The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 15, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 5, 1962 Page: 3 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Paducah Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Bicentennial City County Library.
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THE PADUCAH POST, PADUCAH, TEXAS, THURSDAY, JULY 5. 1962
1,
frame. Dale Bradford
Dodgers 17, Giants 2
The Dodgers went on a hit
d run spree Thursday to drop
2 league-leading Giants 17-2
It’s the Law
in
Texas
WATER ATTRACTS CHILDREN
Owning a swimming pool is
becoming rather common in
Texas and it places some legal
duties on the owner. Your main
duty hinges on the “doctrine of
attractive nuisance” under which
you become legally responsible
to young children who trespass
on your land.
As a rule you owe no duty
to trespassers. They must take
your property as they find it:
if dangerous, that is their tough
luck. Not so for children who
wander on your land. The at-
tractive nuisance doctrine says
that if you have some man-
made things on your land which
entice youngsters you have a
legal duty to make your land
sate for them.
A high tension line, an old
mineshaft, a railroad turntable,
a pool of clear acid may be
irresistible to children. It they
are likely to be attracted and
unable to grasp the dangers,
you have an “attractive nuis-
ance,” and you must make your
premises safe.
Recently a court held that a
swimming pool may be an at-
tractive nuisance. In this case
a toddler drowned in Jones’
pool. Jones and the boy’s par-
ents lived across the street from
each other. About 30 feet from
the street, the pool was fenced
but with openings through
which children could enter. On
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weekends the Jones were not
home, only the Jones’ children.
Animals often played near the
pool. |
The pool and the animals
could attract a youngster; he
could not grasp the water’s
danger. The Joneses could have
had a locked gate. A jury prop-
erly held Jones responsible for
the drowning.
How young is the child? Can
he appreciate the dangers? How
easy is it for the owner to make
the place safe for children
There are times when an old-
er child should appreciate dan-
gers. An older child playing on
a scaffold should appreciate the
dangers of height. In another
case a twelve year old boy
tried to jump on a train whiph
was moving along a public
street. When he fell he could
not get damages for his injury,
He should have seen his dan-
ger. Besides how could one put
up a barrier along a public
street which could keep out 12
year old boys.
A land owner may have other
duties to trespassers. He can-
not set a “trap” on his land,
create hazards on his land on
purpose; he cannot put a pit on
his land where people frequent-
ly trespass, put in spring guns,
or other traps to harm trespass-
ers.
Sometimes a condition on
your land may be a trap to
children but not one for adults.
The adult may grasp the danger
of slippery algae growing in a
partially drained pool, but not
a child. But even with a trap
on your land the attractive
nuisance doctrine will not ap-
ply without some allurement or
enticement to bring children to
trespass on your land. Such at-
tractions are, in effect, an im-
plied invitation to enter. Check
your place for such attractions,
and in any event consider mea-
sures, such as insurance, to
cover harm that may come from
things on your land. And above
all, keep your place safe. For
all the money may not undo the
harm.
Classified Ads Get Results!
Let Your Grocerman
Be Your Milkman
and
the league-leai
which was called at the end
of four and a half innings on
the 10-run rule. The Dodgers
scored in every inning with hits
and Red Miller securing a triple.
Catcher Tommy Brown belted a
home run into left field in the
second frame for the Giants. In
the fifth, Jerry Ellis singled and
later scored on George Reep’s
single to right.
Yankees 25, Indians 15
The Yankees remained un-
beaten Thursday by shellacking
the Indians 25-i5. They led all
the way with Jim Howeth clout-
ing a home run in the second.
Ben Blount, Lynn Staggs and
Ronnie Fulton got home runs
for the Indians.
White Sox 9, Red Sox 7
A first inning lead of 6-2 was
good for a White Sox victory
Friday night as they went on
to beat the Red Sox 9-7. Bobby
Biddy gave up a home run to
Red Sox Jimmy Taylor in the
fourth inning, then gave up two
walks and struck out three bat-
ters to retire the side. For the
White Sox, Stan Piper, Kyle
Richards and Rayland Hawk col-
lected doubles.
Cardinals 21, Braves 11
Going into an extra inning,
the Cards and Braves were tied
at 10-10, but in the eighth frame
the Cardinals made home runs
plentiful and added 11 runs to
down the Braves 21-11. The
Braves knotted the score in their
half of the seventh, but in the
top of the eighth Danny Wall-
ing hit two homers, Bill Rose
got his second four-bagger of
the game and James Fulton
took a round trip. Phil Richards
blasted a homer in the first
* * •i1
STANDINGS
Major League
S§
W. A. Smithee
Distributor
Billy Mac Teel
Route Salesman
was the
leading hitter for the Braves,
sending out a single, double
and triple in three trips.
Cardinals 19, Giants 1
The Cardinals took the lead
in the Major League Monday
night by whalloping the Giants
19-1. The big hitters of the
Cards slapped 11 hits, including
two home runs by Danny Wall-
ings, and a four-bagger by Bill
Rose. Randy Davis tripled and
doubled. The Giants got their
lone run in the second inning
when Hollis Crumpler tripled,
then scored on a wild pitch.
Indians 20, Red Sox 10
The Indians used a big third
inning to trip the Red Sox 20-10
Monday night. They held a 4-0
lead at the end of the first
frame, then fell behind the Red
Sox 4-6 in the second. The Red
Sox scored four more in the
third, but in the bottom half
the Indians went wild to score
16 runs before the game was
called. Hal Ryan and Lynn
Staggs homered for the Indians.
Dual Grading System for Beef Cattle
Started July 1 on Trial Basis
The dual grading system issible to set up a dual grading
a new concept in beef grading
and became available on a trial
basis July 1, 1962. It represents
a major step toward a more ac-
curate and precise identification
of the factors relating to value
in beef, points out Ed Uvacek,
livestock marketing specialist
for the Texas Agricultural Ex-
tension Service.
U. S. Department of Agricul-
ture scientists have learned,
through studies, that differences
in yield or cutability or beef
carcasses can be quite accurate-
ly predicted by using only four
physical indicators: namely,
thickness of fat over the rib
eye, size' of rib eye muscle, a-
mount of kidney and pelvic
fat and carcass weight.
The studies indicated, con-
tinues Uvacek, that it was pos-
system which would identify
both the quality grade and the
yield or cutability grade.
Principles involved in dual
grading have been tested ex-
perimentally by several state
experiment stations as well as
the USDA, explains the special-
ist. The Texas Agricultural Ex-
periment Station has published
data showing rather conclusive-
ly the positive effect of superior
musceling and the negative ef-
fect of increasing fatness on the
percent of saleable retail cuts
from beef carcasses.
Starting July 1, Federal meat
graders in Texas were equipped
to offer the new dual grading
system, says Uvacek. It will be
available for one year on a trial
basis to qualified firms wishing
I to use
The present system will also
continue to be offered.
USDA meat graders are low
cated at , Brownsville, Corpus
Christi, Houston, San Antonio;
El Paso, Amarillo, Lubbock, and
Dallas.
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to thank each and
every one for their acts of kind-
ness and words of sympathy at
the loss of our brothers, Emmitt
Blair and A. S. Garrison.
We especially thank those
who sent food, flowers and
cards. May God bless you alL
Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Garrison
15p
Vacuum Your Dog
When your dog comes in
from the field his coat is apt to
be a mess of leaves and trash.
Don’t bother to comb these
out. Run your vacuum cleaner
over him a time or two and
once
W
L
Pet.
GB
Cardinals
4
3
.571
—
Giants
3
3
.500
%
Dodgers
3
3
.500
y2
Braves 2 3
Minor League
.400
i
W
L
Pet.
GB
Yankees
6
0
1.000
—
White Sox
2
3
.400
3%
Indians
2
4
.333
4
Red Sox
2
5
.185
4y2
SCHEDULE
Thursday, July 5
6:30—White Sox vs. Yankees
8:30—Braves vs. Dodgers
Friday, July 6
6:30—Braves vs. Giants
8:30—White Sox vs. Indians
Monday, July 9
6:30—Yankees vs. Red Sox
8:30—Dodgers vs. Cardinals
Tuesday, July 10
6:30—Giants vs. Braves
8:30—Indians vs. White Sox
Thursday, July 12
6:30—Indians vs. Yankees
8:30—Giants vs. Dodgers
Friday, July 13
6:30—Cardinals vs. Braves
8:30—Red Sox vs. White Sox
YOUR DOCTOR AND YOU
Who is YOUR Family Doctor?
v
Family Doctor or Specialist, the important thing—
to him and to YOU — is that he is Your Doctor.
He attended medical school for four years after his regular college education.
He did graduate work for one to six years after medical school.
He trades with the local merchants, belongs to and supports local organizations and
charities. His children attend school with yours, and play in your back yard.
He gives a large share of his time and skill without pay; but like you, he does not ask
to be excused from his just share of taxes.
Even as you are, he’s likely to be a member of a political party (or else a proud
independent), of a church, a lodge, a service club, and organizations of his fellow
workers. His associations are his County and State Medical Societies and the
American Medical Association, t
He does not ask the Government to increase his income or reduce his obligations as a
citizen. He asks only to stand on his own merit, to offer his services to You and
Your Family in a free, competitive market.
Isn’t it better - for YOU, too - that way?
For further general information on health care, or perhaps
a speaker for the next meeting of your club or organization,
CALL YOUR FAMILY PHYSICIAN
Hardeman, Foard, Cottle, Motley & Dickens
County Medical Society
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Tooley, Kenneth. The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 15, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 5, 1962, newspaper, July 5, 1962; Paducah, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1018275/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 13, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Bicentennial City County Library.