
3
9
8
4
2
. 7
. 5
. 3
3
. 1
Minnesota
Chicago ...
Green Bay
Detroit ...
3
6
6
7
9
W. L. T. Pct.
8 2 0 .800
7 3 0 .700
4 6 0 .400
New York
Houston ...
Miami ....
Boston ....
Buffalo ...
0
0
1
0
1
7
5
m
i si
Sunday's Results
Cleveland 45, Pittsburgh 24
Dallas 44, Washington 24
Minnesota 13, Detroit 6
3 0 .700
4 1 .556
7 0 .300
7 1 .222
... 6
-. 5
... 4
.. 3
TECHNICOLOR* A PARAMOUNT PICTURE
Dean Martin—Robert Mitchum
1:18 3:22 5:26 7:30 9:34
___51
___ 33
results could reveal something
about criminal behavior and
might bring about a new defini-
tion of insanity.
Baltimore ....
Los Angeles .
San Francisco
Atlanta .......
Dean Services
Held Today
GRANITE — Funeral servic-
es for Eugene Edwin Dean, 40,
of Granite were held today at
2 p.m. in the Church of Christ
Second class postage paid at
Altus. Oklahoma. 73521.
agents had entered the city.
A 24-hour curfew was put on
the city of 300,000 Sunday but
was reduced today to 12 hours,
from 6 p.m. to 6 a.m.
SOUTHEAST OKLAHOMA —
Sunny and cool today and Tues-
day. Fair and cold tonight
Northerly winds 12 to 22 miles
per hour today. Highs today 48
to 56. Lows tonight 27 to 32.
Highs Tuesday 50 to 57.
SOUTHWEST OKLAHOMA -
Fair and cold today and tonight.
Sunny and not so cold Tuesday.
Northwesterly winds 10 to 20
miles per hour today. Highs to-
day 46 to 50. Lows tonight 23 to
30. Highs Tuesday 56 to 60.
NORTHEAST OKLAHOMA —
Mostly fair and cool through
Tuesday. Highs today 45 to 50.
Lows tonight in 20s. Highs Tues-
day 50 to 55.
NORTHWEST OKLAHOMA —
Fair and cold today and to-
Barometric pressure — 30.14
(adjusted to sea level)
Sunrise and Sunset
Monday: Sunrise, 7:09 a.
m.: Sunset, 5:29 p.m.
Tuesday: Sunrise, 7:10 a.
m.; Sunset, 5:29 p.m.
other miscellaneous items. Inter-
ested persons must be present to
bid. For pre-inspection of invita-
tion for bid 37-9077, contact Mr.
Frank Ray. Fort Sill, Okla., tele-
phone area code 405, EL 1 -
4721.
end of Ocean Hill-Brownsville."
The 100-bIock area of the dis-
trict with 8,000 students, has
about 125,000 persons—71 per
cent of them Negroes, 24 per
cent Puerto Ricans, 4 per cent
whites, and one per cent Orien-
tals.
Miami at Boston
New York at San Diego
Oakland at Cincinnati
Only games scheduled
National League
Eastern Conference
Capitol Division
IE
E
aat}
Philadelphia ...-. 0 10 0 .000
Century Division
Atlanta 16, Chicago 13
Green Bay 29, New Orleans 7
Baltimore 27, St. Louis 0
Sunday's Games
Atlanta at St. Louis
Dallas at Chicago
Green Bay at Washington
Minnesota at Baltimore
New Orleans at Detroit
New York at Los Angeles
Philadelphia at Cleveland
San Franicisco at Pittsburgh
“9
T
Suday’s Results
Houston 38, Denver 17
Cincinnati 38, Miami 21
Kansas City 31, Boston 17
Oakland 43, New York 32
San Diego 21, Buffalo 6
Sunday’s Games
Buffalo at Denver
Entries Needed
ALL ORGANIZATIONS are urg-
ed to return Christmas parade
Watch For Your
GRAND
OPENING
THURSDAY, NOV. 21st.
See Your Wednesday
Times-Democrat
For Details.
Every four weeks
Every twelve weeks
Every twenty-four weeks
Every fifty-two weeks
By MAIL
OKLAHOMA PANHANDLE—
Fair and cool today and tonight.
Sunny and not so cold Tuesday.
Highs today 43 to 48. Lows to-
PLANE CRASH
TEMPLE (AP) -Carl Gow-
er Worsham. 17, of Temple, was
killed Sunday when his light
plane crashed as he was prac-
ticing touch and go landings at
The heaviest battle raged 15 pose as refugees crossing the
miles south of the city, around a bridge, and another 100 for Ger-
IT’S A:
TWIN GIRLS: Sp. 5 and Mrs.
Kenneth Marler are the parents
of twin girls. The first weighed
4 pounds 4% ounces born at
11:25 a.m. and the second weigh-
ed 4 pounds % ounce born at
11:30 a.m. Sunday Nov. 17 at
Altus AFB Hospital.
government militiamen fought1
off an attack Sunday night at
Binh Son, 35 miles south of Da
BOY - Mr. and Mrs. Dalbert
Clarke are the parents of a 7
pound 8% ounce boy born a t
3 a.m. Monday, Nov. 18 at Alt-
us Memorial Hospital.
with Vernon Turner officiating.
Dean died Saturday in his
home. Burial was in the City
THE PRINCE of Peace Catholic Church Altar Society entertained bachelor
airmen with a covered dish dinner in the Parish Hall. The 35 in attendance were
entertained by James Harrison who sang and played the guitar and Loree War-
ren, accompanied by Bobbie Nelson, who also sang. __________________________
company added a million dol-
lars to the budget—“but then,
we also got a million dollars’
worth of publicity." Although
photographed in Czechoslova-
kia, Germany and Italy, the
scenes match perfectly, he said.
Even one scene in which an ac-
tor began racing across the
Czech bridge and finished the
run in Italy nine weeks later.
Home of famous low-cost family burial protec-
tion plan. Let our representives explain the de-
tails of this pre-need plan.
Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich.,
has scheduled hearings starting
Dec. 3 by the Senate antitrust
subcommittee. Hart says the
subcommittee staff has substan-
tiated “information and impres-
sions in the warranty area” as
described in the FTC staff re-
port.
The Transportation Depart-
ment plans the other inquiry
into the rising cost of fixing cars
as part of its general look into
the auto insurance industry.
President Named
ROGER PIPPIN, 806 N. Grady,
Altus, is president of and has
been named vice - chairman of
the evaluation and study com-
mittee on the Student Activities
Council at Oklahoma College of
Liberal Arts, Chickasha. The
council is a branch of Student
Association and will work with
the Student Activities Board, of
which Shucki Overton of Altus
is president. Roger is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Hornsey.
♦ ♦ $
Joins Faculty
BEN GERALD Harris of Altus
joined the College of Liberal
Arts and Sciences faculty at
North Texas State University,
in Denton, Texxas this fall. H e
has been named an assistant
professor in the biology depart-
ment. Dr. Harris received h i s
bachelor of science and doctor
of philosophy degrees from Ok-
lahoma State University, Still-
water. He is a member of Sig-
ma Xi national honorary science
fraternity.
Home.
He was born April 6, 1928 in
Mangum and had lived in the
area all of his life. He married
Miss Jerry Dunn in Wellington,
Tex. on Jan. 10, 1948. Dean was
an employee of Greer County.
He is survived by his wife,
two sons, Johnny and Ronnie
and one daughter, Twila, all of
the home.
Also his mother. Mrs. E. E.
Dean Sr. of Granite; one sister,
Mrs. Nita Edwards of Lake of
the Ozarks, Mo.; one brother,
Lonnie Dean of Mangum.
is 23 pairs or 46 chromosomes.
One chromosome from each
pair comes from the mother and
the other from the father. This
combination determines a per-
son’s physical characteristics.
The genetic defect being
looked for in Speck is known as
the XYY syndrome, in which
there is an extra chromosome,
or 47.
The normal make-up in wom-
en is two X chromosomes. Men
have both an X and Y chromo-
some, with the Y chromosome
dominant.
In the XY make-up, two Y
chromosomes occur where there
should be only one.
Some geneticists claim that
since males are somewhat more
aggressive than females, a dou-
le does of the Y chromosome
maker put too much stress on
sale, giving dealer little incen-
tive to develop strong repair
and service operations.
Other points:
Bad feelings about warranties
could be eased if the manufac-
turers caught more defects at
the factory and dealers did a
better job of predelivery inspec-
tion.
—Dealers might show more
enthusiasm for warranty re-
pairs if their payment from the
manufacturers was increased.
— V’arranties should be pre-
sented in more straightforward
terms and publicized more fully
by manufacturers and dealers.
There will be two other inves-
(CONTINUED Feor PAGE ONE)
ed in this sale is a variety of
items including overshoes, heat-
ers, vehicular components, tents,
wash basins, bedsprings, urin-
SURTAX
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE)
Nixon to eliminate or reduce the
tax.
Wilbur D. Mills, chairman of
the Ways and Means Commit-
tee, which usually holds life-
and-death-control over tax legis-
lation, has come out strongly
against any cutback of the sur-
tax in the near future.
COLONEL SANDERS’ RECIPE
Kentucky fried Ckicken.
I
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
American League
Eastern Division
W. L. T. Pct.
TROOPS
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE)
enemy attacks and terrorism in
Da Nang and along an 80-mile
stretch of the coastal lowlands
south of the country’s second
largest city.
National police seized 150 per-
sons in Da Nang who could not
produce proper papers. They
were being questioned to deter-
mine if they were Viet Cong.
Gen. Lam said 15 terrorists, in-
cluding four women, already
Getty Makes
Official Speck
Undergo Tests
CHICAGO (AP) - Attorney
Gerald W. Getty confirmed Sun-
day that convicted slayer Rich-
ard Speck has undergone tests
to determine whether he pos-
sesses a chromosome abnormal-
ity which some scientists be-
lieve is the cause of criminal ac-
tion in some persons. Getty de-
clined to reveal the results.
Getty is the public defender
appealing the conviction in 1967
of Speck for the murder of eight
student nurses two years ago in
a South Side townhouse. Speck
was sentenced to die in the elec-
tric chair.
Getty said he would release
the results of the tests after a
decision is made by the Illinois
Supreme Court on the appeal,
which was argued Sept. 25. All
death sentences are automati-
cally appealed under Illinois
law
He said that he would not use
ITALIAN
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE)
nounced more demonstrations
with workers later this week.
The students have been occu-
pying four of the country’s uni-
versities for the past week,
clashed with police during the
general strike last week and
fought with riot squads in Flor-
ence during a demonstration
Saturday demanding the release
of persons jailed during the
strike.
The University of Rome an-
nounced it has cut the telephone
lines from the occupied law
building because the students
were making numerous interna-
tional calls. The announcement
said one call was to Cuba.
The strikes and student unrest
are indirectly related to the
looming government change.
For five months, the minority
Christian Democratic govern-
ment of Premier Giovanni Le-
one has been limping along
waiting for the Socialists to re-
turn to their coalition. The Soci-
alists are now ready, and Leone
was reported preparing to re-
sign on Tuesday.
On Wednesday, the national
council of the Christian Demo-
cratic party meets to discuss re-
constitution of the center-left
government. Mariano Rumor,
secretary of the partv. and
Treasury Minister Emilio Co-
lombo are expected to emerge
as the leading candidates for
the premiership.
Just A Moment1
“"p.
CZECH
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE)
dents in Bohemia and Moravia
joined in. The students said they
would occupy the buildings until
Wednesday and perhaps longer
in an effort to get the govern-
ment to recognize them as a po-
litical force.
The strikers avoided open
contact with outsiders so as not
to give the police a pretext for
moving against them. Prague's
university student action com-
mittee also dissociated itself
from brief, small youth demon-
strations Sunday night.
About 300 youths marched
from the national museum to
Old Town Square but dispersed
immediately at the request of
police. Patrol cars and busloads
of police stood ready to break
up any other demonstrations,
but there were none.
EXPERIENCED
«6)
24%
218-220 W Commerce Altus, Okla
73521 Phone HU 2-1221.
(Dally Except Saturday)
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
CARRIER SERVICE
“We were fighting against
time,” remarked Kronick. “The
weather was turning cold, and
the leaves were beginning to
redden. This would have con-
might make a person abnormal- pail
ly aggressive.
Getty said he permitted the
chromosome testing because the
TRADE
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE)
which is the work of two of its
staff bureaus.
But the FTC announced it will
ing might alarm the populace.
Elaborate precautions were
SCHOOLS
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE)
demonstrations And resulted in
several arrests.
Even before the tentative set-
tlement was announced the Rev.
C. Herbert Oliver, chairman of
the Ocean Hill board, told news-
men as he left Gracie Mansion:
“We are extremely saddened
by the decision imposed on us to
settle this illegal strike... It is
obvious that the black and Puer-
to Rican people of the city are
not going to be allowed to deter
mine the future of their chil-
district headquarters town, Dien
Ban. South Vietnamese infan-
trymen and militiamen, and
U.S. helicopter gunships and ar-
tillery were credited with killing
253 enemy soldiers in a 24-hour
the results in the present ap-
peal. but left open the possibili-
ty of their use in any future ap- ____________________________
peal. He said he could ask that open hearings on car warranties
Speck be committed to a mental - * •
institution instead of executed.
Normal chromosome make-up
Both Byrnes and Mills seemed
to agree that the tax should not'
be eliminated if it would mean 1
an increased federal deficit.
Byrnes' said the surtax, which I
brings in $12 billion to $14 billion
a year, should not be eliminated
unless other sources of revenue
could take its place.
“It is possible we can elimi-
nate the surtax if there is a
would be against elimination of
the surtax.
“We may as well face the fact
that the cessation or lessening
of hostilities will bring immedi-
ate demands from all sides for
additional spending on the
domestic front,” Mills said last
week.
“I think it would be a mistake
to assume that cutting back the
tax would be the solution to our
expenditure control program,”
Mills said.
+8.
■ FUNERAL HOME
Oklahoma Zone Forecasts
CENTRAL OKLAHOMA —
Fair and cold today and tonight.
Sunny and not so cold Tuesday.
Northwesterly winds 10 to 20
miles per hour today. Highs to-
day 46 to 50. Lows tonight 22 to
27. Highs Tuesday 52 to 57.
came out and I photographed
the 20 scenes I needed, all in
one day.”
Producer Wolper observed
(4n)
The Individual who takes no
part in community activities,
who fails to support commu-.
nityin titstinns, deprives him-
self a- ne as othe of the
benefits of comnuni action.
Support of civic end philan-
thropic activitie. and institu-
tionsprovidesthes’ rvicesand
facilities which no ir. dividual
can supply but whish every
citizen at some time may need.
Mrs. Tom Diaz and baby, El-
;dorado
Jeff Doughten
Betty Goodwin
Attends Conference
D’EON THOMASON, an Altus
municipal employe, attended the
12th Annual Conference for
Municipal Clerks, Treasurers
and Finance Officers held at Ok-
lahoma State University. She
satisfactorily completed t h e
Managerial Development Semin-
ar conducted by the Business
Extension Service at OSU.
77797
..-5
ALTUS
sue 39842 *8*683
a-.
Church, will officiate.
Burial will be in Fairmount
Cemetery under the direction
of Coley Funeral Home.
Mrs. Tice was born March
17, 1875 in Cook County, Tex.
She died Sunday in Harmon
County Memorial Hospital.
She is survived by one dau-
ghter, Viola Buchanan of Hol-
lis; one brother, W. Guy Blair
of Jacksonville, Tex.; four
grandchildren and four great-
grandchildren.
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE)
they spoke with Altusans. Mon-
roney, showing emotion, said he
wanted to thank everyone who
voted for him in the recent
election.
“I have visited with my sup-
porters mostly by telephone,’
he said, “but Mrs. Monroney
and I felt we just had to come
to A11 u s personally to s a y
‘thanks.’ ”.
Bob Kerr, Altus farmer, who
headed up Monroney’s campaign
in Jackson County, was host for
the informal gathering Monday
morning here.
HU 2-2083
HU 2-7677
is such an organization, work-
ing for the benefit of all and
deserving of the support of
every citizen. Remember, citi-
zenship is a two-way street.
in H o 111 s. Rev. Bob Worley,
It is equally obvious that p a s t o r of the First Baptist
, . . -------change in the budget picture,” I
that the dislocation of the film Byrnes said.
Nang, and reported killing 54 of
the attackers.
South Korean marines re-
pelled a night attack 10 miles
south of Da Nang and said they
killed 18 Viet Cong in hand-to-
hand fighting. Seven marines'
were killed and two were |
wounded.
In Quang Ngai City, 80 miles
below Da Nang, 10 enemy sol-1
diers were killed by government
militiamen defending an out-
post.
A government spokesman I
said U.S. and South Vietnamese j
artillery accounted for 49 dead
near Binh Son and 32 dead near
Quang Ngai.
U.S. headquarters said Ameri-
can war planes attacked an ene-
my bunker complex in the de-
militarized zone again Sunday.,
als, gas ranges, refrigerators, 1
air conditioning equipment, and 20,tie
. • .. • ’ _ NInt
posals to Congress. kia to film battle scenes for an
Among criticism in the re- American movie. Yet Director
port is the charge that the auto- William Kronick managed that
feat and has returned with the
footage to complete a $5-million
war epic.
Kronick was the second-unit
director of “The Bridge at Re-
magen”—in movie parlance, the
second unit is the company that
films action sequences and
backgrounds that don’t require
the principal actors. Like the
rest of the American film troupe
Kronick evacuated in a motor-
cade a day after the Russians
and their allies invaded Czecho-
slovakia.
Forty per cent of the picture
remained to be filmed, includ-
ing important battle scenes that
could be shot only at the Czech
bridge which doubled for the
Rhine span where American
troops crossed in World War II.
Producer David Wolper ar-
ranged for the rest of “The
Bridge at Remagen” to be com-
pleted in Hamburg and Italy.
“But we still needed desper-
ately to shoot the final battle
and the blowing up of the bridge
in Czechoslovakia,” Wolper said
in his Sunset Strip office. “All of
our equipment was still in
coo,
4CITIZENSHIPST)
feN
Tuesday. Northwesterly winds i equipped with flamethrowers
Highsttoday 445t64g.°Lowsda I got within 50 yards of the com-
K 2 Hghs nuesday : pulsed.
Three months
Six months
Year
Other than above
Three months
Six months
Year
29
entries to Carolyn Badger at the Cemetery of Granite under the the Temple Airport.
Chamber of Commerce office as direction of Greer Funeral ————---,
quickly as possible. Deadline for ..... —
1 entries is Nov. 25.
fight that ended early today, made to inform the
citizens of
It began at 3 a.m. Sunday the filming plans, and army
when about 500 North Viet- troops ringed the area to pre-
namese troops attacked the vent any incidents,
headquarters area of the South
GOP
(CONTINUED FROM ONE)
job.
As campaign committee
chairman, Tower could be
expected to adopt what he
calls the “heartland” strat-
egy of solidifying Republican
strength in the South, Mid-
west and far West.
Republicans need a net
gain of 10 seats to take over
unqualified control of the
Senate from the Democrats.
Of the 25 Democrats whose
seats will be at stake in two
years, 14 represent states
Nixon carried in the Nov. 5
election. Of these three are
in the South: Florida. Ten-
nessee and Virginia. Only
one is in the East: New Jer-
sey.
Democratic seats will be
contested in five Middlewest-
ern states that Nixon won,
Missouri, Indiana. Ohio, Wis-
consin and North Dakota.
Farther west Democrats
whose terms are ending rep-
resent five states that went
for Nixon, Nevada, New Mex-
ico, Wyoming, Utah and
Montana.
In the latter state, Senate
Democratic Leader Mike
Mansfield is expected to be
seeking re-election.
Only three of the eight Re-
publicans whose seats will
be at stake in 1970 will be
running in states carried ear-
lier this month by Democrat-
ic presidential candidate Hu-
bert H. Humphrey.
They are Hiram L. Fong
of Hawaii, Hugh Scott of
Pennsylvania and Charles E.
Goodell of New York.
If he is named campaign
chairman. Tower intends to
devote considerable time to
countering any move George
C. Wallace’s third party may
make to put congressional
candidates into the field.
The Arkansas Democrat says
In troubled Czechoslovakia it even if the war ends soon he
was feared that the gunfire and
explosions required for the film-
“But by now all those soldiers
had been discharged, and we
had to train new ones,”
Kronick lined up 400 to imper-
sonate American soldiers, 175 to
TONITE and TUES.
0083
1 ekesr GVN.
Sewes’t,
I TECHNICOLOR* Ta ■
flicted with the early scenes,
। which were filmed in spring.
The South Vietnamese troops And the whole picture was sup-
pursued the enemy soldiers posed to take place in three
while militia men closed in from1 days!
another direction, trapping the ,
Ms? t0 23 Highs Tuesday । enemy. and thenerae watnur besamt
52 to 57 ! In other fighting in the north,: too overcast for shooting. Final-
mee—ent militiamen fnnehtly on the seventh day. the sun
Czechoslovakia—the tanks and
heavy trucks we had leased
from Austria.
“We met with the Czechs and
the Russians in Vienna and be-
gan negotiations. They agreed
to let us return for seven days
of filming, even though it in-
cluded a lot of big explosions
with dynamite and TNT, tanks
firing, etc.’
Kronick returned to Prague
and began preparations to shoot
the battle scenes. “It wasn’t
easy,” he said, “because I had
to match what had been shot be-
fore the invasion. We had been
using Czech soldiers who had
been especially chosen to look
like Americans—and they re-
semble Americans more than
had been found and they told in- any other Europeans could
terrogators 45 other Viet Cong have.
Friday
Willy Tuckines
Charlotte Morris, Lone Wolf
Diane Bingaman
Rachel McDaniel
Jeff Daughten
Pamela Marple
Thelma Abernathy, Frederick
Willy Carson
Saturday
James Hill
Maurice Walker
Lou Wanda Slater
Sally Jo Carder
Eddy Carder
Thelma Jones
Sunday
Mary McKay
Russell Chapman
Estelle Leamon
Clayton Yates
Floice Robertson
Dorothy Rice
B J. Ward
W. H. Ashley
Peggy Gustafson
Tom Thaggard
Annie Thomas
Betty Pickering
Willy Tucker
Carletta Fikes
Monday
Gloria Clark
Karen Ruthledge
Martin Neely
Dismissed
Friday
Darrell Parks
Alene Burt
Bobby Allen
Eunna Turley
Linda Dishman
Saturday
John Leach
Minnie Duvall
Bessie Coots
Addie Culwell
Mrs. Ronnie Hale and baby
Mrs. James Prater and baby
Mrs. Gary Slater
Bertha Montgomery
Betty Flemons
Lucille Hume
Addie McCombs
Herman Adams
Sunday
Richard Watts
Thelma Abernathy
Joe Richards
Willie Carson
May Sanford
Pamela Marple
f-t//AA
. 4 1 «k7
aei‘
f f /"
Altus AFB Hospital
(Visiting Hours; 10 a.m. to 8
p.m.)
Friday
Admitted
A1C Ralph Clark
Sgt. Henry King
Nina Buckner
Saturday
Sgt. Ralph Clodfelter
Mary Powell
Sunday
Linda Marler
Dismissed
Friday
Sgt. Edgar Turner
Rosebud Floyd
Laura Groves
Mrs. William Wright and
baby
Mrs. Kenneth York and baby
Saturday
Frances Hart
Mrs. John Gwinn and baby
Sunday
Mrs. Gale Lee and baby
Mrs. George Delaney and
baby
Altus Memorial Hospital
(Visiting Hours: Medical and
Surgical: 11 a.m. - 8:30 p.m.;
Maternity; 11 a.m. - noon, 2:30-
3:30 p.m., 7 - 8:30 p.m)
Admitted
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Tims, Mr. and Mrs. Sonny Frank Tims
Mr. and Mrs. Mickey Tims
Call HU 2-1212 for Altus & Jackson County
Ambulance Service
205 E. Cypress HU 2-1212
And in Hollis, Oklahoma
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Ferguson, George W. & Hale, James H. The Altus Times-Democrat (Altus, Okla.), Vol. 42, No. 275, Ed. 1 Monday, November 18, 1968, newspaper, November 18, 1968; Altus, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2119812/m1/2/: accessed July 12, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.