The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 84, No. 264, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 7, 1962 Page: 6 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Hopkins County Area Newspapers and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Hopkins County Genealogical Society.
Extracted Text
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THE DAILY NEWS-TELEGRAM Wednesday, November 7, 1962.
26.00 - 28.60; few loads mix-
ed grood and choice 1,000-
1,100 lbs. 29.00 - 29.26; few
standard 24.00 - 25.00; load
prime 1,096 lb. heifers 30.50;
highest for heifers since May
1959; load high choice and
prime around 1,075 lbs. 30.00;
load lots choice 850 - 1,000 lbs.
28.25 - 29.50; load mostly high
choice around 950 lbs. 29.75;
utility and commercial cows
14.25 . 16.50; canners and cut-
ters 11.25 - 14.25; shelly can-
ners 10.00 - 11.00; utility and
commercial bulls 17.25 - 19.60;
cutters 16.50 - 18.00; standard
vealers 20.00 - 25.00; utility
15.00 . 20.00.
Today’s
Markets
Livestock Market
Fort Worth, Nov. 7 Uh —
Cattle 1,100; calves 300; util-
ity and commercial slaughter
cows 12.50 - 15.00, canner and
cutter 9.00 - 12.75, shelly can-
ner 8.00; standard and good
slaughter calves 21.00 - 25.00;
good and choice feeder steers
23.50 - 26.00; good heifers
21.00 - 23.00; good and choice
steer calves 24.50-29.00,
medium 21.00 - 25.50; good
and choice heifer calves 22.00-
26.00, medium 20.00 - 22.50.
Sheep 1,700; good and choice
wooled slaughter lambs 16.00-
17.00, good and choice shorn
lambs 16.00 . 17.50. good and
choice shorn yearlings 15.00-
15.50, old wethers 7.00-8.00;
old bucks 5.00; utility and
good wooled ewes 6.00 - 7.00.
shorn 5.00 - 6.75; good wooled
feeder lambs 12.00 - 13.00.
shorn 10.00 - 12.00.
Hogs 200: U. S. N'o. 1-3 bar-
rows and gilts 16.75 - 17.25,
No. 2 and 3 16.50 - 10.75;
boars 8.00 - 8.50.
Chicago. Nov. 7 !4i — Cattle
11,00; calves 100; slaughter
steers moderately a c t i ve,
steady to 2a higher with prime
steers mostly steady; heifers
active, 25 to 50 higher; cows, (light. Estimated slaughter to-
bulls and vealers steady; load j day totaled 2>j0,800 head. At
lots prime 1.200 1 1.350 |f arm prices on broilers and
lb. steers 32.25 - 33.25 inelud-! fryers ending 10 a. m. today
ing four loads 1.225 - 1.350ranged 15.75 - 16.70.
lbs. at 33.25; high choice and J C|ljca£0 Grafa
prime 1,175-1,375 lbs. 31.50-1 ®
32.25; bulk choice 1,10 0-; Chicago, Nov. 7 i.H—Wheat
1,350 lbs. 29.75 - 31.75; com-j ~Dec- 2.09%-a4j Mar. 2.12’--
parable grade 900 . 1.100 lbs.: a>* • May 2.11 Vs-V*.
29.25 - 30.00; load prime 940 j Corrn—Dec- 1-05 '--rV
lbs. 30.00; two loads mixed ^1.08%--% ; May 1-11*4.
high choice and prime around! ^ec‘ *>5-65
31.025 lbs. 30.25-3.50; good 65 ** > Ma>’
_I____ Rye — Dec. 1.22Vi; Mar.
★
Happy Dog
Kansas City, Nov. 7 i4i —
Cattle 2,500; calves 200; stead-
y to 25 higher; high good to
mostly choice steers 29.00-65;
good and choice 28.00 - 29.00;
good 26.00 - 28.00; average
and high choice heifers 28.00-
50; good and choice 24.50-
27.50; cows 1 3.5 0 . 15.00;
good and choice vealers 23.00-
26.00.
Poultry Market
Austin, Nov. 7 f.P — Poul-
try: south, market slightly
stronger, supplies reported
short to adequate, mostly ade-
quate. Demand irregular, rang-
ing slow to good. Movement
moderate. Prices at farm end-
ing 10 a. m. today, broilers and
fryers 3-3 3/4 lbs. 16.50-17,
mostly 16.75-17.
East: market stronger. Of-
ferings and supplies adequate
for the fair demand. Movement
Mar.
Mar.
Chicago, Nov. 7 Iffl —
Bruno the dog who has been
wired for sound in the inter-
est of science has been per-
forming right on the beam
at a medical engineering
conference in Chicago. The
one-year-old beagle has a
wireless transmitting pack on
his back from which extend
tiny sensors surgically im-
planted in his body. They
radio out reports from var-
ious parts of the dog’s body.
This procedure allows ex-
perimental animals to move
around normally rather
than having to be anesthet-
ixed for such checks. Bruno
is reported healthy and hap-
py about the whole thing.
J. Frank Dobie
Still Serioii8
Austin, Nov. 7 '4* — Texas
folklorist and author J. Frank
Dobie is still La serious condi-
tion.
Dobie is in Austin’s Bracken-
ridge Hospital in the intensive
care unit.
He was hospitalized Friday
night when he received deep
scalp lacerations and a head in-
jury in an automobile accident.
Doctor Thinks
Indian Suffered
With Arthritis
San Antonio, Nov. 7 UR —
The deformed skeleton on an
Indian found in San Antonio
last week may have been that
of an arthritis sufferer rather
than a hunchback.
The director of the Witte
muse u m said yesterday the
3,000-year-old skeleton w a s
found in north San Antonio by
a road construction crew. The
discovery led to others in what
was once an Indian villuge and
later the village dump.
Dr. William A. Burns, the
nifiseum director, first said the
skeleton was probably deform-
ed at birth—killing the theory
that Indians slayed deformed
infants.
Now Burns says, a doctor
who has studied signs of arth-
ritis in other ancient skeletons
says the crippling disease of
arthritis may be responsible for
this Indian’s trouble.
★
Not Total Lo»*
Cleveland, Nov. 7 W —-
The election wu net a total
Iom for Ohio’* defeated
Governor Michael DiSalle.
He diacloaed early thia
morning that he’d received a
telephone call from hi*
daughter, Toni, in Florida
informing him that he’s
about to become a grand-
father again. Commented Di-
Salle: "1 feel like a new
Republicans Win
JP Judgeships
Business Cards
1.23% ; May 1.22 Va.
Soybeans — Nov. 2.40 ;V
i Jan. 2.42 >*-42; Mar. 2.45.
San Antonio, Nov. 7 (41 —
The first two Republicans ever
elected justices of the peace in
Bexar County history were
chosen by voters yesterday.
They are R. L. (Bob) Strick-
land and Frank Vaughan.
The two men defeated in-
cumbent Democrats in the
northeast and northwest sec-
tions of San Antonio.
They are the only Republi-
I cans to get a winning vote in
’ | Bexar County.
Appliance* New & Used
Sales & Service
•- • -
ELECTROLUX
Vacuum Cleaners and Polishers
fkles, Service and Supplies
Effective Moth Protection
and Rug Shampoo
GEO. H. FOX
'027 Church Street
™.7™.S!Tt iltoa DM
After six sessions without a loss |
the New York stock market! (Continued from Page One)
turned irregularly lower today, j ]e^7wo seats in the Senate.'
Trading was active. | Democrats elected 24 senators
George Romney
Beats Swainson
In Michigan
Detroit, Nov. 7 Of) — George
Romney has been elected gov-
ernor of Michigan. Romney,
former American Motor
Corporation p resid e n t, cut
sharply into traditionally Demo-
cratic Wayne County (De-
troit) in defeating incumbent
Governor John Swainson.
Picking up some 4 0 per
cent of the industrial Detroit
area vote. Romney became the
first Republican elected to the
governorship in 14 years.
Returns from 3,571 of
5,199 in c 1 u d i n g 1,714 of
Wayne County boxes 1,765,
gave Romney 962,370 votes to
988,769 for Swainson. In
Wayne County, Romney polled
373,894 votes to 583,168 for
Swainson.
Political experts had esti-
mated Romney needed at least
34 per cent of Wayne County’s
total vote to win the governor-
ship.
Although Swainson held a
ed by a Democrat in the state, numerical lead over Romney,
Overshadowing the campaign j did no* w'n enough of P°P-
was the issue of the Cuban ; u 1 o u s Wayne— Detroit—
crisis. Most Republicans and <’ <>11 n 4s votes ,to overcome
Democrats believed Ca,.chart Komney s certain lead outs.de
had emerged on top on that is- | t"e eount>’-
j
Capehart Loses
To Democrat
Indianapolis, Nov. 7 (JP) —
Veteran Republican Homer
Capehart has suffered defeat
in his bid to become the first
Hoosier to win a fourth term
in the Senate. His youthful
Democratic opponent — 34-
vear-old Birch Bayh, Jr. —
registered a triumph early to-
day when his ballot lead became
instil mountable as the count
in Indiana neared completion.
Ba.vh’s victory fob nvs one
of the hardest-fought and best-
financed campaigns ever wag-
Soviets, Cubans
Seek to Oust
US From Base
Key West, Fla., Nov. 7 UP) —
A Soviet diplomat and a top
Cuban, leader, who have been
sitting in on the Castro-
Mikoyan talks in Havana, in-
sist that the United States
must give up its naval base at
Guantanamo Buy. The Soviet
ambassador to Cuba and the
president of Cuba’s institute
of agrarian reform spoke dur-
ing a televised program which
opened a four-day celebration
of the 45 th anniversary of
Russia’s Bolshevehik r e v o 1 u-
tion. Neither dropped any hints
as to what might be taking
place at the daily meetings be-
tween Fidel Castro and Soviet
trouble s h o o t er Anastas
Mikoyan.
Both voiced support for what
the Cubans describe as “Fidel's
five points.” These are de-
mands laid down by Castro
after Russia announced it was
withdrawing its rockets from
Cuba.
Chief among the points is
U. S. abandonment of the
Guantanamo base. Others in-
clude a halt to the naval block-
ade, to air space violations and
to so-called subversive activi-
ties and “pirate” attacks.
Neither speaker mentioned
the international arms inspec-
tion which the United States
insists on and which Castro
has vowed he will never permit
on Cuban soil.
Sulphur-Graphs-
MR. AND Mrs. H. D. Han-
son plan to attend the Austin
College football game in Sher-
man Saturday. It will be Dad’s
Day. Their son, Phil Hanson is
a senior end on the team and
in the process of picking up his
fourth football letter. The game
will conclude the season for the
team.
DIRECTORS OF the Cham-
ber of Commerce will meet
Thursday at 10 a. m. in the
chamber office. Dr. Jos e p h
Longino, new president of the
organization, will be conduct-
ing his first board session. The
meeting is expected to be de-
voted largely to organizational
work.
POLICE HAD a quiet day
Tuesday with one traffic ar-
rest the only activity record-
ed. It involved a motorist
charged with speeding. No
complaints were listed on the
day’s patrol reports and no ac-
cidents occurred.
The 65 - year - old Capehart.{ file! all Afina PlplfC
s not. formally conceded do-1 UlkiClHUIIia l lVIVd
First Republican
As Governor
has not formally
feat, but issued a statement
admitting that Bayh’s margin
was what the lawmaker called
"formidable.”
Jailers Suspended
The movement of most key
a n d Republicans 14—making; /
Aemodeling and Repairing
Plastering. Stucco—
Simulated Brick and Stone
All Work Guaranteed
RAWLINGS
CONSTRUCTION CO.
1607 Live Oak St.
Phone: 1476 Commerce, Texas
stocks was fractional although j thp totals now stand at fi7 Dem-
a few moved one P°,nt or so- Lcrats and 32 Republicans.
Declines of one to about four Dtmocrats are leading in the
points were registered for some one race stin 0Ut_S enator
\t Sail Antonio
Oklahoma City, Nov. 7 (A*)—
•A Silver Star ex-Marine and
THE WOMAN’S Society of
Christian Service of the Tira
Methodist Church will meet at
7 o’clock tonight in the com-
munity center. Mrs. Edd Sulli-
van will have charge of the
program.
THE REGULAR meeting of
the Como P-TA will be held
Nov. 13, at 2 p.m.
THE WOMENS Missionary
Circles of the First Assembly
l_ _ —- . of God Church will sponsor a
I Oil KPTinPnV rummage sale Friday and Sat-
“ J urdav in the McMullan build-
Wins Easily inc“ “,m
Over Lodge
Boston, Nov. 7 (JP* — Edward
(Ted) Kennedy, the President
kid brother, has scored a
smashing triumph over Repub-
lican George Cabot Lodge to
win his brother’s old seat in
the U. S. Senate.
The President was quoted as
being “extremely pleased.”
The Kennedy landslide yes-j SHERIFF PAUL Jones lost
terday promised to surpass the his trusty Wednesday. Offi-
THE PTA City Council will
meet Thursday at 2 p. m. at the
Travis School.
AGRICULTURAL W ORK-
ERS in the county will hold
their regular monthly meeting
at 2 p. m. Thursday in the
community room of the Sul-
phur Springs State Bank. A
program on wildlife and game
laws in planned.
511,000-vote margin rolled up
by his brother, John, two years
ago when he won the presiden-
of the so-called growth stocks.
Sales during the first hour
ran to about 840,000 shares.
Ernest Gruening’s battle in
Alaska. The latest senatorial
race to be decided was Ala
Typewriter
Sales & Service
- • -
Lower were. U. S. Steel 41 j ^ama, where Democrat Lister
12 down 3/4; General Motors Hi]1 won reflection.
56 1/4 down 1/2; American: l„ Alabama, the veteran Sen-
Telephone 110 down 1/2; IBM
358 down 3 1/2.
Higher were: Goodyear 31
up 3/8; Anaconda 39 1/2 up
1/8; United Aircraft 53 up
ator Hill battled to the end in
a surprisingly close race with
Republican James Martin. But
Hill, leading by 7,000 with only
86 boxes not counted, is the
San Antonio, Nov. 7 —
Two Bexar County jailers got
15-day suspensions yesterday,
one for releasing the wrong
man and the other for leaving
a prisoner unguarded.
Sheriff Bill Hauck said the
suspensions of Sergeant Ray-
mond Sanchez a n d Jailer
Henry B. Garcia were effec-
tive immediately.
Hauck said Sanchez let the
wrong man out of jail.
farmer, Henry Bellmon, has c-' „
given Republicans the Okla- The 30-year-oM baby of the
ho m a governorship for the PoDttca Hy potent Kennedy
clan rolled up such a margin in
cers from the Texas State Pen-
itentiary a r rive d to take a
prisoner being held here on a
forgery charge to begin a term
at Huntsville.
first time in history.
He smashed into a bead over
millionaire W. P. Bill Atkinson
almost from the first precinct
to report.
An independent, Richard Za-
vits, was swamped overwhelm-
ingly, garnering only a few
hundred votes.
It was a stunning victory for
the Republicans as their bed
rock wheat farmer campaign-
his first race for public office
that he carried fellow Demo-
crat Endicott (Cub) Peabody
to an upset victory for gov-
HOPKINS COUNTY sher-
iff’s officers arrested a man
here Tuesday night on a war-
rant from Upshur County. The
man posted a bond on charges
ernor over the incumbent Gov-! of disturbance and carrying a
ernor John Yolpe. j concealed weapon and was re-
leased.
5/8; Johns Manville 41 1/4 up winner.
1/4. i In Alaska, Senator Gruening
Typewriter Sales and Service
RENTALS AND REPAIRS
J. H. NUNN
Adding Machine Sale*
and Service
The American Stock Ex-
change was mixed in moderate
trading.
On New York bond mar-
kets, corporate issues moved
higher; treasury issues were
unchanged.
Ph. 5-2616
206 Church St.
Misceilaaeous 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.
Connally Grabs
(Continued from Page One)
has a 5,000-vote lead over Re-
publican Ted Stevens with half
of the precincts in the spraw-
ling state counted.
10.
He added: “Both men are. , . . . ,
named Edward Hernandez and1 ed a«aui» was e an conup
both were being held under j t,on and »,lum»,ed f°r econom>'
$2,500 bonds for burglary from J ,n stfte government.
Judge A. A. Semaan’s court. Atkinson rolled to a narrow
T h e sheriff said Sanchez J primui-y victory, with a 1 cent
should have checked to make | hike in the states 2 pel cent
The Democrats sent some [ sure he y,ad the j Edward i sa*es tax to state govern-
nevv, yet familiar, faces to the ; Hernandez instead of grab- j ment needs the main plank ill
Senate— Edward Kennedy, bing the first card file lie1 his platform,
brother of the President, from came to.
Massachusetts; former US Wei- Hauck said that the wrong
fare Secretary Abraham Ribi-j man stin js p0ne.
coff from Connecticut; and j Garcia got his suspension
former Food for Peace direc- f 0 r jetting John H i n k 1 e of
tor George McGovern from Oklahoma City out of his cell
Homei Thoi nberiy,, South Dakota. I to sweep the runway on the
22,312, Jim Dobbs 10,334, both j There were a couple of start-
ling upsets. Governor Gaylord
Nelson of Wisconsin defeated
Barron 13,431, both Ft. Worth. I Republican Senator Alexander
13. Graham B. Purcell, Jr. j Wiley. A young newcomer,
33,225, Joe Meissner 15,673, Birch Bayh. turned out Repub-
Austin.
12. Jim Wright 20,779. Del
Export
TV SERVICE
Oa All Make* TV’*
TYLER TV
Service
103 N. Davis Ph. 885-2212
(Your Color TV Dealer)
Professional Cards
M. Z. BAILEY
»«AI- ESTATE, insurance
ABSTRACTS
A* oldest abstract and real
in Hopkins County
19U
both Wichita Falls.
14. John Y o u n g 46,336,
Lawrence Hoover 20,265, both
Corpus Christ i.
16. J. T. Rutherford 36,584,
Ed 1' o r e in a n 42,587, both
Odessa.
18. Walter Rogers, Pampa,
34,385; Jack Seale, Amarillo.
23,617.
19. George Mahon. Lub-
bock. 45,532; Dennis Taylor,
Crosbyton, 22,457.
21. O. Clark Fi.-her 28,133,
Edwin S. Mayer 9,081, both
San Angelo.
22. Bob Casey 73,558, Ross
G. Baker, 63,684, both Houston.
Okay Nine Amendment!
Voters apparently gave their
stamp of approval to nine of
the 14 proposed amendments to
the state constitution while
turning thumbs down on the
controversial “trial de novo”
proposal.
The nine brought to 153 the
total of constitutional amend-
ments approved by the people
since the cons titution was
adopted in 1876.
The trial de novo amendment
would have allowed a new trial
on appeals from administrative
bodies, and w’as the most con-
troversial of the record slate
of 14 propoals.
The voters favored two wel-
fare increases. One would in-
crease the authorized limit on
old-age assistance, aid to de-
pendent children and aid to the
blind from 47-million to 52-mil-
lion dollars annually. The oth-
er would boost the limit on
total state expenditures for aid
to totally and permanently dis-
abled persona from 1J/4 to 2'«
million dollars.
sweep
jail’s third floor without a
guard.
Senator Wiley
Loses Seat
A MEETING of the city
commission, postponed f r o m
Tuesday night, was scheduled
at 4 p. m. Wednesday.
a regular m o n t h I y business ]
meeting at 7 p. m. Thursday |
at the Legion Hut on Church
Street.
lican Senator Homer Capehart
—an outspoken critic of the ad-
ministration’s Cuban policy.
Republican Leader Everett
Dirksen will be back.
Republican gains in the
House have fallen far short of | Herbert Barnes of Roselle
the 218 needed for a majority.! Park follows tradition, his
Democrats have elected 246 (bachelor days are numbered.
Milwaukee, Nov. 7 (41—Sen-
j ator Alexander Wiley, the sen-
( ior Republican in the U. S.
j Senate, was defeated in his
; bid for an unprecedented fifth
| term from Wisconsin by Dem-
j ocratic Governor Gaylord Ncl-
I son in Tuesday’s elcciton. With
i about half of Wisconsin’s pre-
j cincts counted, Nelson led the
Roselle Park, N. J., Nov. 7 7fj.year-old Senate veteran by
J’*'—If bachelor mayor - elect J more than 34,000 votes with
Milwaukee’s D e m o c r a t i c
Bachelor Days
May End Soon
congressmen to 174 for the Re-
publicans. Twelve other Dem-
ocrats are leading. And three
Republicans are ahead. House
Speaker John McCormack of
Massachusetts and GOP Leader
The twenty-nine-year-old Dem-
ocrat who won election yester-
day will suceed Mayor Arthur
Dorfner, who was a bachelor
when he was elected. Dorfner
succeeded Robert Sheldon, who
Charles Halleck of Indiana will j was a bachelor when he was
strongholds still largely un-
counted.
Mrs. Roosevelt
Is Unchanged
New Y'ork, Nov. 7 (41 — A
family spokesman says
Republicans captured s t a t e I Dorfner and Sheldon I Mrs. F'ranklin D. Roosevelt's
f 1 ’ condition remains unchanged
today. She has been reported
in serious condition with anem-
ia and a lung infection.
be returning.
elected.
The only republican candi-
date for a statewide office to
survive the Kennedy Democrat
sweep was Attorney General-
elect Edward Broke, who will
be the first Negro to hold a
major office in Masachusetts.
For the Kennedy family, it THE AMERICAN Legion
was a victory in round four [and Ladies Auxiliary will hold
of a 46-year-old feud at the
polls with the Dodge family.
President Kennedy defeat-
ed George’s father, Henry
Cabot Lodge, Jr., for the same
Senate seat in 1952. He beat
him again in I960 when the Ulpsi| flpriTiari
elder Lodge ran for vice-pres- If Wl UvlIllQll
i d e n t against a Democratic T> # 1 * «■
against a Democratic ticket JJClBIlUS ACilOIl
led by Kennedy.
Bonn, Nov. 7 (4*> — Eighty-
s i x - y c a r -old West German
Chancellor Adenauer pounded
his fist in the parliament in
Bonn today as he defended his
government’s action a g a i n st
officials of a news magazine.
British View
Kennedy Win
London, Nov. 7 iJ’* — Brit-
ish newspaper see the election
results in the U. S. as a victory
for President Kennedy — al-
though one notes that Kennedy
still apparently will have
trouble putting over some of
his Democratic program. The
British also see the outcome in
California as dousing Richard
NiXort’s political career. One
remarks:
“The Republican will not
suffer too badly from the de-
feat of Mr. Nixon.”
Try a Want Ad for Results
houses in New York, Michigan,' are n’lan jt.d now
Pennsylvania and Ohio—all
populous seats of power for the
next presidential contest. They
put in three of those seats men
most likely to be considered
for the GOP presidential ora-
illation — Governor Nelson
Rockefeller of New York, Con-
gressman William Scranton of
Pennsylvania and industrialist
George Romney of Michigan.
Democrats have definitely elect-
ed 19 governors; Republicans
13.
Still undecided are the gub-
ernatorial races in Alaska,
Rhode Island and Minnesota.
proposition to prov i d e for a
state program of acquiring con-
servation storage facilities in
reservoirs through bond sale
proceeds by the Texas Water!
Developemnt Fund. Another ap-
proved amendment would en-
able the legislature to establish
a system of continuity in state
and local government opera-
tions in the event of enemy at-
Also gaining favor was a tack.
Voting Conies
Before Hospital
Austin, Nov. 7 (4*—Mrs. Ag-
nes Rogge, 65, decided yester-
day that voting was a bigger
emergency than a broken leg.
While walking up the steps
of a polling place she fell and
broke a leg. An ambulance
was called and soon arrived.
An ambulance attendant,
Billy Peel, carefully lifted
Mrs. Rogge on a stretcher and
started to roll her into the am-
bulance for a quick run to the
hospital.
“Just a minute,” said Mrs.
Rogge, “I never did get to
vote.”
Pool stood by patiently
while Mrs. Rogge marked her
ballot, then rushed her to the
hospital.
Try a Want Ad for Results
Per si stance
Finally Pays
Dcs Moines, Nov. 7 (41 —
Persistence has paid off, polit-
ically, for an Iowa Democrat.
For 24 years, Clinton Ryan
has been trying to get elected
to a Poweshiek County attor-
ney. He made it yesterday —
the First Democrat to get the
office since 1939.
Governorship
Won by Burns
Honolulu, Nov. 7 (41 — John
Burns, Democrat who tried for
his second time to become
Hawaii, governor won an upset
victory yesterday over Repub-
lican strongholds.
Single Voter
Fails to Show
Santa Ana, Cal., Nov. 7 (41
—The 16th precinct in Santa
Ana had a remarkable turnout
yesterday. Only one of the 173
registered voters failed to show
up — and she lived across the
street from the polling place, stations.
Circuits Cut
In East Texas
Dallas, Nov. 7 (41 — A man
digging a hole for a fallout
shelter west of Shreveport,
La., yesterday played havoc
with East Texas ground com-
munications.
He chopped into a South-
western Bell Telephone Com-
pany underground cable and
knocked out for more than
two hours 23 carrier lines.
The circuits included those
used by the Associated Press
to carry news to Texas news-
papers and radio and television
2,5%'~
DIVIDEND
TO ELIGIBLE
TEXAS MOTORISTS
That’s right, Taxss policyholder*
hav* coma to sxpaet dividend
saving* from Stats Farm Mutual’s
famous 6-month policy. Nina out
of tan pollcyholdara hav# aavad
mor* than *30,000,000 over ths
past27ysara. Stst# Farm's pres-
ent 25% dlvldand rat# makas th*
actualcost of carlnsuranc# lower
than that of most other comps*
nies. For mor# complata detail#
tea me soon*
BRICE
INSURANCE
209 Church St.
PHONE 5-4760
M1 SSI
Box Office Open* 1:45
Picture 2:00 p. m.
LAST SHOWING
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Virginian (c) . 3, 6
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10:40
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Kory Calhoun 2
11 . 00
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Bent of Urourho 4
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Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 84, No. 264, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 7, 1962, newspaper, November 7, 1962; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth829173/m1/6/?rotate=270: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.