The Taylor Daily Press (Taylor, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 133, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 23, 1962 Page: 6 of 6
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Page 6, Taylor Daily Press, Wednesday, May 23, 1962
MARKET
REPORTS
LOCAL MARKET
EGGS:
.............28
.............26
.............22
.............22
..............18
.............18
Current Receipts ....
.......08 to .10
..............05
.............15
.............12
.............12
.............50
Top Hogs ...........
..... 15.25-16.00
Crash-
FORT WORTH
MARKET
FORT WORTH (AP) — Castle 1,300
calves 200; good steers 22.50-24.00
standard heifers 19.00-20.50; utility
17.00- 18.00; cows 13.00-15.50; feood cal-
ves 23.00-25.00; standard 21.00-23.00;
good and choice feeder steers 22. GO-
24.00; medium and good heifers 19.00-
22.00; good and choice steer calves
22.00- 28.00, medium 19.00-23.00; good
heifer calves 20.00-23.00; choice 23.GO-
23.50.
Hogs 400; top 15.00-15.75.
Sheep 7,000; good and choice spring
lambs 17.00-19.00; good and choice old
crop shorn lambs 13.00-15.00; choice
and prime 15.00; choice shmn yearl-
ings 12.00; ewes 4.00-5.00; good and
choice feeder spring iambs L2.00-15.00.
MIDDAY
WALL STREET
NEW YORK (AP) — Tobaccos were
a bright spot as the stock market., af-
•ter suffering another sharp sinking
spell, rallied above its lows, and cut
its losses in active trading early this
afternoon.
The As'socia:cd Press average of 60
stocks at noon was off .20 at 234.50
with industrials down 1.60, rails off .50
and utilities down .70.
While the over-all picture still was
Dne of decline, the level was up con-
siderably from its worst.
Tobaccos ran up gains of 1 to 3
points while losses of key stocks else-
where in the list went to 1 or 2
points. Stome stocks erased tosses and
showed advances of fractions to more
than a point.
Continued Jack of confidence, short
selling and margin calls accompanied
the steep sinking spell at the start. On
the recovery, some short-sellers hasten
ed to cover their contracts and bar-
gain hunters scurried to pick up stock,
The Dow Jones industrial average at
-toon was off 2.43 at 633.91.
Trices were lower on the . Americar
Stock Exchange in fairly active trad-
.ng.
Corporate bonds declined. U. S. gov-
ernment bonds were firm.
Hornung Hit
By Appendicitis
KANSAS CITY ® — Paul Hor-
nung, the Green Bay Packer foot-
ball star, is in a Kansas City
hospital with an apparent attack
of appendicitis.
Dr. D. M. Nigro reported Hor-
nung is undergoing a test series
to determine the exact trouble.
He is in fair condition.
Hornung, an Army corporal sta-
tioned at Ft. Riley, Kan., was in
Columbus, Ohio, over the weekend
to serve as best man at the wed-
ding of Ralph Guglielmi, New
York Giants quarterback. He be-
came ill Monday night after he
checked in at a Kansas City ho-
tel on the return trip.
—-o--
Downes Awaiting
For Title Bout
LONDON ® —Terry Downes,
with one member of the fighting
Fullmer family vanquished, wait-
ed today to take on the next—
with the world middleweight box-
ing title as the prize1.
The dynamic Londoner, who
formerly served in the U.S. Ma-
rines, outpointed Don Fullmer of
West Jordan, Utah, over 10 furi-
ous rounds at London’s Wembley
Stadium Tuesday night.
That put him in line for a crack
at Don’s brother Gene, who is
recognized as world champion by
the National Boxing Association.
Millionaire mink farmer Merv
Jensen, manager of -both the Full-
mers, said the fight would be on
—if Gene was offered enough
money.
Leaders Hang On
In Texas League
Bv THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Tulsa, Albuquerque and San
Antonio held onto the top three
rungs in the tightly bunched Tex-
as League race Tuesday night.
Tulsa edged El Paso 10-8 as re-
lief pitcher Bill McNamee came
on in the eighth with the tying
runs on base and retired the
side. San Antonio beat Amarillo
5-2 and Albuquerque defeated Aus
tin 5-1.
Law
(Continued from page 1)
Andy Griffith show, won his sec-
ond supporting actor Emmy in a
row.
Leonard Bernstein won two em-
mies. One was for the outstanding
children’s program for his young
people’s concert with the New
York Philharmonic; the other was
for his Philharmonic tour of Ja-
pan.
The Garry Moore Show was
named best variety show, and its
comedienne, Carol Burnett, was
named best variety artist.
(Continued from page 1)
Latha Sue Haggard of Austin and
Washington, D.C., have two sons,
Robert, 5, and Edward, 2.
Mrs. Wilks and her children,
accompanied by Mrs. Howard
Hanes, the former Cleo McWhor-
ter of Taylor, will leave Durham
tonight for Austin.
Wilks graduated from Taylor
High as the highest ranking boy
in his class. He was a cheer
leader, Glass president, band
president and a member of the
all-state band his junior and sen-
ior years.
He graduated from Abilene
Christian College in 1956, with
honors Magna Cum Laude. He
was a member of several college
organizations.
He was president of the Texas
Academy of Science and was a
lab instructor his senior year, on
teaching fellowship.
Wilks entered the University of
Texas graduate school, biology
department, in 1956 on a teach-
ing fellowship and received his
master’s degree in 1959. He got
his Ph.D. degree in January of
1962. He taught at Stephen F.
Austin College - in Nacogdoches
last summer, prior to going to
Duke.
Wilks was one of the children
of Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Wilks. The
other two are Charles, a student
at the University of Texas, and
Janice, a student ait Taylor High
School.
The only known survivor of the
crash, rescued from an intact sec-
tion of the fuselage after an all-
night search, died in a, hospital
90 minutes after the rescue.
He was Takehiko Nakano,27,
an engineer who carried business
cards listing addresses in Oak
Park, 111., and Los Angeles.
He was removed from the mid
die section of the fuselage, which,
shorn of its wings and tail sec-
tion, plunged into a shallow gully
about 20 miles from where debris
first started spewing from the
doomed plane.
Temporary morgues were set
up in a garage in Unionvilie, a
small community just south of the
Iowa line.
Jerry Hoshner, a member of
a Continental Airlines invest!
ga-tion team, said the flight should
have been at about 9,000 feet
and traveling 500 to 600 miles per
hour at the time of the crash.
The inside of the fuselage was
a jumble of bodies, seats, luggage
and clothing.
Nakano was found half way
down on the right side of the in-
tact section, lying with his back
against three seats.
When told help had reached him,
he was able to respond only fee-
bly. He died in St. Joseph’s hos-
pital in Centerville.
The craft, a Boeing 707 piloted
by veteran Capt. Fred Gray of
Pacific Palisades, Calif., made its
last report at 9.15 p.m. from
position 35 miles northeast of
Kirksville, Mo.
The plane then disappeared
from the FAA surveillance radar
at Kansas City.
About that time, too, Mrs. Clarl
Jones, wife of the postmaster at
Cincinnati, Iowa, saw a bright
blue flash in the sky. Others saw
it too.
Residents of this farm country
disagreed about the sound that
followed. Some described it as a
popping sound, others as a loud
explosion.
Mrs. Junior Rollins, 35, a farm
wife from just north of here, said
she heard a large clap, like thun-
der, just after a storm had pass-
ed over the area.
She looked out the door and
stars were shining from a clear
Sky, she said.
The Weather Bureau said squall
lines packing winds up to 80 miles
an hour were pounding through
the Kirksville area about the time
the plane was lost on the radar
screen.
Two Centerville men, Jack Mor-
ris and Leo Craver, found the first
piece of wreckage on Highway
60 about five miles south of Cen-
terville. It was a curved piece
of metal.
They brought it to the police
station. Officers phoned the high
way patrol and were told a Con
tinental plane was missing.
Search parties set out and found
a trail of hits and pieces of de
bris.
The trail led in a southwesterly
direction over the Iowa line and
into Missouri.
Stag Barbecue
Slated for Bar
FISHER & HAFERNIPI
AGENCY
ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE
WANT ADS
RENT-SELL-HIRE
With Classified
Call EL2-3621
A hundred and fifty judges and
lawyers are expected to attend
an informal stag party and bar-
becue at Wilson Fox’s Riverside
Ranch June 4.
William L. Kerr of Midland,
president of the State Bar Assn.,
will be among the notables pres-
ent. Leon Jaworski of Houston,
president-elect of the state organi-
zation, is expected to be present.
Congressman Homer Thorn-
berry has -been invited, along with
Vice President Lyndon B. John-
son.
We don’t know if Thomberry
will be in Texas at that time or
not,” Fox said. “Johnson has
never attended a lawyers’ par-
ty here.”
The “Bench and Bar” party is
being put on by the Taylor law
firm of Fox, Fondren and Sapp.
Supreme Court justices, appeals
courts justices and other judges
and lawyers from all over Cen-
tral Texas are expected to he
present.
The event gets underway
7 p.m.
-o-
Bankers-
(Continued from Page 1)
oil industry reached a peak right
after the Suez crisis, dipped slight
when the canal reopened, but now
are coming back in percentage
of total loans—meaning more nor-
mal times in the oil fields and
refineries.
Oilmen without wells in foreign
lands think today’s troubles could
be solved if the federal govern-
ment would cut oil imports fur-
ther to encourage more drilling
and production at home. They
stress that if war should cut off
foreign sources, we’d need our
local capacity bad.
A tax proposal before the Con-
gress also worries Texans. This
calls for taxation of total income
of subsidiaries abroad. At present
only that part of earnings that re-
turns to these shores as profits or
dividends is taxed;
Taxing all income of our over-
seas subsidiary could cut gack our
exports,” says H. Neil Mallon,
chairman of the executive com-
mittee of Dresser Industries,
maker and exporter of oil field
supplies. “This would kill the very
thing President Kennedy is work-
ing for in his trade bill—increased
U.S. exports.”
Mallon reasons that if Dresser’s
Swiss-based foreign sales subsidi-
ary is taxed on all its earnings,
rather than on what it returns to
the parent company in dividends,
it would be hard put to compete
with manufacturers in other lands
where tax laws are more favor-
able.
‘This could cut our exports,” he
said, “and1 add just that much
to the U.S. balance of payments
deficit and the resultant loss of
gold. It also could mean loss of
jobs here for those now making
goods we export.”
NEWS OF
PEOPLE
Mr. and Mrs. Fred C. Heap
have returned from Fort Worth
where they visited with Lt. Col.
and Mrs. E. M. Christensen, and
Miss Michelle’ Christensen. They
were accompanied to Taylor by
Col. Christensen, who is in Central
Texas on business.
Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Lauck and
R. E. Lauck will be in Mexia
Friday to attend graduation exer-
cises for Bob Hamilton. Bob is
the grandson of R. E. Lauck and
the nephew of Mr. and Mrs. E.
L. Lauck.
Mrs. W. M. Taegel has return-
ed from a several months visit
with her daughter, Mrs. Luther
Chandler in Miami, Florida.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Heap are
back from Dallas, where they
visited Mr. and Mrs. Lindsay
Schmidt.
Honors-
(Continued from Page 1)
the salutatory medal and the
scholarship given by the Texas
Council of Church Related col-
leges.
Awards in the poetry contest
sponsored Recently by Court Guar-
dian Angel, Catholic Daughters
of America, were given to Alice
Kucera. Ellen Supak, and Theresa
Pavlik in the first division; Pa-
tricia Urbanek, Adele Kucera,
and Betty Kuhn in the second di-
vision, and to Bobby Morales,
Gary Lange, and Patricia Kuhn
in the' third division.
The American Legion awards
to the boy and girl in the eighth
grade possessing the qualities of
honor, courage, scholarship, lead-
ership, companionship, and char-
acter were presented to Johnny
Hafernik and Linda Lange.
Awards to outstanding boys and
girls in high school classes were
presented to Louis Huff and Kar-
en Hennig as freshmen; Gary
Lange and Rebecca Havelka as
sophomores; Thomas Naivar and
Rita Spinn as juniors, and John
Woibrueck and Grace Martinka
as seniors.
Mr. and Miss St. Mary’s High
to Joseph Pavlik and Patricia
Kuhn; senior Sodalist awards to
John Woibrueck, Joseph Pavlik,
Patricia Kuhn, Judy Mikeska,
Sandra Ortiz, Margaret Rychlik,
Barbara Naivar, Charlene Havel-
ka, and Grace Martinka.
The junior-senior religion award
to Rita Spinn; homemaking
awards to Charlene Havelka and
Barbara Naivar; science award
to Rebecca Havelka; typing award
for errorless speed test to Grace
Martinka; typing awards for an
average of “A” in the course to
Rita Spinn, John Woibrueck, Pa-
tricia Kuhn, Bennie Joe Naivar,
Ronnie Gola, and Andrea Touehet.
The bookkeeping award was
presented to Maxine Cantu and
Andrea Touehet; the school spirit
award to Maxine Cantu; service
award to Sandra Ortiz and Jack
The U.S. Treasury argument is Veselka; and also announced were
that the proposed tax law could (the delegates to Boy and Girls
catch any tax dodgers who may
be setting up sham subsidiaries
abroad. Mallon says his com-
pany’s overseas operations and
those of most other U.S. compan-
ies aren’t in that class.
Taxing of 'all earnings of for-
eign investments would Help bal-
ance the budget in the coming
fiscal year, the Treasury says.
Mallon argues that this flow to
the Treasury would be temporary
if export business is crippled as a
result.
“It’s like a farmer saving mon-
ey in the spring by not buying
seed and fertilizer nor hiring la
gor,” Mallon says. “But in the
fall the farmer wouldn’t make
any money from the harvest—be
cause he wouldn’t have anything
to harvest.”
Thursday: A man who has
learned to take the long, calm
view.
found remains of what they
knew must lie ahead—a door
bearing a picture of an eagle,
Continental’s emblem, sandwiches
and an inner door, probably the
emergency exit, with the legend:
“To be opened on takeoff and
landing.”
It ended in a pasture where
about 20 miles.
It ended in a pasture whereg
Lester Cook and his son, Ronnie,
Adolph Remmerf
Rites Thursday
Adolph Remmert, a retired
farmer, of 721 W. 8th Street,
Taylor, died Tuesday night in a
Taylor hospital. He was born
Jan. 20, 1884 in Austin County,
Texas, and had lived in Taylor
since 1948. He was a member of
St. Paul Lutheran Church.
On Nov. 26, 1911 he was mar-
ried to Miss Minnie Haverland,
who survives him.
Other survivors are four daugh-
ters, Mrs. Frank Kaatz and Mrs.
Carl Fernecke, both of Thrall,
Mrs. Alfred Kaatz of Taylor and
Mrs. Edgar Rosenthal of Thorn-
dale; one son, Eldo Remmert of
Taylor; two sisters, Mrs. Mary
Meyer of Brenham and Mrs. An-
na Meiske of Taylor; six grand-
children and two great-grandchil-
dren.
A son, four brothers and! two
sisters preceded him in death.
Services will be held Thursday
at 4 p.m. at the Condra Memorial
Chapel in Taylor with the Rev.
E. A. Heye officiating. Burial
will be in the Taylor City Ceme-
tery.
Pallbearers yill be Arnold Rem
mert, Henry Remmert, Erwin Ro-
wald, Aldo Meiske, Albert Priem
and Raymond Schroeder.
-o-
Mrs. Willie Davis
Dies Tuesday
Mrs. Willie Davis died Tuesday
in a Taylor hospital.
She is survived by two sisters,
Mrs. Mae Young of Taylor and
Mrs. Suella Beaven of Austin, and
brother, Arthur Glasscock of
Austin.
Services will be held Thursday
at 2 p.m. at the Condra Memorial
Chapel in Taylor with the Rev.
Jerry Mallory officiating. Burial
will be in the Thorndale Ceme-
tery.
Pallbearers will be Don Smith,
Connie Lawson, Henry Pumph-
rey, Ray Ponton and Wallace
Harkins.
Mrs. Davis was bom Apr. 14,
1891 near San Gabriel in Milam
County, and had lived in Taylor
since 1938. She was a member
of the First Christian Church and
the Order of -the Eastern Star.
Her husband, John Davis, pre-
ceded her in death in 1937.
State as Thomas Naivar and
Rita Spinn with Maxine Cantu as
alternate to Girls State.
Commencement will he Friday
at 8 p.m. in St. Mary’s Church,
be brought by the Rev. Donald
bishop of the Diocese of Austin,
will present the diplomas, and
the commencement message will
be brought gy the Rev. Donald
McLeaisch of Austin.
Mrs. Marvin Howe
Dies at Austin
Mrs. Marvin A. Howe, a for-
mer resident of Thorndale, died
early Wednesday morning in an
Austin hospital. She was bom
Mar. 18, 1911 at Thorndale and
had lived in Austin since 1957.
She was a member of the Trinity
Methodist Church at Thorndale.
On Aug. 17, 1927 she was mar-
ried to Marvin A. Howe, who sur-
vives her.
Other survivors are two daugh-
ters, Mrs. Gayle Simank of Aus-
tin and Mrs. Oscar A. Hillegeist
of Rockdale; four sisters, Mrs.
Sam Allcom of Austin, Mrs. C.
B. Ableson of Orange, Mrs. Bruce
Wagner of Arlington and Mrs.
Graham Dickerson of Thorndale,
and two grandchildren.
Services will be held Thursday
at 5:30 p.m. at the Condra Me-
morial Chapel in Taylor with the
Rev. J. N. Foreman officiating.
Burial will be in the Ttylor City
Cemetery.
-o-
Hughes Rites
Set Thursday
Funeral services for Fred H.
Hughes will be held Thursday at
10 a.m. at the Condra Memor-
ial Chapel in Taylor with the
Rev. <H. Hegdahl officiating. Bur-
ial will be in the Taylor City
Cemetery.
Hughes, a resident of Taylor
since 1930, died Tuesday in
local hospital.
He is survived by his wife, and
a sister, Mrs. George Bachman
of Wichita, Kan.
Hughes was bom Sept. 9, 1877
at Howard, Kan. He was a mem-
ber of the American Spiritualist
Church.
TEXAN IN QUARTERFINALS
RICHMOND, Va. W— A talk-
ative Texan and a taciturn Lou-
isianian were casting ominous
shadows over the field today as
the Southern Women’s Amateur
Golf Tournament entered the
quarter-final round. Perky Poily
Riley of Fort Worth and quiet
Clifford Ann Creed of Alexandria,
La., will be hard to stop short of
Saturday’ sfinals.
Hospital Notes
New Patients
Mrs. Albert Stauffer, Taylor
Mrs. Bill Larkin, Thorndale; Jose
Corona, Round Rock; Mrs. F. M.
Courtney, Killeen; Mrs. Bill Mar-
tinka, Granger; W. L. Edmond-
son, Elgin.
Dismissals
Mrs. Eula Tate, Taylor; Mrs.
Paul Graves, Buckholts.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Tim David,
Georgetown, a daughter, born
May 22, at 5:38 p.m. weighed 7
lbs 7 ozs.
17, saw the fuselage in the first
Here and there the searcherg light of dawn.
REPOSSESS SPINET PIANO
May be bought for balance due — Assume Small
Monthly payment. Pianp may be seen in Taylor
WRITE TO
Bledsoe Music Company
Khrushchev to Visit
Romania in June
MOSCOW ffl — The Presidium
announced today that Soviet Pre-
mier Khrushchev will pay a state
and party visit to Romania during
the last hall of June.
Khrushchev paid a similar visit
to Bulgaria last week. The two
visits into Eastern Europe seem-
ed to indicate a plan to concen-
trate more attention on the neigh-
boring Communist states.
Buy in Taylor and build your
own home town.
Day by Day
Wednesday
5:30 p.m. Intermediate choir of
St. Paul Lutheran Church to
meet.
6:30 p.m. Junior choir of St.
Paul Lutheran Church to meet.
7:30 p.m. Senior choir of St.
Paul Lutheran Church to meet.
7:30 p.m. Boy Scouts of St.
Paul Lutheran Church to meet.
Thursday
7:30 p.m. Cub Pack 167 to
meet at St. Paul Lutheran
Church.
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The Taylor Daily Press (Taylor, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 133, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 23, 1962, newspaper, May 23, 1962; Taylor, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth799870/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Taylor Public Library.