Nowata Daily Star (Nowata, Okla.), Vol. 49, No. 179, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 12, 1958 Page: 4 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Nowata Star and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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N
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I
DEAR FOLKS
(Continued From Page I)
on the vergs Of refusing the invita-
tion for the past week Will we
be smart and refuse or will our
ego W i n out?
They have already told us that
they can not guarantee a it la
cast-off band uniforms This is
smart When we played in the
University of Oklahoma band 20
years ago we were a slim 36
waist even though our over-all
tip-to-toe measurement was over
6 feet Now can they find a 44
inch waist with the same height
measurement? Well they may have
NOVVATA (OKLA) DAILY STAR—WEDNESDAY NOV 12 1958 16:n
had some freaks sihee otir time
that will provido :he tdillrms rive-
Ft our IrM110
We are t by letter that we
will rehearse at 10:30 Saturday
morning before the Missouri game
and that we will practice a
time formation before the noon
hour Then at 1:30 p m sharp
We will march on the field like a
trailer behind the Big Bed band I
We will also perform at halftime i
before 60000 fans Our knees are 1
shaking already In all our college
years which included prancing up
and down between the goalpost
all the way from Lawrence Kan-
sas to Dallas Texas we can
IEveryday Eargains
COFFEE Sunnycup 1-lb pkg 59c
COFFEE Yacht Club 1-113 can 75c
COFFEE Sunnycup 1-lb pkg 59c
COFFEE Yacht Club 1-1b can 75c
CRACKERS Sunshine 1-lb 30c
GINGER SNAPS Nabisco 1-lb pkg 39c
PINEAPPLE Crushed No 300 can 19c
OLEO Farbest quarters 1-lb pkg25c
IVORY LIQUID DETERGENT king size$109
BACON Hull's thick sliced 2-lb pkg 98c
ROAST Beef chuck lb 55c
Iler Work Clotket—gporunt Goods
-TREE DELIVERY
BAUMAN'S GROC & MKT
11-1111 J UltVUe WI I Iwo
I 316 E Modoo
5itimaamenionswassomorawswatiatanto!
I wAuccinv
FOR
CD 11 N
OF
JIMMY'S FOODLINER
Kt 11
Phone 593
(Coming Soon At Trimmei's Location)
Owned and Operated by Jim Bayouth former
manager of Bayouth's Dept Store in Nowata
LIVESTOCK AUCTION
COFFEYVILLE STOCKYARDS
I COFFEYVILLE KANSAS
822 West 14th Street
Packers Are Outbid
On Better Type Veal
A normal run of livestock for this season of the year sold at
the Saturday Weekly livestock auction on the Coffeyville Stock-
yards in Coffeyville Kansas
Livestock sold Included 1192 head of cattle and calves 454
hogs and six sheep
Lightweight veal calves were very scarce and the packers paid
up to $3125 for prime veals while the country buyers paid
from $31 to $35 per hundredweight for the better quality kinds
Another fairly good assortment of heavyweight baby beef
calves and fat yearlings sold 50 tents to $1 higher in a very
active trade with the bulk of the good to average choice
grades sellicttg from $2550 to $2710 Several odd head of high
choice grades sold from $2740 to $2790
All kinds of killing cows continued in active demand at strong
prices compared to last Saturday's higher market with big
heavy cutter cows up to $1775 freely and utility and commercial
Cows from $1775 to $10
Good to choice fat young heiferettes showing some feed sold
from $2050 to $2250 Big killing bulls were rather scarce and
sold fully steady with the best offered at 52290
There was a good active broad demand for practically all
classes of stocker and feeder cattle calves and other replace-
ment cattle All weights of stock calves both steers and heifers
sold generally steady compared to a week earlier with good
to choice heavy stock steer calves and lightweight Yearlings
from $26 to 53280 while good to choice lighterweight
stock steer calves sold from KA to $3460 and good to choice
heifer calves sold from $26 to $3050
The heavyweight feeder cattle weighing 550 pound up sold
fully 50 cents higher in an a- ti7e trade Stock cows and cows
with calves at side were scarce again and prices were higher
The usual large number of good buyers purchasing livestock
at the sale was fast and active
Quotations—Veal calves $18 to $3125 heat y fat calves $23
to $28 fat steers and yearlings $22 to $28 utility and com-
mercial cows $1775 to $2050 canner and cutter cows $1350
to $1775 stock iOIA1 $1610 to $250 killing hulls $18 to $23
stock bulls $1850 to $2350 stock calves $21 to $37 stock steers
and yearlings $1950 to $301 feeder bteers $1950 to $27
The extreme top on butcher- hogs sus li1855 paid for one
seven-head lot of 235-pound No 1 Berk s bilk! the bulk of the
geod to choice butchers sold from $1825 to 51810 although
three small lots totaling 22 head sold at $1850 Choice under
400 pounds butcher sows sold up to41795 and choice heavy
sows over 400 pounds sold up to $1710
A fair assortment of stock pigs and feeder hogs met with a
right good demand and prices looked strom to higher com-
pared to last Saturday's sale
Quotations—Good to choice butcher hogs 200 to 250 pounds'
$1825 to $1855 light butcher hogs $1750 to $1825 heavy
hogs $1775 to $1750 sows $1625 to $1795 stags and boars
$1159 to $16 stock pigs Marl feeder hogs $1750 to $50
The sale starts at 10 a m farm ladles sent lunch every
Saturday at Cafe in sale barn Come early
Nost Skirting at 10 A M
-
HOWAkD OTTEN Mang'e'r
Telephones 1430 and 3060 Night 1243
r
I
1
RUSSIAN
PfmImMiNE1Mlilf
never remember a crowd of more
than :5000 In the ::ta!lcis We are
awet to !ay thc least
Weil we have takon the plunge
We have informed the authorities
at the University of Oklahoma we
will be in there pitching when the
public address system announcer
says: "And now ladies and gentle-
ment the Alumni band of the Um
versity of Oklahoma is performing
on the field"
And don't chuckle you Nowata
fans who are in the stands that
day when you see a bay-windowed
French horn player struggling
along 20 yards behind the band
That will be your neighbor
still trying to mrster the French
horn and at the same time try
ing to catch up with the band
Designs Asked
For Big American
Space Missile
WASHINGTON — The Nation-
al Aeronautics and Space Adminis-
tration has asked the missile in-
dustry to desisgn a one-ton space
capsule capable of orbiting the
earth for as much as 28 hours
NASA plans to launch the capsule
from Cape Canaveral Fla in the
nose of an Atlas intercontinental
ballistic missile
It said in an anncuncemont that
the winning design may resemble
capsule concepts proposed for man-
ned flight into space but will not
be a true space craft
The agency presented its preli-
minary specifications to 38 missile
and aviation manufacturers at a
meeting at the Langley Research
Center near Norfolk Va last Fri-
day NASA asked the companies to
submit bids by Dec 4 and said it
would award a contract for the
long-term development of the space
capsule after Jan
NASA told the manufacturers it
wanted two complete orbits from
the first of the vehicles and 18
or more from later models The
sat Aides must attain an almost
circular orbit rigidly fixed between
the altitudes of 125 and 140 miles
Initially the capsule will contain
only -instownentii for measuring
acceleration and deceleration ve-
locitities temperatures and other
data for relay back to earth by
radio telemtry systems
After several such launchings
capsules with monkeys or other
animals will be sent aloft in a stu-
dy of the problems of abrupt acce-
leration on takeoff re-entry into
the earth's atmosphere and re-
covery once the vehicle has been
returned to earth
Eventually the capsules if they
prove satisfactory may be adapt-
ed for manned satellite flight
' (Continued From Page 1)
if necessary Both Washington and
London contend that the Soviet
Union cannot by itself scrap the
agreements reached after World
War II for occupation of Germany
rGrotewohl called for the signing
of a World War II peace treaty
with Germany Agreement among
the Big Four on terms of a treaty
has been blocked by the cold whr
which split Germany into t w o
camps
All the indications here were that
Russia and East Germany were
about to launch a big diplomatic
offensive to force the Western
powers to acknowledge the exis-
tence of the Communist East Ger-
man government which the West
refuses to recognize on the ground
that it is a Communist puppet with-
out popular basis It was too early
to tell whether this offensive
would be accompanied by a nervL
war against isolated Berlin
Mr and Mrs Fred Rose
of the city Were attending to busi-
ness rilatters in Nowata today
LOOELING
1111EAD
ita Maw 11 6010111
swoon 4 mallow&
irnmemag mama
snowainolo
SPENDING TOWARD TROUBLE
When Congress adjourned a fetv
weeks ago it had appropriated more
motley to be spent in this fiscal
year than in any peacetime year
in the history of our nation This
authorization for cord spending
comes at a time when the citizehs
already are beset with inflation —
with an eroding of the value of
their dollars of income and their
dollars of savings The governmeht
officials responsible for formulat-
ing the federal budget informed the
Congressmen as they were leaving
that in the five years ahead the
budget would avelage $80 billion
a year — for a total spending of
$-16t billion
Present taxes won't produce that
kind of money To meet this year's
record $72 billion of expenditures
the government must borrow at
least $12 billion Tnis borrowing will
be done largely tnrough the banks
No wealth will have been created
to put the extra billions Into cir-
culation The federal governmeat
will merely give the banks paper
promises to pay—"Federal securi-
ties" The deficit spending w11
dilute the value of all money earn-
ed and held by the citizenry
Local Governments Too
In addition to 'Wend deficit
spending state and local govera-
ments likewise are boosting bud-
gets to record highs and many of
them are borrowing money All tins
CURLEY
(Continued From Page 1)
walked the hospital corridor and
had posed for newspaper photo-
graphers Curley's long career was one
triumph and tragedy
He won election to the hig r
offices in his home city and state
and once was high in the coun-
cils of his Democratic party — but
he also served two terms in jail
His triumphs included election
as governor Massachusetts at
peak of his career in 1934 Ile
served one term He was mayor
of Boston for four terms of four
years each
lie claimed to have carried Mas-
sachusetts for Alfred E Smith in
the 1928 national election and $tum-
ped the country in the 1932 election
campaign of Franklin D Roosevelt
Air Club Plans
Organizing Meet
Organization of the Nowata Fly-
ing Club is planned at a meeting
tonight at the Chamber of Com-
merce building according to Jack
Henderson and Clayton Walker who
are trying to organize the group
The club will be for anyone in-
terested in flying including both
experienced flyer ! and beginners
Among tentative plans are a two-
posal that the club incorporate
and purchase a 1lane for members'
use
J T Brown of the Indepen-
dence (Kan) Flying Club will be
the speaker and discuss the prob-
lems of organizing such a group
Anyone interested in aviation is
welcome to attend
IRELIIEWBIE
You are invited to attend the series of Bible Lessons
being presented in our building each evening
These lessons are being presented by Hershel Ott
well of Hartford Ill and they are creating a great
deal of interest A session of questions and discus-
sions follow the lesson each evening
Lessons begin at 7:30 and will continue through No-
vember 21
A session of congregational singing precedes the
lesson each evening
BRING YOUR BIBLES AND STUDY WITH US
THE CHRISTIANS' MEET!
FOR 140iRSHIP
AT 513 E: OSAGE
NiEngunnonnomennmannommunnimmommormonimeaun
local state aria federal government
1 speading of borroved money adds
to the amount of inoney in circula-
tion without adding to the amount
or gotds and mu-vices available
And this phase of inflation has been
gotilg on for years In 20 years our
money supply has increased 75
per -Tilt hilc the rate of produc
tiou Of industrial gcods has increas-
ed only 119 per eeat and our jatkp-
ulation has increased only 35 per-
: ecerntofinthtehisd1))(11raid
rohtahse bbueyeinng pow-
11 than cut in half
r In many cases — especially in
s industrial employment—"real" in-
I come has more than kept pace
s with inflation because of continuing
- wage increases Hardest hit have
I been the people On fixed incomes—
r pelljOnS insurance annuities in-
t terest on stocks and bonds and so
-forth The future danger of infla-
? ton however threatens the pro-
penty of everyonc When the in
come price cycle continues its
t leap - frogging climb year after
yea t our whole productive struc-
ture is threatened
Costs Soaring
Twenty years ago a big machine
in an aircraft plant in Topeka
giving two men a productive ca-
pacity bigger than four men pre-
viously had cost $300000 Today
this machine could not be replac-
ed for $900000 — three times the
original cost Unter the deprecia-
tion deduction scriedule permitted
by the federal ta::ation codes the
aircraft company is not compen-
sated for this incrtase due to infla-
tion Thus the company must spend
more profit dollars to keep produc-
tion going at a rate to meet com-
petition This is a factor in rising
prices and in recent years it has
become a factor slowing down tne
rate of capital investment
t When capital investments slow-
! down the creation Of new jobs slow
down accordingly We need to cre-
ate in the United States approxi-
mately 1000000 niw jobs each year
to take care of our younger gen
1 eration coming of age Witnout jobs
for these young liken and women
American prog1s5 would slow uo
) pLI ultimately stall Not enough
of our people realize what it takes
to create a job In American in-
dustry the investment of more thaa
S12C00 is required on the average
to create each new job In some
a little less
Expansion Important
Therefore an investment of :1i
billion a year in American industry
—at todays costs in machinery
plant construction etc—is neec-
sal) merely to provide the jobs for
young people going to work for the
first time In today's highly com-
petitive markets dnd with constan-
tly rising production costs and tax-
es running up to 52 per cent few
industries can manage to save suf-
ficient expansion money out of
profits To expand and make new
jobs they must attract new cap-
ital with stock sales—or borrow at
substantial interest rates
In recent years inflation and
personal taxes as high as 61 per
cent of income have cionbined to
slow down the flow of invest-
ment capital This is an alarming
situation for every citizen of the
United States young and old Our
wealth comes from production —
production of goods and servic-
es It is the fouidation of our living
standard And likewise it is the
foundation of genuine wealth Big
government spending on things
we can do without in our present
crilis and big taxes are realities
which are harmful to the present
welfare and the future of every
citizen
PLAY BINGO
WEDNESDAY NITE 7:30 P M
LEGION HOME
PROCEEDS TO CIVIL DEFENSE
SPONSORED BY AMERICAN LEGION
Drawn Especially Fot
The Nowata Star
Ay Ralph Tee -
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Golf pro likes luggage space in '59 Olds
Oldsmo'D:Il's conquest of "inner" space gives you more room where it counts! For the man who tri
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space-test the new Rockets at your local authorized Oldsmobile Quality Dealer's today!
704 E Cherok
TUNE IN THE "NEW OLDS SHOW" STARRING PATTI PAGE EVERY WEEK ON AbCTVII
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Johnson, David P. Nowata Daily Star (Nowata, Okla.), Vol. 49, No. 179, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 12, 1958, newspaper, November 12, 1958; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2129805/m1/4/?q=coaster: accessed June 12, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.