The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 85, No. 82, Ed. 1 Monday, April 8, 1963 Page: 6 of 6
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standard and (rood slaughter
calves 21.00-24.00; jrood feed-
er steers 22.25, Rood and choice
22.00-25.00; Rood and choice
heifers 22.50; Rood and choice
steer calves 28.50-36.00; -geoA
and choice heifer calves 22.00-
27.00, few 28.00-30.00.
Hors 600; No. 1-3 barrows!
and gilts 13.00-14.00, few;
14.25; No. 1-3 sows 11.00-!
12.50.
Sheep 4,000; mostly choice I
9,500; calves none; slaughter ; sPrin* slaughter lambs 20.00,
steers slow, steady; heifers'*°°d *nd ^ctce 17.00-19.75;
mode, atte active, steady to 25 K?rtd *"* ' cho,c« *hor" am^ :
, , ,, * , *15.00-17.50; good buck lambs
higher; cows and bulls steady. ’*____, ---------
Sulphur-Graphs-
Livestock Market
Chicago, Apr. 8 Ufr--Cattle
i
cows
half a dozen loads prime 1,-
220 - 1,350 lb. steers 25.75-
26.00; bulk high choice and
prime 1.100-1,375 lb. 25.00-
25.50; choice 900 - 1,200 lbs.
23.75-25.00: comparable grade
1,200 - 1,400 lbs. 23.50-24.50;
few loads high choice 1,400-
1,450 lbs. 23.75 - 24.25; good
900 - 1.225 lbs. 22.00-28.50:
'standard 19.50 - 21.00; choice
850-1.100 lb. heifers 23.50-
24.10; load high choice around
1,000 lbs. 24.25: good 21.50-
23.25; utility and commercial
cows 14.75 - 1«.5(»; tanners
and cutters 12.50 - 14.75; util-
ity and commercial bulls 18.00- .
20.(Mt; three loads string choice
700 lbs. feeder steers 26.00:
around three loads good and
choice 900 - 950 lbs. 22.40-
23.00.
Fort Worth. Apr. 8 t.fi—Cat-
tle 800; calves 200; good and
choice slaughter steel > 23.25;
standard and low-good 22.00,
good 22.25; standard Hulsteins
19.50; ....... heifers 22 00-23.00.
standard 21.(10; utility and
commercial bulls 17.00-19.00:
16.00; cull to good shorn ewes :
| 6.00-8.50; g o o *1 and choice j
s)iring feeder lambs 17.00-'
17.50, good and choice old crop;
wooled lambs 12.00-14.00,
shorn lambs 12.00-14.00. i
Mp.aVi 'JBB
.
MR. AND Mrs, Floyd Chap-
man and family, Mr. and Mrs.
Harvie Chapman and family
of Dallas, Mr, and Mrs. Bert
! Chapman and children of Sher-
man and Mr. and Mrs. John M.
Chapman and children of San
Antonio were here Saturday
to attend the wedding of their
i nephew, Capt. William H. Long
nnd Miss Georgie Peer at the
North Hopkins Baptist Church.
Judge Rejects
Quashing Plea
At Eastland
Kansas City. Apr. 8 i.P — ;
Cattle 1 2,500; calves 300; j
steers steady to 25.50 lower; 1
heifers steady to • weak, cows
weak to 25 lower; vealers ;
steady to 1.00 lower; feeders ■
steady to 50 lower; good to |
choice steers good 21.50-23.65 ; j
good to choice heifers 21.00- |
28.00; utility and commercial
cows 1 4.25 - 16.00; good to
high choice vealers 24.00-
31.00; good to choice feeders
22,00-28.25.
Poultry Market j
Austin. Apr. —Poultry:
South, market stronger. Sup- 1
plies about adequate for the
good demand. Movement brisk. 1
Prices at the farm ending 10 j
a. m. Monday, broilers and r
fryers 3*4 - 3 3* lbs. 16.08-;
16.50, mostly 16.35-16.50. |
// y/Tyj*
THE AUSTIN School PTA
will meet at 2- p.m. Tuesday.
Installation of officers foiv the
new yeur will be held.
&A,
' a'i
< Eastland, Apr, 8 Uh — Judge
Tutgsr Callie overruled this
morning a motion to quash the
murder indictment against 17-
year-old Nathan Curry of Cisco.
The youth is charged in the
slaying at Cisco in June of
1961 of a divorcee aiid church
secretary, Mrs. Florence Hus*
sey. She was a neighbor of the
Curry family.
Judge Collie also dismissed
a motion in w h i c h defense
lawyer John Watts of Odessa
pleaded that Curry was being
subjected to double jeopardy. !
The judge overruled tenta-
retumed '• tively a defense motion! asking
Amarillo, ^or a complete file from Dis-!
Earl Conner, i
Jr., of information in the case, i
f •? • a*
ARCHIE T. Edwards, gen-
ii at manager of the Red Star
Fertilizer Division,
late Saturday from _______
where he attended a three-day I ^rict Attorney
staff meeting for division heads
of the Southern Farm Supply
Company. \
MISSION
TODAY and TUES. |
SULPHUR SPRINGS schools
' |
; 1
jjf
......t i
“*lb 91
m i \ >
Curry was committed to the (
Gatesville reformatory a f t e r ;
the 1961 slaying and then re- '
_____________________ leased last winter in a court j
opened an abbreviated week ofI ^eal'*n8 *n Odessa. The East-
classes Monday. Students will I lun<1 County grand jury,
he dismissed at 4 p.m. Wednes- j P,omPtly indicted the teen-
day for a five-day Easter va-,®^1' ^or murder. He is free on
cation. One additional day was bond,
added to the holiday period this j -
year to take up an extra du-V i Pana|la VflfoC
provided in the annual school j VUlluilCI V UIvm
calendar as a hedge against « p. _
;;i;arXt;.°n b-v sev«re wi t ln tleclion
DOUBLE—Meet Marie Dev-
ereux, a former London
model seeking an acting ca-
reer in Hollywood. As a
start in films she was Liz
Taylor’s double for distance
shoes in “Cleopatra.” First
fruit of the Rome stint is
a role for her in “The Long
Corridor.” (NEA).
shot ut the home of Mrs. Sarah
Luckie. The detective quotes
her as saying Hodges was shot
when he struggled with her for
a gun.
Hodges was married and had
seven children.
AwSkiM/rimnifcui
pi f
HI-VUE DRIVE-IN
. OPEN ON
FRI.. SAT.. SUN.
DOUBLE FEATURE '
n
1
mm
In
asTHESAD
3
CAAIf AtowiM*
oMUlV
Business Cards
Chicago Grain
Appliances
Sales
- • -
New & Used
& Service
ELECTROLUX
Vacuum Cleaners and Polishers
Sales, Service and Supplies
Effective Moth Protection
and Rug Shampoo
GEO. H. FOX
0^27 Church Street
(
1
Chicago. Apr. 8 bP—-Wheat i
— May 2.12-11 % ; July 1.90‘a-!
90; Sep. 1.913a.
Corn—May 1.16%-V* : July
1.18 3* - >2 ; Sep. 1.16%.
Oats—May 69 % ; J u 1 y 69;
Sep. 6.
Rye — May 1.31 % ; July
1.30*2 ; Sep. 1.30*2.
Soybeans — May 2.56%-3* ;
July 2.57 3* - % ; Aug. 2.56.
GUEST ARTIST for the monthly meeting Wednesday of the
Woman’s Forum will be Wendell Blake of Texarkana, wide-
ly-acclaimed harpsichordist. The program will follow the
12:30 p. m. luncheon at the Woman’s Club Building.
GOP-Dominated
Colorado Cuts
Taxes Sharply
DEATHS
Denver, Colo., Apr. 8 left —
The Republican - dominated
Colorado general assembly
ended its session today after
j cutting taxes more than any
New York, Apr. 8 ijf)—The , other legislature in the state’s
stock market moved higher to- j
day in active trading.
Midday Wall Street
history.
In the closing hours, the
legislature slashed personal in-
Gray Services
Held al Como
Funeral services for Naval
Lieutenant Commander G. Pat-
ton Giay, 32, were held at the
GROUP FOUR of the Chris- Toronto, Apr. 8 <**— Heavy
t i a n Womens Fellowship ofjearl>’ balloting aided by Ben-
First Christian Church will j elally f ' n e sPrir>8 weather
meet in the home of Mrs. H. A. I Rented to u record vote to-
Snow tonight at 7:80 instead i daY *n Canada’s national elec-
of in the home of Mr. and !tion; Most analysts expect the j
Mrs. Brice Taylor as was pre- election will make 65-ye*r-old
viousiy announced. j Tester Pearson the nation’s
_ 1 prime minister.
MRS. D. L. Jernigan, 444 Pearson, the Liberal Party Austin, Apr. 8 —Another
Gilmer Street, celebrated her i leader, and Prime Minister electoin is in the making to-
89th birthday on M o n d a y. i John Diefenbaker of the Con- day after Saturday’s Hornsby-
Friends and neighbors took a | serVative Party cast their bal-j Dunlap board of school trus
birthday cake and visited with I lots in the early voting, de-
Mrs. Jernigan to assist her in scribed as brisk to heavy in
Four-Way Tie
To Bring New
School Voting
ALSO
UERRT
LEWIS
r* t AMU Y
FUN TIME 91
THE MOVIES1
Show Time: 7:15
Second Show: 9:00
observing the occasion.
FOUR CHARGES of driving
while intoxicated were heard
in County Court in Sulphur
tees vote in Travis County
ended in a four-way tie.
Each of the four candidates j
received 51 votes. ,
There were 103 votes cast, j
but only 102 were counted in
j eastern Canada.
Montreal and Ottawa re-1
ported the early turnout heav- |
ier than in the last election, j
in June, 1962. All parties in the official results. What or-! Fire of undetermined origin
Fire Damages
Newpaper Plant
Roswell, N. M., Apr. 8 Iff!—
Como Methodist Church Mon- Springs Monday morning. All j metropolitan Toronto said they j dinarily would have been a tie- broke out in the composing
j____ . r* c...........a. ... . » .1 i ...ul . ____1 •__I. .. . _____ e r> ......
Typewriler
Sales & Service
rypewriter Sales and Service
RENTALS AND REPAIRS
J. H. NUNN
Adding Machine Sales
and Service
Ph. 5-2616
206 Church St.
Most gains of key stocks were
limited to fractions. . . . ...
Sales during the first hour ^"*e taxes $7,250,000 on 1963
earnings. Shortly after the
session opened in January, the
legislature cut income taxes
for 1962 by 15 per cent, or a
total of 8 million dollars.
The Colorado income tax had
ranged from 3 per cent on the
first $1,000 in earnings up to
9 per cent for taxable income
of $10,000 and over.
The cut for 1963 will be $5
for each $1,000 up to $10,000
taxable income. Over $10,000,
Miscellaneous Service
REAL ESTATE LOANS
• For the Purchase of Homes
• For the Construction of
New Homes
• To Re-Finance Loans with
Others
• To Repair Real Estate
• To Add Rooms or Improve
Your Home
Reasonable Interest and
Prompt Service
Sulphur Springs
Loan & Building
Association
ALL TYPES OF PRINTING
Fast Dependable Service
Phone 885-3141
THE ECHO PUBLISHING CO.
Expert
TV SERVICE
On All Makes TV’n
TYLER TV
Service
RCA Victor Dealer
103 N. Davis Ph. 885-2212
(Your Color TV Dealer)
ran to about 1,660,000 shares.
Motors were strong. So were
steels.
Higher were: US Steel, 48;’*
up *2 ; General Motors. 69. up
’* ; Goodrich, 49 *4, up % ;
IBM, 447, up 5; Litton, 66%,
up ■■** ; White Motor, 53. up
1 % ; Montgomery Ward, 38, up
%. ■’
Dst* vv n was L,’S Smelting,
66% , down 5.
The American Sto c k Ex-
change was higher in moderat- • the cut will amount to $10 per
]y active trading. '$1,000 of income.
On New York bond markets. The Colorado governor, John
trading was light. A. Love, thanked the legisla-
Govemment issues were ture for a “fine beginning” in
steady to lower. Corporate is- cutting taxes and reducing ex-
much re-
in future
day afternoon. four motorists entered pleas
Comdr. Gray was killed in of guilt and were fined $50
a plane crash Wednesday at and costs ($85.30 > each. One
Glvnco Naval Air Station, Ga. of (he arrests was made by
His wife, the former Billie city police, while highway pa-
Joye Lewis, was a resident of trolmen made the other three
Como before their marriage. arrests, over the week-end.
were flooded with calls asking j breaking vote the 103rd ! room of the Roswell Daily Rce-
; for transportation to polling ballot cast improperly ord Sunday...
booths. Lines formed before marked and thrown out. | First reports indicated dam-
The Travis County commis- aK‘‘ ma>’ r u n as h ' «h as
sioners court officially declar- j *100.00°. but a more accurate-
polls opened in many areas.
Survivors include his wife:
two sons, Michael and Robert
of Glynco; a sister, Miss Jo
Annee Gray of Albuquerque,
N. M., and mother, Mrs. T. A.
Gray of Randolph.
Naval Chaplain Rogers con-
ducted funeral services.
The Rev. J. L. Rand and the
Rev. R. L. Cates assisted-
Burial was in Como cemetery.
A PROGRAM on cancer ed-
ucation will be held at 7 :30 to-
night at the Woman’s Club
Building in Sulphur Springs.
Four of Family
Shot lo Death
' ed the vote a tie today to set
the stage for a new election,
i No date has been set.
sues were quiet.
penditures but said
niained to , he done
sessions.
Republican Love, a newcom-
er to politics, upset two-term
Democratic Governor Steve
McNichols last November on
a tax cut platform. Republi-
cans also swept to control of
both houses of the Colorado
legislature at the >anie time.
Rites Conducted
For David Petty
MARRIAGE LICENSES is-
sued in Hopkins County lust
week went to Glenn Sprague
and Mrs. Alice Faye Day and
to W'illiciTi Leon Garner and
Miss Tommie Alice Binkley.
Nuclear Power
Urged for Ships
figure will be available when
the extent of damage is known,
Managing editor Al Stubbs said.
The afternoon newspaper will
be printed in Hobbs, 140 miles
away, and shipped by truck to
Roswell for distribution for a
few days, Stubbs said.
Linotype machines a n d the
press were damaged by drip-
ping tar. A partition in the
building was burned away,
Final rites were held Mon-
day afternoon in the Cumby meet at
Baptist Church for David Owen
Petty, 80. a retired Cumby! THE TRAVIS School PTA
farmer who died Saturday in will meet Tuesday at 2:30 p.
Greenville. m installation of officers will
He was born Dee.
United States
Handed Note
By Russians
Moscow, Apr. 8 W — The
Soviet Union handed the Unit-
ed States a note in Moscow
today and diplomatic sources
said it concerned Atlantic al-
liance nuclear weapons and
West Germany.
Foreign Mini s ter Andrei
Giomyko handed the note to Siantigo. Chile, Apr. 8 Im.* u.i,iuv;i»oi
L. S. Ambassador Foy Kohler. ; Communist hopes of taking over sisters, Mrs. Elmer Yarborough]'^’ Mays> Elvira Pet-
Copies were sent to the Brit- rfext year in another country— of Arl i n g t o n and Mrs. ” " ,”-1" r * -■ - •> -
i.sh and French, and the West this time Chile—appears to
German embassy was under-I have suffered a severe setback, children,
stood to have received a sep- Returns from nationwide muni- <iren and
El Paso, Apr. 8 W—An El!
Paso mother, who would have
been 40 years old yesterday,
shot to death her three children
Saturday night and then killed
herself. i Washington, Apr. 8 UP!
Detective Sergeant Bob Bar- The Navy- is understood to he j Stubbs said, and part of the
ron said Mrs. Jean Adams shot now urging that all its fight- j roof was sagging,
the children, Kathy Lee Shep-1 craft of more than 8,000 , A carrier boy, who was help-
--- laid, a 12-year-old daughter by tons be nuclear-powered in-j*ng in the circulation depart-
THE EXECUTIVE commit-! a previous marriage; 4-year-old - stead of conventionally-power-
tee of the Hopkins County ; Elizabeth L. Adams and 8-year-! ed as has been favored pre-
Cham b c r of Commerce will 1 old Mark Adams while they ] viousiy. Informed authorities
u. m. Tuesday | slept in their beds and then i in Washington say the change
went to her own bedroom where | is urged in view of technolo-
she shot herself. All were shotjgical advantages reducing the
in the head. j cost of nuclear-powered sur-
Justice of the Peace Texas! face vessels.
Ward said a note found in the !--
room said that Mrs. Adams was
meet at 8:30
at the Chamber offices. The
Beautification committee will
3 p. m. Tuesday.
; ment, discovered the fire about
i 9:80 a. m.
j Firemen got the blaze under
: control about an hour later.
1 Roswell Fire Chief George
Daniels said the fire may have
startde in a defective electrical
switch.
Want
Results
Chile Defeats
Red Alliance
j m. Installation of officers will j despondent and , unhappy and pnnQfn] Dnflr
12, 1882 highlight the meeting. did not wish her children to! UClftwX Qi Jt QilV
in Hopkins County, the son of ___ I suffer.
David Petty and Meranda Fry' VOLUNTEER WORKERS at Ward e s t i m a t e d that the
Petty. He married May Candle, i Memorial" Hospital last week ! shootings occurred about 11
who preceded him in death, in j WMe Mmes. A. D. Jacobsen, P- ">■ Saturday.
1JI4’ Lonnie Campbell, M. E. Cona-) The bodies were discovered
by Mrs. Adams’ 18-year-old
Delays Decision I CABLE’TV
Survivors include four sons, r> o
,’ j way, Roger Smith, Earl Payne, i
■ Jim Masters, Bill Brashear, j so,L Jnnies M. Shepard.
O. Petty, of Route 1 Greenville ! fd.. H a ^ v e F Whatiey. Pink
andJ. W. Petty of Cumby; two! Lad,es; Ann Klndel’ Jan 0r'
J. A. Petty of Dallas, W.
Petty of Route 1 Campbell
B. L.
arate note.
The embassies concerned de-
clined to disclose details.
eipal elections show a coalition,
headed by pro-Western Presi-
ross, Judy Fails, Glenda
Gaines of Cumby; 17 grand- Horne> 1>atsy Adams- Cal0,yn
15 great-grandchil- I Fouse’ Kare" Swinde11 and Pat
3 great-great-grand- ■ Wilkins, Candy Stripers.
Winners Picked
(Continued from Page One)
—LIFE INSURANCE—
Home Protector
Family Group
Hospitalization
Cancer
BURT C. WAITS
230 Connally Street
Phone; 88 5-2623
OMEGA - SOUTHWESTERN
TERMITE CONTROL
.Member Texas Pest Control
Association. Work
food and nutrition, blue; Lana
Rasure, Cathy Andrews, Wade
Bartley and Johnny Harper,
all of Dike, landscape plant
identification, It 1 u e; Judith
Kellum and June Irvin, Dike,
poultry marketing, blue; Kathy
Mitchell and Cheryl Allen,;
Bidnker, salad, blue;
Sue Williams and Paula Me- j
( lure, Pine Forest, electric, i
red; Max Watson and Sammy i
Steele, Lee-Hi, farm and home
safety, red peffaeWel 'Anderson, j
Gafford Chapel, food and nu- j
trition education, red; Dianna
Watkins and Janie Walters,
Pine Forest., safety, red; Lin-
da Rhodes and Becky C'ald-
dent Jorge Alcssandri has easi- tery.
•dy**-defeated-s^a Communist-led
alliance The elections were re-
garded as a warmup for next
I year's campaign, when the Reds
i say they'll capture the presi-
dency.
children.
Burial was in Climby cemu-
I OOF
Notice
LAMAR SCHOOL PTA
members will hear business-
man Riuhard R. Orwig speak
i at their meeting at 2:30 p.m.
Tuesday. Fifth grade students
i will present a program.
Detective Barron quoted the
boy as saying he came home
about 12:30 Sunday morning
and went directly to bed.
Mrs. Adams’ husband, Ray
Adams, a service station opera-
tor, told police he closed his
station late Saturday night,
went home and directly to bed
in the den of the house.
Sunday morning the husband, jbhe next six months,
unable to get into the main j -
part of the house, called his
stepson on the telephone and
asked if Mrs. Adams were
awake.
The son went to his mother’s
Seoul, Korea, Apr. 8 (JP) -
A' South Korean government
spokesman says that Korean
strongman General Chung Hee I
Park has decided to wait until
September to make any deci-
sion on whether to continue
his military rule. But the j
spokesman says Park will per-
mit immediate resumption of i
political activity by opposition i
groups — and will base his fin-
al decision on their conduct in
presents
Guaranteed.
Know Your Termite Company. _____
Free Estimate and Inspection welL* ^cktonTTaladrVed.
Bonded and^ Insured Three records reports in the
Phone 885-5810 senior division also were pre- j
—-------------------------------------------------------' sen ted Saturday. Farm Bu-j
1 real* records were presented
by Nina Kellum, Dike; agri-
business records were present-
ed by Rhonda Potts, Dike; and
state fair awaidsv4:ecoi'ds were —Adm. Harold Page Smith
nrau»nDr*.:4jtyt>'$d9y Dike, jg to become Supreme Al-
for the eliminations^ lied Commander in the At-
were Miss Judy Lennon, Mftsip'
Sandra Wright, Misfc Doris El-
kins and Miss Annette Pol-
hemuB.
Professional Cards
M. Z. BAILEY
THE VOCATIONAL Nurses ______ ______ _
Bright Star Lodge No. 71,f ‘^.!W!?t'i“.t,on wil-1 ™*‘et Tuesday: bedroom and found her body.
1IOOF, will hold a regular bus- j at 7:3p° "L the h°tm"
| mess meeting at 7:30 tonight p- h
at the lodge hall on Comrslly | ,-s er‘ _
I Street, Work will be in the in-]
! itiatorv degree. Gerald Regan, j
Noble Grand; 1. H. Jones, see.
«nlh Slain
At Drive In
HOPKINS COUNTY and
i Sulphur Springs enjoyed one
of those rare highway and
street safety week-ends Satur-
day and Sunday with no acci-
dents reported to either police
or highway patrol ofifeers.
Hearing Set
On Resolulion
Plain view, Apr. 8 uP — A WESLEY METHODIST
flurry of gunfire broke out i Church is holding a pre-Easter
after three youths approached , revival each night this week
it car at a Plainview drive-in beginning at 7:30. The Rev.
theater while a movie was be- James Westbrook, pastor of the
ing shown just before midnight. ; church, Will deliver the ser-
The firing started shortly aft-! mons. Ardist Rormrek will lead
er they asked one of the car’s j the singing.
occupants, 18-year-old John Lo- j -
pez of Plainview, to step from' MR. AND Mrs. James Bar-
the vehicle and talk to them. ! ririgton of 129 Texas Street
NATO ATLANTIC CHIEF
BEAL ESTATE, INSU1
ABSTRACTS
i_.
Tbm oldest abstract real
Mtate firm hi Hopkias County
Sines 1911
3,*"
j Lopez fell dead from a bullet
in the back.
Witnesses told peace officers
the fatal shot was fired by a
stocky, long-haired youth who
had climbed on top of a car.
'tactic, succeeding Adm. Rob-
April oU. At present, btnitri
is commander in - chief, U.
S. Naval forces, Europe.
(NEA).
j in the
automobile wit!
; identify the trio who approach-
ed their vehicle. The three fled
on foot.
Police dogs trailed them to a
announce the birth of a daugh-
ter Sunday, April 7, at 7:05
a. m. at Memorial Hospital.
busy highway, where the flee-
• Austin, Apr. 8 UPI—The
i House State Affairs Committee
I has a hearing scheduled in Aus-
| tin tonight on a resolution op-
' posing disarmament of United
States forces in f a v o r of a
United Nations force. The reso-
lution is by a Dallas Republi-
can, representattive George Ma-
Catee.
Anxious Police
Hunt Bomber
Another boy and three girls,'in*ryouths apparently caught a
told investigators they could not
The slaying, victim was the
son of Rafael Lopez of Plain-
view.
Want Ad for Results
Florida Pastor
Fatally Shot
Jacksonville, Fla., Apr 8 UFI—
Police at Jacksonville report
that the pastor of one of Jack-
sonville’ largest churches, the
Reverend George Hodges, 57,
was shot and fatally wounded
today while making a church
call. Detective Captain R. B.
Whittington said Hodges—pas-
tor of the Beaver Street Bap-
tist Church—apparently drove
back to the church after being
Trenton, Mich., Apr. 8 UP—
Anxious police in Trenton
searched today for a dynamite-
equipped, possibly crazed man
bent on blowing up bridges.
A homemake shoebox bomb,
containing 15 sticks of dyna-
mite wired to an alarm clock,
was found yesterday under a
footbridge in Browntown town-
ship, second recent instance of
its kind.
JUNIOR ECONOMICS
Baltimore Iff! — Eric Metzler,
11, of Baltimore, was paid $5
by some neighbors to feed their
pet cats while they were away
from home. J' k*—
H o' 1 o s t the key t o their
hoti#e while playing, however,
and had to pay $5 for a lock-
smith to make an impression
of the lock for a new key.
Later, skipping along near
his home flipping the new key,
he dropped it down a storm
drain. A policeman helped him
retrieve it, but it cost another
35 cents to get an extra key
made for insurance.
Eric now figures that feed-
ing the cats cost him 8% days
labor carrying out garbage for
another neighbor, who pays
him 10 ceiltb a day.
•
TV - TONIGHT
Frorrom Mating* fur
T-V Cable Subscriber*
MONDAY
IV
0:30 Channel
Na.
Movie: “April Love”
3, «
P»t Boone
Dakota* ......
2
To Tell The Truth
Maverick .....................
7:00
I’ve Got A Secret_____
7:30
41
Rifleman ..... ..................
Sugar foot ....... ........
Lucille Ball
:-i
0:00
Danny Thomas .......
14
Stoney Burke .....................
... 2
8:30
Surfside Si* ..................
«
Art Linkletter ................
3
Andy Griffith ......
4 1
Wrestling _____!......... .
.. 5 1
9:00
Plan word .....................
Special: Movie “Oscar
4 1
Awards” ............. J
1. 2 I
9:30
Stump the Star*_______ 4
Art (.ink letter ...................... 0
Mike Hummer____________S
New*. Weather A ^ t
Spurt* . . ........... 4. 4
M 8W4 !..................................-;1|
10:15 '
Tunisia ________________________
»» V..v ; L
Movie: “Man with a Million’* :
(Jresory Peek k I
Steve Allan ..........»........—........ 41 |
Tonlfht
Thriller
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Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 85, No. 82, Ed. 1 Monday, April 8, 1963, newspaper, April 8, 1963; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth829154/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.