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Lubbock Avalanche-Journal from Lubbock, Texas • Page 4

Location:
Lubbock, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

lubbotk, (TtxJ. TAFT BACKER ISSUESlTATEMENT Dirksen Says Dewey Will Not Be Secretary Of State If GOP Wins LIMA, Ohio, Sept. 20 Everett M. Dickson (R-I1L). has discounted the possibility that New York Gov.

Thomas E. Dewey might become Secretary of State if the Republicans win the Presidential election. The Illinois senator said he was "quite certain there were definite assurances on this point" at the hreakfast meeting he arranged last Friday between GOP presidential candidate General Eisenhower and Sen. Robert A. Taft.

Barker Dirksen said: "It was pretty definite that Dewey will not leave New i'ork state." He declined to give a more positive statement. The Illinois senator, who set up the agenda for the Taft-Ike hreak- fast parley, was one of Tail's main backers for the presidential nomination at the GOP convention. He iolcl the convention Dewey twice previously led the party to defeat in presidential races. Dirksen was in Lima for a nnon MORNING COUGHS ir you cough, whesM, can brefttne or well because ot lUiclts of Cronchlftl Asthma or non-cardiac Chronic Bronchitis, get MENDACO trom your druc- Klst today. This Ereat medicine usually works wondrous last to help loosen remove thick, strangling phlegm.

Thus curbs coushJnff and promotes freer breftthlnc and reittul sleep. Money hack: guarantee. luncheon address, The Illinois senator said the Taft- jlke alliance added "tremendous" strength to the Republican cam! paign. Asked what effect Dewey's back- I ing of Ike might have on the elec- jtion outcome, Dirksen said it was difficult to determine since the value of Dewey backing was largely localized to the Eastern states. Andrews Oil Field Worker Gets i 15-Year Sentence In Slaying ANDREWS, Sept.

20 A 109th District Court jury here Friday returned a verdict of "mur- 1 der with malice" in the James Marcus Dailey trial and sentence was assessed at 35 years in the state penitentiary. Judge G. C. Olsen presided. The jury was out about 15 hours.

Dailey, 29-year-old Andrews oil field worker, was convicted in connection with the fatal shooting June 21 ot Eathei Adams, 25, another Andrews oil field workman. Adams was slain hy a shotgun blast in front of Dailcy's home. Jurors were C. D. Smith, B.

F. John Oliver, W. L. Pierce, S. J.

Hinklc, J. A. Ulmer, J. P. Roach, Sam Dyess.

L. H. St. Clair. Clifford Long, H.

G. Lindsey and J. J. Stewart. PROGRESS IN FIELD PREDICTED Extensive Soviet Research On Synthetic Fuels Is Indicated By W.

JOYNES MACFARLAN company says it has established WASHINGTON, Sept. 20 IJP) vitally needed chemicals can Scraps of information out of Russia produced on an economic basis have convinced the top U. S. gov- coa hydrogenation. Then, too, ernment synthetic fuels man that the Bureau of Mines says that gas- the Soviet is working hard to ij nei along with such chemicals, IKIIIS.

BRIMS come one shortage it would have to whip if it were planning an all- can be produced at a cost of from 11 to 17 cents a gallon for the gasoline compared with a cost of about 12 cents a gallon for gaso- The chest X-ray survey at Texas Tech on Monday and Tuesday, with State Department of Health technicians on hand- to make the free precautionary pictures. On Friday, 588 persons visited the center in the east lobby the Administration Building. tor have an X-ray picture made. center will be open from a. till 5:30 p.

each day. Gene Holeman, 17, Lubobck io returned home from West. Texas Hospkal Saturday receiving treatment for injuries" fered in a collision in vicinity (ft 1 16th St. and College Ave, Friday. A night.

John Wesley Chism, 17, 22nd had received 0 out war a shortage of liquid fuels. Russia, says Dr. W. C. Schroe- line from crude oil.

der. assistant director of the Bu- i There is no reason to think, Dr. reau of Mines, undoubtedly has Schroeder said, that the German but did not remain overnight in the more natural and. synthetic liquid scientists who pioneered the pro-i hospital. fuels at its disposal than Germany duction of aviation gasoline from frs jgjp St ever had and is paying increased; coal have not made advances so Sa ay Io po)ice he j.

Buick sedan, license 854S. was stolen from her home coal have not made advances attention to synthetics. that Russia could produce it at a There has been speculation that; cost somewhat comparable to that i attained here. CHIROPRACTORS GET joint meeting of the West Texas and Panhandle Districts of the Texas Chiropractic Society were given a lesson in history by Dr. Doyle D.

Jackson, left, professor of education at Texas Tech, Saturday in the Plainsman Hotel at the meeting's opening banquet. Dr. Jackson warned the members of the danger from government socialists "or economic planners as they call then'selves Society members pictured here are, left to right, Dr. Robert Cieere, San Antonio, West Texas District president: Dr. William Blair, Lubbock, Panhandle District president; and Dr, Gil Kr.utson, Amarillo, state president.

(Staff Photo.) iChiropractors Hold Join! Meeting Here jTech Judging Teams ter Busy Weak Of Contests Monday lack of such fuels, especially aviation gasoline, is one thing that deters Russia from starting a major, war. Data Is Obtained Dr. Schroeder said in an inter, view that although little official in- I formation is available some credible data has been obtained from various sources. One such source, he said, has. been Germans in the coal hydro- nomic burden on a nation.

Some of these I Saturday "If the cost of producing the avi-; wcre ation gasoline for Germany in i World War was uneconomic, and the nation was forced to that method of supply purely as a wartime necessity." he said, "the situation has changed, and now (here would be no reason why the cost of turning coal into gasoline should be such an extremely heavy eco- rnorning. No CAREERS' WITH FUTURES Streamlined couriei prepare qulefcfr for ulartinjr of early security. or nlrht. DRAUGHON'S BUSINESS COLLEGE Olal other told a raeetuVg i praetors at the Plainsman Hotel handle Saturday night. It is this system which provides I the people with the incentive to HEART Heart trouble, in its many forms, can be corrected, in many cases, Chiropractic.

Pressure idue to misaligned vertebrae) on the nerves supplying this mighty pump of the body prevents it from getting enough power from the brain to do lts work Weakness follows and dis- 5e 1S the Ult CHIROPRACTIC scientifically relieves this nerve pressure and the heart regains strength without a change of 'investigated" better way to health. We invite your investigation. Complete Spinal EVERYTHING POSSIBLE." Washed! AND Case Historv No IOCS: Lady; Age 50; Came to the Stephens Chiropractic dime with the following History and Symptoms: Had severe heart trouble with aching and paining in the left chest' region and extending down into the left arm. Her thyroid gland was enlarged and she haa FIND CAUSE X-Rav pictures were made of her spine which has shown that the vertebrae were misaligned in such a way as to produce pressure on nerves leading to her affected region of the oody. She took a course" of chiropractic adjustments and now she claims that her life has been saved from a Hfetime of suffering STAT STICAL RECORD HEART TROUBLE 171 cases reported, 135 completely recovered or decidedly improved.

Percentage of rrrovpry, 79.4C£. Districts of the Texas chj actic Socicfy that private enterprise was being threatened hy Washington bunglers and socialists. The major portion of the chiropractors meeting will be held today at the Plainsman. Starting at 10 a. m.

the members of the two districts will hear four major speakers and take care of society business. Speakers will be Dr. Claud Kiliingsworth, Borger, talking on "The Health Sciences Belong to the People, Not the Dr. Robert Cloere, San Antonio, "Chiropractic's Contribution to Our Nation's Dr. Elton Berkman.

Colorado City, "Public and Dr. Brooke Stephens, Lubbock, "Recent Recognition of Chiropractic by Major Insurance. Companies." Dr. Gil Knulson. Amarillo, is president of the state society; Dr.

William G. Blair, Lubbock, of the Panhandle District; and Dr. Cieere, of the West Texas District, Another speaker scheduled for Saturday night was Preston Johnston, national president of the American Business Club, who was unable to attend the banquet due to illness. Mrs. E.

Gollehon I Succumbs At Post POST, Sept. 20 Georgia Elizabeth Gollehon, in poor health for many months, died at her home here today, just one day 'before her84th birthday. A native Georgian', she had lived in Post and Garza County for 37 years. Her husband, I. L.

Gollehon, died more than two decades ago. i Funeral services will be conducted here at 3 p.m. Sunday at the First Baptist Church, with the pas- i tor, the Rev. T. L.

Denton, offi: dating. The Rev. J. E. Stephens, retired Methodist minister, will assist i Burial, under the direction of the Hudman Funeral Home, will be in Terrace Cemetery here.

Cecil Cummings, Ike Brown, Ray Smith, Berchard and Sim Wilson and Oscar Bowen will be the pallbearers, i Mrs. Gollehon leaves two daugh- ters, Mrs. Pearl Howard of Pleas- i anton and Miss Vera Gollehon of Agriculture judging teams of Texas Tech face a busy week of nationwide competition starting Monday. The dairy products judging team is scheduled to open the week Monday in the Southern Dairy Products Judging Contest at Nashville, Tenn. To Compete At Memphis On Wednesday, Sept.

24. the Tech Dairy cattle judging squad competes in the Southern Dairy Cattle Judging event being held in Memphis, Tenn. The products judging team switches to the Collegiate Students' Dairy Products Show in Chicago on Thursday, Sept. 25, and the cattle judging team lands at the National Intercollegiate Dairy Cattle Judging Contest at Waterloo, Iowa, on Monday, Sept. 29.

Koy Neeley is coach of the dairy cattle judging team, which includes Spencer Norwood. Burleson; Charles Browning, Burleson; Roy Miller, Friona; and Carl Menzies, Menard, The dairy products squad is coached by Dr, J. ,1 Willing, ham, head of the department of dairy manufacturing at Tech. It includes Dudlay Price, El Paso; Raymond Vanderpool, Dallas; Julian Hunsucker, Hedley; and Eaton Rigsby, Evant. genation industry.

have heard from former co-workers who were taken to Russia after, the war and now are producing liquid fuels from coal there. It is known too that Russian orders for equipment for coal hydrogenation plants have been received in Berlin and other German Cities. American experts who visited Germany after World War estimate that 90 per cent of the aviation gasoline "supply for the German Luftwaffe when it was the largest Air Force the world had known came from coal through the hydrogenation process. When the war ended Russia got several synthetic fuel plants and thousands of scientists and workers. Experts Work For U.

S. The United States brought sev- eral hundred German scientists to this country after the war, includ- I ing a dozen or so experts on coal hydrogenation. "At least one U. S. chemical Free Book on Arthritis And Rheumatism HOW TO AVOID CRIPPLING DEFORMITIES An amazing newly enlarged 44- page book entitled "Rheumatism" will be sent free to anyone who will write for it.

It reveals why drugs and medicines give only temporary relief and fail to remove the causes of the trouble; explains a specialized non-surgical, non-medical treat- which has proven successful Post; two sons, Robert Gollehon of for the past 33 years. Littlefield and Elmer Gollehon of I You incur no obligation in send- Colorado Springs, two sis-1 mg for this instructive book. It ters, Mrs. Tom Capers of may be the means of saving you Worth and Mrs. Nora Collie of I years untold misery.

Write to- Rialto, a brother, F.Jday to The Ball Clinic, Dept. 2311, Clement, Gorman; four grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. Excelsior Springs, Missouri. Adv. 4-PIEOE SOUTHERN IVY MIXING BOWL SET FOUR SIZES, HANDY FOR ALL UTILITY WORK, DECORATED IN SOUTHERN IVY.

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About Lubbock Avalanche-Journal Archive

Pages Available:
420,456
Years Available:
1927-1977