Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

Corsicana Daily Sun from Corsicana, Texas • Page 9

Location:
Corsicana, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
9
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

7 Miss Shivers Riles Monday Funeral services for Miss Pau- Shivers, who died Saturday, were held Monday at 2:30 k.p.m. from the First Methodist A church at Tehuacana with torment Wortham City come- Officiating were Rev. John Wesley Ford, district superintendent, and Rev. George Thompson, Methodist minister from Mabank. Miss Shivers was a native of Corslcana and was born here in 1000.

She wag a nurse. Surviving are her parents, Rev. and Mrs. L. W.

Shivers, Tohuacana; four brothers, Estes Shivers, Hobbs, N. Leslie Shivers, Elk City, Lawrence shivers, Hamlln rind James Shivers, Mexia; two R. Thornton Mrs. B. A sisters, Mrs.

J. Tehuacana, and Bates, Alice, several nieces nephews other relatives. Pallbearers were E. B. Trotter, J.

T. Bounds, W. A. Hasklns Dick Lloyd Yelverton and D. W.

Needham. Corley directed. ELECTION 0i CONTINUED PROM ONf tabulated, this In Itself wan nol discouraging. They could look 4, also on the more than 100,001 Democratic votes for former Maj. Gen.

Edwin A. Walker, a John Birch Society member, and hope they might pick up a substantial number of these In November. Gov. Price Daniel, seeking his fourth term, finished third In Saturday's primary, followed by Atty. Gen.

Will Wilson, former State Highway Chairman Mar shall Formby and Walker. latest Figures returns to th Election Bureau from 253 of th 254 counties, 178 complete, i noon tabulation: Domncratlc Governor: John Connally 898, 811, Price Daniel 232,597, Mar shall Formby 132,787, Edwin Walker, 127,481, Will Wilson 159,880, Don Yarborough 294,531. Lieutenant Governor: Bob Baker 246,999, Crawford Martin 168.581, Jarrard Secrest 1D0.291, Preston Smith 271,197, James Turman 330,997. Congressman at large: Wood- I row Bean 229,610, Manley Head 1 150,373, Warren Moore, 174,903, Stevenson 193,516, Rus" 'sell Van Keuren 63,101, Phil Wll' lie 76,567. Attorney General: Carr 618,911, Tom James 161,719, Looney W.

T. Mc- Donald 97,239, Les Procter KKJ, Tom Reavley 262,002. Railroad Commissioner: Ben Ramsey 790,312, Keith Wheatley 342,187. Agriculturu Evctta Haley White 660,801. Commissioner: 436,713, John Criminal appeals: Otis Dunagan 383,795, W.

A. Morrison 650,537. Supreme Court Place 1: Moade Griffin 555,904, Jesse Owens 506,762. Supreme Court Place 3: Zollle Steakley 615,472, Willard Street 416.520. Race track betting Tntmt: For 453,135, against 554,822.

Race track betting legislation: For 430,939, against 535,289. Abolishing poll tax: For 828,460, against 488,565. Republican Governor: Jack Cox 93,943, Hoy Whittenburg 23,186. Lieutenant Governor: Kellis Dihrell 52,827, Bill Hayes 53,740 Congressman at large: Des Barry 61,780, Giles Miller 28,868, Joe Phillips 23,392. Race track betting: For 31,090, against 41,380.

Abolishing poll tax: For 42,606, alde to Vice President Lyndon Johnson. He insisted, however, that the decision to run or governor was his own and If elected "no one will be at side or behind the governor's chair." Yarborough Surprise Yarborough no relation to Sen. Ralph Yarborough, a 36-year-old New Orleans- aorn ex-Marine who surprised Texas political observers two years ago by polling 600,000 votes plus in an unsuccessful bid for lieutenant governor. In discussing the runoff, both Connally and Yarborough shy away from making it a conservative-liberal battle. But the war whoops that echoed from Saturday's precinct conventions over the state dlcated that both liberals and conservatives were ready to pick candidates and do battle.

The Republicans gleaned some hope from a recent poll which showed 57 per cent of those who responded believe the state would be better off If It had two-party system. I The fact that 65 per cent of those who answered the pollsters regarded themselves Democrats and only 7 per cent were willing to own up to Republicanism did not phase the GOP strategists. The Republicans had the Indisputable fact that former President Dwlght D. Elsenhower carried the state twice, former Vice President Richard M. Nixon missed a majority by a hairline margin in 1960 and they elected their first senator since Reconstruction days in 1061, when San.

John Tower won the contest to succeed Vice President Johnson in the ESTES CONTINUED FROM PAQB ONt a thorough investigation. This department will continue as an open book. We welcome investigation of our activities. Wrong- doors will be dealt with Immediately." In other main highlights of the news conference Freeman said: had mentioned the Estes affair "in passing" to President Kennedy and discussed it in detail with presidential aides. Gen.

Robert Kennedy has taken an active hand in Investigation of the case. does not know whether any department employes ever solicited Estes for contributions to the Democratic party. his opinion there are no grounds for the charges made last week by Battle Hales, a department employe, that the department gave Estas "favored treatment." decision has yet been made about the future of former Asst. Sec. Jaces Ralph, one of the three officials mentioned in connection with Estes 1 gift-making.

Freeman said he Is awaiting results of an FBI investigation. Ralph Is In training for a post as agricultural attache to the Philippines. Freeman said Ralph has not been in what the secretary called an "operational" po- sltlon for several months. One of the questions raised at the news conference was whether Vice President Lyndon John- Corsicana, Daily Sun, May 7, MOVE Bob Graham, Irving, Company Mod. Tank Battalion, 49th Division, gives the 'Move Out' command for his company convoy of M-48 tanks.

Some 20,000 Fort Polk, against 33,087. Padre Island national For 16,574, against 1220. park: Padre Island state park: For 27,397, against 771. No Padre Island park: For 11,247, against 13,351. Five Democratic congressmen 'who had opposition In the prl- appeared certain of re- Only Rep.

John Dowdy of the 7th District met difficulty. A handsome six-footer, Connally, 45, was for many years an Car Repairing We repair any and all at cars. Our work and will please you, Drive In to KEIFNER BROS. GARAGE 111 W. 3rd Ave.

Dial TR4-78D1 son, i Estei Texan, had recommended for membership on the PASTIMES IN SPORTS By Fat Brawn National Cotton Advisory Committee appointed by Freeman last year. The answer supplied by Undersecretary Charles Murphy, who sat In on the news conference, was that Johnson had made no recommendation "to my knowledge." Freeman said Estes had been put on the advisory committee because he was "knowledgeable" about cotton. Freeman was asked if pressure had been put on him to "soft- pedal the investigation." "No," he said. "If anything is wrong in the department, I want to know It." Admits 'Drag' Freeman said the department's cancellation of some controversial cotton allotments for Estes had "dragged a bit" but asserted that it involved a legal question that was not entirely clear and that Estes might well complain that he "has been sharply dealt with." One matter never raised with 'reeman was whether he wish- to appear before a congres- ional committee and discuss he Bates affair. Rep.

Paul Flndley, said oday he had written Freeman irglng him to appear voluntary before the House Agriculture Committee. The House committee has no resent plans to call Freeman. Rep, Harold Cooley, halrman, said some time ago he elt the Agriculture Department Investigation and those nderway In Texas would handle he matter for now. At a session today of a House I M. MMMCIM BASKETS AU, AT TUB MASSACHUSETTS VMCA TODAiY FOB FOUR DBCO imEDS fc UARMACY Ltd.

SINCE 1879 AIB CONDITIONED Fact Automobile Delivery Service PHONE TB447M SU North Main fttrcet Free Customer Parking la Bear. troops went afield as Exercise Iron Dragoon began. The exercise will run through May IB. (AP Wirophoto) ULBRICHT JONTiNUED FROM PAGE ONE ago. It was a curious Interview in which the two editors often presented Ulbricht with ready made answers such as In a question of communication routes to West Berlin.

The editors asked: "Your recent statement on the establishment of an International arbitration agency for lines of communications linking West Berlin with the outside world has aroused a big response in many countries. How do you assess proposals of some Western newspapers to the effect that this body should not only be an arbitrator but practically manage the communications the German Democratic Republic which would result in a violation of the sovereignty of tha German Democratic Republic?" Ulbricht said the proposal was made because East Germany wants to contribute to keeping peace in central Europe but then added: "It is but natural that a precondition for such a step on our part must be the appropriate modification in the status of West Berlin. This means that the occupation regime, hotbeds of conflagration of war and centers of subver slve activity, must disappear in West Berlin, that West Berlin will become a peaceful demlli tarized and neutral free city. This of course goes without say Ing." But he Insisted he could not accept the idea that an international commission actually would administer the routes. The Interview invited speculation, here that the Soviet government wanted all old positions i-estated publicly.

Clearly this would tend to offset claims from Western spokesmen that the Soviet Union Itself- eager for a settlement and prepared to make substantial concessions to get one. Observers here have felt for some time that the Soviet Union has not modi- fled position in any respect and Is unlikely to before actual negotiations begin. At one point Ulbricht proposed that isolated West Berlin be glv- on extraterritorial status like that of the United Nations in New York. Ulbricht said that under the agreement between the United States and the United Nations, the United States had the right to check on visitors to the United Nations but no right to put obstacles in their way. Ulhricht, in suggesting some such arrangement for West Berlin, sale nothing about East Berlin.

Ulbricht said there was no possibility of foreign control of access to Berlin and that "the recognition of the sovereignty of the German Democratic Republic is Inevitable." We Welcome The Opportunity To Serve Your Banking Needs. First Notional Bank Mtmber F. O. C. CORSICANA, 1EXAS Intergovernmental Relations sub committee, Reps.

Florence Dwyer, R-N. and Odin Langen, R- asked whether that group had received any word frorr the department to its requesi for information on the Estei matter. Rep. L. H.

Fountain, D-N. C. chairman, said a preliminary In vestigation has begun and the subcommittee "will go into an; and all of these matters tha should be gone Into." Counsel James Naughton laid a reply from the department was ue Tuesday. STORAGE TIME Spring nuttier no friend la 7001 (aril NoWi the tlmi to pro- lot font Jacket, or itolM. or wool wtlolo from the mothe, bnmldltT.

Place them in Ihe cool, Aty climate of oar etor- Tmulle without PICK-UP AND DELIVER Leonard Bros. Cleaners Third Avu. and 1Mb (it. DIAL TR4-S151 NUCLEAR JONT1NUED PKOM PAGE ONE combat conditions as potable. In a war situation, the suh- viarlne virtually always would ire Its load of 16 Polaris nils- illes from beneath the surface where it would be safer from enemy attack.

Missile Old The test Involved a first generation Polaris missile. 11 Is propelled by solid fuel. A EOO- orid generation mode! now ap- iroaching readiness will travel more than 1,700 miles and a still later version will be ablo to hit targets nearly 2,900 miles from the launching sub. The test Sunday was the fifth nuclear explosion in operation Dominio the series of U.S. atmospheric tests.

The four previous shots were dropped from planes. How far the missile darted over the Pacific or how much wallop It carried was not disclosed. However a Polaris a range of about 1,400 milts and its warhead's explosive power Is estimated at about the equivalent of 600,000 tons of TNT. lio joint announcement Sunday by the Atomic Energy Commission and the Defense Department said the weapon was triggered at about 6:45 p.m EST In the Christmas Island testing area. The missile was launched by the Polaris submarine Ethan Allen and presumably from deep the ocean but an AEC spokesman declined to confirm this.

The Polaris has been test fired many times previously but always with a dummy warhead. First Field Test The ballistic missile is one of few pieces of ordnatice ever developed by the United States and put in the hands operating forces without having oeen given full-scale field tests Prior to Sunday, there had been no combined U.S. test of the two major the missile and warhead. A complete, all-out test firing never had been made. A nuclear charge never had been Xli- ed in missile trajectory out Into space, then plunged back into the heat-generating atmosphere to detonate above or on a target.

Proof testing Is one purpose of the nuclear which began April 25 In the Pacific, The 30 or explosions, It Is understood, will include three types of effect and new weapons. The proof tests will check out nuclear weapons systems the United States has developed but never fired. The effect testa will try to learn what an enemy nuclear explosion would do to the U.S. missiles, radar and underground missile sites. Mlnuteman Possible Another missile that may be tested with its nuclear warhead for the first time Is the Minuteman intercontinental ballistic missile.

The Minuteman and the Polaris rate at the top of the weapons priority since they will form the core of American nuclear striking power. So far the United Slates flvo Polaris submarines In operation, each armed with 16 missiles. Three others have been commissioned and 19 more are under construction or have been authorized. The goal li to have a fle.it of 41 cruising the seas by 1067 Five Polaris subs woro signed by the United States Sat- Three Cases ub County Court Slated Tuesday Three cases were set for trial jefore a jury for this week as ounty Judge Kenneth A. Douglas called the docket Monday at 10 a.m.

A jury panel will report Tuesday at 10 a.m. Set for trial were the follow- ng cases: Tuesday 10 a.m. State vs. Samuel Lonbo Duncan, driving while Intoxicated. Tuesday 1:30 p.m.

State vs. urrie C. Manning, DWI. Wednesday 10 a.m. State vs.

Raymond Lee Rush, DWI. Judge Douglas accepted the 'ollowlng pleas of guilty Monday morning: Thomas Earl Watson, DWI, $50 and costs, three days in jail, six month suspension oC driver's license. Harold Davis, DWI, $50 and costs, three days In jail, six month suspension of driver's license. Kenneth Ray Ainsworth, DWI, $50 and costs, three days in jail, six month suspension of driver's license. Bobby Carney, sale of whisky (two cases), $400 and costs in the first case, 30 days in jail and coats in the second case.

Tom Lawson Baker, DWI, $50 and costs, three days In jail, six month suspension of driver's license. SEC CONTINUED FEOM PAGE ONE UO.OOO a year or less. Where an individual salesman makes false claims in selling mutual funds, Conwell said, all SEC can do is act against nls parent firm. But this, he said, Is an impractical way of fetting at an individual tales- man. Where a salesman deals in regular brokerage business in addition to mutual funds, he is subject to regulations of separate stock exchanges and National Association of Securities dealers.

But there Is no general test of qualification for mutual fund salesmen, Conwell said. He added that there la no supervision whatsoever for "captive sales organizations" that specialize in a particular mutual fund or funds of specialized companies. These firms, Conwell said, make a big point of door to door selling drives. Loomls testified that some supposedly respectable brokerage houses uae "boiler room" tactics although he said this high pressure sales method through long distance phone calls has generally died out In the past five years. It is still used by small firms on a limited scale, he said.

The SEC official said he believes the hearing will show "an urgent need for raising brokerage standards and for more effective requirements for entry Into the business." Loomls cited the case of one brokerage proprietor who had a record of armed robbery but the SEC was powerless to keep him out of the business since ho had violated no securities laws. urday to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and moro were promised when they hit the waves. Tha nuclear armed submarines, while they were put under technical NATO control, still remain under U.S. control. And only President Kennedy could order their nuclear wcaponu to be fired.

BATTERIES GROUP 12-MONTH GUARANTEE STROUBE IMPLEMENT CO. a Hlrhway 75. TR4-5031 Optical Service CUSSES WITH WA A. ft'A 2000 YARDS GINGHAM CHECKS 36" Wide AH Drip Dry. YD.

£DAYV MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS Short Sleeve Knits And Cotton Fabric Styles. MEN'S BROADCLOTH SHORTS Sanforized Gripper Fly Sizes 28 to 44 WOMEN'S NYLONIZED PANTIES White Aqua Pink Maize Blue Coral BOY'S WASH PANTS Belted And Continental 6 to 14. Special Purchase! RUGS Tweeds, solids in loop and pile design. Most with foam rubber back. Sizes to 18x30 For ALL COSTUME JEWELRY Gar Bobs Neck Pieces Wrist I'lcccs GIRL'S PIXIE SETS Shirt and Shorts Cotton Jersey Assorted Colors.

Sizes 6 to 14. Sale LADIES' Nylon Hose Reg. $1.99 BUBBLE LAMPS Attractive Lamp Plastic Base Non-Breakable White Turquoise Pumpkin Sale Could Be Used As TV Night Lamp or Table Lamp. ALL COTTON PRINTS AND SOLID COLORS I Drapery $1001 Bark PLASTIC LAUNDRY BASKETS Jumbo Site Assorted Colors SHOE WOMEN'S Flats Casuals Spring 6.ff%&T And Summer WOi Colors In Almost All Sizes. CLEAR GIRL'S Dress and Novelty Styles $1 87 Whites ANCE WOMEN'S High-Lew-Mid Heel Wanted A Colors In Dozens Of Styles.

SPECIi mmmmm Electric Percolator VALU ON SMALL EMSCTRIO POP -UP TOASTER EDAYI APPLIANCES FRY-PAN 'RICES 6 Transistor RADIO $12 88 Store Hours: Week 8:30 to 5:30 8:30 to 6:00 Stamps TlrWfflMU.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About Corsicana Daily Sun Archive

Pages Available:
271,914
Years Available:
1909-1981