The Shreveport Journal from Shreveport, Louisiana (2024)

A THE SHREVEPORT JOURNAL, SHREVEPORT-BOSSIER CITY, TUESDAY, JULY 6, 1971 TODAY'S NEWS TODAY-WITH TODAY'S PICTURES Ark-La-Tex Deaths Guy W. Stacy LEWISVILLE, Ark. Guy W. Stacy, 77, died Sunday in a Little Rock Hospital. He was a retired planter and cattleman, and a member of the United Methodist Church.

Survivors include his wife; two sons, G. W. Stacy Jr. of Chico, Robert B. Stacy of Bakersfield, one daughter.

Mrs. Hugh Winters of Norfolk, one sister, Mrs. B. J. Pennington of Shreveport; nine grandchildren; eight great-grandchildren.

Funeral services were held at 10 a.m. today in the Smith Funeral Home chapel with Dr. Joe Hunter and the Rev. Charles Wathal officiating. Burial was in the Wilson Cemetery.

Miss Evie Ramsey NACOGDOCHES, Tex. Funeral services for Miss Evie Dixie Ramsey, 74, there, held at 2 p.m. Monday in chapel of the Cason Monk Funeral Home with the Rev. Derwin Walker and Bob Joiner officiating. Burial was in the Oakgrove Cemetery.

Miss Ramsey died Sunday morning. Survivors include two brothers, Jack Ramsey of Carthage, Boone Ramsey of Houston; three, of sisters, Mrs. Nacogdoches, Sarah Mrs. SteMargaret Reed of Sweeney and Mrs. Rosalee Ponder of Munford, Ala.

Mrs. R. Patterson NACOGDOCHES, Tex. Funeral services for Mrs. Rosabelle Patterson, 92, at 10 today in there chapel of the Cason Monk Funeral Home with the Rev.

Don Brice officiating. was in the Oakgrove Cemetery. Mrs. Patterson died Sunday afternoon. Survivors include two sons, Dewey Patterson and Oscar Patterson, both of Nacogdoches; two daughters, Mrs.

Lois Parker and Mrs. Mattie Belle Hayden of Nacogdoches; seven grandchildren; three greatgrandchildren. Edwin Inge ATLANTA, Tex. Edwin Inge, 68, died in his home Monday. Survivors include his wife; two sisters, Mrs.

Gladys Acker of Rusk, Mrs. Billy Smith of Mesquite; one brother, Reece Inge of Atlanta, Ga. Funeral services will be held at 4 p.m. today in the Smyrna Baptist Church with the Rev. Raymond Sherman officiating.

Burial will be in the Smyrna Cemetery. Floy F. Newman JOYCE Funeral services for Floy Franklin Newman, 69, who died Sunday in Winnfield General Hospital, will be held at 4 p.m. today in the Southern Funeral Home chapel with Rev. Jimmy Yocum and the Rev.

Jeramiah Jenkins officiating. Burial will be in the Union Cemetery near Joyce. He was a school bus driver and a Baptist. Survivors include his wife; two sons, J. W.

Newman of Ocean Springs, R. S. Newman of Hughes, two brothers, Irie Newman of Joyce, Jack Newman of Bernice; four Mars Probe Could Make No. 1 Find If Russia's two large Mars probes land on the red planet and find life there, they will have made what some scientists think will rank as the scientific discovery of the century. The Soviets have not said what the two spacecraft will for, but repeated hints in the Soviet press suggest their mission is to land softly on the Martian surface with life detection instruments.

The United States at one time also planned an unmanned landing on Mars this year, but a series of cuts in the space agency's budgets downgraded the project and delayed a landing until 1976. THE RUSSIAN spacecraft, Mars 2 and Mars 3, were expected to reach Mars sometime next November -about when America's Mariner 9 is scheduled to orbit the planet. Mariner 9 will not be able to search for life, although its twin cameras and other sensors might turn up evidence indicating that some form of life could or might exist on the planet. A direct search for life forms requires a landing. This now will be carried out by America's project Viking.

the launch of two spacecraft in August and September, 1975. They are to reach Mars the following summer. BECAUSE THE. two Russian craft are heavier than the Vikings, many U.S. space specialists are convinced they will attempt a Mars landing and search for live.

Such weight they say, is not needed for an orbiting mission alone like Mariner's. Dr. Thomas O. Paine said in his public speech before retiring as space agency administrator last fall that finding extraterrestrial life "would surely rank as one of the major discoveries in the history of science." Nobel prize winning chemist Harold C. Urey and other scientists have said such a discovery would be the scientific discovery of the Twentieth Century.

IF. THE two Russian spacespace agency administrator George M. Low said he did not think America's Viking plans would be changed. He said such a feat would add more excitement to the project. "I think the two programs would complement each other and we have pretty much agreed that we would share in the scientific results of our planetary programs," Low said after the May 30 Mariner 9 launching.

The Viking spacecraft will consist of an orbiter and a sterilized landing capsule. The whole assembly will first orbit Mars and spend up to 50 days looking for landing sites in areas most likely to harbor life. When you put your highway Kansas City Southerncantake trailers and containers on FLAT your product to market faster Kansas City Southern, you via piggyback facilities in Miscan sit back and relax. Excel- souri, Kansas, Arkansas, Loulent piggyback facilities at TO isiana, Texas. seventeen points between Kansas City and New Orleans In Kansas City, Pittsburg, will make the Joplin, Neosho, Siloam and quickly.

piggyback transition smoothly LET Springs, Fort Smith, Texarkana, Shreveport, BeaumontPort Arthur, Lake Charles, To keep your inventories on Greenville, Dallas, Minden, the move and our deliveries Alexandria, Baton Rouge, on time. Gramercy, and New Orleans. ANSAS CITY 2 SOUTHERN Lines the uncommon carrier Telephone 423-3661 Local Deaths Ed H. Carpenter Funeral services for Ed H. Carpenter, 71, father of J.

C. Carpenter of Shreveport, were held at 10 a.m. today at Lake Baptist Church in Silver Lake, Tex. Burial was in the church cemetery under direction of Grand Saline Funeral Home. Survivors, in addition to the son, are his wife; one daughter, Mrs.

Bill Perrett of Atlanta, two brothers, R. L. Carpenter of San Antonio, and Hugo Carpenter of Grand Saline; two sisters, Mrs. R. K.

Shirley of Tyler, and Mrs. James L. Peace of Canton, eight grandchildren, and one greatgrandchild. Claiborne Bryson Funeral services for Claiborne Bryson, New York City resident band former Shreveporter who died Sunday in New York following a brief illness, were held at 10 a.m. today at Osborn Funeral Home Chapel.

Burial was in Greenwood Cemetery. Mrs. Hazel Rowell Mrs. Hazel Blaine Rowell, 40, 6347 Greenwood died at 10:30 a.m. Monday at Shreveport Manor Nursing Home following a long illness.

A native of Mississippi, Mrs. Rowell had resided here for 17 years. Funeral services wll be held at 2:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Rose-Neath Funeral Home Chapel with the Rev. A.

W. Smith, pastor of Kelly Memorial Baptist Church, officiating. Burial will be in Forest Park West. Survivors include her mother, Mrs. Inez Blaine of Shreveport; one daughter, Connie Darlene McClellan of Cleveland, one sister, Mrs.

Louise Nardini of Shreveport, and one brother, Roscoe Blaine, also of Shreveport. Mrs. Emma J. Jackson Funeral services for Mrs. Emma J.

Jackson, 88, 106 Broadway Bossier City, who died Monday morning at Pilgrim Manor Nursing Home following a long illness, were held at 10:30 a.m. today at the Rose-Neath Funeral Home Chapel in Bossier City. Officiating was the Rev. L. L.

Oliver, retired Christian Crowds Held BackProtesters Greet Kissinger in India sisters, Mrs. Myrtle Taylor Joyce, Mrs. Susie Mae Ray of Willets, Mrs. Cecil Valentine of Bridge City, Mrs. Hazel Hawkins of Jacksonville, three half-sisters, Mrs.

Clara Bell Malcomb of Graceland, Mrs. Ruth Newman of Joyce, Mrs. Marie Ingles of Joyce; step-mother, Mrs. Lula Newman of Joyce; 13 grandchildren; four great- grandchildren. Miss Irene Stone Miss Stone died Friday morning.

NACOGDOCHES, Tex. Funeral services for Miss Irene Stone, 65, were held at 10 a.m. Monday in the chapel of the Cason Monk Funeral Home with Dr. J. I.

Cartlidge officiating. Burial was in Waldrop Cemetery in Panola County. Survivors include one brother, Clyde Stone of Nacogdoches; four Miss Arlene Stone of R. Hoffman batisters, of Alhambra, Nos. Peggy Curie and Mrs.

Lee Scarbrough of Austin. S. S. Williamson HOMER -Sherman S. Williamson, 63, died in his home Monday morning.

Funeral services will be held at 4 in the Calvary Church near mistoday, Homer with the Rev. Harry Ganey and the Rev. Lloyd Brown officiating. Burial will be in the Arlington Cemetery under the direction of the First National Funeral Home of Homer. Survivors include his wife; two daughters, Mrs.

Jackie Brown of Minden, Mrs. Billie Prestidge of Haynesville; one son, Garland S. Williamson of Longview, two brothers, John Williamson of Haynesville, Wade Bates of Homer; seven grandchildren; five great-grandchildren. Will G. Jones MINDEN Will Gray Jones, 80, died in the Veterans Hospital Sunday night after a long illness.

He was a native of Arcadia but had lived in Taylor for the past few years. Funeral services will be held at 4 p.m. Tuesday in the Green Kleinegger Funeral Home el. Burial will be in the Sibley Cemetery. Survivors include one sister, Mrs.

Rosie Maxey of Minden. Guthrie P. Martin JONESBORO -Guthrie (Guss) P. Martin, 90, died Monday night a Ruston hospital after a short illness. He was a native of Jackson Parish and was an active member of the Zora Methodist Church near Chatham where he served as Sunday school superintendant and in other capacities.

He also worked in the other churches in the surrounding area. He was a former member of the Jackson Parish Police, and served as the president Jury, from 1940 to 1948. Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the Jonesboro United Methodist Church. The Rev.

Dan Tohline and the C. K. Brooks will officiate. Burial will be in the Xora Zora Cemetery under the direction of Edmonds Funeral Home of Jonesboro. Survivors include one son, H.

Alton Martin of Jonesboro; two daughters, Mrs. Flossie Martin Edmonds of Jonesboro and Mrs. Oree Ball of Shreveport one brother, D. J. Martin of Houston, and five grandchildren and five great grandchildren.

Miss Anna Burnham HAYNESVILLE Miss Anna L. Burnham, 89, of Haynesville died in Claiborne Parish Hospital here Monday morning following a long illness. Funeral services will be held at 2:30 p.m. Wednesday at First Baptist Church here with the Rev. E.

V. Appling officiating. Burial will be in Old Town Cemetery under the direction of Bailey Mortuary of Haynesville. Miss Burham was a lifelong resident of Haynesville. She was a retired Haynesville High School teacher and was a member of the First Baptist Church of Haynesville.

She leaves two sisters, Mrs. W. L. Waller and Mrs. F.

L. Clampitt, both of Haynesville; three sister-in-laws, Mrs. Drew Burnham and Mrs. W. Z.

Burnham, both of Haynesville and Mrs. C. C. Burnham of Franilin; and a number of nieces and nephews. Otha Crain MAGNOLIA, Ark.

Otha Crain, 72, died early Sunday in Magnolia Hospital after a long illness. He was a native of Columbia County and: a retired house painter. Survivors include his wife, one son, Jerry Crain of San Antonio, two daughters, Mrs. Dorothy Franks of Magnolia and Mrs. Juanette Baucum of Shreveport, one brother, T.

O. Crain of Laurel, three sisters, Mrs. Ina Smith and Mrs. Cora Moore of Magnolia and Mrs. Christine Duke of Montrose, and eight grandchildren and two great grandchildren.

Funeral services were held Monday at 2 p.m. at the Macedonia Baptist Church with the Rev. Ferrell White officiating. Burial was in the Macedonia Cemetery under the direction of Lewis Funeral Home. Pallbearers were Bolivar Ainsworth, Herbert Franks, Don Impson, Fred Sanders, Dale Nipper and Buddy Chisholm.

Reece Hamblen LONGVIEW, Tex. Rites for Reece Hamblen, 59, will be held at 2 p.m. today in Apline Church of Christ with Lowell Worthington and Boyd Fannin officiating. Burial will be in Lakeview Memorial Gardens, with Rader Funeral Home in charge of arrangements. A machinist for a local industrial plant, Mr.

Hamblen died Saturday in a local hospital after a short illness. Survivors are his wife; a daughter, Mrs. Nancy Hudgins of Dallas; a son, Raymon Hamblen of Garden Grove, two sisters, Mrs. John Labb of Sacramentoa nd Mrs. Tinnie Riddick of Oklahoma City; a brother, Palmer Hamblen of Santa Ana, and five grandchildren.

minister. Burial was in Greenwood Cemetery. George Wesley Duke George Wesley Duke, 65, 4012 Fairfax died at 5 a.m. Monday at his home following a sudden illness. A native of Mansfield, Mr.

Duke had resided here for about a year. He was employed by Hunter Oil Co. in the production department for 40 years. Survivors include his wife; one daughter, Mrs. Linda Temple of Dallas, five sisters, Mrs.

Bessie Deans of Mansfield, Mrs. Ralph Smith, Mrs. W. A. Lewing and Mrs.

A. L. Hinton, all of Shreveport, and Mrs. Bill Coleman, Jonesville, two brothers, Edwin A. Duke of Forest Hills and G.

D. Duke of Houston, and two grandchildren. Mrs. I. S.

Waskom Mrs. I. S. Waskom, 73, 2530 James died at 6:45 a.m. Monday at Willis-Knighton Hospital following a brief illness.

Mrs. Waskom, a native of Rapides Parish, had resided here for 35 years. Survivors include her husband; two sons, E. W. Roberts of Shreveport and Frank N.

Roberts of Napa, one daughter, Alice Lancey of Buckeye, three sisters, Mrs. Alice Normand of Aberdeen, Mrs. Elsie Chattin of Gustine, and Mrs. Helen Firran of Bakersfield, two brothers, Clifton Murphy of Boyce and Buddy Murphy of Orange, and 11 grandchildren. der "direction of Rose-Neath arrangements, unFuneral Home Chapel, were incomplete today.

Big Gas Find Came After 200 Dry Holes AMSTERDAM Discovery of the Groningen natural gas field in the northern Netherlands came after 13 years of drilling more than 200 dry holes. Now it has the greatest volume of reserves 141 trillion cubic feet of any single field in the free world. It has reserves equal to about three-fifths of Texas'. NEW DELHI (AP) White House adviser Henry Kissinger arrived in New Delhi today amid small demonstrations protesting the twoday visit by President Nixon's chief foreign policy adviser. Police kept the demonstrators away from Kissinger.

But he was certain to run into vigorous criticism from Indian officials outraged because the United States is continuing to ship arms to the Pakistani army despite its bloody suppression of the independence movement in East Pakistan. Several hundred a can demonstrators also turned out in Bombay, on India's west coast, when Vice President Spiro T. Agnew's plane made a 90-minute refueling stop en route to Kuwait. But there, too, police kept the demonstrators out of the airport, and Agnew did not leave it. About 500 police cordoned off the New Delhi Communist airport and held back 50 Socialist demonstrators shouting "Kissinger go home" and carrying a huge banner of Death Go Back." Some had baskets of eggs and tomatoes to throw but they never got anywhere near Kissinger.

Waiting buses took them to the U.S. Embassy two miles away, and they charged into the walled compound. U.S. officials quickly bolted the steel doors of the embassy building, and police arrived a few minutes later and chased the demonstrators away. The visitor's arrival time and his itinerary was supposed to be kept secret due to the likelihood of anti-American demonstrations because of the latest U.S.

military shipments to Pakistan. But the pro-Moscow newspaper Patriot published the exact arrival time and details of most of the itinerary. KISSINGER CONFERRED with embassy officials this afternoon and meets Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, Foreign Minister Swaran Singh, Defense Minister Jagjivan Ram and other senior officials Wednesday. He goes to Pakistan Thursday. Girilal Jain, editor of the FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF SHREVEPORT 2050 LINE AVENUE, PHONE 423-7163 DOWNTOWN: MILAM AND EDWARDS Statement of Condition JUNE 30, 1971 ASSETS LIABILITIES First Mortgage Loans $49,673,810 All Other Loans 35,308 Savings Accounts $54,698,698 Loans to Facilitate Sale of Real Estate 9,693 Loans in Process 595,482 Cash on Hand and in Banks 550,698 Other Liabilities 842,103 Investments and Securities 10,403,575 Specific Reserves 8,682 Fixed Assets Less General Reserves and Depreciation 311,404 Deferred Charges and Undivided Profits 5,176,015 Other Assets 336,492 Total $61,320,980 Total $61,320,980 DIRECTORS OFFICERS Aucie D.

Calcote Travis A. White President Albert N. Elmer D. D. Philip Hamilton Philip Hamilton Vice President Leonard W.

Phillips Aucie D. Calcote Vice President Joseph P. Schierer John C. McGarrity Vice President Ben Sour Dr. Leroy Robert K.

Cooper Vice President Vogel Travis A. White Miss Jimmie D. Guice Vice President and Secretary Victor V. Warnock Treasurer George G. Dimick, Emeritus J.

Berchmans Borne Assistant Vice President Philip Lieber, Emeritus Robert W. Norris Assistant Vice President Shreveport's specialists in savings and home loans for 85 years. Times of India, wrote today that Indian officials should leave Kissinger "in no doubt that America's credibility here has suffered enormously in the past two weeks" because it is continuing 'to ship arms to Pakistan. Foreign Minister Singh has said he was given a "clear assurance" during his visit to Washington in mid-June that there would be no more military shipment to Pakistan until a satisfactory politisettlement was reached with the East Pakistanis. But since then three freighters have left the United States with arms for Pakistan, U.S.

officials have admitted that there may be more. THE NIXON administration says the arms were ordered before it banned such shipments and they cannot be interfered with. But this explanation is not accepted by the Indians. Kissinger came to India from Bangkok, where Foreign Minister Thanat Khoman said he assured Thai leaders there will be no change in U.S. commitments to Thailand.

Fish Worth $16,000 Killed by Intruder INTERLOCHEN, MICH. (AP) Police said someone broke into a bait shop over the weekend and killed an estimated $16,000 worth of fish by dumping weed killer in the water tanks. No motive could be determined. Israel diamond exports were up by 23.3 per cent in the first third of 1971 over the same period for 1970. VENETIAN BLINDS Repair HODNETT Blind Co.

1710 Kings Hwy. 868-3671.

The Shreveport Journal from Shreveport, Louisiana (2024)
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