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Corsicana Daily Sun from Corsicana, Texas • Page 12

Location:
Corsicana, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Daily Sun, Nov. 16, 1959 ACROSS 1. Grampus 5. Historical period 8. Leaf of palmyra palm 12.

Close tightly 13. Twice five 14. Worthless person 15. Barter for money 16. Diminutive of Harriet 17.

Grow light fc 18. Assign -S 20. tection 22. Had being 52. Classify 24.

Click beetle 53. In no 25. Anomalous 29. Size of paper 32. Cross 33.

Head of a soldering 34. Animal enclosure 35. Sheep 36. Presiding officer 38. Average 39.

Demand payment 40. Better conditions 44. Piece of furniture 48. Color of a 'horse 49. Possessive adjective 51.

Dirt Solution of Saturday's Puzzle manner 54. Fling about 55. Tricks 56. Merry 57. Architectural pier DOWN 1.

Bones 2. Stagger 3. Short visit 4. Acknowledged 5. Suffix ot ordinal numbers 6.

Learn from books ia 37 7. Anticipated 8. More experienced 9. Grant temporarily 10. Moos 11.

A queen of England 19. Label 21. In favor of 23. Bribing to commit perjury 25. Wrath 26.

Tier 27. Spawn of fish 28. Cover 29. Anchor tackle 30. Gone by 31.

Through 34. Card game 36. Disfigure 37. A fixed routine 38. Kicks a football 40.

Constellation 41. Needy 42. Sour 43. Portico 45. Blessing 46.

Tilt to one side 47. Wagnerian character so. rir-ycn MODEST MAIDENS TnJtnuxk Strfsfcred C. 6. PAR TIME 27 MIN.

AP Newsttottfttt BUCKLEY WEATHER CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE Amarillo had 17 degrees around noon, Childress 27, Lub- hock 30, Wichita Palls 40. Action Delayed The Weather Bureau said the drop is not sharp as the front passes, but temperatures plunge one to two hours after the front moves through. By Tuesday, the Weather Bureau said, temperatures will drop as low as zero in the upper Panhandle and 10 to 20 degrees elsewhere in North West Texas. Lows of 15 degrees for the northern portion of North Central Texas were predicted, 20 in northeast Texas, 26 in South Central Texas, 15 in the upper Pecos Valley and 28 elsewhere in Southwest Texas. Only showers forecast were for East Texas.

45-Below Noted A fierce new storm, sending temperatures dipping to record lows, lashed most of the Rocky Mountains and northern Great Plains today. Temperatures dropped as low a's 45 degrees below zero during the predawn hours. The storm roared out of Canada Sunday into Montana, already numbed by a blizzard which struck four days ago. Parts of Kansas, the Dakotas and Montana were battered Sunday by winds up to 60 m.p.h., which reduced visibility in some localities to near zero by whipping the air with blinding snow. During the night, however, the winds died down and limited visibility was reported today in only scattered sections of western Nebraska and northwest Iowa.

Lincoln, located in western Montana, reported the state's lowest temperature, the mercurj there sinking to 45 degrees below zero. The mining city of Butte In western Montana reported temperature of 41 below zero shortly before dnwn. Drummond and Helena both had readings of 39 below. Montana's warmest morning low was 7 below at Missoula. The Helena reading was 4 degrees colder than the all-time November record set just last Friday.

Forecasters said it wa possible later morning readings would be even colder. Billings in eastern Montana had 13 below. Two northern Wyoming cities, Sheridan and Cody, charted 23 below zero. Akron near the Kansas line, had 2 below. Skies Clearing Despite the blizzard, clearing skies were reported in most flocky Mountain and Great lains states.

The Weather predicted slowly rising starting Tuesday and continuing the rest of the week. Cold wave warnings were josted for most of the Rockies and the Midwest, with sharp drops in temperature and snow store for more than a dozen states. The cold weather was expected to invade most areas from eastern Wyoming and Colorado, northeast New Mexico, the northwest Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, the Dakotas, Nebraska, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Missouri and northwest Illinois. Below zero readings were predicted for northern states, along with strong northerly winds and now. Readings Tumble At Scottsbluff, the temperature dropped from an afternoon high of 64 to zero by midnight.

The temperature fell 29 degrees in one hour at Denver Sunday night. Helena, Montana capital that took the brunt of a record storm ant midweek, reported a 20- nch snow depth with about six nches of new snow. The new storm dropped two six inches of new smow over Montana, but all main highways emained open. Air travel was halted, but trains and buses managed to keep near schedule. In western Montana, authorities were looking for two missing hunters, Fred Miller and Joe Kent (ages not available), of Hamilton, Mont.

Officers said they apparently became lost while hunting with three other men. Snow in the area is 14-16 inches deep. Hunters Trapped A bulldozer struggled through three to four feet of snow in an effort to reach about 30 hunters snowbound at a ranger station near Augusta, along the east slope of the Continental Divide west of Great Falls. A ranger, calling into report the situation, said the men had shelter and food, were in no immediate danger. The bulldozer was not expected to reach the hunters until late today.

The snow broke an Idaho Power Co. transmission line between Bannock and Salmon in central Idaho near the Montana- Idaho border Sunday, causing Bannock to be without powei for more than 10 hours. Ice gorges built up in the Missouri river at Townsend south central Montana, and in in the Yellowstone River at Glendive in the east. An estimated 60 head of cattle were reportc frozen near Townsend as a re suit of the Missouri River water being backed into sloughs by ice jams. Water from the Missouri seeping into the basements of few Townsend homes and as precautionary move 15 persons members of three families, let their homes.

Sheriff Jack Foster said tha unless the water rises in nearb sloughs another 13 to 18 inches there would be no further dam age to homes in the town of 1, 500. Schools Closed Many Montana schools, es pecially those in rural area; were closed today. Snowplows were unable to keep roads in northern Wyoming cleared in the face of 30 m.p.h. winds and new snow. Six inches of snow on the level at Cody was piled as high as 6 "Holy smoke, Mom, I didn't know one of our ancestors was a beatnik 1" WISHING Regiitercd U.

S. Patent Office. 4 A 6 3 5 ti 2 A 8 4 6 A 2 3 8 6 2 4 8 3 6 7 2 8 5 3 6 4 A 7 3 5 2 7 4 6 A 8 A 3 7 4 6 2 4. 3 A 6 5 7 3 4 6 A 5 3 2 4 3 6 A 2 3 8 7 A 3 5 6 A 4 2 7 6 5 2 3 6 2 8 3 7 5 6 A 2 3 4 6 7 ERE is a pleasant little game that will give you a message every day. It is a numerical puzzle designed to spell out your fortune.

Count the letters in your first name. If the number of. letters is 6 or more, subtract 4. If the number 3s less'than 6, add 3. The result is your key number.

Start at the upper left-hand corner of the rectangle and check every one of your key numbers, left to right. Then read the message the letters under the checked figures give you. 1959,. ky WillUm J.Milltr. DistribuUd by Klni Ftmturra Syndlc.tt.

ll 16 iet iri drifts. The snow generally had end- in Montana today and the torm crept eastward and south- ard into the Dakotas, Wyom- ng, western Kansas and west- rn Nebraska. The Weather Bureau said the old front will extend from Lake uperior through the Central lississippi Valley, across north- rn Texas and into New Mexico this evening. In other parts of the country, ght rain spread northward rom the Gulf through the Lowr Mississippi Valley ahead of he stormy weather in' the west entral plains. Temperatures moderated dur- ng the night in the upper Mississippi Valley and Great a region.

Temperatures as much as 30 degrees igher than Sunday morning vhen readings of near and be- ow zero were reported. It was cloudy and colder along he Atlantic seaboard from Maine to the Carolinas and ihowers fell in parts of Massa- ihusetts. Clear and mild weather irevailed in Florida while it was to partly cloudy in the east and Gulf and the southwest of the country. Some early morning reports: York 38, cloudy; Chicago 4, cloudy; Boston 36, cloudy; Washington 46, cloudy; Atlanta 9, cloudy; 72, cloudy; Louisville 43, drizzle; Detroit 55, cloudy; St. Louis 34, cloudy; 26, cloudy; Kansas 33, clear; Denver 13, show; Dallas 39, cloudy; Phoenix 60 nartly cloudy; Seattle 29, clear; San Francisco 48, clear; Los Angeles 61, cloudy; Anchorage 5, partly cloudy; Honolulu 76, clear.

PANAMA CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE the U. S. Information Agency and private U. S. property.

Rubottom was asked whether was true that Panamanian olice "looked the other way" vhen the demonstration started nd had received radio instruc- ions to do nothing about the lisorders. He replied that instructions lad been sent to some units of he Panamanian police force via radio evidently instructing them not to interfere. "Putting the best possible face in it, it was a miscalculation," said. Rubottom was asked whether he demonstrations had not aken place in such a way as indicate that it was Panamanian government policy. He replied that Panama's charge d'affaires "came to see me and he certainly did not Indicate that the demonstrations vere government policy." Repossessed Sewing Machines Take Up Payments (Two Slant -o-matics) Ssnqrer Mwchme Co.

125 WEST COLLJN ST. PHONE TIM-3051 HERTER FROM PAGE ONE tbput his ultimate aims, Herter laid, adding: "We can certainly expect many sorts of lures and pressures in ill parts of the free world, backed with mounting industrial power designed to confuse, subvert and take over. "The need to keep a firm grasp on both sets of facts the necessity for common grounc and the aggressive competition will be a severe test of our political maturity as a peo- Lnshes Indifference Herter lashed out at what he as a tendency of Americans concentrate on the pleasant ihlngs of life to the point where they become indifferent to work dangers. He put it in these words "We have, of late, been too much absorbed, I feel, in thi mere enjoyment of a prosperou: life behind our defensive curtain of nuclear power. "We must realize Instead tha the fateful competition with com munism has placed a first clain on the energy and interest of all.

That means subordinatin our private interests to the para mount public interest. "It also means using our econ omy less for the things which not really matter, and more fo the things which do for th uses which would train and in form our minds, promote th health of our society and kee our country free." Herter cautioned against be lieving that President Eisenhower's talks with Khrushchev somehow have magically ended cold dangers. "So far, the elements of duress over Berlin has been submerged; but otherwise there were few tangible results of the Khrushchev visit, nor were such to be expected. "Indeed, it may be better so, for early successes tend to breed (self-deceptive Euphoria." (Euphoria is a delusion of well- Kiwanis Club Sees Film On Auto Accidents A 20 minute film, "On Impact," was shown at the Monday luncheon meeting of the Corsi- cp.na Kiwanis Club before 39 members and guests. The film was made by the American Medical Association in co-operation with the Ford Motor Company.

This was a study of what happens to automobile passengers when the car hit some- or is involved in an accident. The film brought out that when the auto hits an object the people riding in the car continue moving until they hit something inside the car. It also mentioned that automobiles have never been safer an' that accidents have declined some 57 per cent in past 10 years. 38,000 Killed In '58 Some 38,000 people were killed last year in traffic mishaps while one and one-fourth million were injured. The film also related that 54 per cent of the people thrown outside the car were likely to be hurt more seriously than who were not thrown outside.

Of those who remained inside, 24 per cent were not injured as badly. The film also showed experimental research work being conducted at Cornell University where electronically wired dummies in two cars were observed. The cars were involved in a wreck and a different one was crashed into a solid wall. Dr. Andy Megarity, who screened the film and was program chairman, said that in 100 accidents where all safety devices were employed there there were only seven deaths Highway patrolmen had estimated there should have been 55 deaths resulting from the accidents.

Opening the assembly were the songs, "Li'l 'Liza Jane" and 'More We Get Together." They were followed by the pledge to the American flag and the singing of "America." Wayne Oldroyd pronounced the invocation. Plan Ladles Night Don Tekell reviewed plans for the annual Ladies Night occasion which is scheduled Dec. 7 at Kinsloe House. A. C.

Wimpee, Dallas, Texas Baptist Brotherhood Convention, will be the featured speaker. He has been the speaker to a similar occasion in Corsicana. Tickets to this will be $2 each. Guests at the meeting included Jim Benham, secretary of the NJC Circle Club; Theresea Koch, pianist; Derrell De- Rushia, Dr. L.

E. McGary, and V. A. Nichols. Leon Dtetz won the one dollar handshaking prize.

Dr. David Hansford dismissed the meeting. BLOND IE jeing.) A new process of communica- lon may be developing, Herter said, in the series of high level meetings between govrnmnt eaders. Displays Caution Herter said he uses the word 'may" to talk about such a possibility "because only time can tell whether we shall have learned to talk somewhat less at cross purposes than in the past, and with better understanding of opposing points of view." Much of Herter's address was a reaffirmation of the administration's intention of continuing a liberal trade policy despite the record balance of payments deficit in overseas transactions. He stated it this way: "But I can assure you there is no intention of retreating from America's basic policies of liberal trade or of proposing solutions which would weaken the over-all defensive or economic strength of the free world.

We must find solutions to our problems through expansion, not curtailment." Herter disclosed that the administration has newly considered and rejected a policy of insisting that all American aid money be spent in the United tates. The administration a month ago ruled that loans by the government's development loan fund must be spent on the American market. Herter said this buy-American provision was considered for grant funds also. But, he said the decision was made "for tho present" not to change the right of countries to use some of the funds to buy in third countries. The administration, Herter disclosed, has decided to attach a buy American provision to 20 to 50 million dollars of funds advanced by the International Co-operation Administration to countries wanting aid for specific development projects.

But he made clear that a treasury-led drive to insist that all aid money be in the American market had been rejected. Looking at the East-West struggle, Herter said it is imperative that Americans match the Soviet "enthusiasm for achievement." "It will take our most strenuous, devoted and persistent efforts," he said. Court Decision Backs Monitors WASHINGTON, Nov. 16 The Supreme Court today refused to rule on the validity of the powers a federal district judge gave a board of monitors to make a general housecleaning of James R. Hoffa's Teamsters Union.

A union appeal argued that the right to govern their own affairs had been taken from 1,600,000 members of the union, and that they are now subjecl to day-to-day government ol U. S. District Judge F. Dickinson Letts of this city. Letts appointed the three-man board of governors.

The Supeme Court at the same time refused the union a stay of judgment by the U. S. Cour' of Appeals here that uphelc authority of the monitors. The stay was asked on grounds it was needed to pre vent "serious and irreparable in jury" to the International union and its locals, and to preven the possibility of "unrecover able financial damage." The stay request added: "In view of the expanded ac tivities by the monitors, invol ving so sweeping a degree interference with the members right to control their own af fairs. petitioners (Teamster and its officers) have reason anticipate in various locals a wave of resentment and dissen sion leading, in some cases, disruption of the It added that some local might treat the situation a 'justifying secession" from th nternatlonal.

The union asked that the sta remain in effect until final Su preme Court action on the ap peal that attacked authority the monitors. WORKERS CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE personal income tax in prefer ence to a general sales tax. "A sales tax is a tax tha makes no allowance for the per sonal problems of the indivic ual," he said "and it bears eve more heavily on poverty tha upon wealth." Sun Want Ads Bring Results Your Want Ads to TR4-4764. Sun Want Ads Bring Results a Want Ad and Conver it into TR4-4764. Batteries 6-V.

GiPI 13 Months Guarantee 95 Exch. 6 Tires 670 15 Black Nylon 95 Each Plus Tax Rccappable Tire 11 STROUBE Implement Co. S. Hwy. 75 Dial TR4-5031 'illl't I'LL TEACH HIM A LESSON-I'LL PULL THE CHAIP.

OUT FROM UNDER HIM THIMBLE THEATRE 8TARRIM POFETB MV FATHER A MY FATHER IS A BANK PRESIDENT. 1 MY FATHER IS A -SENATOR; MY FATHER 1 A BARNEY GOOGLE AND 8KCFFT 8MTO I NEED ME A VACATION MISTOFhR SILAS HAVE VE GOT ENNY OL' BONES I COULD SCORCHT SMITB SNARL, THAT'S WE DON'T WANT TO DO ANVTHINIS TO DISCOURAGE HIM FROM DIVING FOR THAT DEEP SEA TREASURE FOR A GUV LIKE HIM NEEDS JUST THIS LITTLE BITOF OPPOSITION ID MAKE HIM PETERMINED To WITH ARISKV LI'L ABNCR VO' BROKE IS MAH I INI PERFECT SHAPE AH CAIM'T TO STICK NEAR BIS SMELL BARNSMEU. IN TH' SADIE HAWKIMS DW A PWMPCBUBCr.7— STMysrEWOUStf OAKY DOAKS Atl'XKUDWVKfiOT H-HEWMSBHOOU IWUZ HCADftK SOME PARTICULAR) musoouof PLACE, jn.4 tMCEITOMIA. MA'AM? SOMETHIM' MTMET BOJC MURDOCH. AN DID vmm CLAIMED SHE MlflHT BBHAVUKJ BROOM WTIHHER ASA AMD NOW THAT DONE THAT, LETfe CONTINUE ON OUR REGULAR ROUNDS: AS TRAFFIC OBSERVERS ITfe OUR DUTY TO REPORT SMOKE VIOLATIONS BER3RH THEV HAMPER VISIBILITY JUST A ROOF VENTILATOR SAW SOMETHING CAP" 8TDBBS AMD TIPPD I JUST THOUGHT STOP IN AND SEE VOLJ I THINK I'LL GO AND CALL I AN' CALX- ON MRS.

r-f ON MRS. SMITH SUES AL'S'AVS SOOD TOtt A THE SMITH PAMILX XOOLL NEVER RNP ANY (5OLP.

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About Corsicana Daily Sun Archive

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