The Levelland Daily Sun News (Levelland, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 28, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 9, 1957 Page: 6 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 25 x 21 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
4—
V
ffe-
*AGt SIX
THE LEVELLAND DAILY SUN NEWS, LevglUnd, Taxaa, Wednesday, Octobar 9, 1957
Sugor Bowl Game of 1939 Recalled
National ChampionT
Greatest Challenge After Season
f^P **|
By BOB BOOBING
The Aeoociattw] Fret**
Occasionally, a national football
champion receives its sternest
challenge in a postseason trial of
the right to rule the gridiron. Such
was the case with the mighty
Texas Christian Horned Frogs of
1938.
Not once during the regular
schedule did TCU trail an oppo-
nent as quarterback Davey
O'Brien, the amazing 150 pound
Heisman Trophy winner and soph-
omore fullback Connie Sparks
struck crippling blows from be-
hind a massive line.
Going into the Jan. 2, 1939, Sug-
ar Bowl game against eastern
champion Carnegie Tech the
Frogs were top heavy favorites.
All America center, linebacker
and defensive signal-called Ki Al-
drich had been declared ready de-
spite an eye ulcer.
However, TCU Coach Leo
"Dutch" Meyer sounded a warn-
ing before the gajne: "Any team
that could score 20 points on Pitts-
burgh is bound to have some-
thing."
As 50,000 fans watched, the fa-
vorites marched to a seednd pe-
riod score on the passing of
O’Brien and rushes of Sparks who
plunged the final yard. O’Brien
missed the conversion attemptr
Tech had held for downs on its 12
and 23 in the first quarter but it
appeared the Skibos were weak-
ening.
A spectacular pass play changed
all that.
From midfield, Pete Moroz
floated a long pass to George
Muba near the goal lipe and he
Stepped across for a Carnegie
touchdown 50 seconds before the
half. Muha converted and Tech
led 7-6.
On the play preceding the touch-
dowm maneuver, Aldrich had in
tercepted a pass and returned it
40 yards but TCU was detected
offside.
! In a classic demonstration of
{championship mettle, TCU
stormed 80 yards on five plays fol-
lowing the second half kickoff for
the winning points.
Carnegie was deployed in expec-
tation of a long pass when O'Brien
fired a rifle shot over the line to
Durward Horner from Tech's 40
to the 26-
The tall end simply outraced the
defenders the rest of the way.
Flu Causes Change
In Card Main Event
BEAUMONT m — Floyd East.
136, of Lake Charles, La., and
Otho Sligar, 137, of Houston will
replace Paul .Jorgensen and Jun-
ior Flores, both of Port Arthur,
in the main event Monday.
Jorgensen, Texas featherweight
champion, was to. dqfend his title
but the bout whs postponed until
Oct. 28 because Flores came down
with the flu.
San Angelo to Clash
With Ranger College
Rv THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
San Angelo makes its start in
championship play in the Pioneer
Conference this week, clashing
with Ranger at San Angelo Satur-
day
Undefeated, untied Arlington
State, boasting a 4-0 record, plays
Paris at Paris Saturday while
Tarleton State tries for its first
victory in a melee with the Hardin-
Simmons B team at Stephenville
Thursday'. '
Cameron clashes with Comptoh,
Calif, at Lawton Friday.
OKLAHOMA CITY tit-Safety
Commissioner* Jim Lookabaugh
declared the Highway Patrol does
not intend to permit "any undue
speed or wild driving" by Okla-
homa football fans going to Dallas
for the Texas game this weekend.
O’Brien, who completed 17 of 28
aerials for 228 yards that day, had
started the drive with a 35-yard
toss which nestled in the arms of
halfback Earl Clark.
P'Brien hauled down touchdown-
bound Merlyn Condit on the TCU
27 in the third period and kicked
a field goal in the fourth for the
final 15-7 margin. But the earlier
swift surge of power alraady had
determined the outcome.
Confident Anticommunists Expect
Take Over San Marino Government
By RICHARD EHRMAN
SAN MARINO Hi - Confident
anti-Communists today expected
to take over undisputed rule of
San Marino by nightfall, ending a
12-year Communist rule of this
tiny mountain republic.
Anti-Communists who set up a
provisional “White" government
on Oct. 1 gave the Reds until
Second String
QB is Selected
As Back of Week
Minnesota's *Dick Larson, a sec-
ond string quarterback who has
been overshadowed by talented
Bobby Cox for two years, today
was named Back of the Week by
the Associated Press for his spec-
tacular feafe in leading the un-
beaten Gophers to victory over
Purdue.
The 21-year old 5-11, 175-pound
senior stepped into the breach
when the inspired, underdog Boil-
ermakers were giving Cox and the
Gophers fits. Cox had been
shackled on the ground and in the
stir.
Larson ran back a punt 72 yards
for one touchdown, passed 16
yards to Bill Chorske for another,
and ran five yards for the third
and winning touchdown in the last
quarter, for a 21-17 victory. He
set up the final TD with ,a 52-yard
pass play t© Chorske._______
He was "simply sensational'”
said Minnesota coach Murray
Warmath.
There were plenty of other con-
tenders for the honor in the week-
ly AP poll.
High on the list were Billy Can-
non, Louisiana State sophomore;
King Hill, Rice quarterback; Alex
Hawkins. South Carolina halfback;
Charlie Sidwell, William and Mary
halfback; Don Sutherin, Ohio State
halfback; Riiy Nitschke and Tom
Haller, Illinois; Dave Bourland.
Army and Jim Bakhtiar, Virginia.
Debris of Comet
Threatens'Orb'
- Hem* J P««' ~
WALLACE
ATRE
TODAY
THURSDAY
KCCMT HU «■ LMttSTBt »■
Bachelor
Rtu-ty Su
I*l*oi*d ifcrv Unl*«d
-PLUS-
.n**1 SEE IT NOW ON HIM
ROBINSON
.BASILIO
SUGAR RAY I
VS
CARMIN
OFFICIAL WOilB S MtOOlEWtlCNT
CMAMftOHSHir FICIIT FILMS «- vmttir unjn
SPADE
TODAY
LAST TIMES
LONDON UP—The Soviet earth
satellite may be smashed out of
existence tonight by debris from
a comet, a leading British astrono-
mer said today.
The danger to the earth’s first
man-mSde moon lay in the path
of the comet Giacobini-Zinner.
The earth crosses the path of
this comet about 10 o’clock (5 p.m.
EST) tonight.
Debris scattered by the comet
on its journey through space could
hit the satellite, Prof. A. C. Lovell
said.
This debris could deflect the sat-
tellite from its course, damage it
or wreck it entirely, he added.
He urged all observers of the
artificial moon to watch it closely
this evening. Its radio signals
might tell something of the ef-
fects of such a cosmic collision.
Lovell is head of the Jodrell
Bank Radio Astronomy Station,
the world’s most important center
of its kind.
2 Divorces Granted
Two divorces were granted in
72nd District Court by Jpdge Vic-
tor H. Lindsey.
Ellen Martelia Mayfield was
granted a divorce from J. M
Mayfield Jr., while Vivian Capps
won a decree in her suit against
I. R. Capps.
Death is Accidental
THREE RIVERS. Tex. "P A
coroner’s verdict of accidental
.death was entered after .cafe own-
*r Ray Bonar, 58 was found dead
if a gunshot wound at his home
/esterday. Officers said he appar
rntly had been cleaning a gun.
Gas Burns are Fatal
HEBBRONVILLE, Tex <P
Manuel Hinojosa. 48, died last
light of burns received in an ex
olosion Sept. 28 Pedro Hinojosa
lied last Wednesday. Both werr
njured when gas exploded at a
;arage.
DALLAS iP William Anderson
4. died yesterday of injuries suf
ered the night before when he
•vas struck by a car. , ,
G p.m. to answer an ultimatum
demanding "complete surrender.”
The leader of the rival Commu-
nist regime,‘ Domenico Morganti,
indicated last night that his side
was ready to give in.
"Really, we have no choice be-
cause we have been under siege
by an enormous fQrce of foreign
troops,” Morganti told a news
conference.
Morganti referred to Italian po-
lice who have blockaded the 38-
square-mile republic of 13,000 per-
sons entirely surrounded by Ital-
ian territory. Italy and the United
States have recognized the anti-
Communist government.
Federico Bigi, unofficial premi-
er of the White government,, sent
the ultimatum. He would not say
what would happen if the Reds
rejected it.
Morganti said peace talks were
being held and only a few final
details had to be worked out with
the neutral peacemaker, San
Marino Tax Collector Oliviero
Cappelli. •
San Marino became the only
Communist-ruled country outside
the Soviet *bloc shortly after World
War II. Because of defections, the
Reds lost their legislative major-
ity last month to the Christian
Democrats.
Tempe Leads BC
In All Statistics
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Arizona State of Tempe has
spreadeagled the Border Confer-
ence. The Sun Devils lehd in every
statistical department, both team
and individual.
Leon Burton has taken the lead
in rushing with 365 yards, in total
offense with the same figtfre and
in scoring with 24 points.
Charley Sanders of Wesf Texas
is second in rushing with 328 yards
and also irv total offense.
John Hangartner pf Arizona
Statejpps in passing with 21 com-
pletions in 32 attempts for 367
yards. Ken Ford of Hardin-Sim-
mons is secopd with 19 of 35 for
250 yards.
■ Mulgado leads in pass-receiving
with nine catches for 196 yards
and in punting with an average
of 41.2 yards on nine boots.
Arizona State leads in total of-
fense with 431 yards per game and
in total defense, giving up only'
147.
Christian Women's
Fellowship Meets
Mrs. Mary Hope Herrington was
hostess to the Christian Women's
Fellowship meeting at 7:30 p.m.,
■j Monday night, Oct, 7.
Christian Church.
Mrs. A. B. Williams presided ov-|’LU *u,m^ 0,1
er the business meeting prior to an- ln" (
Antoinette Biebini, the molt’
beautiful and versatile per-
former with Ringling Bros. Cir-
cus, scheduled for the Lubbock
Coliseum, Nqv. 11-13.
Ringling Circus
Coliseum Show
Set for Nov. 11-13
i
LUBBOCK (Spit — Mail Orders
are now being accepted at the Lub-
bock Municipal Coliseum for Ring-
ling Bros. & Barnum and Bailey
Circus performances on November
11. 12 and 13. "The Greatest Show-
on Earth" will play five perform-
ances, showing on November 11
and 12 at 3:30 and 8:00 p.m. and
on November 13 at 4 p.m.
The big show no longer plays
under tents, but instead in major
large arenas and outdoor grand-
stands. This will be the first time
that a circus has played the gi-
gantic 7,509 seat Coliseum, and it
promises to be a real treat for
South Plains audiences. In place of
sawdust the huge new show will
play on a foam rubber surface,
but/the entertainment is very much
the same us in tents. The herds
of elephants will be there, all the
wonderful .clowns will be inter-
mingling with the crowds. The aer-
ial acts will still be swining from
unbelievable heights and the spec-
tacular "Grand March” will still
open the world's greatest- enter-
tainment Value.
There” are four marvelous cos-
tumed spectacular production num-
bers this year, and they are "The
Coronation of Mother Goose,”
"Cherry Blossom Time." “Sarativ
ga Racing Ball of 1913',’ and "Car-
nival in Venezuela." In all there
are twenty-five displays and acts.
The show to be seen in Lubbock
is the same one that earlier this
year played New' York’s Madison
Square Garden. In New York the
top price was $6.50, but the Coli-
seum has announced that the top
price for Lubbock will be $3.60.
Other prices are $3.00. $2.40 and
$1 80. Children will bo admitted at
half price to any section- at AFTER
NOON SHOWS ONLY. Night prices
are the same for aduits and child-
I ren.
Mail orders are filled in the or-
i dor they are received at the I.ub-
[ bock Coliseum, care of City Hall
Lubbock, Texas
Thunderstorms
Boom Over State
Again Today
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Thunderstorms boomed ovet
parts pf Texas again Wednesday
as a cold front lay along a line
through Lufkin, Junction and Del
Rio.
Lightning knifed into a truckload
of 39 bracet-os Tuesday night a!
Lainesa and killed Pricilianc
Mata, 37, a Mexican national.
Another bracero was burned on
the hand.
Skies were mostly cloudy north
of the front with temperatures
ranging in the 50s and 60s early
Wednesday. South of the front it
was partly cloudy with readings
near 70 degrees.
Scattered showers and a few
thunderstorms W'ere reported near
Corpus Christi and west of San
Antonio from the Junction area to
near Cotulla.
Light drizzle fell over much of
the Panhandle and South Plains
and along the Red River. Light
rain was reported at Texarkana,
Tyier and Longview.
A .17 inch rain at Lamesa
stopped the farm workers from
picking cotton and the braceros
were on their way to town from
the N. B. Leatherwood farm w'hen
the lightning hit.
Rainfall in the 24 hours ending
at 6:30 pm. Tuesday included
Wichita Falls 1.08 inches, Mineral
Wells .80, Fort Worth .22, Dallas
and Van Horn .12, Dalhart .09,
Sherman .04 and Waco _03.
Highs Tuesday ranged from 60
at Dalhart to 95 at Presidio.
Postwar Institution in Tokyo
at the First! L-l|',rMJCK- 1 exas. Patrons sending
j orders should enclose a self-addres-
sed stamped envelope or 25c for
a program presented on missions.
Program topics were very capa-
bly given by Mrs. Tom Spencer
and Mrs. Courtney.
Mrs. Herrington served refresh-
ments at the conclusion of the
meeting to Mmes. Mona Schwab.
Ward Gregg, Mary Roberts, Fay
Stubblefield. Spencer, Maude Heath
Courtney, Williams, Gladys Bow-
man, and Ed Hiersche.
WP\
mi
/ ■
i§!tl
/> i
•4— ESj
MILESTONE- Bernard
M Baruch, the nation's elder
statesman, smiles as he cele-
brates his 87lh birthday anni-
versary at a summer cottage
in Old Westbury, New York.
f
Ringling Bros. Circus is one e-
vent that South Plains people will
not want to miss. Seeing the
"Greatest Show on Earth" in
doors promises to be a marvelous
new experience.
Boxing Event Won
By 90-pound Woman
SAN ANTONIO CTi Game little
Barbara Buttrick of Yorkshire,
England, who, at 90 pounds, gave
away 2.3 to Phylis Kuglern, 113'2.
of South Bend, Irvd , outpointed her
heavier opponent in six rounds
last night.
There were no knockdowns.
Santiago Gutierrez, 163, of San
Antonio, knockodyout Elioy Tellez.
157'o, of San Antonio in the eighth
routxi of the 10-round main event
Gas Service Restored
RAYMONDVILEE. Tex. i.ft
Service to natural gas users was
restored today after repairs to a
broken transmission line. The four
inch line of the Rio Grande Valle,}
- This -Oy.- w a s -hsrc^'rrxT14 sf l)r T3V-
ford yesterday by a piece of farm
equipment.
Release Falcon Water
MC ALLEN, Tex. i.p Water re
'oases from Falcon Rcservoii
were increased by Mexico yester-
day from 2 400 to 2.825 cubic fee
a second. The United States low
'•red releases from 2,200 to 2.00
"ubir feet. Storage stood at 1,728,
100 acre-feet.
Bold patterns ami bright color-
listinguish the work of womer
weaver®, knitters and embroider
ers in Norway.
Spy Conviction
Nets Soble Term
Of Seven Years
NEW YORK Ofl—Jack Soble, a
Lithuanian r e f u g e e -who took
shelter in America in W’orld War
II and then headed a Soviet spy-
ling here [or., a decade, today
faced seven years imprisonment
for his crime.
Soble. 54. was sentenced yester-
day by Federal Judge Richard H.
Levet. His wife Myra, 53, and 64-
year-old Jacob Albam, co-conspir-
ators-who had also pleaded guilty
to spy conspiracy charges, were
resentenced yesterday. Mrs. Soble
was given four years and Albam
five.
Each of the three could have
been sentenced to 10 years.. But
Levet said yesterday: "There is,
I believe, strong indication of re-
morse on the part of these de-
fendants in varying degrees. . .”
After his arrest last Jan. 26,
Soble underwent an apparently
complete change of heart. Saying
j he deeply regretted betraying his
adopted country, he helped fed-
j erai authorities unravel the thread
I of his network of espionage con-
j tacts.
The government said Soble’s co-
operation helped obtain spying in-
dictments against several others,
including Alfred K. Stern and
Martha Dodd Stern, daughter of
a former American ambassador
to Germany. The Sterns are now-
believed behind the Iron Curtain.
Mrs. Soble and Albam also were
credited with helping the govern-
ment uncover further espionage
information.
Under their original indictment,
all could have been sentenced to
death.
The Sobles, sitting beside their
lawyer, held'* hands as Levet
spoke.
VISIT PARENTS
Visiting in the home of their par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. George Stach,
are Mr. and Mrs. David Tinkle of
Pekin, 111. They plan to spend sev-
| eral days with her parents. Mrs.
Tinkle is the sister of Mrs. Gerry
Swain and Mrs. Douglas McSwane.
FALL LEAGUES
Now Being Formed
ENTER YOUR
TEAM NOW!
For Further Information
SEE
W. B. “Bill” GOATES
OR
JACK SISK
PLAINS BOWL
Brownfield Highway
Coffee Shops Offer Sex, Music, Art
TOKYCKff! — The music blares
raucously. Hip-swaying waitresses
!n split skirts and low cut gowns
shuffle by in time to the beat
Itudents, businessmen and pass
ersby crowd booths along the gar-
shly painted walls, relaxing over
:ups of pungent, dark brew.
They are enjoying one of the
uodern crazes of this traditional
and of tea — the coffee shop
Coffee has been drunk in Japan
or decades in tea rooms and milk
iars. But the 72,412 coffee shops,
low licensed in Japan — 6,632 of
hem In Tokyo — are largely a
Postwar institution.
They offer almost every con-
ceivable appeal to customers -
i a z z, classical music, fashion
shows, art and pretty 'girls.
These unique establishments are
i strange combination of the A-‘
nerican soda fountain, street cor-
ier, pool hall and record shop
■vhere Japanese gather to gossip,
aik business or meet a date. Their
idvent in Japan produced many
problems.
"Nude” coffee shops, with hos-
tesses dressed in translucent out-
er garments, have only recently
disappeared/from lusty Osaka and
Kyoto. Hostesses in, bathing suits
are also gone.
Women's civic groups charged
conditions in Tokyo’s 852 all
night shops were equally bad.
Last August they forced through
a new regulation barrCng persons
under 19 from such establishments
requiring adequate lighting, for-
bidding locked rooms and requir-
ing removal of major obstructions
to observation.
But still the sexy joints contin-
ue.'In Tokyo the "Albion" fea-
tures blaring, pounding, fi-fi jazz,
a circling chorus line of slinky,
suggestively dressed waitresses
and an excellent cup pf American-
style coffee.
The most common coffee shops
now feature good hi-fi music, aim-
ed for a particular taste. "L’Am-
bre" in downtown Tokyo lays out
full classical concerts for weeks
ahead, prints a program for its
patrons and offers every conceiv-
able type of coffee in an Old Eng-
lish atmosphere.
A recent, typical program in-
cluded records of Arturo Tosean-
ini leading the NBC Symphony Or-
chestra in Rossini’s Cinderella Ov-
erture, Beethoven Symphony No.
4 and Wagner's Siegfrid funeral
music.
Other coffee shops specialize in
L,atin music, display art objects
or present movies and several of-
fer patrons freedom to scribble on
blackboard walls.
Some even specialize in. ..noth-,
ing but coffee, and have develop-
ed it into a highly evolved cult
leaving the average Westerner in
slack - jawed amazement. Check
this advice by Tokyo expert, Ic-
hiro Sekiguehi:
"Know your coffee and pick
your blend. Weigh qach part ex-
actly. Mix. Weigh again. Place in
a filter (drip arrangement), add
near boiling water, slowly. . . .drop
by drop at first. . . .then more ra-
pidly.
"Weigh cream and sugar, too.
Sugar in first. Stir. Cream next.
Don't stir. "Sip. Don't gulp. I>et
the cream and coffee mix in your
mouth to get the full flavor. That's
the only way to get a good cup of
coffee.”
What you come out with is a
heady, potent brew that will crin-
kle the hair of the average A-
merican and send his stomach in-
to rumbling, gastronomic f 1 i p-
flops. But it's coffee that will give
you drive for many hours if you
can take it.
COFFEE AND: Japanese girls in split toreador pants
and low-cut tops serve patrons of the "Albion,” a Tokyo
coffee house that features hi-fi jazz, sexy waitresses and,
incidentally, a good cup of coffee. The cdffee shops are a
craze in postwar Japan.
HAL BOYLE SAYS:
Elsa Maxwell Satisfied with Life
Of 'Real Glamor' At Ripe Age of H
MCALLEN, Tex. i.T) — Gonzalo
Quintana of Mexico's diplomatic
service has come here to succeed
Rodolfo Bravo as assistant to
Mexican Consul Alvaro Domin-
quez. Bxaso was transferred to
San Antonio.
NEW YORK (.?> "Everybody is
frightened but me," said Miss
Elsa Maxwell, looking like a Ro-
man empress as^ she lay, propped
up by a pillow, in her bed In the
^Valdorf Towers.
"But nothing or nobody in this
world can scare me a little bit.
I've made out a will asking that
my ashes be scattered over the
Adriatic Sea, which I love.
"If I knew 1 were to die tomor-
row, I'd want my epitaph to be:
I die happy!' For I was born gay.
and .my life has been glorious,
transcendency magical, full of
glamor - and f mean real glamor.”
But a new kind of glamor has
entered the odd career of this ad-
venturous lady, who was born in
a Keokuk. Iowa, opera house dur-
ing a performance of "Mignon,”
and grew up to throw 2.000 soci-
ety parties around the world.
At 74 Elsa has become one of
the big surprise hits of the winter
celebrity season 1 among the
masses7 not The classes she usu-
ally hobnobs with. Her breezy wit
has made her a Tuesday night star
on "Tonight,” the NBC TV show.
Her book on how to throw a party
is condensed in the current issue
of McCall's. And Las
called her for a~TWO-w^©R engage-
ment—"Not to perform, just to
look at me."
While taking her afternoon bed
rest, the volatile buddy of the
Duchess of Windsor gave forth as
follows:
"I'm young and fresh at 74
roar with laughter. I think they're
all mad. But people are bored with
old routines, and whatever else I
am. I am not routine. Too many
of us arc conveyer-belted mental-
ly-
"Now at 74 they catch up with
me. It's because I'm alive. It
shows that to he hourself is all
that matters to say what you
think.
"If I wore cast away on a desert continuing
island, the ffvo people I'd like
most to have with me would be
Arthur Rubinstein and Maria Cal-
ias ll can't live without music'.
Noel Coward this conversion is
djvinoh Jack.Paar 'lie's so amus-
the darned island.
"The five people I'd hate most
to bo cast up on a desert island
with are Elvis Presley, King Far-
ouk, Arthur Godfrey, Liberace and
Jimmy Hof fa, that Teamsters of-
ficial. . . The first four bore me
(I think -Godfrey is the greatest
bore that ever lived). . .Arid as for
Hoffa, what good would a truck-
driver be on a desert island?”
Field Extender
Oil Recovered
On Drillstem
Canyon oil has been recovered
on drillstem test at Honolulu Oil
Corp.’s No. 26-A Ellwood Estate,
north offset to production in the
North Smyer-Canyon and Strawn
field of northeastern Hockley Coun-
ty.
Tool as open three hours to
evaluate the interval from 9,626-39
feet. No gas or fluid surfaced.
Test string was pulled to recover
Vegas has j.453 feet of free oil and 270 feet of
water and oil-cut mud. Shutin pres-
sure was 3,845 pounds after 30
minutes.
Core was cut from 9,639-49 feet
to yield 10 feet of very slightly oil-
stained dolomite. Drilling opera-
tions were resumed below that
I- poiotr
The one-location north steoout to
current field pay situates 660 feet
from north and 1,930 feet from
east lines of Section 32, Block A,
R. M. Thompson survey. It is six
miles north °f Smyer townsite.
Texas Crude No. 1 Sosebee, four
miles northwest of Ropesville,
drilling &915 feet in lime.
Sw ab Tests Continue
K&H Opr. Co. of Houston was
to test its prospective
Penn lime discovery five miles
south of Anton. The No. 1 J. R.
Williams et al.
From perforations at 9,952-62
foot, operator swabbed new oil at
the rate of six barrels per hour.
1
ingb and a great scientist.. Why j Treatment was With 10,000 gallons
would I want the scientist?. . .Why, acid-frac prior to sw'ab. Tests con-
to figurc^ojt a way to get me off 1 tinuod.
Streamline your business with
complete communications
//i ih V\
' * #
i •! 1 \
\
Here are 3 modern
telephone services
that can save you
time, trouble, money!
O INTER COMMUNICATIONS
PBX Switchboard service puts the busy executive in instant
touch with Ley peupledliroughout the plant, store or office.
e GROUP COMMUNICATIONS
Loud-speaking phone lets everyone hear, talk to
outside party. Operates without lifting receiver —
leaves hands free.
O AUTOMATIC ANSWERING
Electronic Secretary answers phone when you're out,
records messages, plays them back to you.
)
. Itl on* of our oxporioncod communications men analyro your
tolophono tot-up and too if any of th*i* modern service, can
help you. No obligation, just call our Sutinutt Office.
LJ
GENERAL TELEPHONE COMPANY
OF THE SOUTHWEST
/JMambeA. One ȣ the Qleat CMu*tutuc>ilio*H items Svuiiej^ Ame-iica
—I
Sr
\
V'•:
"TE? -
„, .....,
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Brewer, Orlin. The Levelland Daily Sun News (Levelland, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 28, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 9, 1957, newspaper, October 9, 1957; Levelland, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1122866/m1/6/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting South Plains College.