The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 82, No. 130, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 1, 1960 Page: 2 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 23 x 17 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
-
WF'“
m
99
i
m
THE DAILY NEWS-TELEGRAM
Tuesday, May 31, 1960.
m Ji
• i
I
if
Business Cards
Electrician—
Electrical Ceatractort-
Repairs, etc,
- • --
LIGHT FIXTURES
Fans — Supplies
Wiring and Repairing
electric
Phone 5-4667
MILLIGAN
Main Street
ELECTRIC MOTOR
REWINDING
—Prompt Service—
Repairing and Rewinding
Any Size Electric Motor
Pickup and Delivery
Hogue Electric Shoo
405 Old Jefferson
Phone 5-2332
Authorized CHRYSLER
AIRTEMP Air Conditioning
NO DOWN PAYMENT—UP
TO 5 YEARS TO PAY
HENDERSON
Refrigeration-Air Conditioning
407 Locust Phone: 5-2470
Wiring and Repairs
WILER’S
ELECTRIC
108 Texas Street
Phone 5-4800
Bailding Contractor*—
Material*. _ ect.
Quality Ready Mix
Concrete
Building Blocks, Culvert Pipe,
Septic Tanks, Well Curbing
Sand, Gravel Cement
BELL CONCRETE
PRODUCTS CO.
7«h arCotton Belt Tr. Ph. *-*7*1
LUMBER
Loans—Plans, Estimates
F. H. A. Title 1 Loans
Build Anything—Repair—-Add
A Room — New Bath, Build
Grade A Barn—Hay Barn,
Garage, Up to S3,000.
Weat Building Supply
PAPERING—
PAINTING—
TEXTONING—
Free Estimates
WOODROW WILSON
TU 5-4469
4
CONTRACTING
Building and Remodeling
llile Cabinet Tops, Floors and
Walls. Paint & Paper
Contract or by the Hour.
Phone 5-2642
FRANK HUDSON
1135 S. Fisher St.
Painting A Sheetrocking
Taping and Bedding
For Discriminating Customers
ALLEN A. GLOVER
Phone TU 6-5537
Appliances New ft Used
Sales ft Service
--- • -—
ELECTROLUX
Vacuum Cleaners and Polish-
ers, Sales, Service and Supplies
Effective Moth Protection
and Rug Shampoo
GEO. H. FOX
1027 Church Street
Feral tare Upholstery
Refinishing
--- « --
McLARRY BROS.
MADE-RITE MATTRESS CO.
Jefferson and Jackson Sts.
Phone 5-4747
Expert Mattress Service
We Give “S&H” Green Stamps
" HAVENS
Mattress A Upholstery
Complete Mattress Service
and Furniture Upholstery
Mattress Renovating, Make
Innerspring of Your Oid
Mattress. Free Pickup and
Delivery.
AH Work Guaranteed
S04 Jefferson St. Ph. 5-2246
Livestock Market
Chicago, May 31 dh—Cattle
20,000; calves 100; slaughter
steer sand heifers steady to 25
higher; cows and bulls steady
to 25 higher; vealers 1.00 to
2.00 lower; load prime. 1,230
lb. steers 32.25; load mostly
prime 1,327 lbs. 31.25; few
mixed choice and prime 29.50-
30.00; high choice 28.25-29.50;
most average choice 26.75-
28.25; mixed good and choice
26.25-26.50; most good 23.00-
26.00; two loads mixed stand-
ard and good 900 lb. Holstein
29.50; few utility and stand-
ard Holstein 20.00-21.50; good
to average choice heifers 22.75-
27.25; several loads average to
high choice 27.50-27.75; util-
ity and standard heifers 17.50-
22.50; utility and commercial
cows 17.00-19.00; canners ana
cutters 15.00-18.25; utility and
commerical bulls 20.00-21.50;
few standard and good vealers
19.00-27.00.
Fort Worth, May 31 141 —
Hogs 800; early trading rath-
er slow; harrows and gilts open-
ed about 25 higher than last
Thursday or unevenly steady
to 25 lower than Monday; a
few sales of mixed 1-3 butch-
ers ITS.25-16.00.
Cattle 2,800; calves 900;
very slow; trends not estab-
lished.
Sheep 10,000; steady; good
to prime spring slaughter lambs
20.00-22.00; good and choice
old crop shorn lambs 16.00-
18.00; ewes 4.50-5.00.
Kansas City, May 31 '4*
Cattle 10,500; calves 300; gen-
erally steady; good and choice
steers 24.00-26.50; heifers and
mixed yearlings 22.50-27: cows
15.50-18.00: hulls 19.00-20.00;
good and cohice vealers 23.00-
27.00; 500-950 lb. stocker and
feeder steers 24.00-27.50;
choice steer calves to 29.00.
DEATHS
Mrs. Sanders
Dies Monday
Mrs. H. F. Sanders of Wills
Point, a former Hopkins Coun-
ty resident, died at 9:05 p.m.
Monday at Wills Point. Mrs.
Sanders had lived in this coun-
ty since 1883, before moving
to Wills Point to live with her
daughter last y e a r. She was
100 years old.
She was horn in Indiana in
1859. In 1895, she married H.
F. Sanders.
Final rites will he held at
11:00 a.m. Thursday at the
Church of Christ on Jefferson
Thl Lions’ Club met at the
Womans' Club Building Tues-
day for their regular weekly
luncheon with Walt House pro.
silling.
Featured guests at the noon
meeting were Captain Nichols
and Lieutenant Munster of the
Dallas Car Theft division of
the Dallas Police Department
and Hopkins County Sheriff
Paul Jones.
Nichols and Munster gave
short talks on car theft and
methods of prevention before
i • .. fil>v, I mr InP
Sulphur-Graphs-
LACY GLENN reports he
found a single key on a ring
Tuesday morning on the north
side of the public square. The
key was turned into the city
police station.
Mircellaneous Service
- • -
Your Office Supply
Headquarter*
MILLER’S
Print irt Stationery
Phone 5-3551
CITY GLASS
AND UPHOLSTERY
C. L. Morgan—J. L. Buchanan
Cooper Highway
Windshields and Door
Glasses Installed
Phone: 5-4306
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
Poultry Market
Austin, May 31 —Texas
hroiler-frver market by state
department of agriculture:
South: Market steady. Sup-
plies short to adequate for a
fair to good demand. Move-
ment about normal. Prices at
the farm ending 10 a.m. today,
broilers-f ryers 2 44-3 Mi lbs. 17
cents.
East: Market about steady.
Offerings and supplies fully
adequate for the fair demand.
Trading moderate. Volume and
confirmed sales, not including
exchange sales, at the farm
ending 10 a.m. today, broilers-
fryers 2%-3% lbs. 200,000
head: 18 per cent at 16, 2 per
cent at 16.21, 3 per cent at
16.50, 2 per cent at 17, 10 per
cent intra-company transfers,
65 per cent undetermined.
Arkansas Poultry
Steady; offerings barely ade-
quate to excessive.
Prices (2 % -3 % pounds)
16%-17% cents.
Street with Tillet S. Teddlie j showing a film depicting the
con tacting. Burial will be at benefits performed by local po-
Connor Cemetery. j lice-officers.
Her grandsons will serve as The film depicted life in a
pallbearers. | city with no law enforcement
The body will remain at agency, showing how crime
Tapp Funeral Home until! would run rampant without the
10:00 a.m. Wednesday, when aid of a local police depart-
it will he moved to the Otho ment.
Sanders residence in Dike. Travis King, program chair-
Survivors are three daugh- man, introduced the two Dal-
ters, Mrs. George Williams of las policemen.
Wills Point, Mrs. Audrey Min-
ter, Sulphur Springs; and Mrs.
Carl Wilder of Dallas; two
sons, Otho Sanders, Dike; and
W. J. Reed. Dallas; 24 grand-
children, 47 great grandchil-
dren, and 2 great-great-grand-
children.
SETTING OF' forms for curb
and gutter construction along
the new high school campus
was started Tuesday as the first
tangible step in the street con-
struction program for that area
The present project calls for
1,775 feet of curb and gutter
on each side of Lee Street,
which borders the campus on
the south. Work is starting on
the north side of Lee west of
the Texas Street intersection.
MRS. GENE Attlesey will
present her piano pupils in re
cital tonight at 8 o’clock at
F'irst Baptist Church.
4-H Members
Give Program
Chicago Grain
Chicago, May 31 HP— Wheat
—July 1.84%-%; Sep. 1.87’4;
Dec. 1.92%.
Corn—July 1.21%-*4; Sep.
1.20-%; Dec. 1.13%.
Oats—July 72%-%; Sep.
72%; Dec. 75%.
Rye—July 1.25-25%; Sep.
Egg Prices Due
To Improve
College Station —Egg prices
to producers for the last half
of 1960 are expected to aver-
age considerably higher than
for the same period a year
ago, says John G. McHaney,
economist for the Texas Agri-
cultural Extension Service.
Seventeen county 4-H club: A strong factor in the fore-
members took part in a Rural rast is the likelihood that the
Life Sunday program at the number of layers will continue
Dike Methodist Church last, to decline during the months
ahead. The production of egg-
, ' . , , n tvpe chicks in the United
The featured speaker, Don, 1 . , .. .
,,, , , . , I States during the first three
Hatley “student at Last Tex-: of ,g60 w a s 37 per
as State College, was the on- below the production for
ly person on the program not ^ ^ m9 and
currently engaged in 4-H dub. trend l'continued through
work' April, the economist says. The
production drop in Texas for
this same period was 38 per
cent.
WESLEY METHODIST
Church will have a Vacation
Bible School beginning Mon-
day, June 6. Classes will be con-
ducted each morning from 9
to 11 o’clock through F’riday,
June 10. All children are in-
vited to attend.
THE RELATIVES of Paris
William Palmer and C o r d i e
Lou Hicklond will hold their
annual reunion Sunday, June 5,
at City Park. Everyone is in-
vited to bring a basket lunch
and help make this an enjoy-
able day.
THE CEMETERY Society
will meet Wednesday morning
at 10 o’clock in the Carnegie
Library.
Members of county 4-H
clubs taking part in the pro-
gram were Pat Potts, Dike,
master of ceremonies; Lou Ann
McKinzie, Dike; and Pat
Marts. Gaftord Chapel, song
leaders.
Special talks and songs were
presented by Pat Marts, Rhon-
da Potts, Dike; Elvira Petross
and Joyce Kennemer, Arbala;
Egg production in the na-
tion in March was 9 per cent
more than the previous month
hut 7 per cent below March
of 1959. In Texas March egg
production was up 21 per cent
over February but 8 per cent
less than March of 1959. The
POLICE MADE two arrests
Monday, with one defendant
paying a $20 fine on a drunk-
enness and affray charge. The
other was a speeding case
originating in the 700 block
on Gilmer Street. Officers also
investigated a prowler com-
plaint early Tuesday morning
on Bellview Street. They
found nobody in the area.
Houston Sets
Integration
Plan for '61
Houston, May 31 I* — The
Houston board of education
has adopted a 3-school integra-
tion plan.
One board member, Stone
Wells, said after its adoption
that “No child will be forced
to attend an integrated school
under this plan.”
The school hoard’s only Neg-
ro member, Mrs. Charles White,
cast the dissenting vote. A
long-time board member and
former president of the Uni-
versity of Houston, Dr. W. W.
Kemmerer, refused to vote. He
called the plan “very weak and
I’m not for it.”
The three schools are a high
school, junior high school and
an elementary school, but they
weren’t designated by name.
The choice of the schools was
left up to the school superin-
tendent, John McFarland, aft-
er the results of Saturday’s
desegregation referendum.
The plan is to start operat-
ing in September, 1961.
U. S. District Judge Ben C.
Connally set a W e d n e s day
deadline for the board to sub-
mit its plan.
The school board president,
Dr. Henry Peterson, opened
the hoard meeting by saying
any departure from the pres-
ent system of education is “re-
grettable.”
Mrs. White said: “This plan
is an insult to school patrons
because only three schools in
a system of 170,000 students
are integrated.”
About 25 per cent of Hous-
ton’s public school students are
Negroes.
The board’s plan said no
child will be permitted to at-
tend an integrated school if he
has a school disciplinary record,
police record of juvenile rec-
ord.
1 SS 1 OjD
Show Starts at 1:30
Every Day
TODAY, WED.,
THURS. and FRI.
NCCHT-MIIKSNCASTCR S«Ml
BURT AUDREY
LANCASTERHEPBURN
ALL THAT IS
UNCONQUERABLE
IN MAN...ALL
THAT IS
UNVANQUISHEDit
IN WOMAN
IS IN
usamm
l<tl
f
OirtcM by
JOHN
H
USTON
AUME IONS CMAAtrS
MURPHY • SAXON • BKKFORO
TECHNICOLOR*
Hi-Vue Drive-In
Open Full Time
LAST SHOWING
TONIGHT
-Iwn. LOVE ASM)
SUiaali
sunn, demu
GAZEBO
UesCUHKI’acMM
AUTO GLASS EXPERTS
GEE GLASS A MIRROR
L.O.F. Shatter Proof
Pittsburgh Plate
ALL WORK FULLY
GUARANTEED
Jefferson St.
1.26%; Dec. 1.27%. „„„ ....................... ............... ....
Soybeans —July 2.15%-15; Gayle Harreison, Pine Forest;; number of eggs produced per
Sep. 2.11%; Nov. 2.10. Elaine Teer, Como; Lavanna ’----rr----“—*■
Douglass, Norma Campbell,
Closing Wall Street S^s^K&K*'
Pages were Judy Potts at)d
Judith Kellum of Dike.
Complete
RADIATOR. SERVICE
Clean, Repair and Recore
Used Radiators — Completely
Reconditioned for Sale
Pickup and Delivery
Judv Kennemer & Son
327 Main Phone 5-2004
•Typewriter Sales and Service
RENTALS AND REPAIRS
J. H. NUNN
Adding Machine Sales
4k ScrvicB
Phone 6-2616 206 Church St. ProfeSSiOHal CdfdS
■m
/
BILL’S GARAGE
Bill Fulbright, Owner
COMPLETE AUTO SERVICE
Tune-up9, Brake Lining
and Adjustment.
104 Water Oak
Dial 5-3573 Nite 5-2842
Distributors of Johnson’s Wax
Products and Other Nationally
Known Products
Operated by Bobby Goff
The Southwest Sanitary
Co.
Janitor & Sanitary Supplies
105 N. Davis Phone 6-5869
KENNEMER REST HOME
Private rooms available for
elderly men or women.
Nursing Care.
623 N. Davis St. - Ph. 6-2218
Mr*. Merto Kennemer
Ben’s Generator - Starter
and
Electric Motor Service
Servicing All Types Generator
and Starters.
106 Mulberry Street
Ph. 5-2446 Res. Ph. 5-4547
Travel Arranged
Without Charge
TOWN & COUNTRY
Travel Service
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Fisher
Phone TU5-2727 Day or Night
220 Main Street_
BLADE WORK
Iron-Ore Gravel, Sand,
Fill Dirt and Pea Gravel
Phontj, 5-4861
C. L. BURROWS
308 Ardis Street
New York, May 31 Wi —
Heavy selling clipped prices at
the close on the New York
stock market t o d a y. Despite
gains by selected issues—not-
ably electronics—the market
overall was apparently lower.
Volume for the day was es-
timated at 3,500,000 shares
compared with 3,040,000 shares
Friday.
Closing prices of some repre-
sentative stocks: American Tel
and Tel, 89%, up 1%; Stand-
ard Oil of New Jersey, 40%,
down %; Santa Fee, 23%,
down %.
Both government and corpo-
rate bonds chalked »up modest
gains.
In Chicago, wheat was mix-
ed. Corn and oats were slight-
ly lower. Soybeans were mix-
ed. Hogs: steady to strong—
top $17.50. Cattle: slaughter
steers steady to 25 cents high-
er—top $32.25.
Cotton futures in New York
closed 35 cents a bale lower to
20 cents higher.
US Nay Show
Aerial Shots
layer in Texas in March was
22 per cent above February
and this increased rate of lay,
pinots out the economist, could
have been responsible for at
least a part of the price de-
cline in March.
McHaney says egg produc-
tion will remain below the year
before and soon the egg sup-
ply will decline seasonally.
With an increase in egg prices,
the possibility is very good, he
MR. AND Mrs. Mickey Bal-
lard announce the birth of a
daughter, Susan Dianna, at
8:05 p. m. Monday, in Memo-
rial Hospital. The young lady
weighed 6 pounds, 10 ounces.
She is the granddaughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Ferris Wyatt
and Mr. and Mrs. Fini* Bal-
lard.
Washington, May 31 OP — adds, that many producers will
SALES AND SERVICE
Typewriter*, Adding Machine
Complete Stock
Office Furniture and Supplies
SHELTON OFFICE
EQUIPMENT
*23 Main Dial: 6-3717
M. C. BAILEY
ABSTRACTS
REAL ESTATE, INSURANCE
Tha oldest abstract and real
estate firm in Hopkins County
Sines 1911
Divinity School
(Continued fxom Page One)
tary of the commission of faith
and order of the World Coun-
cil of Churches.
The students who said in a
signed statement that they
were turning in their bachelor
of divinity degrees are Rich-
ard Dickinson of Glen dora,
CpI.; G. Richard Dulin of Dal-
las, Texas, and Wilson Boots
of Ellenwood City, Pa.
Their statement said they
were involved in the sit-in
demonstrations and “We can
no longer claim special privi-
lege for ourselves and see our
brother denied them ...”
They were graduated Sunday.
Of the 13 students who quit,
Dickinson said, eleven were
from southern states. They
signed a statement saying “We
have openly supported the sit-
in movement with the know-
ledge and without the reprisal
of the university.
"If this university cannot
accept Jim Lawson as a stu-
dent, then we cannot in good
conscience remain.”
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The Daily News-Telegram is
authorized to announce the
following Democratic candi-
dates for public office, subject
to the Democratic primary
June 4, 1960;
County Commissioner, Proc. 3*
LEX FITE
(Re-election)
T. M. (Mervin) CHESTER
County Commissioner, Proc. ll
H. TRACY KNIGHT
DALE SEWELL
Various agencies of the gov
ernment are considering the re-
lease of some of the photo-
graphs obtained by aerial re-
connaissance over the Soviet
Union.
The question of whether to
release them has been under
discussion since the Paris sum-
mit conference broke up. No
decision has been reached thus
far.
State Department officials
say the photographs the U-2
flights over the Soviet Union
produced are of outstanding
quality. Some officials argue
that, now that the mission of
the U-2 has been disclosed,
there is no point in keeping
these photographs classified.
The final decision rests with
the White House.
hold hens which have been in
production 10 to 12 months.
From a marketing standpoint,
this could mean more leakers
and cracked shells and eggs
with lower interior quality.
These conditions, McHaney
says, will lower the overall in-
come from eggs.
This quality factor, along
with the reduction of lay of
older birds, should be analyzed
carefully by producers in de-
termining whether to sell old
hens, keep them or replace
them with pullets, concludes the
economist.
BAND DIRECTOR Walter
Williams, while taking a year-
end inventory of band hall
property, reports he found a
clarinet, apparently in very
good condition. Williams said
the instrument appears as if
it has not been used all year,
and was probably lost by a
band student in 1958 or 1959.
He asked that anyone missing
a clarinet come by the band
building to see if the instru-
ment is his.
MR. AND Mrs. Don Petty of
629 Tate Street announce the
birth of a daughter Tuesday,
May 31 at 12:20 a.m. at Me-
morial Hospital.
MR. AND Mrs. B. T. Allen
of Route Two announce the
birth of a daughter Tuesday,
May 31, at Memorial Hospital.
Court Rejects
Death Appeal
Washington, May 31 (d* — A
Houston man lost a chance be-
fore the US Supreme Court to-
day to escape the electric
chair.
He is Howard Stickney, sen-
tenced to death for the slaying
of Mrs. * Clifford Barnes of
Houston.
The nation’s highest court
rejected his appeal for relief
trom the death sentence.
Mrs. Barnes and her hus-
band, who worked with Stick-
ney for the Texas Highway De-
partment, were killed on a
lonely Galveston beach on
March 24th, 1958. The wom-
an’s nude body was found lat-
ter in her apartment. Canada’s
Royal Mounted Police arrest-
ed Stickney in New Brunswick
a month later,
Stickney’s appeal asserted
that police in a prolonged ques-
tioning brain-washed him into
confessing that he killed the
Barnes couple. He contended
he was denjed due process of
law.
Cuban Officers
Reported Held
Miami, May 31 tfl — The
Miami News .says several Cu-
ban air force officers were ar-
rested over the week-end by
Major Raul Castro, minister of
Cuba’s armed forces. The News
says a raiding party led by Raul
Castro broke into a meeting of
officers. One of the officers
was reported to have drawn a
gun againt Raul Castro, but it
was knocked out of his hand by
a soldier.
The paper says the nature of
the meeting has not been de-
termined — that it’s not known
whether the officers were con-
spiring against Fidel Castro's
regime. But the paper says
there are unconfirmed rumors
in Havana that the air force
group was planning mass defec-
tion and escape to the United
States. ,
Rocky Urges
Unity Meeting
Albany, N. Y., May 31 Of'—
New York’s Governor Nelson
Rockefeller has suggested an
early meeting of Western
hemisphere foreign ministers
to d i s c u s 8 problems which
threaten Pan-American unity
and security. The proposal M
part of a five-point program
Rockefeller advocated to es-
tablish closer relations among
Western hemisphere nations.
Former Nazi
Guard Held
Munich, Germany, May 31 OH
— Another former officer of
the 'Nazi elite guard is under
arrest in Munich. Fifty-year-
olcK former Captain Curt Fiebig
is being held on suspicion of
having a part in the war-time
mass slaughter of Jews. Offi-
cials aay the arrest was not
connected with the capture of
Adolf Eichmann by Israeli
agents.
FIVE SULPHUR Springs
men have been appointed to
East Texas Chamber of Com-
merce committees by Caldwell
McFaddin of Beaumont, presi-
dent of the organization. They
are J. W. Pratt, industrial de-
velopment; E. E. Matheson. la-
bor relations; Phil A. Sartin,
gas and oil; Grady Prim, water
resources and Joe Williamson,
world trade.
USE OF abusive language
came cheap to a local man in
Justice Dewitt Loyd’s court
Tuesday, but the operating ex-
pense was another matter. The
fine assessed on his plea of
guilt was only $1. Court costs
brought the total bill to $22.
Armed Bandits
Hold Hostages
Fort Worth, May 31 1*1 —
Two armed bandits were sur-
prised in a doctor’s office in
the F'ort Worth suburb of
North Richland Hills last night.
They held the doctor plus two
small children and their par-
ents while they completed their
job.
The captives are Dr. Bruce
Jacobsen and Mr. and Mrs. J.
D. Stickney and their children,
5-year-old Batty and 4-year-old
Mike. They were forced to lie
on the floor while the bandits
robbed the doctor of about
WED. and THURS.
TIM
UMBlE
lAUGH MAKER
OfMOHMC FOR
SERGEANTS!
mat
GRjFRTH-fARR
WAITER MATTHAU )
momi a «wu n»1k acTSU mSnmd
Show Time—7:45
$100 worth of narcotics and
$6 in cash.
Mrs. Stickney, who had been
slightly injured in a traffic ac-
cident, and her family had met
the doctor in front of hfa of-
fice. When the doctors and the
others entered the building,
the two bandits jumped out of
an examination room behind
them and held them captive
until they completed the bur-
glary job.
EllisWarns
(Continued from Page One)
population is growing three
times as fast as the general
population. Despite progress in
raising the standards of the
prison system, he said, it is
more crowded now and has
greater needs than at any time
in the past.
Texas Woman
(Continued from Page One)
to have belonged to a New Or-
leans man, Rosalina Ditta. Mrs.
Christakis said Ditta was the
man her sister was to have
married and that he had lent
her the car.
//,vs/5 a phont at hand In a homa that's Ttlnphont-Plannadf
■ |
RC
fresher
Science Shrinks Piles
New Way Without Surgery
Stops Itch-Relieves Pain
~ ----
hs Task, H. T. (H-.U1) - Far th*
flrst time sdenee has found a new
healing substance with the aston-
ishing ability te shrink hemor-
rhoids, (toy itching, end relieve
pain — without surgery.
In ease after case, while geatly
relieving pain, actual reduction
(rininkage) took place.
Ment amazing of all-results were
—jf1- ghat sufferers made
___ lag safe-
Tbi* ■ubatanc* is sow «Ysusbls
in tupp«*it*rv or •/or*
under the same PrsiwsM** A
At your drngglat. aeney bask
"... U*i no trouble—Vm in my workshop”
. Spend much time at your hobby? Then an addi-
tional phone at your elbow will often prove a
boon. And it’a no luxury, either, at ita low coat.
Get a neat wall phone, it leaves your workbench
clear. |
GEHtRAL TELEPHONE
America's larpsil Independent Telephone System
'"Diry '
v*
■ • - %..* - - ■ -e -r* a»An- M*.j
.-.v . v.,1 Kjy.:'. ; jjy f>S3fiaMt*
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 82, No. 130, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 1, 1960, newspaper, June 1, 1960; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth830164/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.