The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 84, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, January 26, 1962 Page: 4 of 6
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THE DAILY NEWS-TELEGRAM Friday, January 26,1962.
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PROFITABLE *
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JUST CALL KBS WAHT AD - PHONE 885-3141
]
NEWS-TELEGRAM
WANT AD
RATES
Figure Your
Own
Ad Costs---
N.umbjer »
Words -
•One
Day
2-3
Days
5-6
Days
15 or less
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16 to 20
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1.50
2.25
21 tq 25
'.95
1.85
2.80
26 to 80—
1.15
2.25
3.35
31 to 35
1.33
2.65
3.95
36 to 40
] .50
3.00
4.50
41 to 45
1.70
3.35
5.05
46 to 50
’1.85
3.75
5.65
CASH DISCOUNT
Take a 20 per cent discount
frctfn these rates if cash ac-
companies o r d e r. Three days
allowed for payrdent where
ad is received over telephone
without loss iof discount. Do
not pay carrier boys for classi-
fied ad.
Minimum charges (including
cash discount. 60 cents, with-
out discount, 75 cents.
CALL 5-3141 and a com-
petent ad-taker will gladly as-
sist in writing your Want Ads. I
Female Help Wanted 16
EARN, LEARN
And have fun making money
as a Tapper ware Dealer.
Part time or full time. Car
necessary.
VERLA HOLTSLANDER
Tupperware Distributors
Phone PL 3-1008, Holly
Jane Sales, Route One, E.
Marshall Hwy., Longview, Tex-
as.
WAITRESS WANTED — Ap-
ply in person, Chuck Wagon.
Salesman Wanted
LOOK: Splendid Rawleigh bus-
iness available in Hopkins Co.
or Sulphur Springs. Exception-
al opportunity for industrious
person. Write Rawleigh Dept,
TXA-691-18, Memphis, Tenn.
w26-ltp
Job* Wanted
NURSE WANTS JOB sitting
with people at home or hos-
pital. In or out of city. . . .
Phone 885.4096.
Help Wanted
20
BLIND ADS — We are not
allowed to give out informa-
tion concerning ads signed by
box numbers. Please do not
ask.
CARD OF THANKS — One
of the nicest ways to tell your
friends “Thank You.” Publish-
ed only as paid material at
regular classified rates.
IN MEMORIUM—Memorial
eulogies, whether in prose or
poetry, are accepted only as
paid material at regular classi-
fied rates.
CANCELLATIONS — If an
ad is cancelled you pay for
the actual number of days
your ad runs.
DEADLINES—All ads must
be in by 11 a. m. of the day
of publication.
ERRORS — Advertisers are
requested to notify us immedi
ately of any error in their ad.
We are responsible for only
one incorrect insertion.
CARRIER BOYS
WANTED
Roujfces open now for
qualified boys between
the ages of 12 through
14 years of age.
Must Have Bicycle or
Scooter.
Apply in person to
Billy Sam Elliott, Daily
News - Telegram office
between 5 and 6 p.m.
week days only.
Household Good*
New & Used
FURNIJURE
Buy - Sell - Trade
NEWELL CAMBRON
225 Gilmer Street
Misc. for Sale
Public and Legal Notices-r-
First publication .03 per word
each additional run____.015
WANT AD CALENDAR
1— Card of Thanks
2— Florists and Nurseries
3— In Memorium
4— Women’s Apparel
8—Children’s Apparel
6— Lost, Found, Strayed
7— Personals
8— Business Service
9— Beauty Aids
10— Wanted to Buy
11— Let’s Trade
12— Used Cars for Sale
13— Auto Service
14— Tires, Parts, Supplies
15— Male Help Wanted
IS—Female Help Wanted
17— Salesman Wanted
18— Jobs W’anted
.19—Men or Women Wanted
20— Help Wanted
21— Good Things to Eat
22— Household Goods
23— Musical Instruments
24— Miscellaneous for Sale
25— Pets and Livestock
26— Poultry, Feed Supplies
27— Plants, Trees and Shrubs
28— Hay and Grain
29— Farm Implements
30— Apartments for Rent
n3l—Room and Board
32— Sleeping Rooms
33— Shoe Repairing
34— Houses for Rent
35— Miscellaneous for Rent
36— Wanted to Rent
37— Business Opportunities
38— Business Property
39— Farms and Lands
! 40—Houses for Sale
41— Lots for Sale
42— Real Estate Wanted
43— Legals
44— Notice
45— Education ,
46— Announcements
47— Instructions
48— Household Appliances
WE HAVE trash barrels and
clothes line poles. Phone
5-2433. GORDON & MORRIS.
225 So. Davis.
FOR RENT — Four room
bouse at 320 Hodge Street.
Contact Floyd Banks, Sanger,
Texas .
Misc. for Rent
TRAILERS FOR RENT!
Local Rental Trailers.
Cargo Insurance NOW Avail-
able on Nationwide Trailers,
for one way rentals,
DENNY’S PHILLIPS “66"
Service Station
500 Main St. Pho. 5-3220
Business Property
FOR RENT—Modern air con-
ditioned building east of Nel-
son Pharmacy on Connally
Street.^ See H. C. McGrede or
B. F. Ashcroft. Phone 5-3332.
Wanted to Rent
WANTED TO LEASE
Pasture anywhere in the
Dike area.
Write Box A-936, Care
Daily News-Telegram.
Houses for Sale
FOR SALE OR TRADE —
House, located at 3608 Pickett
St., Greenville, Texas. Priced
$3,000.00. Four rooms and
bath on paved street. Or will
trade for land in Hopkins
County, prefer Southwest
part.
If interested write:
W. W. Jones, 1546 Owega
Ave., Dallas 16, Texas.
Instructions
Men and Women Needed
TO TRAIN
FOR CIVIL SERVICE
We prepare Men and Women.
Ages 18 - 54. No experience
necessary. Grammer school ed-
ucation usually sufficient. Per-
manent jobs, no layoffs, short
hours. High pay, advancement.
Send name, home address,
phone number and time home.
Write Box A-914, care Daily
News-Telegram.
FOR SALE—New three bed-
room brick veneer. South side
Lee Street. Built-in electric
oven and burners. Central
heat, two tile baths, attic
stair, knotty pine cabinets.
Phone 5-3381 or 5-4011.
FOR SALE --- Two bedroom
house at 116 Foscue. Cyclone
fenced. Phone 5-2647.
Notice
You
MRS. LULA WOOD
are invited to call by noon
Saturday for a free quart of
Dairy Queen. Phone 5-3640.
NOTICE
We pay $1.00 per hundred for
scrap iron.
GORDON & MORRIS
Wrecking. Yard
225 South Davis
Lcgel*
BE IT ORDAINED BY amount assessed
THE CITY COMMISSION OF
THE CITY OF SULPHUR
SPRINGS, TEXAS
Whereas, the City Commis-
sion of the City of Sulphur
Springs, Texas, has heretofore
by resolution ordered the im-
provement of I Fisher Street,
from Lee Street to Interstate
30, by grading, installing con-
crete curb and gutter, and
paving with oil and asphalt to
a depth of 6” together with ah
asphalt seal coat thereon. .
Whereas, said Commission
from evidence and facts before
it, deemed that said curb and
gutter and paving would en-
against the
same.
Now, therefore, be it fur-
ther ordained by the City
Commission of the City of
Sulphur Springs, Texas, as fol-
lows, to-wit:
First, that there shall be
and is hereby assessed against
each parcel of property abut-
ting said street and against
the owner thereof hereinafter
named, described, and set
forth the several respective
amounts below specified as to
CARNIVAL
* ■ -
Mjrv,
By Dick Turner
rl
’ft nit VHP- *»• T.X. »«t u* s«t. <*•
‘I got Junior to drink his milk, Mom!"
Chi Taziaa Editor’s
Frontier News Hashes
January 22, 1862
The Butler expedition — The
troops on Board the Constitu-
tion to disenbark and go into
Camp - Agreeable to instruc-
tions from Washington,
the troops on board the steam-
er Constitution are to disem-
bark and go into camp for
orders.
This indicates either the
breaking up of the Butler Ex-
each of said owners of said j pedition, or a change of desti-
property and description of
the property and the amount
that would be assessed against
hance the value of each par-j each lot or parcel and its own-
cel of property more than the j er as follows, to-wit:
BUY, SELL AND TRADE
GUNS!!
STEAK HOUSE CAFE
Clinton Dame, Owner
FOR SALE — Used water
pump, in good condition. Con-
tact M. L. Simmons, Birth-
right, Texas. Phone Wilson
5-2410.
TAKE UP PAYMENTS on
Singer Slant-O-Matic, machine.
Call 885-5542.
MILLIONS OF rugs have been
cleaned with Blue Lustre. It’s
America's finest. Wester Fur-
niture Co.
Property
Owner
T. J. Holmes
I). R. Mclntire
Everytt Byrd
W. B. Woodard
J. M. Fite
Virgil Vititow
W. W. Barnes
Oscar Pullen
Oscar Pullen
Mrs. C. A. McKee
J. B, Shears
Floyd Dixon
Lot &
Front
Cost per
Total
Block
Footage
Foot
Cost
2
206
105’
$2.25
$236.25
39
206
140’
2.25
315.00
4
206
120’
2.25
270.00
5
206
90’
2.25
202.50
6
206
100’
2.25
225.00
22
201
188’
2.25
423.00
25
201
176’
2.25
396.00
26
201
76’
2.25
171.00
3
203
375’
2.25
843.75
4
203
71’
2.25
159.75
1
203
64’
2.25
144.00
.1
202 Walker 70.5’
2.25
158.63
2
202 Walker 147.7’
2.25
332.33
n is hereby
signed by
the Mayor
of the
Pets and Livestock
BULLS FOR SALE
Registered Hereford Bulls.
One to four years old.
LYNN CHAPMAN
1026 No. Davis Pho. 5-2066
Kennith Clayton, Tira
Community
Hay and Grain
28
FOR SALE — 1,500 bales
good hay at Dike. Bermuda
and Lespedeza mixed, 50c per
bale. Some from fertilized
Coastal, 60c. Call W. S. Ty-
ler, Sulphur Springs, or Ger-
ald Goodman, Birthright, Wil-
son 5-2190.
FOR SALE.
High -quality Grass—Hay.
Stored in barn on Highway,
9 miles South of Paris.
Contact Mr. Mullins, Mgr.
Lazy 3 Ranch, phone Sunset
4-8953, Paris, Texas.
scribed parcels of property to
accompany the amount as-
sessed against it and each of
said owners shall be, person-
ally liable for the amount as-
sessed against his or her prop-
erty respectively, that the
amounts assessed against said
property and owners thereof
shall be payable to the City of
Sulphur Springs, Texas, as
follows, to-wit:
Payments to be made in 30
days after completion. If pay-
ment is not made within 30
days, balance will draw inter-
est at the rate of 6% per an-
num.
Third, that such lien as is
placed against the property
shall remain in full force un-
til a written release has been
City of Sulphur Springs, Tex-
as, and duly recorded in the
deed records of Hopkins Coun-
ty, Texas.
Passed and approved by the
City Council for the City of
Sulphur Springs, Texas, on
first reading this the 16th day
of January, A. D., 1962.
Passed and approved on sec-
ond and final reading this the
day of
D.,
Mayor
Commissioner
Commissioner
Commissioner
Commissioner
ATTEST:
City Secretary
Apartment* for Rent 30
FOR RENT—Three-room fur-
nished apartment. Near Jr.
High School. Phone 5-4935 or
5-4221.
Rockies Send
Colder Air
Toward Midwest
Business Service
WE NEED!
YOUR head in our business!
LEROY’S BARBER SHOP
202 Main Street
Leroy Harvey, Owen French
and Elmer Hamrick
. Pi
Wanted to But
FOR RENT—Nicely furnished
five room upstairs apartment
Two private entrances. Good
condition. Mrs. R. L. Green.
Phone: 5-3551 deys or 5-
3202 nights. -
FOR RENT —Neat furnished
apartment. Private. Has car-
port. Adults only. 828 College
St. Phone 5-5179.
Houses for Rent
■ By Associated Press
Rain, sleet and snow spread
across wide areas of the nation
today and colder air headed
from the Rockies into sections
of the Midwest and in parts of
the Northeast.
Cold wave warnings werie
posted for North Dakota,
northern South Dakota, north-
ern Minnesota and parts of
Montana. The weather bureau
said the cold air from Canada
is expects! to send tempera-
turfs-to 15 to 25 degrees below
zero by tomorrow morning.
Wet spots covered areas in
SPOT CASH PAID!
Bicycles, Round-table, child-j Harlan West,
ren's furniture.
Anything else of value —
Just call
DERMONT’S WA REHOUSE
, Phone 5-4348
’ 108 Hinnant St.
■ tq- jjjjy-*
From, owner— A $4,000 or
$5,000 Home. Call after 5
p. m., 885-5259.
FOR RENT—Three room and
bath house, on paved street.
Phone 5-2209 or 5-4542. J.
_34 north, midwest, south and east
U|«ul Cart for Sale _12
FOR SALE—Clean 1956 Pon-
tiac, radio, heater and factory
air- See Jim Bryce, 1011 Gil-
fcer £t«
but amounts in most places
during Qie nigfct and early
morning were not heavy.
However, a storm develop-
ing in the Southern Plains
brought moderate to heavy
rainfall from the middle Mis-
sissippi V a 11e y eastward
FOR RENT — Unfurnished,
two bedroom bouse. Redecor-
ated throughout, Venetian
blinds, TV cable connection. _
Couple only, at 217 Houston throuKh Tennessee and the1
Gulf Coast northeastward
from northern sections of the
Eastern Gulf stjates to the
lower Ohio Valley.
During the night and early
morning rain splashed the
Northern' Pacific Coast, with
showers and freezing drizzle
inland! in the Northern Plateau
and Northern Rockies.
Fog covered scattered sec-
tions of the Gulf States and
while fair to partly cloudy
the Middle Mississippi Valley,
weather was reported in other
parts of the country.
Fairly cold weather contin-
ued in the Plateau states.
Temperatures ranged from
near zero to 20 in the Central
Plateau region and parts of
the Southern Plateau section.
Readings were in the 20» and
30s in the northern half of
the area from the Rockies
eastward. Higher marks pre-
vailed in other sections of the
country, ranging into" the 70s
in Florida and southern Texas.
nation. The troops are compos-
ed of tkje Maine Twelfth Regi-
ment, the Bay State Regiment,
and two of three detached com-
panies. They have been con-
fined on board some 10 days,
hourly expecting to start for
the mouth of the Mississippi.
—The New Yorw Times (Re-
Four Candidates
List Expenses
Austin, Jan. 26 UR — The
clerk of the Texas House,
Ralph Roberts, has reported
that all four candidates in the
U. S. House special elections
Saturday and Tuesday have
filed their expense accounts.
Contestants in Saturday’s
election to chose a successor to
former Representative Frank
Ikard are two Wichita Falls
men, Graham Purcell, a Demo-
crat and Republican Joe Bai-
ley Meissner.
Purcell reported contribu-
tions of $6,799. Meissner re-
ported contributions of $975
and expenses of $2,041.
Contestants in Tuesday’s
election to choose a successor
to the late Speaker Sam Ray-
burn are Ray Roberts of Mc-
Kinney and R. C. Slagle, Jr.,
of Sherman.
Roberts reported contribu-
tions of $5,003 and expendi-
turics of $1^30. Slagle de-
ported contribution of $750
and expenditures totaling
$311.
printed in Texas papers)
Life at the capital — Accord-
ing to the Washington corres-
pondent of The New York Ev-
ening Post gaiety prevails at
the Federal Capital this wint-
One of the most striking fea-
tures of life here is the utter
carelessness and insouciance of
every one. From Mrs. Lincoln,
driving in her gaudy coach, and
Mr. Lincoln, amusing himself
with Hermann’s feats of
“prestidigiations,” down to the
young officers dancing gaily at
the balls, every one seems to
consider the present time one
especially created for amuse-
ment. There is not the slightest
seriousness anywhere that I
Student Killed
In Plane Crash
St Phone 5-3478.
FOR RENT — Three bedroom
house, garage and storage, 220
wiring and TV cable connec-
tion. Phone 5-4672.
FOR RENT—-Four room house
at 1052 Gilmer St. Call C. A.
Cain 5-4320.
FOR RENT — Two bedroom
house at 6 0 3 Whitworth.
Phone 885-5837,
Ohio Valley to North Carolina
and Southern Virginia. Rain
changing to snow was forecast
in a broad belt from the ex-
treme Southern Rockies
through the Central Plains to
the west central upper Great
Lakes. Two inches of snow
fell in Albuquerque, N. M.
The storm also is expected
to bring showers from tht
Defaced Pennies
Result in Term
Austin, Jan. 26 iFS—A three-
year prison sentence has been
given 41-year-old Fred Heiss-
ner for possessing and pass-
ing off defaced pennies for
dimes.
He pleaded guilty to using
acid to reduce pennies to the
size of dimes and then swap-
ping rolls of the altered coins
Southern Plain* and Wester^ to bank tellers.
Amarillo, Jan. 26 iFI — A
young man was killed when a
light plane crashed near Ama-
rillo yesterday has been identi-
fied as 20-year-old William M.
Matthews of Star Route, Halo
Center. The crash occurred
shortly after he took off from
Amarillo’s Trade Winds Air
port.
Matthews, a student at Tex-
as Tech, was alone in the 4-
place Cessna 150. He was on a
practice flight from Lubbock
to Childress, to Amarillo, and
back to Lubbock.
The plane was owned by the
Champ Aviation Company in
Lubbock.
have been able to diseover-it
was all fun. And anyone who
looks or speaks earnestly of the
critical conditions of affairs is
regarded as a bore all but some
of the few older heads. One
would thing all the ’’fast” boys
of the country had come to
Washington, for none of the
men here seem to care for much
else but jollity. The streets
are thronged with officers and
privates, all intent on amuse-
ment, and dashing young caval-
ry men clank their swords and
jingle their spurs in dancing
rooms as well as bar rooms. The
mournful faces are at the
horhes that the war has made
desolate. — The Weekly Tele-
graph.
“Yankee” to the last — A
correspondent, writing from
one of the Yankee camps, at
the mouth of the Salt river, be-
low Louisville, tells the fol-
lowing:
Interesting incidents are pro-
vokingly rare hereabouts. One
occured in the brigade last
night, which may serve to en-
lighten the world upon the pe-
cularities, of an army chaplain-
cy. A dying man sent in great
haste for the chaplain, who was
soon at his bedside, ready to
perform his solemn offices in
his behalf. Bending over the
dying man, he gently inquired
what he should do for him. “I
just wanted to inquire,” said he,
“If I die, can my father draw
my wages?" — Comment is un-
necessary. The Bellville Coun-
tryman.
i pH |
Animal Kingdom
Across SMutodtt*
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32 Fldl
33 Tens*
SlVarttabto
14 State
15 African dtalack
16 Pedal digit*
HRXibi? »B^rten«aent MDWm*
37 Rail
31 Try .
32 Rodent
33 Employ ♦
34 Mineral fOttl
35 Poisonous lizard
35 Lockjaw
38 Decrees
39 Regret
40 Equality
41 Asterisk*
44 Harangues
48 Posses*
49 The son
50 Front
M Dlkrtlon
65Footlike pot-
58 Feminine nuoi
DOWN
lPrepoeition
3 Hibernating
animal
3 Persia
4 Console*
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NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE A8S%
Former Editor
Says Belter
Methods Needed
Tanker Plane
Burns on Ramp
Altus, Okla-. Jan. 26 (F) —
A 3 1/2 million dollar tanker
plane burned at the Altus Air
Force Base in Southwestern
Oklahoma.
The K-C-135 tanker was
standing on a ramp adjacent
to the base operations office.
The base commander, Colonel
John Compton, said an engine
The Trent Affair — Dis-
patches just received from the
British Government show that
the disposition of the Trent
affair by Secretary Seward is
satisfactory, and justifies the
expectation of peace between
the two countries for a long
time to come. -The New York
Times (Reprinted in Texas pap-
ers)
Texas Laughs
By Boyce Hou>e
Two Longview football fans
had just witnessed a thriller,
28 to 27, and they walked past
a meat market. Painted on the j
window was: “Pork' Chops 50; j
Chuck Roast, 58” and one of
the fans remarked, "Say, that!
was a close score, too, wasn’t
it?”
New York, Jan. 26 UP) —
Former editor Harry Ashmore,
who won a Pulitizer Prize at
Little Rock, Ark., says the
death rate among new news-
papers is growing because
newspapers — among other
things—have lost their top role
in the total field of communi-
cations.
He says, also, that newspa-
pers have not learned to, “roll
with the punch” and • improve
their methods.
Ashmore says there has been
a lack of imagination, an un-
willingness on the part of the
industry as a whole to recog-
nize changing conditions and
try to adapt to them.
Ashmore’s comments came in
a television production which
dealt with the recent closing
of the Los Angeles Examiner
and Los Angeles Mirror. It also
took up the general topic of
the decline in the number of
the country’s newspapers.
Ashmore said newspayers
have been suffering losses in
advertising revenue and that
some of it has gone to tele-
vision.
He said also that some news-
papers are virtually abandoning
the role of advocacy. In Ash-
more’s words “They’re becom-
ing bland and saying nothing
at all, because that’s the safe
thing to do.”
Among others taking part in
the program were Mark Eth-
ridge, publisher of the Louis-
ville-Courier Journal, and Louis
Selzer, who runs the Cleveland
Press.
Ethridge was asked to com-
ment on the fact that in his
city his paper does not have
any competition.
Ethridge replied: “People
argue about monopoly, but
with all the media of communi-
cation—television and radio,
and so forth, I don’t think the
public is being deprived of any
avenue of opinion.” In fact, he
said, the public probably gets
more shades of opinion than it
ever got.
As to whether newspapers
have lost touch with readers,
he said sights have to be rais-
ed as far as public intelligence
is concerned. Ethridge went on
it say he believes newspapers
undestimate what the public
will take, and that television
does too. He added that tele-
vision does some good docu-
mentaries but there still is a
lot of trash on TV and in news-
papers, too.
To a question on whether
people believe newspapers as
much as they used to, Selzer
said be believes in total, peo-
ple are doing a great deal more
thinking for themselves.
He said he believes there
has been a decline in investi-
gative reporting. And he said
one of his concerns is what he
termed the blackout of infor-
mation that takes place from
government, from industry and
from o’tbcr quarters in the
country.
★
Tough Safe
Oakland, Cal., Jan. 26' (FI
—Highway workman found
an abandoned • a f a in an
abandoned garage on a proj-
ect in Oakland. It bad baen
•tolen two weeks before from
the Marin Golf Club in No-
vato, Cal. It muat have baen
a tough safe. When the club
manager opened it, there
were the contents, $2,500 in
cash, still intact.
Delegates Bill
Sent to Daniel
Austin, Jan 26 (FI — The
House has sent a bill to Gover-
nor Daniel for his signature
that would change the method
of alloting delegates to politi-
cal party conventions.
A 102 to 39 vote cleared the
Senate - passed bill off the
calendar and moved it to Dan-
iel for signing.
Present law allots delegates
on a basis of number of vtoea
cast in the most recent presi-
dential year election for gov-
ernor. The bill tha# passed
would make it the most recent
gubernatorial election-period.
Spokesmen for the bill said
it would encourage political
participation in non - presi-
dential year election for gov-
ernor, The bill tha|t passed
would make it the most recent
gubernatorial election - period.
Spokesmen for the bill said
it would encourage political
participation in non-presiden-
tial years. Opponents said it
would reduce the representa-
tion of rural areas in the af-
fairs of the parties.
College Prexy
Resigns Post
Abilene, Jan. 26 (FI — The
president of Hardin-Simmons
University—Doctor Evan Al-
lard Reiff—has resigned.
In his letter of resignation
to the board of trusses, Dr.
Reiff said his resignation was
effective July 1 “or earlier
Nearly 18 million families in
the United States own dogs.
should a successor b# chasen
or other proper arrangements
be made by the board of trus-
tees for the administration of
this office.”
Dr. Reiff would not comment
on his reason for resigning and
would not immediately say any-
thing of his future plans.
He was H a r d i n-Simmons’
10th president and had served
in the post office since July of
1953.
Liquor Agents
Destroy Stills
Austin, Jan. 26 (F)—The Tex-
as Liquor Contol Board re-
ports that state liquor agents
destroyed 85 stills in dry coun-
ties last year.
The agents destroyed 10,775
gallons of mash and 182 gal-
lons of moonshine liquor at the
still sites. The stills had a ca-
pacity total of 6,800, gallons.
In days of yore, heaven pro-
tected the working girl. Now-
adays it takes a union, a wage-
hour law, unemployment com-
pensation, s o c ia I security,
matfunetioft-xesulted in an ex-1 health insurance, and a pen-
jjlorioa which caused the fucJsion plan.
WE ARE REPAIRING
FROZEN PUMP PARTS
Hargrave Machine
AND
I
Welding Shop
611 Mulberry St.
Phone 885-4585
■*
,/f'
%
>:5s.
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Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 84, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, January 26, 1962, newspaper, January 26, 1962; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth829463/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.