The Clarksville Times (Clarksville, Tex.), Vol. 90, No. 12, Ed. 1 Friday, April 6, 1962 Page: 6 of 12
twelve pages : ill. ; page 24 x 19 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:
',V'A
_
v i ... •
K3F > ;■. 1 -
tew*'
-T
-J&j-
•j:
..jr.
, -*■*
Friday, April 4 1942
Pit* 4
'' .
to the two aortal areorl-
fintfs okwM outgo by
•4K’ million during fiscal year
1961. according to the 22nd Annual
Report «eot »o Con grew recently
by the trustees of the funds.
* Paul I. files, district manager
of the Paris Social Security Office,
said that the official figures giver
In the trustees* report show that
income to the two funds during
the rest of this decade arid on Info
the long range future will be suf-
ficient to cover all outlays for
Income to the Old-Age and Sur-
vivora. Insurance Trust Fund dur-
ing Hie oast fiscal year amounted
to 111,114 million, including *522
million interest on invested assetr
Piles said. Total disbursements
for the year were *11.743 million
At the end of June 1961, the fund
stood at *20 9 billion
Total income to the Disability
Insurance Trust Fund during fls-
W to 11.082 mil-
lion. including *60 million hi In-
terest nn investments Disburse-
ments were *745 million and the
assets of the fund at the end of
the fiscal year totalled 12.504 mil-
lion.
Secretary of the Treasury,
the Secretary of Labor.,, and the
Secretary of Health, Education-.-
2
Now it the tlm# to
chock tho flltor on your
oir conditioners.
M your Allen ore dirty,
repioco with new ones
or, H you hove o clOon-
oble typo, cloan thor-
oughly.
A doon Alter improves
tho movement of tho
err .. .gives more cool
oir .cuts dust ond
pollen to virtually sore,
for informafion or
assistance, colt your
dealer, oir condition-
ing se.rviceman or
1HL
LIGHT COMPANY
and Wcltarg—art required by law
to malar a report to Congress each
year on the operations and status
of the funda during the previous
fiscal year and on their expected
operations and status for many
many years Into the future.
According to the trustees’ esti-
mates. ‘disbursements from the
Old-Age and Survivors Insurance
Trust Fund during fiscal year 1962
win exceed income, mainly be-
cause of the effect of the 1961
smendments. In fiscal year 1963.
income and outgo are expected to
be In approximate balance. In
every year thereafter on Into the
long range future. Income to the
Old-Age and Survivors Insurance
Trust Fund is expected to exceed
outgo. - sy;..........
- The assets of the Old-Age and
Survivors Insurance Trust Fund
are expected to amount to 922?
billion by the end of December
1965. By December 1*70. they
will have Increased to *53 7 bil-
lion. At the end of 1975. It Is es-
timated that the fund will amount
to 999 6 billion. By the end of
1975. assets of the Disability In-
Miranre Trust, Fund are expected
*o toil *29 billion.
Files said that the Paris Social
Security Office has a new booklet
wfilrh describes In simple lan-
guage how the social security pro-
gram is financed. Free copies of
this booklet are available upon re-
quest. he said. Just ask for Book-
let No. 36 William C. Hall. Held
v ’WftT'fie In ffa rks-
ville on Mondav, April 2. 9 00 a m
to 12 00,noon in the basement of
the post office, should you desire
further Information.
Agriculture Now Tops Manufacturing
In Investment Per Worker in RS.
j
pi *■ >
V
Wjltl
:/ -
1
DAREDEVILS ON THE HIGH WIRfc—The Segrera Troupe
from South America will appear with the A1 G, Kelly and
Miller Bros. Circus which will show in Clarksville Sunday af-
ternoon, April 15. —
AKKS FOR FUNDS FOR
ETHEL CEMETERY
Mrs. Lela Rozcl
treasurer of Bethel Cemetery As-
sociation. Detroit. Route 1. an-
nounces that funds are needed for
maintaining the cemetery again
this year and appeals to persons
Interested to make their contribu-
tions early so that mowing and
other upkeep activities can be
started on time.
Circus Here for
Afternoon Show
Sunday, April 15
This year. the A1 G. Kelly and
Miller Bros. Circus, whtch
4n-Clarksville fur a
will
appear-
day stand Sundav afternoon. April
15. was successful in booking the
Segrera Troupe, a remarkable
high wire act The act fompoacd
of four .girls and three boys, per-
form astonishing pyramids of hu-
man figures, perilously balanced
as they move across the 50 feet of
wtre stretched taut, high above
the circus ring Many supreme
are accom-
EXPERT AUTO
BODY, PAINT
AND GLASS
REPAIRS AND
REPLACEMENT
JflhiLloriAfMI4^
Faint, Glass and Body Shop
N. Cadar St.
Phono 427-3209
plished by these dare devilsT
Juan Segrera. the boss of the
troupe relates a narrow escape
while appearing with Clrp Macias
in Bogota. Columbia. Immediate-
ly preceedlng the Segrera act In
the program ,was an act of Ara-
bian horses One day. two of the
horses acted up and accidently
kicked away a pin from one of
the guy wires of the high wire ap-
paratus. The incident passed un-
noticed and the troupe began the
act without a hint of trouble
Juan's, slsjp*. Dolores, was first
view recently.
*Thr same statement landed Kell-
er In an East Berlin jail a few
months ago, he said.
- And It's one reason the slim,
dark-haired ybuth fled his home
in East Berlin and reached the
United States.
“The secret police came to my
House and said they wanted to
talk to mpj TheiC kept me In jail
re they talked," he
to step fuj the wjxc,__The wtra
shuddered 100 Dolores slipped:
Awgk-JlalJvLlltt ,. » ■ I #1 t« t 4l«A CA n M/l
r-i
• •:
ELECT
tRfrJlurklIv caught the wire and
was pulled to safety. Quickly ev-
erything was hark to normal and
pin rent
The act
as if nothing had hap-
Trstimony to the danger
k’-
#4-
MURRY B. GILES
County Clerk
RED RIVER COUNTY
QUALIFIED:
BBA Degree in Business. East Texas State College.
H Graduate Work, University of Texas. -
30 year! of age.
. Let’* live a young man a chance to live in and serve
liver bounty.
I'; *3,
\ advertisement paid for by friends of Murry
went nn
pened
of their act Is proved by the fact
that in the past five years, three
performers have been killed In
American circuses.
The all new 25tlr Edition of the
A1 G Kelly and Miller Bros Cir-
cus will ronslst of a huge cast rep-
resenting *26 foreign lands -some
of the outstanding features will.be
the El Grano Trio of acrobatic
marvels. Empress I .cot a and her
cage of jungle beasts, 20 beautiful-
ly costumed nod gorgeous girls
In an aerial ballet, .the F.squeda
flyers. , stars of the* high trapeze
and two tltantir musical spectacles
—"Picnic In Fairyland” and the
Moonbeams in the SkyT"
Performances of the elrcus will
be at 2 30 In the afternoon. Doors
to the live continent menagerie
annex featuring -the largest herd
of elephants with a traveling show
will open one hour before circus
time.
Clarksville Native
Dies in Virginia
Lucian 'Beet Farrier, retired
from the U S. Army, died In
Richmond. Va . April 1. Death
was attributed to asthma, from
which he had suffered several
years.
Date of the funeral will be April
14. at 2 00 p m., with Interment
at Falryiew. His body is to be
cremated Jolley's Funeral Home,
will have, charge of local arrange-
ments.
Deceased Is a native of Clarks-
ville. son of the late Dr. and Mrs
.! J Farrier. He graduated from
Clarksville High School In 1941 and
was agent for The. Dallas News
for a time.
His military career extended
from 1945 until discharge in 1959
on account of illness
"Surviving are a sister. Mrs Jen-
nings Hobson Jr., Purrellvllle. Vir-
ginia; brother; James J. Farrier,
Dallas; two nephews, and one
niece
Refugee’s Future
A Question-Mark
Galveston —tM— “I think a per-
son would have to be crazy to ac-
cept Communism.”
That's what Ferdinand Keller,
18. told a reporter during an Inter.
As a result of Its own technolog-
ical revolution and other struc-
tural changes, agriculture has
emerged as one of tMT hlgh-capi-
talizatlon areas of the economy in
recent years.
In .fact, farming’s average in-
vestment per worker Iff terms of
assets used In production has ex-
ceeded that for manufacturing for
more than a decade, according to
an analysis of data compiled bv
the V S Department of Agricul-
ture and the National Industrial
Conference Board The estimates
for I960 were *22.100 of Investment
for each farmworker as compared
with (19.900 per production work-
er in manufacturing as a whole
Ba<k in, 1939, production assets
per farmworker of *3 400 repre-
sented less than two-thirds of the
Average Investment per worker in
manufacturing.
Need For More Savings ,
~~Thls development and its rela-
tionship to the problem of meet-
ing the growing capital needs of
our hlgh-lnvextment economy take
on added significance from the re-
cent study of capital formation
and H*,-~flnanring In the United
States made by tj^e National Bu-
reau of, Economic Research and
financed by a grant from the Life
Insurance Association of America
The study emphasizes the need for
more savin g.4 to promote faster
Brnm.rnjr grmtlh declaring that
culture averaged over * per cent
a'year In the 195040 period, dou-
ble the 3 per cent annual average
for manufacturing In the period.
Thus agriculture has taken on
fundamental aspects of Industrial-
ization. and ft Is Interesting to
optic that what has been happen-
ing ’ In the United States has Its
counterparts in this fespeet in
Eurone and elsewhere in the
world. .A recent United Nations
survey states that farming In Eu-
rope is In the process of becom-
ing a highly capitalized business
as a result of modernization and
mechanization accompanied by de
elining employment. Note of this
has also been taken by the Bank
for International Settlements in Its
report of big manpower shifts
out of agriculture into manufac-
turing in countries like Germany.
Japan. Italy and Austria where
unusually high rates of economic
growth have taken place In recent
years.
-#■
said
When the police did talk to Kell-
er. they warned him against mak-
ing further statements against the
Communist regime.
The death of Keller’s mother In
April ended his last tie with East
Germany. His father, a German
soldier, died some time after
World War II In a Russian wbrk
camp.
The Berlin wall was not built
until August. Keller crossed the
border with no difficulty.
Keller slipped aboard the &. <L
Emma in Barcelona NoV 15 and
found a coffin-sized hiding place.
A rrew member brought Keller
food and water.
quesllon-
Trtv ramr? r a*
—ftTTt
mark.
I,eon Harper of Texas City, who
had been aboard the ship with-
out knowing Keller was stowed
away, gave the youth a ride to
Texas Cltv.
Harper and his wife, whose 19-
year-old son was killed In an acci-
dent last year, took an immediate
liking to Keller.
So did the Harpers’ 17-year-old
daughter. Suz.v. J......
When Keller-T-Wifly admitted to
them he had entered the U. S
Illegally, they began trying to find
ways for him to remain In Abe
US. .
It would fake an act of Gongress
and that's what the Harpers—and
Keller—are trying to obtain.
The decade
for example, the number of farm
workers declined by around i
quarter, while the total farm^pop*
New Device Guides
Low-Fly jhff Planes
A electronic system which will
guide low-flying planes safely over
surface obstacles has been devel-
oped bv an aerospace company.
Called a "terrain avoidance sys-
tem.” the equinment will be most
valuable to high-speed military
planes required to fly at extreme-
ly low altitudes of a Jew hundred
feet to .avoid enemy radar and
surface-to-air missiles. The sys-
tem can also guide thP pilot in
foul weather landings and take-
offs. during night missions, or ov-
er unfamiliary terrain.
The system will enable an air-
craft to Veep ajeafe distance above
mountain ranges; tall buildings,
high-tension lines a rid any other
obstacles
Heart of the terrain avoidance
system is a non-seahning antenna
which eliminates- complex mech-
anisms and computations.
IF YOU KNEW W1ELY__
Mansfield. Pa. Sign held
by two hitchhikers on Route 15:
"Our wives decided to take a bus
—and leave the walking to us."
_Aline Okla. —UH— An original
sod -hogs* of the' -'type- usecT^by
pioneer settler* in Oklahoma Is
still In a good state of preserva-
tion a few miles south of Aline
In north-central Oklahoma It was
for capifaTuse on a homestead stak-
ore rapidly than savings, [ “d lh~ffle tqierahMir^StlTtr’Yflii of
1*93,
•And tne on gin a I owner still'
owns It. He is 91-year-old Mar
shall McCully. The sod house 1*
hear the more modern farm home
erected by the McCully family In
1909/
outlets
plied more rapidly
Behind the growth in agricul-
ture's capital needs has been a
fourfold rise - in total production
assets combined with a marked
reduction in the number of farm-
workers over the last two decades.
During tlltsT period farming's pro-
duction assets rose from less than
*40 billions in 1939 to around *158
billions In 1960. These figures ex-
clude farm operators' dwellings
..... *........ *h»rr of ^ih"r as-
sets. Farmland and service
lugs icpresent about three-quart-
ers of production assets in agri-
culture, a much higher proportion
than the comparable relationship
In manufacturing where the phys-
ical assets are nearly equally di-
vided between structures, equip-
ment and inventories.
A long-term decline in the ag-
ricultural • labor force a log v.Hh
the farm population as a whole
has been one of the major «truc-
♦neal tihanges^Jn^iarmin,;. Over
e« in fanning. Over
of thiHfimrr aWnr.-
ulnttnn dropped hi muir than
million and now represents
about one person in every 9
the entire population, as against
one in fi in 1950.
Fewer and Bigger Farms
Accompanying this trend, in-
volving a substitution of capital
investment. m« hanization and oth'
er production innovations for the
traditional' dawn-to-dusk physical
toil has bonn the concentration of
farming in fewer hut stronger
hands as a result of the marked
reduction in the number of farms,
an associated increase In the size
of farms, and Increasing speciali-
zation in agricultural operations.
The latest Census of Agriculture
show* that the number of farms
declined by more than a fifth and
that average size Increased by a
'ourth since 1954 'alone. This is in
key ping with the accelerating
trend toward farm enlargement In
rocent years. Close loTTitf of all
farm sales over the past year
were for this purpose according
to the Department of Agriculture
against a proportion of only about
a quarter In the early Fifties.
Boom in Productivity
All these changes have mani-
fested themselves in a spectacular
increase in agricultural productiv-
ity. As a matter of fact, gains
in output per man hour in agrh
For AUTOMOBILE and
FURNITURE
UPHOLSTERING
AND VENETIAN BLIND
REPAIRS
CALL
BILL LYNCH
Pickup and Dalivar
Fra# Estimatas
BILLS
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1403 Watt Broadway
DAIRYMEN ORGANIZE TO
" YieHY MASTITIS_______ _
College Station —■ Members lof { ~
the Collin County Dairy Herd I to- -
prnvemeht Association, they rc-
'xtde^ln Collin, Grayson and Fan-
nin cdbnties, are pondueting" ar.
organized campaign against mas-
titis — the most widespread and
costly disease of dairy Pattle.
Curtis W Richardson. £rea ex-
fehsion dairy specTilFst, says that
so far as he knows, this is the
first organized group In Texas to
undertake such a, control program
through use of the California Mas-
tltU Test. '
Each cow In the fnilking herd
will be checked monthly by the
CMT method Individual records
will be kept on each cow and a
planned treatment program will
be followed by each, dairyman.
PHONE 427-2450
T5TT
V...
P. O. BOX 632
smith sms mum
able from the offices of county
■ agents or by mail from the Agri-
I cultural Information Office. Col-
lege Station, Texas. It la a joint
publication by the Texas Agricul-
tural Experiment Station and Ag-
ricultural Extension»Service.
The Stone Age Ungers In Neth-
erlands New Guinea. One tribe
only recently learned how to make
fire.
Our OuaiiMM la Y*u» Prateed—
WeUrep Insurance Agee**
Cherokee Strip. Sod
House Preserved
BACTERIAL BLIGHT COSTLY •
TO TEXAS FARMERS
Bacterial blight in recent years
has cost Texas cotton growers up
zillion annually by reduc-
ing ylel38~lffn7—ie«mirtng grades
It occurs throughout the wo!
wherever cotton is grown ' A new
publication. MP-534. "Bacterial
Blight of Cottpn,” Is now avail-
MUTUAL OF
.OMAHA
• Hospitalization
1* tncomo- Protection
• Lifo _
, INSURANCE
—NQ AGE^IMIT IF
GOOD HEALTH.
D. E. CONERLY
j
Congressman
WRIGHT PATMAN
formally opened his campaign for re-
election as a United States Congress-
man from the First Congressional Dis-
trict with a giant rally in Ml Pleasant
this week. •'
t
Watch Television Station
KCMC-TV, Channel 6 -
AT NOON FRIDAY
for film of the oroceedinas. including
AuagluiaAihA Xusa aao LnA Ua J
mniiies irom nn ■rat
friends. —
Watch Television Station
KCMC-TV, Channel 6 <
i__ at 6 P.M. SATURDAY
. ______
liman's opening campaign
address.
RE-ELECT
Wright Patman
U. S. Congressman
(Political Ad paid for by Rod Rivor County
frionds of Wright Potmen)
r r-
TED LAWSON
219 N. WALNUT ST.
CLARKSVILLE, TEXAS
ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE
FOR YOUR
)
-1
RHINE NOW. PAY LATER
Tucaon, Art*. —0*— Stanley Lay-
man placed thla sign In the wtn-
doyv of hla Turnon xhoe*h|ne shop;
Credit rarfo "-
HOME - AUTO - BUSINESS
REPRESENTING CAPITAL STOCK INSURANCE
COMPANIES
VOTE
Marshal! Formby
v
FOR
GOVERNOR
Platform Includes:
ipBfied Tax System
Solution of Water and Conservation
ProblemsT~~~"^______
Amending Merit Auto Insurance Plan
Raising Speed Limits en Divided Highways
State Operation on Cash Basis
No New Taxes in 1963
(PAID POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT)
Regular ch
nun chart
Classified i
Lime regi
twice regular r;
All cards c
ind all special i
for at reguli
For additi
telephone 427-:
I i—l Hank*
May we* use th
thank you to ev
lads of kindness
land the food hi
Ithe passing of oi
fare thankful to
|of Mrs. N. D. M
We wish to expi
I for the kindness i
recent loss. The
C. M. Haulston.
^ Lost
and Fi
LOST, somewhc
I navy blue bordcrc
I metal tag on one
-Mrs. H. Chain,
-Announce™
SEPTIC TANK
I service. Cali Cu
2960 ClarksviUe.
WqOTEN HOM
haa ^vacancy lor
i-Wifet large, v>
i, running1 w
tress, pleasant :
port care. Call 1
. 5—Personal
WASH HOCK i
delivered anyw hr
County. Bdi St
Concrete.
HhLH Ytf AN CE
7—Male
GOOD OPENI]
River Couuty foi
ness. Products ji
yea*1*.—Mtnft hav
view, write at on
partment TXD-5
Tenn.
FOR SALE
v—Appliances
FOR SALE—<
*—and dry
Dryer alone woi
Russell.
TEXAS
CtARKSVIl
BUTANE-
GAS AND /
10—Automobll
FOlt SALE; T
ment of A-l Use
ville. Visit our cc
lot and . cnjdy
choice. All ma
Any terms yoiir
will justify. Wc
FOB SALE—1!
*875.00. John V
Annona,. Texas.
ASC SPI
S
BRINC
ALL
DO<
Laf u* H
Hit
We will
Phone 427-
v
- \
T
T5CL :
</.
\T. • *
-<
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.
Pinson, Joe. The Clarksville Times (Clarksville, Tex.), Vol. 90, No. 12, Ed. 1 Friday, April 6, 1962, newspaper, April 6, 1962; Clarksville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth893899/m1/6/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Red River County Public Library.