Miami Daily News-Record (Miami, Okla.), Vol. 58, No. 102, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 26, 1960 Page: 3 of 12
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WEDNESDAY OCTOBE1 p3 1960
MIAMI DAILY NEWS-RECORD MIAMI OKLAHOAIA
PAGE THREE
Markets
JOPLLN STOCKYARDS
HOGS: 25 to 50c higher 200-230
pounds $1725-1750 No 2 & 3
grades 190260 pounds $17 heavier
butchers $16-1675 light butchers
$1550-1675 s o w s 400 pounds
down $1150-1575 heaier sows
$13501425: boars $9-11
CATTLE: Steady to strong
good-choce fed steers T21-23
standard-low good $18-2050 commercial-standard
stee r s $16-18
commercial-standard steers $16-18
good-choice heifers and mixed
yearlings $21-23 commercial and
standard $16-18 utility and com-
mercial cows $1350-1450: canner
and cutter cows $1043 light can-
ner and shelly kinds $6-9 utility
and commercial bulls $15-16 can-
ner and cutter bulls $11-14 good-
choice lightweight stock calves
$22-25 medium stockers $16-21
common stocgers $10-15 stock
cows $12-15
CALVES: Steady prime veals
$25-26 good-choice veals $21-24
utility commercial $15-20 common
lightweight calves $3-14 good
choice slaughter calves 300-500
lbs $18-22 commercial-standard
$12-16
SHEEP: Steady choice lambs
$16 prime $1650 good lambs
$1450-1550 slaughter ewes $2-6
Evening Lions Hear
Wildlife Talk Here
Emmett Jarvis of Chelsea dis-
cussed wildlife preservation a n d
hunting regulations Tuesday dur-
ing a meeting of the Miami Eve-
ning Lions club He was accom-
panied to the meeting by another
guest Sam Hall state ranger from
Fairland They were introduced by
Lion Bill Bradley
The dinner meeting was held
at Hotel St James
RUMLAGE SALE
In an endeavor to raise money
for a trip to Washington DC next
June youth of the First Presby-
terian church wilt hold a rummage
sale Friday in the community
room of the courthouse The doors
will open at 7 am Katrina White
chairman has disclosed
'I see great days alleacr
Great days possible to men and
women of wilt and vision
—Carl Sandbutg
It is important to
Vote Noy 8
$ew Teri" N Y (Spc09 — For the
first time science has found a new
healing substance with the aston-
ishing ability to shrink hemor-
rhoids stop itching and relieve
pain—without surgery
In case after case while gently
relieving pain actual reduction
(shrinkage) took place
Most amazing of all—resul tat were
'''Nt
Now! showsostIihru
Open 1:00 60c-25c
Obithary
NUCKOLLS FUNERAL
Funeral services for Mrs Julia i
Ann Nuckolls of 301 South Nlaple
street Commerce will be held at
1:30 pm Thursday in the Com-
merce Methodist church with Rev
Frank Simmons of Afton offi-
ciating Burial in the Cayuga cemetery
northeast of Grove will be under
the direction of Jim Thomas
Funeral home Commerce
Mrs Nuckolls 79 died Tuesday
morning in Miami Baptist hospital
Pallbearers will be A C Ander-
son Ferman Smith T Hare ht k
Nuckolls Bob Nuck ol Is and
Leonard Roberts
GEORGE W WILSON
George Wilhelm Wilson 55 died
at 9:45 am today in his home
200 South Treece street Fidler
Wilson a farmer and miner
lived in the Salina and Zena
Okla communities until moving
to Fidler 12 years ago He was
born July 17 1905 at Zena
Surviving are his wife Mrs
Maudie Fay Wilson of the home
five daughters Mrs Bernice Min-
nie of Ketchum Mrs Nettie Si !key
of Pryor Mrs Wanda Smith of
Fidler Mrs Juanita Termentoczi
Golden Colo and Miss Shirley
Wilson of the home a step-daughter
Mrs Lela Strange Denver
Colo a brother David Wilson
Pueblo Colo four sisters Mrs
Alice Andoe and Mrs Viola
Cochran of Jay Miss Ida Wilson
Tulsa and Mrs Mary Cook Ken-
wood Okla and eight grandchil-
dren Arrangements will be announced
by Hunter Funeral home Picher
MRS HELEN L LLOYD
Mrs Helen Louise Lloyd 44
formerly of Picher died at 2:45
am today In a Stockton Calif
hospital Her home was at 596
Elanor avenue North Sacramento
Calif
Mrs Lloyd was born Jan 23
1916 at Joplin She had lived at
Picher from the age of 3 until
moving to California in 1958
Surviving are her husband Jack
Lloyd of the home seven sons
Jackie Lloyd Lar Vegas Nev
Jerry Lloyd with the Army at Se-
attle Wash Don Lloyd with the
Navy at Stockton and Paul Ron-
nie Tommy and Bobby Lloyd of
the home a daughter Miss Bar-
bara Lloyd Girard Ran her
mother Mrs Alta Sweeten Pich-
er four brothers Bill Wayne
Bob and Joe Sweeten all of Pich-
er four sisters Mrs Jeanette In-
man Mrs Lucille Smith Mrs Bet-
ty Ware and Mrs Pat Poo ler all
of Picher and two grandchildren
Funeral services and burial will
be in California
DYEING LOGWOOD
Most of the logwood used for
dyeing in the United States comes
from Haiti It is so called because
it is shipped to market in logs
weighing about 400 pounds
Science Shrinks Piles
New Way Without Surgery
Stops Itch—Relieves Pain
so thorough that sufferers made
astonishing statements like "Piles
have ceased to be a problem!
The secret is a new healing sub-
stance (Ilio-DyneS)—discovery of
a world-famous research institute
This substance is now available
In suppository or ointment form
under the name Preparation tilt
At all drug counter&
7t? t
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BLAZIN'
ACTION!! 1
rPlus—World News
and Huey Cartoon
VI
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Miami Baptist
Hospital News
Admitted — Ntrs Eugene Crow '1 I
Commerce Mrs Jack Randle I Grant VanHoose has moved back
Grove Mrs John Massey Seneca to Quapaw
Mrs Jennie Wilson 602 Third ave- 1 The awc of the First Baptist
nue southeast Robert Ma fi d I
- ---Y--e-- church met at the home of Mrs
Fairland Richard Mayes 530 C l
i Ethel Yost Present were Mrs
street southeast j Bessie Tipton Mrs Fairy Van-
Dismissed — James Mattingly ! gundy Mrs Jessie Clark Mrs
229 K street southeast Mrs Sadie i: Chester Brewing and 7'1 r s
Corbett Picher David Morrissey ! Lenora Amphlett
811 C street northwest Richard '
The Quapaw Lions club met
Mayes 530 C street southeast
Monday night with President Jack
Jack Doan 1227 B street north-
!Buzzard in charge !Members will
east Patsy Neal Picher Mrs I meet next on Nov 14 at the Bill
Oliver Fields 416 F street south-1
i Holder farm All who expect to
east Mrs George Brewster 703 !
i attend must make reservations in
I street northwest Mrs Donald 1 advance
aa with Buzzard or Hamer
Topping and baby college Dor NIusgrove secretary ltrs Katie
othy Kaylor 2224 B street north- Fitzgerrell from Baxter Springs
east Betty Bressman Commerce was a guest of Mrs Aaron Floyd
Births—Mr and Mrs Donald last Friday
Topping a girl Inhn noAr ennnt ikTnnriltr in
Politics
opposed for state senator from
Ottawa and Delaware counties
Pat McCue Miami has no oppo-
nent for state representative office
No 2—to be vacated by Lollar
as he becomes senator—and in-
cumbent Joseph E Mountford
Miami is uncontested for repre-
sentative office I All are Demo-
crats Bob Gee is unopposed for
county attorney Gee has been as-
sistant to Reed who is not running
for re-election
Rounding out the county office
positions are Democratic incum-
bents—Henry Austin court clerk
George G Russell county judge
W J Worley treasurer John
Hinds assessor Fred Jimerson
county superintendent Bert
Dresia county clerk J R Cun-
ningham surveyor Hass L Wat-
kins commissioner of central dis-
trict and Billie C Amonette
northern district commissioner
State questions up for approval
are 394—concerning requirements
for special sessions ct the state
legislature — and 395— concerning
state income tax withholding pro-
cedures Wilburn Cartwright Democratic
corporation commissioner faces
Republican Percy Butler
Ifez Bussey former Quapaw res-
ident now of Norman is unopposed
for criminal appeals judge of the
southern district Supreme court
justice candidates—all uncontested
—are Floyd L Jackson Ninth dis-
trict All are Democrats
King
September and received the 12-
month suspended term for driving
without a Georgia driver's license
Georgia sells I- and 5-year
driver's licenses which expire on
April 1 King said at the time of
his arrest he had a valid Alabama
license
While the other sit-in demon-
strators were released on bond
King was held at the request of
Deka lb County officials for violat-
ing the state antitrespass law
while on probation The law under
which King and the others were
charged makes it a misdemeanor
to fail to leave private premises
when requested to do so
King's counsel argued the pro-
bated sentence was invalid since
the law sets a limit of six months
on such sentences They also
claimed the P nt tresspa ss law is
unconstitutional
A BIG COLOR WESTERN! T hcz t BIz:0() o d
YUL BRYNNER IN HIS FIRST WESTERN
STEVE McQUEEN Star of Trs "WANTED DEAD OR ALIVE"
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tooth like
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—No7001 EiTia
Guns Start Blasting
Daily at 1:45
4:30 7:15 9:40
1
QUA PAY!
Mrs Chester Brewington
Correspondent
307 Kentucky Phone OR 4-23:S
The Quapaw Lions club met
Monday night with President Jack
Buzzard in charge Members will
meet next on Nov 14 at the Bill
Holder farm All who expect to
attend must make reservations in
advance with Buzzard or Homer
Musgrove secretary Mrs Katie
Fitzgerrell from Baxter Springs
was a guest of Mrs Aaron Floyd
last Friday
John Beck spent 1lonclay in
Muskogee
The Tuesday Study club met at
the home of Madeline Myers
Hostess's were Lucile Looney and
Miss Myers The meeting was di-
rected by Mrs Audrey Black
president The program was on the
subjects "Education for Free-
dom" and "Education for Sur-
vival" Present were Mrs Gordon
Kinder Mrs Mabel Floyd Mrs
Fred Jeffries Mrs Mildred Buz-
zard Mrs J W Heck Mrs Carl
Black Miss Mary Bragg Miss
Looney and Miss Myers
Miss Janice McMinn and Gary
Holden were married Saturday
night
The Full Gospel church is con-
ducting a revival this week with
evangelist H A Rogers in charge
Mrs LeRoy Sills visited friends
and relatives in Quapaw Tuesday
Mr and Mrs Paul Large have
returned from a vacation in Boul-
der Colo Yuma Ariz and
Edmond
Ben Eby is home from the
Miami Baptist hospital recovering
from a heart attack
Mrs Crandall Wheeling is in the
hospital
"KEY TO THE CITY"
In the walled cities of medieval
Europe a key to the gate was giv-
en to any distinguished and trust-
ed person so that he could come
and go without being challenged
by the guard Thus originated the
custom of presenting a distin-
gruished person with the key to a
city
262 square inch
viewable picture
21 -inch tube
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This is achieved by using the
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Russian Actress
In Frisco Looks
Like Rodeo Star
By BOB THOMAS
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)—Pink-
cheeked and pretty she looked
like a rodeo queen in her cowboy
boots blue jeans plaid shirt and
western hat
Her name is Zhanna Prokhoren-
ko and at 20 she is one of the
Soviet Unions rising film stars
She came here with the Soviet
entry in the San Francisco Inter-
national Film Festival "Ballad of
a Soldier" which gave her a star-
ring role in her first film
Zhanna is having a ball beside
the Golden Gate but her fun will
be short-lived Back home she's
just another student
In the Soviet delegation's suite
at the Sheraton-Palace she ex-
plained how the Soviet system for
film players works
go to the Institute of Cin-
emagraphic Art all day six days
a week" she explained "There
are classes for all film workers—
actors writers directors camera-
men and so forth We are students
for four years Then we graduate
and start working"
But some students are selected
to work in movies Director Gri-
gori Txhukhray was looking for a
girl to play the love interest in
"Ballad of a Soldier" After test-
ing 20 actresses he saw a photo-
graph of Zhanna and sent for her
That part of it sounds like a Hol-
lywood saga
Her ambition?
"To have every role I play dif-
ferent so I can show what I can
do" she said
Zhanna gets $10 a week as a
student plus her own apartment
When she works in a movie—she
interrupted one for this trip—she
earns about $200 a week plus va-
cations in the Crimea and else-
where School's out from mid-
June to September
‘'ENTRILoQuism EXPOSED'
LrrrLE ROCK 9rk (AP) —
There is no such thing as "throw
ing your voice" says nightclub
ventriloquist Peter Rich
"It's 90 per cent acting and 10
per cent ventriloquism" he adds
"I just talk without moving my
lips and attract people's attention
to my dummy"
Rich said anyone cad learn the
trick by practising 10 minutes a
day
I
RCA VICTOR
:cF44
Prestige
proved by the President pertain-
ing to internal working papers of
the executive branch of the gov-
ernment the secretary of state
and the director of the United
States Information Agency have
dtstermined that this paper will
not be made available outside the
executive branch"
Hagerty had been told that
Thomas Roderick a USIA coun-
sel told Congress Tuesday that
Allen was going to check with the
White House flr a decision on
whether to withhold the report
Hagerty was asked whether Al-
len had checked with the White
House and what the decision was
The press secretary's short state-
ment was the answer
Rep John E Moss D-Calif
chairman of the House Govern-
ment Operations subcommittee
quoted Roderick Tuewiay as say
big Allen WAS checking the White
house on whether to release the
report
Hagerty had said that just so
there would be no misunderstand-
ing about President Eisenhower's
position on prestige he wanted to
refer newsmen to many public
statements on that subject in-
eluding Eisenhower's address
Thursday night at San Francisco
In what was widely interpreted
as a slap at Kennedy Eisenhower
said in his speech that no one
should be misled by those he said
seem fond of "deprecating the
standing condition and perform-
awe of the entire nation"
Hagerty earlier brushed aside
all inquiries as to the existence
of a report or reports
Day Location of AF
Recruiting Changed
Mr Force Sgt Ted Croninger
has changed the day and location
of his weekly recruiting visit to
Miami Croninger will be at the
county surveyor's office on the
first floor of the courthouse each
Friday from 9 am to 4 pm The
recruiter formerly was located
each Tuesday In the Post Office
building
FOR
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Dial XI 2-8952
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Congo
mentary democracy In the na-
tion's political turmoil this inevi-
tably favors Lumumba And
among all the squabbling political
leaders only Lumumba is likely
to upset the 80-year-old Belgian
commercial hegemony
The Congolese army — which
UN mission chief Rajeshawar
Dayal of India calls a "disorgan-
ized rabble"—is bitterly divide4
within itself Prominent UN offi-
cials say it is held together only
with the help of the Belgian offi-
cers and money provided by
Belgian firms operating in the
Congo
Despite secret Belgian aid and
advice reported by the UN Con-
golese soldiers frequently seem
out of control Thy have been
seen mercilessly beating civilians
and stripping women in public in
areas under their domination Ten
persons were killed by rampaging
soldiers in a Leopoldville suburb
Saturday and two more were re-
ported killed Tuesday
Belgian staff officers have re-
appeared in army camps where
little more than three months ago
soldiers mutinied against their
Belgian officers and raped many
of their wives
And 36 Congolese cadets were
sent to a Belgian military acad-
emy a few days ago against the
will of the UN mission
PROBLEMS OF BIGNESS
TORRINGTON Wyo (AP) —
Torrington residents reached their
goal according to the recent cen-
sus They passed the 4000 mark
in population
Then came the sad news
Under Wyoming law the town
will have to adopt a budget plan
used by cities establish new city
government departments and pay
higher fire insurance premiums
until a paid fire department is
established
Says Dad 80 Is
Dangerous Driver
LOUISVILLE Ky (A P)—Et
ward Ashby is 80 stone deaf ani
extremely independent Ile also
a dangerous driver says his soi
Wayne St
"Take his license Judge I
want to save his life or someon
else's" the son pleaded in traffà
court Tuesday
The father was charged
reckless driving Police said ha
attempted a U-turn in heavy traff
tic
Wayne Ashby said state official
refused to revoke his father's
license without affidavits
"My father will obey the law:
he won't drive if he doesn't ha‘4
a license but as long as he has
one he will" the son said
Judge Ralph Stone continued thck
case to Nov 29
go
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Heck, Jess. Miami Daily News-Record (Miami, Okla.), Vol. 58, No. 102, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 26, 1960, newspaper, October 26, 1960; Miami, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2141746/m1/3/?q=Amanda+Montgomery: accessed July 5, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.