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Corsicana Daily Sun from Corsicana, Texas • Page 25

Location:
Corsicana, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
25
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Corsicana. Daily Sun, April 29. 1963 ACROSS 1. Soapstone 5. Electric unit: abbr.

8. Saute 11. October birthstone 12. Serpent 13. Sail yard: Scotch 14.

Ital. wine dty 15. Formic add producer 16. Moslem commander 17. Judges 19.

Bib. pronoun 21. Reddish clay 23. Seasons GA 5 ft MARE ART 1S 1A A A A PR A 5 PA 1R sT 0I PE A Bu LAST 1 STA HA A IF A A 1 DRA PE DE 0 1 EL A 26. A great success: slang 29.

And not 30. Relative pronoun 31. Win 33. Guided 35. Attempt 36.

Three-spot 37. 39. Half: prefix 0F YESTERDAY'S PUZZII 41. Cheat: slang 45. Spurt 47.

Competent 49. Scruff 50. tool 51. Digit 52. Ger.

river 53. Small 54. Watering place 55. DOWN 1. Natterjack 2.

Part of a church 3. Tardy 4. Mount 5. Camel's hair cloth 6. City in Calif.

2 3 4 i 5 6 7 1 8 9 10 II 1 12 1 13 li 'S ir 18 IS 20 21 2Z i 23 24 26 26 27 28 29 30 31 11 i 34 35 38 777 39 40 41 42 41 44 4b 47 48 i 49 SO Sf 51 53 S4 SS 7. Route 8.Heavy- laden 9. Old cloth 10. Word of affirmation 18. Scion 20, Avena 22.

All-day sucker 24. Corn spike 25. Boll on the eyelid 26. Moist 27. Blade 28.

Grapple with 32. Amer. humorist 34. Emblem of morning 38. Title of address: Sp.

40. 42. Put on cargo 43. Hastened 44. Belonging to that girl 45.

Jowl 46. Female sheep 48. Afternoon snack Cotton Event Shaping Up, Kiwanis Told Navarro Cotton Festl val set for next Monday was previewed by Gerald York, county agricultural agent, before tho Kiwanis club Monday. York summarized the background of the festival and then presented a color film provided by the National Cotton Council. Cotton plays a major role in the total economy, said York who pointed out that the product affects either directly or indirectly all of the county's estimated 35,000 persons.

He then went over schedule which Includes a parade, beauty contest, style show and other activities. The parade, he said, promises to be one of the most colorful over witnessed in Navarro county. Wayne Oldroyd introduced York. Among the other guests Introduced was Miss Dale Hamilton, Corsicana high school student who is the Kiwanis entry in the Cotton Festical beauty contest. Other guests were Mrs.

Elizabeth Logan, a member of tho Cotton Festival committee; J. A. Voss, Bob Hamilton, Mack Mullins, and the Kiwanis Students of the Month, Emy Lou Settle and Bill Boyd of Drane junior high who were presented Distinguished Service certificates bv Bud Griffin. dards. The length of training of the student in comparison witn the job.

Three students, Lothar Harris, Tommy Johnston, and Jerry Brigance won places in the Technical Information Contest. Lothar Harris won 3rd place in radio and TV servicing which gave him enough points to be declared the 3rd highest outstanding student in the state in this division. Tommy Johnston won 4th place in Meatcutting and Jerry Brigance won 4th place in auto parts, which gave him enough points to be declared the 3rd highest outstanding student in this dl vision. The above students are enrolled in Industrial Co-operative Training Classes at Corsicana High School. These classes permit the student to take enough academic courses to qualify for graduation and at the same time work 1-2 day on some type of technical job, receiving training in some skilled type job.

The group was accompanied to Ft. Worth by Williams R. Hay VIC Advisor and ICT coordina tor and Mrs. Hay. CO-OP CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE 14.76 miles of new line, and that 12 miles were removed from the Navarro Mills Reservoir area.

He said the organization had 18 full-time and one part- time employes. He gave the background of the organization, pointing out that often it is erroneously referred to as the when actually the REA (Rural Elec- trication Administration) is merely the agency from which the cooperative borrows money. He reported that since the local cooperative was started in New damage to government buildings and government housing projects, repaired after Karen, was expected to run high Many government vehicles and much government equipment in this U. S. trust territory island had been battered about.

Government supplies in warehouses leaky after Karen came in for more soaking. Of more than 500 tent houses built for victims of Karen, 60 had been blown away by Olive and an uncounted number dam aged. Autumn is the typhoon season in the Western Pacific. Olive is the first to threaten Guam in the spring. OAS CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE drawn from the committee of five.

White said that the United States in fact had not withdrawn because it had not agreed to serve. When asked if the United States had been approached by the OAS to serve on the group, White said have no information whether it was or was The four members chosen 30 far are Colombia, Chile, Ecuador and El Salvador. Facio said after a one hour meeting with their representatives that a fifth member has not been named. Brazil and Bolivia are believed under consideration. The team, including a U.

S. representative, was set up Sunday night by the OAS as it moved to head off armed conflict between the two neighbors on the Caribbean Island of Hispaniola The Dominican Republic, charging that Haitians had invaded the Dominican Embassy in Port Au Prince and that the Haitian government was plotting to kill Dominician President Juan Bosch, threatened military action unless the situation returned to normal today. Haiti in turn announced it had broken diplomatic relations with the Dominicans. The Council of the OAS first to convene itself as a consultative body directly representing the Foreign Ministers of 20 American Western Hemisphere Republics. Then it named the five iiation investigating team and called on both Haiti and the Dominican Republic to keep the peace pending tha study.

STUDENTS CON 1 INUED FROM PAGE ONE to build 1,596 miles of line. He Texas. The contest is rated on: How well the president presides over the ceremony? How well the members know their parts? The business-like manner in which the ceremony is conducted, and the percentages of officers participating. Bill Hollingsworth won first place in the Student Selected Job contest with his exhibit of gold Inlays in the dental technician division. Student selected jobs permit members to enter jobs that are typical examples of the wrork that is done by the craftsmen in the field in which they are training.

Each job selected by a member must be accompanied by the drawing from which it was made, or, in the case of service trades, a detailed expla- added that $756,698.13 on the principal and $506,000 In interest had been repaid, plus an advance payment of $191,323.04. "I am very said Hampel, the cooperative can make the capital credit refunds of $29,246.73, because the cooperative was founded on a non-profit Others who appeared on the program were attorney Bob Murphy, Nacogdoches, former district attorney for that county; Leighton B. Dawson, the cooperative attorney who guided proceedings on old and new business, including election of directors; and Wassom who gave the report. nation of the parts that were replaced and the adjustments iT lPrlOON that were made. The jobs are judged on: Accuracy with which jobs meet specoifications.

Skill displayed in finishing the job in accord ince with industrial stall- BATTERIES GROUP 12-MONTH GUARANTEE 95 Kischange STROUBE IMPLEMENT CO. S. Highway 75. TR 4-5031 CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE parts of the island to prevent short-circuiting of lines whipping In the driving winds. Traffic throughout was virtually at a standstill.

Gov. Manuel Guerrero said no estimate of damage could be until the wind dies down and a survey can be made of public and private property. The Karen debris cleanup program costing $273,000 in federal funds was nearing completion when Olive struck. Crops just beginning to cover from Karen were again a total loss. Many homes and buildings partially repaired with loans from the Small Business Admin istration and local lending agencies were damaged anew.

LIQUIGAS Soft Water For Pennies A Day -------------------Automatic Water Softener Rentals. No Drums To Change. rCtS. HiWay 75 North Call TR 4-5641 BLONDI WISHING WELL Registered U. S.

Patent Office. 7 4 62 853 462 4 3 A A SA A 4 i 5 a i 64 2 5 7 a 8 4 UPI A A VN 3t8 i 5 6 4 3 8 5 i ELG A 4 35 2 47 8 5 3 6 4 5 SR A FY I A 2 4 6 5 3 8 4 1 7 8 5 7 3 4 NR WV A I I 5 3 4 8 2 5 5 3 4 6V 8 NPL A 4 8 5 73 6 4 8 5 2 3 4 8 A 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 is 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 your key numbers, left to right. Then read the message the under the checked figures give you. IMS, by Wllltam J.

Miller. Dlttributrt by Features Syndicate. Inc. LEGION CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE we were created, and to remember our preamble, where it prescribes our to mutual among our comrades in He charged them to "Keep the American Legion 6trong and your Americanism programs. Most other organizations and Institutions believe in our programs, but we have to keep stressing them, and keep them in working order.

Moody had no scare talk about the Red Threat. "We fighting Communism when few people knew what ft was, when it was called he reminded the delegates from the Sixth District. had a commander shot down by them while carrying a flag In a parade in WalJa Walla. But there is not a Communist under every rug in America, and I am sure that when the showdown comes, we will be able to do something about He went on to say he thought that every president we have had since World War II been the best-informed person In the country about any Communist threat. I think this administration is well info rim'd.

I care if it is Democrat or Republican. think if Communism takes this country, it will have to do it politically, first. I think we can stop it Moody urged the Legion to renew its rapport with the National Guard, reminding them that for years the Texas commander of the Legion was at annual summer Guard camp and at the Legion convention. regret that our connections are not as close as they used to be. The National Guard needs our help badly now.

Some of those people in the Pentagon want to put the Guard under federal control. The National Guard played a big part in all the wars we had, and I am afraid to get away from that. Our civilian soldiers are Reaching back into four decades of lore concerning the Legion, Moody told them the story behind the various programs of the wel- lare, rehabilitation, Boys State, junior baseball, school awards, and others. One reason the Legion has remained powerful and strong as an institution, asserted Moody, is that it has remained aloof from national politics as an organization, taking neither side in the campaigns although members may of course vote their convictions. of this, down through the years we have grown in influence Many groups and persons have come to the American Legion to try and "sell on their program.

We accepted some of them and we rejected some of them, as we saw fit, without any strings. can say this, every major legion program has originated at the post level and gone up to adoption at the top, and not the other way around. These have been grass roots program, to serve a very present and actual i talk was the highlight of the convention. He was given a rising ovation at the close of the program, and to draw up a resolution to be submitted to Department commending him for his years of service as Department adjutant. Also on hand for the meeting was Mrs.

Iona Kubby of El Paso, the Texas president of the Legion Auxiliary, In a brief talk before the men, she told the Legionnaires that too often they are not encouraging the Auxiliary members to be active and constructive, and as a result, members lose heart and incentive. In the afternoon business sessions, delegates passed four resolutions. One, drafted by Johnson-Wiggins Post, 22, Corsicana, urged the government to organize and supervise civil defense preparations in this country, and to pay full-time salaries, where necessary, to get active and competent persons to administer the civil defense program, where possible, ex-service men reservists or retired service men. Another one which was adopted asked the state legislature to continue the Veterans Land program, a bill that is the at Austin but having trouble now. Also adopted was a resolution endorsing House Resolution 1927, equalizing pension benefits for World War I veterans.

A fourth one adopted would ask the federal government to reduce from 65 to 60 the age at which a person gets a $1,200 federal income tax exemption. Rejected and not adopted was a resolution sent down from National Headquarters, asking that fewer resolutions be sent up from posts, and that these be restricted to things with which the Legion is directly concerned. Oliver Meadows, executive assistant to Congressman Olin E. Teague, talked briefly about Legion matters, and forecast a concerted effort in Congress to cut back the Veterans Administration budget. Next Convention Rio Vista, Johnson county, was selected as the site for the fall convention of the Sixth District Posts at Ennis, Glen Rose, Hillsboro, Hearne, Kerens, Ll- pan, Mexia, Rio Vista, Teague and Waxahachie were cited for exceeding their membership quota.

Delegates elected to the national convention were O. H. Lumpkin of Ennis and W. H. (Bill) Smith of Corsicana.

Alternates are P. V. Carpenter of Ennis and C. W. Pease of Ker- Joe L.

Matthews Unit reports and presentation of awards by Mrs. Pease followed, and preceded adjournment. CASTRO CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE of United Socialist party, and the Cuban and Soviet ambassadors. The conference broke up around midday for a lavish dinner in the Kremlin Granovitaya Chamber, a 15th century hall suptuously decorated with Fresco paintings of Tsars and Saints. Castro also paid a formal call on President Leonid nev and laid a wreath at Lenin's tomb in Red Square.

Khrushchev escorted his Cub an visitors to a special ballet performance of "Swan at the Bolshoi theater. Moscow television broadcast the show beginning with the two entrance in the ornately gilded box. The bearded Cuban will be the centerpiece at May Day parade in Red Square, where he received an elaborate welcome to Moscow yesterday. Castro is getting the most elaborate vip treatment ever accorded a foreign visitor to the Soviet Union. Some Western circles view the extraordinary handling of visit as an attempt to recharge the apparently waning enthusiasm for his Russian allies since last Cuban crisis.

Castro is known to have been deeply offended by failure to give him advance notice of his decision to withdraw Soviet rockets from Cuba as President Kennedy demanded. Other sensitive topics likely to come up during the talks here include: 1. Russian backing for Cuban efforts to liquidate the embarrassing U. S. Guantanamo naval base in Eastern Cuba.

2. Bigger Soviet handouts for the tottering Cuban economy. 3. fence-sitting position in the Soviet-Chinese ideological feud. 4.

The exploitation of Cas position in Latin America for Soviet political purposes. A Cuban embassy official said Castro would stay in the Soviet Union for a month. Soviet officials refused to confirm this. The Cuban leader is expected to visit Algeria sometime fter the middle of May. LAOS The order of business in the morning included the call to YEMEN order by Arlon Simmons, commander of Kerens Post 307; presentation of colors by Corsicana Post 22, of the Legion and the Kerens Auxiliary, the latter represented by Misses Theresa Vernon and Barbara June Davidson of Kerens.

Rev. J. W. Fore of Kerens gave the invocation; M. H.

Harrison led In reciting the preamble to the Legion constitution; and Joe M. Daniel gave the welcome address. O. Lumpkin of Ennis presented distinguished Auxiliary guests. The commander and the presi dent then made committee appointments.

Moody made his speech, and a memorial service led by C. H. Harrison was held. Members then attended the church of their choice in Kerens. The noon meal was served at the Armory, with Kerens Post 307 as host.

The afternoon business session saw Dennis D. Donoho Corsicana, sixth District Vice Commander, conduct the roll call of posts, and the report of the convention committees. A membership turn-in by individual posts followed. A service officers report was heard. Commanders of the posts present then gave a summary of their current post activities, and Mrs.

Kubby talked briefly to the Legionnaires. In the Auxiliary sessions Mrs Pease presided and the Kerens unit advanced the colors. Mrs Stella Phillips of Mexia led the pledge of allegiance; Mrs. Gro ver Crawford gave the invoca tion; Mrs. B.

Y. Hammer of Hillsboro the preamble to the constitution; Mrs. W. C. Wasson of Kerens extended the address of welcome and Mrs Sue Wilson of Ferris responded.

Mrs. Tommie Taylor of Hearne read the convention call, the roll call of units and minutes of the last convention Committee reports were by Mrs G. W. Holland, Ennis; Mrs Ernestine McMahon, Cleburne Mrs. Willie Nowlin, Mexia President Kubby gave the greetings from the Department, and Mrs.

Marie Lumpkin of the convention was authorized Ennis talked on "Women for CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE the UN Truce Supervision Organization in Palestine. The reported agreement grew out of a special mission by U.S. diplomat Ellsworth Bunker, who worked out a tentative solution in direct talks with Saudi Arabian and UAR officials. It calls for the withdrawal from the Red Sea Republic of all UAR troops, estimated at about 20,000, and for an end to all military aid to the ousted Royalist regime by Saudi Arabia. U.

S. Ambassador Adlal E. Stevenson and Sir Patrick Dean of Britain called on Thant this morning for a report on the Yemen situation. Thant is leaving tonight for a 12-day trip to Europe on other matters. CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE sentatives of the International Control Commission for Laos, made up of Indian, Canada and Poland.

They make periodic trips to the Plaine des Jarres, 120 miles northeast of Vientiane, because the Pathet Lao has refused to let them be stationed permanently in the area. There has been no evidence of any direct Soviet appeal to the Pathet Lao for peace, W. Averell Harriman, saw Premier chev at the weekend. Harriman told a news conference Khrushchev assured him of full support in restoring peace and neutral ity in Laos. court CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE bring major guidelines as to the powers and limitations of the states in these fields.

The high court's decision in the Richmond, contempt case was not signed, but said sweepingly: "State compelled segregation in a court of justice is a mani fest violation of the state's duty to deny no one the equal protection of its Sun Want Ads Bring Results. Your Want Ads to i'R 4-4764..

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About Corsicana Daily Sun Archive

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