The Palmer Rustler (Palmer, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 42, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 15, 1964 Page: 4 of 4
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Fidel to leave
Cuba in Ashes,
Sister Declares
MIAMI, Fla.
Castro declares
(AP).—Juanita
that
brother Fidel plans to
her
leave
Cuba in ashes “when he finds
himself lost.” And she said the
time is ripe for his overthrow.
“Fidel’s plan is as sinister as
that of Nero—who left Rome
burning,” said the Cuban dicta-
tor’s sister, in exile since June.
Miss Castro, 32, and four years
younger than the prime minister
continued: “'I am absolutely cer-
tain that he is capable of carry-
ing out his plan.”
STATEMENT REQUIRED BY
THE ACT OF AUGUST 24, 1912,
AS AMENDED BY THE ACTS
OF MARCH 3, 1933, AND
JULY 2, 1946 (Title 39, United
States Code, Section 233)
SHOWING THE OWNERSHIP,
MANAGEMENT, AND
CIRCULATION OF
The Palmer Rustier publish-
ed Thursdays at Ennis,
Texas October 1, 1964.
1. The name and addresses of
the publisher, editor, managing
editor, and business manager
are:
Publisher: United Publishing
Company, Ennis, Texas.
Editor: Floyd W. Casebolt, En-
nis, Texas.
Business Manager: Charles E.
Gentry, Ennis Texas.
2. The owner is: (If owned by
a corporation, its name and ad-
ment of the State of Texas shall
be divided into three distinct de-
dress must be stated and also
immediately thereunder the
names and addresses of stock-
holders owning or holding 1 per
cent or more of total amount of
stock. If not owned by a corp-
oration, the names and address-
es of the individual owners must
be given. If owned by a partner-
ship or other unincorporated
firm, its name and address, as
well as that of each individual
member, must be given).
Name:
United Publishing Company,
Inc. Mrs. C. A. Nowlin, G. G.
Dunkerley Estate, Miss Emma
Jean Sims, Mrs. Hazel Bla c k,
Charles and Mary Helen Gentry,
all of Ennis; Judge A. R. Stout,
Waxahachie, Texas; Lester Jor-
dan, Dallas, Texas and Dr. Gene
Nowlin, Princeton, New Jersey,
Mrs. George Gibson, Ennis.
3. The known bondholders,
mortgages, and other security
holders owning or holding 1 per
cent or more of total amount of
bonds, mortgages, or other se-
curities are: (If there are none,
so state).
Name:
Mrs. C. A. Nowlin.
4. Paragraphs 2 and 3 include,
in cases where the stockholders
or security holder appears upon
the books of the company as
trustee or in any other fiduciary
relation, the name of the per-
son or corporation for whom
such trustee is acting; also the
statements in the two paragraphs
shows the affiant’s full knowl-
, .edge arid belief as to the circum-
stances and conditions under
which stockholders and secur-
ity holders, who do not appear
upon the books of the company
as trustees, hold stock and se-
curities in a capacity other than
that of a bona fide owner.
5. The average number of
copies of each issue of this pub-
lication sold or distributed,
through the mails or otherwise,
to paid subscribers during the
12 months preceding the date
shown above was: (This infor-
mation is required from daily,
weekly, semiweekly, and tri-
weekly newspapers only, 915.
1964.
Charles E. Gentry,
Business Manager
Sworn to and subscribed before
me—this 1st day of October,
1964.)
Emma Sims,
(My commission expires June 1,
1965).
CARPET SALES
SERVICE - CLEANING
Free Estimates
Raney Furniture
Waxahachie WE 7-1991
or Dewey Glenn Smith
221-5327, Lancaster
- The FALMER RUSTLER - ' Thursday, October 15, 1964
(NEA Telephoto)
GOLD MEDALIST — The Olympic women’s 100-meter free
style gold medalist for the third consecutive time, Australia’s
Dawn Fraser, is flanked by runner-up, Sharon Strouder, left,
and Kathleen Ellis, right, both of the U.S., during award
ceremonies in Tokyo, Japan. Miss Fraser set a new Olympic
record of 59.5 seconds in the swim. ■ ,
ft s The law
Know What It Costs to Borrow
There are many factors that
a person about to make a person-
al loan from a bank or finance
company should understand.
These are important in decid-
ing whether the loan is on reas-
onable terms and worthwhile.
First, what will the loan cost?
Cost includes not only the in-
terest but any “extras” such as
closing costs and credit investi-
gation or service charges. Is
credit life insurance required?
Are such costs added to the loan
or paid in advance? Is the in-
terest and/or such charges de-
ducted from the amount borrow-
ed and only the net amount paid
over?
Does the lender require col-
lateral or co-signers? If so, what
can the borrower do to meet
the requirements? Collaterial or
co-signers may enable one to
borrow on more favorable terms.
When does the borrower get
his money? Must he apply and
then wait?
What about repayment? Is it
by installments, or all at once
at the end of the loan period?
Can there be prepayment? What
about renewals or extensions of
the loan? What penalties if the
borrower is late in making pay-
ment?
Few borrowers stop to realize
that when loans are repaid in
installments the quoted interest
of 6%, for example, may be mis-
leading. The true interest could
be approximately 12%, which
might make the borrower re-
consider.
The reason for this is simple:
If you borrow $100 to be repaid
in 12 monthly installments, on
the average you have the use
of only $50 for the year. Interest
of 6% computed on the entire
$100, as is customary in some
lending agencies, is actually 12%
on the $50 you had use of.
Likewise, a 112% a month
carrying charge on a store ac-
count doesn’t seem high—but
that is 18% a year, which is
mighty steep interest.
Rather than charging or fi-
nancing something involving a
carrying charge, it may be far
cheaper to borrow the money
on an ordinary loan and pay for
the purchase. For example, $100
borrowed for 6 months and re-
paid at the end of the term, at
6% simple interest, costs only
$3.00. .
(This newsfeature, prepared
by the State Bar of Texas is writ-
ten to inform—not to advise. No
person should ever apply or in-
terpret any law without the aid
of an attorney who is fully ad-
vised concerning the facts in-
volved, because a slight variance
in facts may change the applica-
tion of the law.)
Landing System
For Spaceships
To Be Tested
HOUSTON. (AP).—A space-
ship landing system—pieced to-
gether from surplus and salvag-
ed parts, is scheduled for test-
ing Wednesday in Galveston
Bay.
Manned Spacecraft Center en-
gineers call their brain child a
Parasail. It consists of a huge—
vented 80-foot parachute and
two rockets with 12,000-pound
thrust.
It will be the' first time the
parachute and rockets have
been tested together. Both have
been unsuccessful in separate
trials.
Engineers have pieced the
Parasail together with parts they
scrounged or made and h a v e
worked on their own time.
Project Engineer Lee Norman
said the total cost is less than
$100,000.
The two rocket engines are
designed tto ignite about ten
feet from the capsule’s "I splash-
down. - 834
Said Norman: “It would land
with the same impact as if it had
been dropped from seven in-
ches.” . . ,^
The system originated with
the Mercury program in 1961 at
Langley Air Force Base in
Virginia.
However, all the big m o ney
has been spent in the para-
glider—an inflatable, triangular-
shaped, wing-like device.0
After spending more than
$21,000,000 without a successful
manned test flight--the 'Space
Agency said it had given up on
the paraglider for any Gemini
missions. 1
Branch Chief John K i k e r
said the Parasail was the only
hope in sight- for land landings
in the Gemini program. He said
he didn’t think the system was
the ideal, way to land a space-
craft.
He added: “But it is the best
we have now.”
DUMPED—Lou Brock of the St. Louis Cardinals dumps Phil Linz, New York Yankees short-
stop, to break up a double play in the fifth inning of the fifth World Series game in New
York. Bill White started the action when he grounded to Bobby Richardson at second. A run
scored on the play, giving the Cards a 2-0 lead. The Cards went on to defeat the Yanks,
5-2.
(NEA Telephoto)
It’s Named Picese- %
Nellie Connally * .
Gets Her Dream
House, on Knoll
FLOREVILLE — For years,
Mrs. Nellie Connally has want-
ed a home with unique front
doors.
She got the doors—eleven of
them eight feet tall—in 1961.
This month she got the house.
The ten-room, two-story Lend-
ers stone house sits on a knoll
about seven miles west of Flores-
ville on Governor Connally’s 1,-
200 acre ranch.
The Connally’s have named
the house “Picosa,” the Spanish
name of a nearby creek. It
means hot like pepper.
Texas’ first family opened
what Mrs. Connally called their
“dream house” to newsmen less «
than a week after they moved
- in.
ANTIQUES
Cut & Carnival Glass
Marble Top & Brass Tables
Love Seats - Washstands -
Silver - Clocks - Bric-a-Brac
MARCIA ANTIQUES
Air-Conditioned
S. Highway 75 Bus. Rt.
PALMER RUSTLER
Published weekly by the United Publishing Co., Inc., which also
‘rhlish The Ennis Dailv News and The Ennis Weekly Local.
Any erroneous upon the character, standing, or reputation of anv
person, firm or corporation, which may appear in the columns
Of this paper, will be gladly and duly corrected upon being brought
n the publisher’s attention.
Entered at the post office at Palmer, Texas, as second class mans
matter under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879.
All communications of business and items of news should be ad-
dressed to the company, not to individuals.
le’s Elephant
Digger-Upper
n Riverland
ROCKPORT— Joe Hissong
Seventeen Southern Gover-
digs up elephants in his spare
time.
Actually,, he only digs up
pieces of them.
On a recent search, for ex-
Susie Elaine Brazier to Exchange Vows
With Glenn Toal; Jan. Wedding Planned
Mr. and Mrs: C. A. Brazier of Palmer have announced the en-
gagement of their daughter, Su-
sie Elaine, to Glenn Toal.
The engaged couple plan a “the house was desiged around
January wedding, the doors and the iron railing.”
The bride-elect is a graduate She rescued the doors, floor
of Palmer High School. Her tile and iron grillwork from a
fiance, a graduate of Ferris High : 1740 town house being demolish-
School, is the son of Mr. and edin London, in 1961, (
Mrs. John Toal of Lancaster, for- The black and white tile was
Mastedon teeth, on the other
hand, look like a bunch of enam-
eled cones tied together with
same lime-material.
The teeth, tusks, bobes and
other signs of elephants abound,
he says. There is also a host of
other prehistoric animals and
plants.
Hissong explains, the abund-
ance of remains by the presence
of prehistoric death traps along
the banks of streams and quick-
sands in days when the huge
beasts roamed Texas. #:
merly of Trumbull.
nors, attending their annual con-
ference next week in San Anton-
io, will be intertained there Sun-
day night.
Mrs. Connally told reporters,
ample, he returned from the
Nueces River bottoms lugging
a portion of a tusk from a mam-
moth, one of the mightiest ani-
mals to roam Texas in the Ice
Age.
Ore. Wizard of
Banner Day tor
United States
At Olympics
TOKYO. (AP).—It was a ban-
ner day for the U. S. at the Oly-
mpic Games and as swimmer
Dick Roth of Atherton, Calif.,
put it so aptly: “I thought we
were going to wear out The Star
a SALE AS AMERCA ™
US SAVINGS BONDS
400-meter individualmedley—
also in record time. The
American 400-meter freestyle
relay team set another world
record in scoring a smashing
victory. And middleweight wrest-
ler Dan Brand of Oakland,Calif,
won a surprisingBronze Medal
Spangled Banner.” There was
an amazing upset victory by
Billys Mills of Coffeeville, Kan.,
in the 10,000 meter run. K. Sitz-
berger of River Forest, Ill., won
the springboard diving and led
a one-two-three American
sweep. Cathy Ferguson of Bur-
bank, Calif., won the women’s for third place., . VA
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See electrical supplies dealers, hard-
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TP&L Office.
TEXAS POWER &
LIGHT COMPANY
A tax-paying, investor-owned electric utility
The chunk of tusk was two. The enormous bulk of, the
feet long and two feet around, animals worked against them
Hissong wasn’t happy, however, when they tumbled oyer a cut-
“I could have cried when I bank or fell into a pit.
saw what had happened,” he “These old stream beds have
said. The dragline operator that I since become our commercial
uncovered it in a gravel pit sand and gravel pits, Hissong
thought it was part of a tree said, “and practically every day
and dropped; his bucket on it co traces of prehistoric animals are
loosen it. He broke it all to uncovered and destroyed.
pieces, and that tusk, as nearly Fragments can be found
as we can tell, was around 12 around sand and gravel separa-
feet long.”tors, he says.
Hissong goes elephant hunt- “Teeth, particularly the enam-
ing practically every Sunday, el, will stand a good deal of
His hunting grounds are the’ rough handling, but tusks gen-
stream beds and gravel pits of ■ erally start to disintegrate as
South Texas and it’s a rare week- soon as the air hits them.”
end that he doesn’t lug home To preserve tusks, Hissong
a bunch of mammoth and maste- saturates them with a 1-to-10
don teeth, solution of shellac in alcohol.
“They’re easy to tell apart,” After this has been soaked up,
Joe says. “The mammoth teeth
have parallel rows of enamel-
ed plates jutting forth from a
mass of softer, more lime-like
material, and they’re big enough
to fill both hands
a heavier coat is applied. Some-
times he wraps the tusk in bur-
lap bagging or excelsior soaked
in plaster of paris to keep it
from breaking up of its own
weight.
Water Captures
Olympic Gold
TOKYO—An 18-year-old wa‘, which
ter wizard from Lake Oswego, room.
-Oregon—Don Schollander—cap-
tured the Olympic Gold Medal in
Tokyo today in the 100-meter
free- style final. He shattered
laid in the dining room, and the
form one-story wing, the kitchen
front porch, as fireplace orna-
ments and on the inside stair-
case.
The long wood and iron stair
railing descends from a library
overlooks the family
the Olympic mark with a time
of 53 and four-tenths seconds—
barely edging out England’s
Bobby McGregor. McGregor lost
by one-tenth of a second—and
he was also under the Olympic
record. Hans Joachim Klein of
Germany finished third.
Schollander's triumph gave
the U-S its first gold medal of
the 1964 games.
Earlier, two girls from Arizo-
na grabbed the first medals for
the U-S in the Tokyo games.
Jeanne Collier of Phoenix won
the silver, or second place, me-
dal in women’s springboard div-
ing-just edging out Patsy Wil-
lard of Mesa, who had won the
bronze. An East-German girl, de-
fending Champion Ingrid Kra-
mer-Engle, captured the gold
medal.
All rooms except the formal
living and dining rooms are fin-
ished in wood paneling.
Most of the living room furni- y
ture, as well as many other items
in the spacious house, are items
the Connallys say they "picked
up over the last 15 years.” Con-
nally, his wife said, never misses
an auction.
The architecture, the Gover-
nor said, could be termed ranch
style, “except that it has a sec-
ond story.”
The second floor accommodat-
es the library and study. Below
are the dining and living rooms.
To the rear of these rooms is a
41 by 18 foot family room with
cathedral ceilings.
Four bedrooms , and baths
form son-story wing, the kitchen
and garage the other.
The cost, Connally said, was
“too much,” but has not been
figured exactly’. /
27
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Beginning to feel like it’s your kind of
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42-6528
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The Palmer Rustler (Palmer, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 42, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 15, 1964, newspaper, October 15, 1964; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1676344/m1/4/: accessed June 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Ennis Public Library.