Throckmorton Tribune (Throckmorton, Tex.), Vol. 75, No. 43, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 13, 1963 Page: 2 of 8
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Night And Day
Inexperienced gardeners
sometimes think that, by sow--
’ing seeds of a vegetable earlier
or later than , the normal time,
they’ll get an earlier or later
crop. While this is true of. ths
vegetables unaffected by the
length of the daylight (or length
of the night) like tomatoes
which will flower and form'
fruit at any time of year, pro-
viding temperatures are suit-
able, it is not true of others.
Soybeans, for instance, are
’short day (and long night)
plants and will simply grow
good plants, but not flower un-
til late summer when days
shorten and nights lengthen. If
you want to try an experiment,
plant some soy bean seeds,
early in spring, others a month
later. You’ll find that plants
from both sowings will flower
and fruit at the same time.
There are also long day (or
short night) vegetables which,
like spinach and spring lettuce,
bloom as soon as the days
lengthen, thus ending their use-
fulness for the table. Spinach
blooms as soon as days are 12
thours long or longer. The plants
apparently get a signal to flo-
wer then. Seed follows flower
and the spinach is said tp ‘‘bolt-
to seed”.
These facts are well known
to seedsmen and account for
their instructions as to plant-
ing time of vegetables.. -r
Mi4, and Mrs. Jim McCoy
and children of Fort Worth
and Gary Condron of Throck-
morton are iback from a vaca-
tion in Galveston. Mr. MoCory
and son brought Gary back to
Throckmorton and they plan
to do some fishing.
MISS SANDRA LUKERT
Miss Throckmorton
Contestant
and
MISS KAY CONDRON
Throckmorton
Personals
She is th-e daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Durwood Condron of
this city.
Mrs. W. A. Dunlap, Jr., and
daughter, Judy, attended the
wedding of her brother, Sam-
my Sorenson, and Carolyn Liv-
ergco.1 at Paint Crfeek Church
Saturday night, June 1. Judy
was one of the candlelighters.
She is the daughter of Mrs.
Margie Lukert of this city.
Miss Sandra Lukert, 15 year
old So-phcme-’e at Throckmor-
ton High Schc’l, is being spon-
sored by Steadham Studio in
the Miss Throckmoi'ton Con-
test to be held Saturday, June
22.
Miss Lukert enjoys outdoor
sports — particularly tennis,
bicycling, swimming and bas-
ketball.
L'"
Mix and Mrs. Lloyd. Ed-
wiards and family of Jacksboro
visited her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Jackson,
other relatives recently.
Recent visitors in the home
of Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Ash and
Ki Mrs. Pete Jones were Mr. and
Kg Mrs. Boyd Badley and son.
® Miss Condron, who enjoys
her family and the things they
do together, lists her. hobbies
as sewing and housekeeping.
She enjoys reading and is
a member of the Library Club,
the Band and FHA.
Mrs. Bill CondTon and Gary
j of her
niece, Cllaudia Jean Reed, and
Joe Tidwell, Monday, June 3,
in Knox City. Gary was an
usher at the wedding and Mrs.
Condron assisted in serving at
the reception.
J. W. Hibbitts and Mr. Race
Hibbitts took Tommy Hibbitts
to Louisiana Satulrday. Tom-
my will work in that area dur-
ing the summer.
Miss Kay Condron, Throck-
'morton High School Junior,
is being sponsored by Con-
dron’s in the Miss Throckmor-
ton Contest to .be held Satur-
day, June 22.
Mrs. Dona Taylor is back
from an extended visit with
her children, in Houston. Her
son brought her home and re-
mained over night.
w
The aerospace'industry, which designs and builds huge weapon'’
systems, must .accomplish its assignments with precisionAF.or~ex .?
ample,, if temperature measurements have a one per cent error a r..
3,500 degree Fahrenheit, the weight of the missile will increase^
by 12,500 f>ound$„due to the increased weight of the heat shield-j'
and additionaf.Juel. In-addition, the use now of q new'standard .!
ran 9ive
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yl_. v j,>-) 1 Aiife
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t Khe
Sr
Candidate
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PRECISIGN
SAW FILING
Let Us FILE
YOUR SAWS
ALL WORK GUARANTEED!
Saw Pickup Service Daily at
Morrison-Smith Lumber Co.
and every Thursday at the
Woodson Hardware
YOU’LL LIKE OUR
FAST SERVICE
Tho Throckmorton Tribune
THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1963 PAGE 2
■-Syr*-
A. A.
Box 162
Throckmorton. Texas
WOODSON NEWS
Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Sonna-
■A
■Mi
3932
WEST
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Horry
and sons spent the weekend in
Fort Worth visiting Miss Bob-
by Ash and Miss Ann Robin-
sin. They all went to the zoo
Sunday.
Mrs. J. B. Reeves took Mr.
Clarence Reeves to Fort Worth
Monday for his regular check-
Mr. and Mi's. Johnnie Rice
spent Saturday night in Win-
ters visiting relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Tay-
lor attended the Prichard Re-
union at Aspermont Sunday.
Mr. ;and Mrs. Sid Gilbreth
and girls of Odessa spent the
weekend here with relatives.
the
to
re-
Visitor’s here in the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Quince Cogbu|rn
were Mr. and Mrs. R. L.
Sparks and children of Mid-
land.
'4^
Hjiutam Hurford of Wood-
son was best man at the wed-
ding of a friend, Billy Crud-
gington, to Miss Judith Shaw,
in Breckenridge.
Mrs. George Condron spent
Saturday night in the home
of her sister, Mrs. Ruth Sto-
ker.
Mrs. Sol Horton visited Mr.
and Mrs. Leonard Wyly Sun-
day.
ISy Meighlm.
of Cisco visited here with Mr.
and Mrs. J. B. Reeves, and
they all went on to Ruidasa
for a visit with the Ralph
Pierce family.
(Bro. George Lisles was in
charge of a meeting at the
North Side Church, of Christ
in Woodson. The meeting was
held Friday through Sunday.
Riecent visitors in the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Woodward
were Mr. and Mrs^Owen Dale
Woodward and children of
Iowa Park, and Mr. and Mrs.
Lennie Woodwjard of Cisco.
Mrs. Lorena Lilly will ac-
company her sister Mrs.
Shultz, and husband of Tem-
ple, and Mrs. Colston of Hous-
ton, on a vacation, leaving
here Tuesday and going west.
Kenny Herrington was car-
ried to the Throckmorton hos-
pital Sunday: after having
been hit by a truck. No par-
ticulars have been learned ,as
to his injuries.
The Bem-ard Willinghams
visited the Warren Willing-
hams in Albany Sunday.
“Delicious meal, wasn’t it,
Dad—too full to move, Dad?”
maker are expecting Mrs.
Scnpamaker, Jr. and children
of Hobbs, N. M. in this week
for a visit.
Candidate for
Miss Throckmorton
A
in
Mr. and Mrs. James Reeves
Cis“visite,i hB™ ’«*Mr
Mrs. Tom Latham was a
business visitor in Throckmor-
ton Monday.
k
■
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W
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ilk ■
Commercial
travelers,
and families
choose the convenient
uSD
WEST
r' 11
K; ,1
Is.'
(. :
lotVOK’’
Located 9 minutes from down
town Dallas on U.S. 80 West,
between Dallas & Fort Worth
Tefephones, Air-conditioning, TV,
wafl-to-Wall carpeting in every
worn - Swimming Pool - Play
davi « ^?/»Kltcb?nettes * Coowiercial
DAVIS ,rates to busipefsjgej^
Grain harvesting in
Woodson area is reported
be about over. Mr. Stone
ports that approximately 50,-
O00 bushels of wheat have
been brought in and shipped.
Visitors in the heme of Mr.
and Mrs. W. A. Parrott were
their children, Mr. and Mrs.
Maurice Wood and children of
Port Lavaca, Mri and Mrs.
Holloway of Mineral Wells,
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Cumby of
Abilene and” Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Parrott and children of Lub-
bock.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Atwood
and children visited in the
Bellah-Brockman home Sun-
day and they all went out to
see the new oil wedl.
Mrs. Bertie_ Lipps and E-
vonne are still in Ft. Worth
visiting Mr. and Mrs. John
Holt and children.
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Will-
ingham visited in Abilene
Saturday night.
Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Bellah
visited Mr. and Mrs. Ewalt
Smith of Throckmorton and
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Bellah of
Elbert Sunday.
FOR SALE
sy:
PUBLICA-
BY
COMPLETE — READY TO GO.
still by
IDEAL FOR CHURCH, SCHOOL OR LARGE BUILDING.
01-Worth
> -J- - - -
J. B. THOMPSON
DRIVE-IN THEATRE
Phene 2171 or 5261
OLNEY, TEXAS
is anything but
I
The Throckmorton Tribune
i
Deputy.
40-4tc.
j
l>
treats the
average
5-room home
JUNE 19-2G
Tab HUNTER and
Frankie AVALON Starring in
Operation BIKINI
JUNE 16-17-18
Metrb-Goldwyn-Mayer
Presents ELVIS in
It Happened
at the
World’s Fair
Hear Elvis sing 10 new hits!
Panavision & Metrocolor
JUNE 14-15
Billy Budd
in CINEMASCOPE
Starring
Robert RYAN,
Peter USTINOV
Co-Starring Melvin Douglas
Introducing Terence STAMP
JUNE 21-22
The Young Racers
with Mark DAMON
and Luana ANDERS
in COLOR
CITATION
TION
— r---
-
incidents as: '
that when the Poles attacked
inside Warsaw, the Russians
M_£S BILL]
Miss BillA
Freshman in
High Schocl,
She is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Timmons.
1
PALLAS
< ; TEXAS
--------- $2.50 per year
Add State Sales Tax
-------- $3.00 per year
Add State Sales Tax
ADVERTISING RATES
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING: 30 a word for first insertion;
20 a word each consecutive subsequent insertion; minimum
charge, 500; cash with copy. Minimum charge for Card of
thanks, $1.00.
DISPLAY ADVERTISING:
* * -:!■ *
Between the lines in their
speech, men reveal more than
they intend. For instance,
did you notice on TV when
the President was asked about
the New York newspaper
strike, he said — “those poor
men” meaning the strikers.
Not a word about the news-
paper stands, many of them
tended by blind or crippled
men, put out of business. Not
a word about the union’s de-
mands — which that great
impartial jurist Judge Medina
called — “fantastic”! No
word about what the strike
has done to many, many busi-
nesses aRd about New
J. D. GHORMLEY
P.O. BOX 171
THROCKMORTON, TEXAS.
Phone: Woodson 345-2395 !,
W' p
I
-■^1
it comes to spending
union funds for “personal
expenses”? He’s David J.
McDonald, president of
the United Steelworkers.
Mr. McDonald drew $38,-
619.71 for “expenses” in
1960. He beat out Jimmy
Hoffa by §20,000. Now
that the Internal Revenue
is getting so sticky about
itemizing business expens-
es, we ivonder whether
the same rules will apply
to the fancy expense ac-
counts enjoyed by union
leaders.
It’s very funny, but did
you know that the New
i o r k newspaper publishers
helped to pay the strikers
to remain o,n the picket line?
It worked something like this:
unemployment insurance is a
tax levied 100% on the em-
ployer. So that in New York
when a wrorker goes on strike,
between unemployment insur-
ance payments plus strike
benefits, many receive almost
as much money to remain on
the picket line as they -would
working.
I submit that unemploy-
ment insurance was never set
up as a lever with which labor
leaders could club manage-
ment into submission. How
lenient are your laws? Legis-
lators had better take $ look
now, «###
not <
American and British fiy<< ’
pleas of the Poles for help, I
the use of Russian held air
fields. The Poles were slaugh- 1
tered. Later, to complete the
annihilation of everyone who
t6Serving Throckmorton County"
Published every Thursday in Throckmorton, Texas, the County
Seat of Throckmorton, Texas. POSTMASTER: Send Form 3579
to Tribune Publishing Company, Throckmorton, Texas.
L. B. Morrison and Don Morrison --------------- RuLYri----
Mrs. W. E. Dillard --------------------------- Bookkeeper
Mrs. George Condron --------------- Woodson Correspondent from defendent
Mary Youngblood Elbert Correspondent
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC: Any erroneous reflection upon
the character, reputation or standing of any firm, individual
or corporation will be gladly corrected upon being called to the
attention of the publishers.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Throckmorton County
Elsewhere
To: Ella luggie,
Greeting *
YOU"ARE HEREBY COM-
MANDED to appear before
the Honorable District Court,
39th Judicial District of
Throckmorton County at the
Courthouse thereof, in Throck-
morton, Texas, by filing a
written answer at or before 10
o’clock A.M. of the first Mon-
day next after the expiraion of
forty-two days from the date
of the issuance of this citation,
same being the first day of Ju-
ly A.D. 1963, to Plaintiff’s Pe-
tition filed in said court, on
the 7th day of May A.D. 1963,
in this cause, nulmbered 179S
on the docket of said court
and styled Roy Tuggle, Plain-
tiff, Vrs. Ella Tuggle, Defen-
dent.
A brief statement of the na-
Publishers twe of such suit is as follows:
Plaintiff sues for divorce
on the grounds
of cruel treatment, there being
no property or custody ques-
tions to be decided.
as is more fully shown by
Plaintiff’s Petition on file in
this suit.
If this citation is not served
within ninety days after the
date of its issuance, it shall
be returned unserved.
The officer executing this
writ shall promptly serve the
same according to require-
ments of law, and the man-
dates hereof, and make due re-
turn as the law directs.
Issued and given under my
hand and the sclal of said court
at Throckmorton, Texas, this
the 16th day of May A.D. 1963.
(SEAL)
Attest: Don Chandler
Clerk, District Court 39th Ju-
dicial District office Throck-
morton County, Texas.
By
3gr|BBS|j?
.IE TIMMONS
■ iqr Cortland* S. Gross,
a ’
York. Just those poor strikers.
If that’s the way to win votes
—» I’m glad that I’m just a
reporter.
♦ «*»
By the best evaluation, the'
secret from Russians have been guilty of
treachery and broken agree-
ments no less than 67 times
HowVbout a round o:
Mrs. Reyford Mathiews
took her4 sister, Wyvonne
Lipps, to Abilene Saturday to
enroll at Commercial Business
College. !
v "I
Rates furnished upon request:
, attack from outside the city
What (llstur°s me mo^ iS The signal was given — the
poles attacked. The Russians
can
the Commie line. At t'rr
western i '
and professors alik e,
Tirhmons,
Throckmorton
, is being spon-/
i sored by Merle Norinan Cos^
.msties at Ima’s Beauty Shop,
in the Miss Throckmorton Con-
test to be held here Satulrday,
June 22, 1963-
Miss Timlmons is a very
friendly young lady and likes
be with friendly pec-ple.
She lists her hobbies as rid-
ing horses, roller skating, and
swimming.
H Arab
U"DO~8T
TERMITE
CONTROL
Professional termite
product for the home-
owner. 5-year chemi-
cal replacement guar-
antee available.
't harm shrubs,
lawn. Free folder.
ers
un:
unions have been defeated at
Locklfeed on four different
occasions, in their attempts to
make, all employees join up.
In the face of White House
pi^mres and the possible
billion kvern.
a c b Gross
bel^Hkly S,aid be didn’t
be «MKfcmfe
Lo join a union if
they didn’t want to. Most of ,
his employees felt that way, ;
too. The contract was set- ;
tied without the forced (
by union leaders. organizations who come to
the coast. With so many ex-
Who’s the champ when amples of Red perfidy, how
anyone who is rational
still imagine that Communism might prove a leader, the
is anything but, a terrible I*JSSians marched all the Pol-
scourge. If it’s true that jsh officers they could gather
.there’s a sucker born every jnt0 a forest, shot them down
minute, it is just as true that and buried them in a com-
there’s a Red ready to lead mon grave. i
sucker: down the garden path. The Russians promised the
’ Hungarians freedom and the
..........
sucker born every into
true that and buried them in
mon grave.
The Russians promised the
^<11 xx^vxyxxx cxxxcx cxxC
right to form their own gov-
V ’I ernment — if they would lay
down their arms. When the
g Hungarian freedom fighters
I ; complied, the Russians moved
I -in tanks and slaughtered the
I « Hungarians.
You’ve heard and read how •
jYv/4 tbe Russians threaten to “bury
us” . . . how they’ll blow
us off the earth with 100
~ megaton bombs . . . how they
“defend” themselves against
Finland, but if we attack
Cuba, it will trigger World
War III . . . how their planes
follow our carriers and how
Russian “fishing boats’*
strangely turn up right next
to islands where and when
we conduct tests.
Now we are in negotiations
with these same Russians
about the curtailment of atom-
ic tests. Do our statesmen
believe Russia will keep that
agreement? Are we to stand,
still on the “promises” of
such an enemy, while Red
China too strives frantically
to arm itself with nuclear
weapons?
ji^RGE AIR CONDITIONING
ap-
— --“'ll* I.XUHU, \jr_i
Lead of Lockheed Aircraft?
We stands up for what he be-
1^1 es. 14,000 Lockheed work-
did not want to join the
>n. In the last ten years,
iROM THE CAPITOL
— 1 ' '■
It seems to me that it is
far more reprehensible for
the Government to give false
news than it is to tell the pub-
lic nothing. National Security
may be served by the Govern-
ment keeping a secret from Russians have been guilty of
time to time ... but national treachery and broken agree-
security will never be served ments no less than 67 times
by the Government misleading since World War II. Personi-
■’ 1 1 " ’ 1" ■ ” •’ ~ - - i S antee a'
J are such S won't _ha>
The agreement I
Morrison-Smith
Lumber Co
the public by distributing fyfrig the perfidy
false information. ■ ' • ’ —
What can we believe when
the Administration establishes
a policy of managed news ? would launch a simultaneous
**** j-xx-.K T . . 1 .1
The signal
only held back, but when
university, students ’^r0Sjj^jpnded ta^J-ltiesperati
; ______ r. can xxxx. Fvlvo lux Lvl
union memberships demanded hardly wait to picket patriotic the Russians denied the flyei
rixr A-n I /-J art' ______________ ______ J — . 1 -r^. ■ « * -• J
1
^VEMBERl
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Throckmorton Tribune (Throckmorton, Tex.), Vol. 75, No. 43, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 13, 1963, newspaper, June 13, 1963; Throckmorton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1372283/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Depot Public Library.