The Canadian Record (Canadian, Tex.), Vol. 68, No. 4, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 24, 1957 Page: 6 of 8
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ERASING THE SCARS OF WAR—Egyptian workmen clear away the rubble of buildings
smashed by the air and sea bombardment which accompanied the Anglo-French invasion of Port
SaW The United Nations salvage fleet bas resumed efforts to clear the blocked Suez Canal, ot
which Port Said is the northern terminus..
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State CAPITOL
MOLDING HIS FUTURE-
This little Hungarian refugee
is intent on the task of molding
modeling clay at a camp in
Traiskirchen, Austria. Once he
and his family are relocated,
hell be able to mold his fu-
ture, free of the shadow of the
Red terror. Junior Red Cross
supplied the clay, one item in
a play kit given to children
- who previously had few, if any,
^ playthings in the hastily im-
oro vised Austrian havens.
Two Students at
Tech Nominees
For Favorites
Two students from Canadi-
an at Texas Tech in Lubbock
have been nominated for class
favorites at all-campus class
meetings.
They are James Oloyd, son
of Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Cloyd, a
senior; and Donna Abraham,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Abraham, a junior.
The eight election winners
. . . two favorites from each
class . . . will be featured in
the class favorites section of
La Ventana, Tech yearbook.
See Our Ad on Page 3
The Fair.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Ryan and
son of Amarillo visited Mon-
day in the home of her broth-
er Abe Haddox and Mrs. Had-
dox.
USE VITAMINS for better
health. ABDOL Vitamins, with
minerals, are good for the
whole family. Ask your phar-
macist. Canadian Pharmacy.
4-tfc
By VERN SANFORD
Texas Press Association
AUSTIN—Gov. Price Daniel
has lined up an impressive
array of goals for himself and
fellow officials during the
next two years.
His message to the Legisla-
ture detailed 25 points. He
labeled four as "emergencies."
Getting top priority were
(1) water conservation (he
suggested doubling the pro-
posed $100,000,000 bond pro-
gram! , (2) additional high-
way patrolmen and other
safety measures, (3) laws to
facilitate right of way buying
for highways and (4) a crime
commission to guard against
official misconduct, curb lob-
bying, etc.
Governor Daniel also recom-
mended pay raises for teach-
ers and state employes, local
decisions on school segrega-
tion, increased old age pen-
sions, abolition of dual bank-
ing - insurance operations,
more money for insurance law
enforcement, improved penal
statutes for insurance and se-
curity controls, use of state
funds for advertising and up-
ping workmen's compensation
benefits.
He said he favors a $5,000.-
000 prison building program,
a paid adult parole system,
laws to curb juvenile crime,
revision of the state constitu-
tion, a continued state office
building program (including
an archives building), im-
proved narcotics laws, study
of the needs of the handi-
capped, election law changes
and long-range study of the
state tax structure.
Legislative comment follow-
ing the talk was favorable.
Enactment of the total pro- •
gram would almost certainly
require more revenue than the
state has in sight. Daniel
made no flat promise against
new levies, except for sales
and personal income taxes.
His budget message, to come
later, will detail costs with
suggestions for new revenue,
if necessary.
Well-Heeled Cowhand
Texas' new temporary U. S.
TH|S CURIOUS WORLD Py William Ferguson
T.M. Reg. U.B. Pat Off.
ONCE INHABITED MNGLANDf .
ns remains have seen
UNCOVERED AS FAR NORTH
AS t-££OS, AND
CURIOUSLY. ALONG
WITH THOSE OF
fíOMDUfí.
YOU THINK WE HAVE
INFLATION NOW~
■N CALIFORNIAS^
GOLD RUSH OAtS,
■four bushels of!
SOLD FOR
*1HI ROOTS OP A TREE HOLD
> IT UP WHILE
Senator, William Blakely, per-
sonifies the Southwestern suc-
cess story.
He began his career as an
Oklahoma wrangler, went on
to become a Dallas lawyer,
SPA and top-bracket finan-
cier. His millions are spread
among tremendous real estate
and oil holdings, three insur-
ance companies and a con-
trolling interest in Braniff
Airways.
His first whirl at politics
seems destined for success too.
He is a friend, not only of
outgoing Gov. Shivers, who
made the 11th hour appoint-
ment, but also of new Gov.
Price Daniel, Senate Majority-
Leader Lyndon Johnson and
President Eisenhower.
Blakely said he will vote
with Democrats in the Sen-
ate, not upsetting the party's
perilous 48-47 majority. Nor
will he seek election.
Senate Leaders
Key chairmanships in the
Texas Senate are in the hands
of Sens. William S. Fly of
Victoria and Wardiow Lane of
Center.
Lt. Gov. Ben Ramsey as-
signed Fly to the finance com-
mittee, Lane to state affairs.
Sen. George Parkhouse of Dal-
las, who headed the interim
Water Resources Committee,
will be water and conserva-
tion chairman.
Senate committee system
was overhauled last year and
the number trimmed from 39
to 24. All chairmen, except
Charles Herring of Austin
(state departments and insti-
tutions; are returning mem-
bers.
Others are: agriculture and
livestock, George Moffett of
Chillicothe; banking, Jarrard
Secrest of Temple; claims,
David Rati iff of Stamford;
constitutional amendments,
Jimmy Phillips of Angleton;
contingent expenses, Craw-
ford Martin of Hillsboro; coun-
ties, cities and towns, Frank
Owen in of El Paso; educa-
tion, Doyle Willis of Fort
Worth; game and fish, Abra-
ham Kazen jr. of Laredo; in-
surance, Searcy Bracewell of
Houston.
Also, interstate cooperation,
Ottis E. Lock of Lufkin; juris-
prudence, R. A. Weinert of Se-
guin; labor and management,
Carlos Ashley of Llano; legis-
lative, congressional and ju-
dicial districts, Martin; mili-
tary and veterans affairs, Ray
Roberts of McKinney; gover-
nor's nominations, Lock; oil
and gas, Dorsey B. Hardeman
of San Angelo; privileges and
election, W. T. Moore of Bry-
an; public health, Mrs. Ne-
veille Colson of Navasota;
rules, Weinert; transportation,
Jep Fuller of Port Arthur.
Steakley Sworn In
First executive appointment
approved by the Senate was
Austin Attorney Zollie Steak-
ley, Gov. Daniel's choice for
Secretary of State.
Steakley's swearing-in by
Chief Justice John E. Hick-
man followed within 24 hours.
It was the new streamlined
oath authorized by one of last
November's constitution-
al amendments.
Quipped Governor Daniel, a
spectator: "I'm glad they left
out that part about never
fighting a duel, because I've
almost had to do some of that
recently."
Steakley's immediate pre-
decessor, Tom Reavely, has
joined an Austin law firm to
• Special Service!
WE BUY burned, junked or
wrecked pars and trucks.
Quality Body Shop. 44-tfc
RADIO, TV and REFRIGERA-
TION SERVICE. All makes
and models factory supervised
and bonded. Backed up by
over 23 years of experience.
Satisfaction guaranteed o r
money refunded. JOHNSON
RADIO & REFRIGERATION
SERVICE, First & Hobart St.,
Phone 132. 39-tfc
FINISH High School or grade
school at home. Spare time.
Books furnished. Diploma
awarded. Start where you left
school. Write Columbia School,
Box 1514, Amarillo 35-52p
LAWN MOWERS and saws
sharpened. Otis G. Riley, 915
Giraud. 49-tfc
For subscription to Amarillo
Daily News, Globe-Times or
Pampa Daily News, phone
526-W. Wilbur Porter. 35-tfc
UPHOLSTERY and Rug-Clean-
ing in your home. Satisfac-
tion guaranteed. Paul Wood,
Phone 547-J. 30-tfc
• Lost
Lost: White and lemon fe-
male pointer. Tattoo on both
ears and on left hip. $5.00
reward. Fur in an Williams,
phone 152. * 4-lc
be known as Powell, Rauhut,
McGinnis and Reavely.
"Bill" Board
With the legislative session
well underway, hundreds of
bills have flooded the hop-
pers. Some erf the more signif-
icant would:
1. Transfer one per cent of
the permanent school fund
(now $340,000,000) to the
available school fund. By Rep.
Louis Dugas of Orange.
2. Create a separate Securi-
ties Commission which would
combine operations now per-
formed by the securities divi-
sions in the Secretary of
State's office and Insurance
Commission. By Rep. Barefoot
Sanders of Dallas.
3. Empower cities to tax ag-
ricultural land they annex at
a lower rate than other prop-
erty. By Rep. Richard C. White
of El Paso.
4. Give the Railroad Com-
mission powér to regulate rur-
al telephone rates. By Rep.
Jack Welch of Marlin.
5. Control interest rates on
small loans. One bill, by Rep.
Ed Sheridan of San Antonio,
would prohibit interest of
more than 10 per cent a year.
Another by Rep. Tony Korioth
of Sherman would limit in-
terest to three per cent a
month.
6. Prohibit sale or use of
fireworks except in displays
authorized by the fire mar-
shal. By Rep. Gordon Forsyth
of Corpus Christi.
7. Abolish absentee voting.
By Rep. B. H. Dewey jr. of
Bryan.
8. Provide for automatic con-
gressional re-districting every
10 years if Legislature fails
to do so. By Dewey.
9. Provide a 4-ycar term for
governor with a two-term lim-
it. By Rep. Dixon W. Holman
of Fort Worth.
10. Require school board
candidates to run for places
to prevent election of a mem-
ber by a minority vote. By
Rep. Ben Ferrell of Tyler.
Your Dollar Buys Most in
Quality Merchandise from
Your Friendly Canadian Mer-
chant
• Classified Advertisements are your best way of selling, trad-
ing or buying small items or services. Rate: 3c per word first
insertion. 2c per word each additional insertion. Minimum
charge for ten words. Classified display JO per column inch.
"I don't see why the boss got so sore when I accident-
ally dropped that old rivet pail; after all, we wear
helmets!"
Wanted
• For Rent
Wanted: Baldwin SP Combine.
State year, price, condition.
Write Box 132, Alva, Okla-
homa. 3-5p
Wanted: Baling wire or any
type of tin. Will buy old hot
water heaters, cook stoves,
etc. Quality Body Shop. 50-tfc
WANTED: Your dirty clothes.
We appreciate your business.
Canadian Laundry. 46-tfc
• For Lease
HAVE PASTURE for about 100
head cows. Bruce Graham.
3-2p
For Rent: Modern 3-room fur-
nished apartment. No chil-
dren, no pets. Jodie Wilson.
4-tfc
FOR RENT: That four-room
cottage at Sixth and Purcell,
just redecorated. Garage. Call
140, or see C. H. Hamilton.
45-tfc
HILLCREST HOTEL—Respect-
able, clean, quiet. Shower
baths, innerspring mattresses.
$7 week. Phone 78-W. Owners,
Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Webb.
44-tfc
Help Wanted
MAN OR WOMAN—to take
over route of established
customers in Canadian. Week-
ly profits of $50.00 or more at
start possible. No car or other
investment necessary. Will
help you get started. Write
C. R. Ruble, Dept. J-4, The J. R.
Watkins Company, Memphis
2, Tenn. 4-lp
Three Inducted,
Ten Ordered for
Physical Exam
Jerry George Case of Cana-
dian, Raymond Rutherford of
Gageby, and Jerry Lee Staf-
ford of Perryton were slated
for induction into the United
States Armed Forces this
week, according to Mrs. Nor-
ma G. Phelps, clerk of Local
Selective Service Board No. 99.
In addition, ten men were
ordered to report this week
for physical examinations.
They are James E. Eller of
Canadian, Finnie Jack Derrick
of Briscoe, Don Edward Diet-
rich of Perryton, Bennie Leon
Bessire of Canadian, William
Ernest Miller of Perryton,
Danny Hillburn Conklin of
Canadian, Lawrence Schoen-
hals of Darrouzett, Delmer
Dean Colby of Perryton, Don-
ald Ray Bowen of Perryton,
and Edwin Chris Vines of Per-
ryton.
Two men are slated for in-
duction on February 6.
For Rent: Furnished or un-
furnished 3 & 4-room apart-
ments. Otis G. Riley, phone
684-W. 38-tfc
• Card of Thanks
Words cannot adequately
express our gratitude to those
who expressed their sympathy
and nelpfulness to us so
beautifully at the time of our
sorrow. May God bless you
all.
The Family of
Mrs. Addie Fletcher
PERSONALS
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Waterfield
spent the week-end in Pampa
in the home of Dr. and Mrs.
W. L. Campbell.
Mrs. John Wilkinson visited
Saturday with her mother,
Mrs. G. E. Terrell and with
other relatives in Pampa.
Mrs. L. C. Sleeper returned
Saturday from Elkhart, Kan-
sas to visit her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Chris Schaef and
family.
John Wilkinson attended
the Chamber of Commerce
banquet in Perryton Tuesday
evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Jess Yokley
returned home Tuesday after-
noon from California where
they have been visiting their
daughter, Mrs. J. H. Woodyard
and family since the latter
part of December.
Mrs. W. L. Campbell and
Mrs. Gober Lee Mitchell at-
tended a luncheon and style
show at the Country Club in
Amarillo Monday.
• For Sale
For Sale: Four rooms furni-
ture. Bedroom, living room,
dinette and kitchen. Must
sell; priced reasonable. Ever-
ett South residence east of
town. 4-lp
Used red divan for sale. Mrs.
Curly Owens, phone 672-J.
4-lc
For Sale: Used Washers, $10
down, $7 per month. No fi-
nance charge. Tipps Electric.
3-tfc
For Sale: Small trailer house
for sale. Mrs. Jim Poindex-
ter, phone 378-J. 3-2p
Sand Love $1.20, Weeping
Love $1.45. Write or call for
prices on other grasses. Quen-
tin Williams, Hughes Bldg.,
Pampa, Texas. 2-3c
COLORADO HONEY — Pure
honey, not processed. True-
blood Motor Company. 50-tfc
RCA • Zenith
Hoffman
TELEVISION SETS
Sets priced from $99
Guaranteed Repair Service
iipps Llectric
49-tfc
SEE SORGHUM ALMUM grass
in my field, and order seed
for immediate delivery. L. L.
Jones, Allison. 42-tfc
USED TIRES, Tubes, Batteries,
transmissions, other used
auto parts. Quality Body Shop.
Phone 682. 1-tfc
GAS FOR LESS. Fraser Grain
Company. 15-tfc
MAGIC-GRIP
Typewriter Pads
A new Non-Skid rubber pad
holds your typewriter or
adding machine firmly in
place . . . kills clatter . . .
and reduces vibration and
wear on your machine.
only $1.25
TRY ONE TODAY
at
The Canadian Record
Office Supplies
QUICK
SERVICE.
READY MADE
MADE TO ORDER
We supply rubber stamps to
fit every need, either ready
made or specially prepared.
All "cushion • mounted" on
heavy sponge rubber. Rapid
service. Order today!
The Canadian Record
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Ezzell, Ben. The Canadian Record (Canadian, Tex.), Vol. 68, No. 4, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 24, 1957, newspaper, January 24, 1957; Canadian, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth183835/m1/6/: accessed April 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hemphill County Library.