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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. 19, 1959 ACROSS 1. Boring tool 4. Quiver 9. State 12.

Italian day breeze 13. Prongs 14. Draw game 15. Billfold 17. Stage players 19.

Yarn measures 20. Be ill 21. Mountain nymph 23. Befalls 27. Lass 28.

Cabinet for papers 29. Burmese demon 30. Has being 31. Talked incoherently 32. Artificial language 33.

Old soldier: colloq. 35. Top cards 36. Hammer head 38. Opponents 40.

Discontinue 41. Depressed 42. Too bad 43. An important affair 46. Separated 49.

Generation 50. Hawsers 52. Twilight 53. To swell out 54. Headliners 55.

Not cooked Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle DOWN 1. Yield 2. Man's name 3. Of higher stature 4. Service or avail 5.

Strikes 6. Article TIME 10 MM. JI-19 7. Sheep-killing parrot 8. Slipped away 9.

Robbed 10. Ventilate 11. Affirmative 16. Faithful 18. Gratuity 21.

Pointed arch 22. Having ascended 23. Urticaria Malt liquors 25. Nostrils 26. Small rock 28.

Countenance 31. Armed airplanes 34. Tried 36. Fruit 37. Christian festival 39.

Floor covering 40. Group of students 42. Copycat 43. Chart 44. Gone by 45.

Twaddle 47. Stowe character 48. Emblem of morning 51. Father BUCKLEY don'f give blue ifampj with traffic tickefs! TEAGUE CONTINUED PROM PAGE ONE to defeat the Bryan congressman. Courts in some parts of the country were blamed for some of the corruption in labor by the speaker.

He referred to Incidents in which persons were beaten up and no action was taken by the courts. "Our courts have not done enough in the labor field," he said. Calling the labor bill orie of the most dififcult and complex Congress had ever encountered, Teague said it was the result of public demands that something be done about Jimmy Hoffa, president of the Teamsters Un- ioo, and his associates. "Hoffa has done more harm to labor than any other living American," he said. The congressman' said he received more mail concerning the labor issue than any other.

Teague also touched on vet- wans affairs and legislation, epace, television investigations, public works, foreign aid and related topics. TV Probe Helpful He called the TV exposes "a good thing" and said Congress had known for some time that all wasn't right in the TV industry. He displayed a model of the Atlas Mercury rocket which, he predicted, will carry an American into space within two years. First two small monkeys, then a large monkey, then one of the astronauts will be shot 100 miles into space, will circle the earth four times, and will then zoom to earth, falling in the ocean' off the coast of Florida, he said. Teague said the government Is now spending $800 million a year on veterans hospitals, $2 billion on compensations and jl billion' on pensions and that 8,000 persons are being added to the pension rolls each month.

He said he supported all practical and feasible benefits for veterans but opposed a movement by one group to give every U. S. veteran with an honorable discharge a pension of $100 per month starting at the age of 65. Teague himself is a disabled war veteran, having been wounded in World War II. What is the area of greatest concern in Washington Inflation, acording to Teague.

He said there are disagreements even in the president's cabinet as to what the corrective and prohibitive measures are. Teague was introduced by Joe Daniel, Navarro county farme and rancher and personal friend of Teague'e. Daniel, a formei member of the club, was introduced by Dwain Bruner, president. Joe Sheppard gave the invocation and A. G.

Godley led the song-fest preceding the luncheon. Douglas Howell is vice presi Batteries 6-V. GPI 12 Months Guarantee Tires 670 15 Black Nylon 9S Each Plus Tax Recappable Tire UBE Implement Co. S. Hwy.

75 Dial TR4-5031 6 95 Exch. 0 MODEST MAIDENS Tradtnark Itefktend U. 8, rfttat II-'. "What I like about the opposite eez is that they're girls 1" WISHING WELL U. S.

Patent Office. 2 6 A 5 7 4 8 7 2 3 5 A 4 3 5 7 I. dent and J. T. Glass, secretary reasurer.

A delegation of special guests from the Corsicana club consist- of Jim Kerley, Julius Jacobs, Reginal King, Rusty Thornhill and C. W. Rich. Bruner introduced the guests. SERVICES CONTINUED PROM PAGE ONE of First Methodist, will deliver Jie sermon.

Southside services will be held at Memorial Baptist Wednesday at 8 p.m. with Rev. Paul Wiseman, Eleventh Avenue Methodist pastor, officiating and with thess two churches participat- Rev. Gaither Day, pastor of North Corsicana Methodist will deliver the sermon for the north- side area at the North Side Baptist church Thursday at 10 a.m. with the Baptist and Methodist churches of Emhouse also participating.

Central Methodist will be the side for services in the west side area Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. and Rev. Reginal King, mstor of Emmanuel Baptist, will oring the message. Evangelical Temple will also participate. Special choral music will be presented at several of the services.

Rev. Alex Cox, First Christian pastor, is president of the Ministerial Alliance. WEATHER ONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE carrots, the present big money crops In the Valley, were not hurt. The frost was heaviest in the Sdinburg, Elsa, Rio Grands City areas; moderate at McAlen and Hargll; and light at Mercedes, Monte Caro and San Juan. The Texas warmup started Wednesday.

Dalhart, which had a morning low of 19 degrees, watched its thermometers jump to a balmy 65 before the afternoon was over. Maximum temperatures for the day ranged from 66 at Amarillo to 51 at alveston. Pre dawn temperatures over state Thursday ranged from 26 at Junction to 47 at Brownsville. No rain had been reported in the 24 hours prior to a.m. Thursday and none was expected.

More frosty weather nipped the Deep South today but the worst of this week's unseasonable cold wave appeared ended other parts of the country. of the lowest readings in Deep South was at Jackson, where the mercury slid to 25. It marked the second consecutive overnight freeze for much of the region. A rising temperature trend was reflected in nearly all sections except the Southeast. It was below freezing for the sec ond straight morning in part: of Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia and the Carolinas.

Although southern Florida escaped the cold air, heavy ralna drenched sections of the east coast. Miami was doused with nore than three inches of rain, with many streets flooded. Temperatures were near or a ittle above seasonal levels in the mid-continent. Light snow flurries continued near the shores of the Great Lakes and in the higher elevations of interior sections of England. 2 8 tr 2 IT 6 A 5 6 3 7 8 2 4 5 3 5 2 3 7 2 6 XT 2 8 6 2 4 tr BUDGET (BOSTON CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONEI CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE WATERTOWN, N.

Y. if) Fifteen inches of snow blanketed this city today. Squalls rag ff inland off Lake Ontario dumped eight inches of snow in four hours, adding to the sev en that had fallen Wednesdaj night. COLLISION FATAL HOUSTON I.T i Wesley Vai Horn, 25, a coffee company enr ploye, was killed Wednesday his car and a truck rollid ed. VVE SEKVICE ALL MAKEf OF TV'S AND ACTO JONES RADIO AXD TV SERVICE 212 B.

KBnton St. I ERE is a pleasant little game that will give 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 is less than 6, add 3. The result is your key number. Start at the upper left-hand corner 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. by WUtism J.

Milltr. Distributed by King Featurw Syndicate. 11-19 BERRIES CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE conference that misuse of approved statements on the label would constitute a criminal offense under the Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act. The plan was based on proposals submitted Wednesday at a public hearing by the cranberry industry, but Flemming made modifications. The principal change was for labeling of tested cranberries determined to be free of the weed killer which has caused cancer in laboratory tests on rats.

Flemming said the Food and Drug Administration will continue to expediate the program of testing cranberries, and is prepared to assist all packers checking their stocks of processed cranberries from the 1958 crop. "It ig understood that this means that these lots will be sampled and analyzed to an extent necessary to assure the Food and Drug Administration tha. they are free of aminotrla- zole," Flemming said. "Packers and distributors of lots that are found to be free of aminotrlazole under this procedure are authorized to place the following statement on containers: Certified safe under plan approved by the U. S.

government for cranberries." As to the 1959 crop, Flemming said, primary handlers and marketing agents have segregated and are holding under safeguards about 4,800,000 pounds of cranberries which they believe may contain aminotria- zole. These lots will be tested by industry under methods and procedures approved by the and Drug Administration. Any lots found to contain ami- notriazole will be destroyed. Many Are Clean Already lots of fresh cranberries totaling over three million pounds have been tested and round free of contamination. The food and drug administration will authorize the diplri- bution of these lots.

A cloud of suspicion has liung over cranberry products since Flemming told a news conference 10 days ago that traces of a weed killer had been found on some of the berries grown in Pacific Northwest. He said the weed killer, aminotriazole, had produced cancer when fed to rats. The Army has ordered Its expected to go beyond 41 bil- ions. The other Items on which the jooks have not yet been closed are those for the foreign aid program, the Department of Health, Education and Welfare; atomic energy, housing, and National Aeronautics and Space Agency. Conferences will be held in Washington between officials of some of these agencies and budget bureau officials in an effort to get final figures.

The hope is to have these figures ready to hand over to Eisenhower when he comes back to Washington next week, Stans said. If Eisenhower prolongs Ms Augusta stay much Into next week, Stans said he himself will be flying back down on budget matters. Only non-military features of he budget came up today, the budget director said. Asked vhether the military subject of a number of Eisenhower conferences here providing more difficulty than usual, Stans replied: "The military budget, it is 'air to say, is getting a closer scrutiny that it has in several years." Stans said that "No, Sir," he doesn't see how it would be possible to hold next year's spend- ng to the 79 billion dollar total now estimated for the I960 fiscal period. There are built in increases excess of a couple of billion dollars in present legislation and jresent programs, he said, "so the budget will be up." Stans didn't go into revenue prospects or the tax picture.

But the way he outlined fiscal prospects offered little hope that the administration might come up with a 1960, election-year tax fo cut. As for the impact of the steel strike, the budget director said is impossible to measure accurately but probably, he said, it will result in a deduction in federal revenue in the present fiscal year and an increase beyond earlier expectations for 1963. The effect of recouped profits after the strike is over is expected to take hold in the 1961 fiscal year, he said. Thus a factor threatening the small surplus this year appeared to be working for a balanced 1961 budget which is a definite goal of the administration. Stnns' deputy, Elmer Staats has said that legislation already on the books and pro already underway carry builtin increases which will force expenditures for upward by more than two billion dollars above I960.

As Staats has outlined the prospects, more money win be needed for outer space project" aviation, the development loan fund, urban renewal and other housing programs, watm- spurces projects, veterans sions and the conservation serve for agriculture. Thus Eisenhower and Stans faced a stern financial chal lenge in trying to hit a tota close to 40 billions for the nonmilitary section of the budget The military portion, as a result of conference here Monday, has been put tentativelj at 41 billion dollars plus. This also is up a bit from 1960 So there are prospects that the over-all budget for 1961 wil hit SI billions or more. This compares with an cstimatec 578.905.000,000 for this year. Sun Want Ads Bring Results BLOND IE TOIH pen- Harriman, big Boston brokerage firm.

The couple was shot down at 9:30 p.m. apparently after having had dinner and as they were getting into Vuona's car parked just off Copley Square. Both fell mortally wounded across the street from the Boston University School of Music, a few feet from the traditional inish line of the annual Patriots Day marathon and just to the rear of the big Boston public ibrary. Vuona died immediately. Miss Betts died in City hospital about four hours later.

Both lad been shot in. the head. The Rev. Cornelius Hastie of St. James Episcopal Church Roxbury, who was visiting on 31agden street, looked out the window when he heard the first of several shots fired below.

He said he saw a man wearing a light-colored trench coat and soft hat fire two or three shots into one of the victims at close range. The Rev. Mr. Hastie said the killer walked about 20 yards to the corner of Exeter street and then sprinted along Boylston street. Miss Betts was married in 1947 to John Grant of Dorches- and divorced two years later.

She had resumed her maiden name and lived in the Back Bay. Friends described her as an "upstanding and likeable person." Vuona was one of six brothers and four sisters, all of Worches- 40 miles from Boston. A bachelor, he lived xvith his mrents, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Vuona.

Until three years ago he was connected with two brothers in a contracting firm. He left them go to work as an engineer for Bennie Cotton, a Worchester scrap metal concern. Vuona was graduated from Northeastern University and during World War II served as a Marine 1st Lieutenant. During the Summer months he operated a drive-in theater in Westerly, R.I. Wallace Cotton, treasurer of he firm which employed Vuona described him as "the cleanesl liv ng man I ever knew." He added: "I just can't believe anyone would shoot him." Miss Betts' mother and step "ather, Mr.

and Mrs. Jamet Ferguson, live in the Roxbury section. She also leaves a sinter. Mrs. Margaret Fortln of Worcester.

Police said Miss Betts first hired a private detective for protection last August and again only two weeks ago. Tumult wa.s a taxicab chauffeur in Boston until August. Police said he dated Miss Betts "a few times" but never was considered her steady boy friend. Police had put a stake-out at his Park Drive, home as well as the homes of his two brothers and two sisters. One brother.

Robert, lives in Burlington, VI. ESCAPE ITS 1 CKASH EDINBURG A TS-i trainer made a forced landing about nine miles north of here Wed- commanas arouna tne worm not to serve cranberries or sell them in commissaries unless there ia advance proof that the products are free of contamination with aminotriazole. The Navy was preparing a similar order. The Air Force a week ago said no cranberries were to be served at its installations if the berries came from areas where they might have been tainted by the weed killer. Industry spokesmen had insisted that al! berries from the 1959 crop were safe to eat.

But Detroit health officials said Tuesday they had found traces of aminotriazole on some cranberry sauce shipped to Detroit last year by a New Jersey firm. Seize Tainted Juice The federal government moved Wednesday night to seize the tainted sauce, which it said was made from 1958-crop berries grown in Massachusetts. That was the first reported case of contamination in berries from that state Another federal seizure order Wednesday involved 87 cases of fresh cranberries shipped two weeks ago from Rapids, to Waterloo, Iowa. Wednesday's two federal actions brought a total of seven the seizures which have been recommended to the Justice Department since an emergency program of cranberry testing began last week. The earlier actions involved berries grown in Oregon, Wisconsin and Washington State.

The Welfare Department said that as of late Wednesday the FDA had tested 533 cranberry samples, of which 526 showed no traces of The lots cleared total 6,304,000 pounds. The seizure actions involve 83,848 pounds. Flemming said his meeting Wednesday with the cranberry Industry representatives was very successful. The industry offered this five-point plan for the future: Continuation of the ban on aminotriazole until its effects are fully determined, segregation of all cranberries about which there is any reason for suspicion, testing of all the 1950 crop, destruction of tainted berries and continuation of cranberry research SCALES CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE Mayor Robert F. Wagner.

Loughran, accused of a $1,000 shakedown of a Brooklyn butcher, has denied any wrongdoing. Two other men have been arrested. Bert Smith 39, a bureau In 'Bctor. and Emamiel Lapidus, 49, president of a Salesmen and Poultry Workers Union local. Lapidus pleaded guilty to two extortion counts and was released on bail until sentencing.

He faces a maximum 15 years in prison on each count. Loughran and Smith are awaiting a heai-ing on extortion charges. McAllen. civilian instructor pilot, and student Lt. Kenneth Sellers, 22, of Norfolk, were aboard the ship from Moore AFB near Mission.

caped injury. Martin Ek. 47, ofi Sun Want Ads Bring Results Repossessed Sewing Machines 1 Take Up Payments 1 (Two Slant -o-matics) Sinerer Machine Go. 1 125 WEST COLLIN ST. PHONE TR4-3051 A WIFE CAN SEE MORE OUT DACSWOOD--SVHAT DID I SEE YOU HIDE.OUTOF THE CORNER OF MY EYE ITS A NICE FEELING TO HAVE A FEW BUCKS TUCKED AWAY FOR AN EMERGENCY OF THE CORNER OF HER EYE THAN A HUSBAND CAN SEETHROUGH A TELESCOPE Sin BLONOIES BUSY IN THE KITCHEN IRONING, I'LL HIDE THE THREE DOLLARS I HAVE LEFT OVER THIS WEEK THIMBLE THEATRE STARRINr FOPETK I'M GOING TO TELL YOUR BEATNIK FATHER WHAT A HORRIBLE THINS HE HAS T.

TOUt) HIM! HE LISTENED! HE A6REEO WITH ME. 1 HE wo HE SAYS I YAM A SQUARE) VOIJR FATHER CAN'T KICK YOU OUT'OF YOUR OWN HOUSE. 1 THEM Hfc THREW ME OUT. 1 BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY 8MITB OL' BULLET" WUZ SORTO LUKEWflRMISH IDEE THAMKY, I'LL TflKE TH' LEETLE VARMINT IN TH'HOUSE AN'SEE WHAT "OL'BULLET" THINKS PiBOUT THE IDEE LOOKY, "OL' BULLET "-HOW WOULD YE LIKE ft'BODACIOUS LEETLE PLAYMATE MISTOFER SMIF-- HOW WOULD YE LIKE A KITTY-CAT PER FREE? SCORCH! SMITH KNOW THIS ISN'T A VERY ORIGINAL WAV OF GETTING ACQUAINTED, I'M GOING IN TO fOIP YOU VOLIR BOSS HAVE AN A BURNLV 1 APfdNTMENl YOU MEAN TO SIT THERE ANDTEU. ME WE'VE NEVER.

MET- -THAT WE PIPN'T HAVE AN HOUR? CONVERSATION THE OTHER PAY? vwow PARN WELL SMITH (-MEBBE NOW HE CAY, NOVEMBER Xfstff VO' IS NOW TH 1 FIRST IN KEERFUL.f YORE FAMBtf TO HAVE IP VO 1 BANGS IT AfSM NOSE LIKEAHOOMIN OR OAKY OOAK8 ARE TH' SASTROPOD SHELLS IM THET BOX? SOMEBOW FERGOT ID REMOVE A HERMIT CRAB FROM AKtfVWW IT PROVES TM' SHEUS ARE-TH' KIWP I HI, MISTER AH' HOW I MM err TO AND HERES ANOTHER COPTER IS COMING IN FROM ABOVE. iN THESE BRIEF MOMENTS THE INTENSE HEAT RAYS HAVE GOT IN THEIR WORK. WILUE-THE-HFTH CERTOINLY 1 STCBBS 4ND TIPPIB GOODNESS! VOU UAUSHIN' AT, MIZ BAILEY--? LITTLE LONGER AND IT'LL BE DC5V- WOULDN'T nr BE t- NICE IP YOU COULD RIDE. THESE CWAIP2S AROUND-? I (SET SO TIRED SITTIN' HERE-- YOUBE COMPLETELY WHY CAN I.

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About Corsicana Daily Sun Archive

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