Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 9, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 11, 1950 Page: 1 of 8
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Sweetwater Reporter
WEATHER — High
55; low this morning, 36; baro-
meter. 30.24, steady. Mostly
cloudy, unsettled, somewhat
warmer. Relative humidity, 32
per cent.
I
5:Jrd Year
Full LsjsmkI L.'ail're*n Wlrn Service
SWKRTWATEK, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 11, 1050
NBA Telephoto Service
British Vote
On Socialism
Again, Feb. 23
Five More Years
To Be Questions In
Coming Elections
LONDON, .Ian. 11, (UP) Prime
Win. Clement Attlee today set
Feb. 23 as the date of a general
election at which British voters
decide if they want five more
years of socialism.
Attlee announced the date of i
the elections in a special state- |
ment which said that the present j
parliament would l>e dissolved i
by King George VI on Feb. 3.
■ Although conservative leader
Winston Churchill is vacation- i
ing in the Maderia Islands, con-'
servative party headquarters j
said "we are ready."
"We look forward to polling
11 a y with confidence," said a !
statement issued by conservative |
chairman Lord Woolton.
"Hut let us not regard thi
election as just a party contest, I
The future of our country is at j
•take and it is time for a j
change."
The forthcoming election cam- I
paign, according to observers,
promises to be one of the most i
bitter in British history. The |
Labor government will cam-
paign on its record of social se-
curity and nationalization of in-
dustry. The Conservatives will
attack socialist "waste" and call
for a return to free enterprise.
| The last general election was
"ield July 5, 1945, after the war
was finished in Europe but be-
fore Japan surrendered. The
labor party won an overwhelm-
ing landslide victory which sur-
prised Labor party leaders as
much as anyone else.
A British general election calls
for selection of an entirely new
House of Commons. Because of
reorganization of constituencies,
there will be election contests
|his time for 025 seats in Parlia-
ment compared to 040 in tin i<tr>
election.
Number 9
%
! U-
Schools Need More Buildings
; — — wm
Group Will Hear Lake Report
' ' /'i Si
m'
MADAME CHIANG LEAVES FOR FORMOSA—Mine.
Chiang Kai-Shek leans over to say Rood by to a friend as
she boards plane at l<a(iiiardia Field in New York City.
This is the first lex of her flight hack to Formosa. At renter
is Wellington Koo, Nationalist China's ambassador to the
1'mted States. (NEA Telephoto).
Military Is Asked
About Asia Policy
WASHINGTON, Jan. 11, (UP)—Republican critics of
j President Truman's China policy demanded today that his
military leaders tell Congress what they would do to stop
Communism in Asia.
Sens. William F. Knowland, Cal., and H. Alexander
Smith, N. J., asked that De-
Taft Says U. S.
China Policies
Serious Blunder
WASHINGTON, Jan. It, (UP)
—Sen. Robert A. Taft., R.. O.,
k^aid today the 1". S. Navy and the
State Department could save
Formosa from the Communists
■without getting us into a shoot-
ing war with Russia.
In a turlous attack on Presi-
dent Truman's hands-off policy
toward Formosa, Taft called for
American action to help the
Chinese Nationalists on their is-
land stronghold.
He told the Senate that the
Chinese Communists could not
■toss from the mainland of China
to invade Formosa if the U. S.
Navy "makes it clear that ships
carrying troops will not be al-
lowed to cross."
Taft added that the Com-
munists "probably" would not
even try to Invade the island if
the State Department made it
"Ijerfectly clear" that the United
Slates will not permit Formosa
to fall into Red hands.
Both steps, the Ohioan said.
JF'iild lie taken without fear that
They would plunge us into war
with Russia.
G. O. P. Would
Ask Action
In Coal Crisis
WASHINGTON. Jan. 11 (UP)
Six GO!' senators today asked
Congress to tell President Tru-
man he ought to do something
about cool.
They , introduced a resolution
saying. "it is the sense of Con-
gress" that the President should
invoke emergency provisions of
the Taft-Hartley act to restore
soft coal miners to full produc-
j tioti.
The United Mine Workers
have been digging coal only three
days a week since Dec. 5. UMW
President John L. Lewis ordered
the work limitation to enforce
his contract demands. Scattered
wildcat strikes this week idled
some SO,000 miners, but Lewis
ordered them back to work next
j Monday,
i The resolution was introduced
bv Sens. Robert A. Taft. ()., Hom-
er Ferguson, Mich., Alexander
[Wiley, Wis., Forrest C. Dunneh.
Mo.. William E. Jenner. Ind., and
Edward Martin, Pa.
It called the three-dry work
week a "strike" and said it will j
"impair the national health and
safety" ii continued.
KXI> WII.IHAT STRIKE
WASHINGTON. Jan. II (UP)
John L. Lewis today directed
striking coal miners to return t<
work next Monday.
His order applies to the more
than 77.000 United Mine Work-
ers who went out on wildcat
strikes.
It has no effect on the three-
day work week in coal fields of
operators which have not signed
new contracts with Lewis.
New Cotton And
Plans For Boys Ready
"Agriculture is now entering
a tew cycle in which speculative
farming must give away to bul-
Juiced farming," Marion Duncan
president of the Nolan County
Boys' Crop Improvement Pro-
gram, said this week In announc-
ing plans for a new agricultural
course of study in schools and
'I II Clubs.
The course in row crop farm-
ing, being adopted for use al-
ready by a number of the
schools, is an entirely new de-
velopment. It is being s'urted co-
incident with the first year of a
'JfciOO prize contest for boys in cot-
ton and grain sorghums in 1950.
"It is of more importance than
ever that farm hoys should have
a general knowledge of scientific
farming and livestock manage-
ment," Duncan said in discussing
the new study course.
"Cotton and grain sorghums
can be raised at a low cost of
production in this area because
of adaptation to mechanized
firming.
r,'Row crop farming has been
recognised as a needed course of
study in the public schools for
a long time. It was with these
thoughts in mind that the new
agricultural program was drawn
up.
New Coarse
"This year the new course of
study In the public schools and
the 4-H clubs of our
dual primarily with
0
Hps
varieties of cotton and sorghums,
i,heir adaptation, culture, dis-
eases. insects, climatic condi-
tions affecting plant growth and
soils.
"The latest scientific develop-
ments released by the agricul-
tural experiment stations and
other farm agencies on these sub-
jects will also be passed on to the
hoys.
"The students will get much
of their training through their
crop projects and by actual field
studies. This course is primarily
an agricultural study of crops,
culture and soils of the individu-
al farm.
I'lonccr Program
"The public schools and 4-H
clubs in Nolan County will be
the original organizations in Tex-
as to teach a course of this type.
The work will he carried out
through the agriculture classes
and the county agent's office."
(.WO Contest
Three Roscoe and seven
Sweetwater business establish-
ments have offered $300 in cash
prizes in the boys' cotton and
sorghum contests.
The prizes will not be awarded
on the highest yields. Instead
awards will be more on the In-
itiative and ability of the con-
testants in making important
agricultural finds from their
would be .of most
On Page Eight
fense Secretary Louis John-
son and the chiefs of staff be
summoned before Congres-
sional Committees to give
their views.
But the Democratic chairman
of the two committees most in-
volved said they had no plans to
hear the military on that issue.
Senators who heard Secretary
of the State Dean Acheson's day-
long policy review at a closed
meeting yesterday said he never
me I j. specific program to
quarantine Communism" in the
Far East.
Acheson wa. > scheduled to tes-
tify today before the House
Foreign Affairs committee and
to speak tomorrow before the
National Press Club. He could
use either occasion or both to
make a full statement on the Ad-
ministration's Far Eastern stand.
Senators who heard him ves
terday said that as of now
administration either has
anti-Red policy in Asia or is not
ready to discuss it.
One Administration leader told
newsmen that Acheson's view of
the Far East could be summed
up this way:
"We'll deal with the thing as
it exists today and hope it is het-
ter tomorrow."
Other committee members dis-
puted a contention of chairman
Tom Connally, I)., Tex., that
Acheson told the committee that,
even without Formosa, the Unit-
i ed States has an "impregnable"
defense line running from Japan
to Okinawa to the Philippines.
One said Acheson merely "ap-
peared to nod in agreement"
when Connally himself made
-itich a statement.
Knowland and Smith were dis-
satisfied with Acheson's refusal
to discuss the views of military
leaders about the strategic im-
portance of Nationalist-held For-
mosa. Moth said they want Con-
gress to follow through on Ache-
son's suggestion that military
question should be taken up with
lohnson and the military chiefs.
But Connally doubted if his
committee would hear the de-
fense viewpoint. And chairman
Millard Tydings, !>., Md.. said his
Armed Service Committee
wouldn't either.
i | Open Program Here
Thursday Night For
All Citizens At
C. of C. Banquet
A rousing dinner program to
peer into the future shape of
thing* in Sweetwater and vicin-
ity will lie held Thursday night
at the Sweetwater Chamber of
Commerce's first meeting, lead-
ers announced Wednesday.
This is the new name of the
long active Sweetwater Club,
| a community - wide • leaders'
| forum gathering.
Ney Sheridan, Jr., president
j who helped stir interest in re-
vitalizing the club to bring in
| more active participi iu>, will be
| in charge of tomorrow night's
program.
The principal talk will be made
by City Manager H. S .Thorgrim-
sen who will report in detail on
the Oak Creek Lake project, pre-
senting maps, charts and fig-
ures.
"After talking with the city
commission, the Board of City
Development, Sheridan and
others 1 have decided to devote
part of my talk to some ideas
on long-range planning for the
future," Thorgrimsen said.
"We are a town of 15,000 to
17,000 people that has grown 67
percent in 10 years and spurted
in the last 10 months. Indications
are that in 15 years this will be
a town of 30,000. Are we going
to sit back and wait for emergen-
cies to arise and then grapple
with them, or will we start plan-
ning ahead now in every phase
of civic life?
"1 do not think that any one
man or woman or one group
can or should have this re-
sponsibility. 1 think it is a
group of many people working
in special fields and 1 have been
talking to various ones to get
their ideas so that I can present
them in the talk Thursday night.
This will not be my idea but the
crvstalization of the ideas of
many persons with whom I
have talked about the subject."
The banquet Thursday at 7:30
p. m. at the Blue Bonnet Sky
Room is open to all interested
men and women. Members of
the club and their wives have
__ tickets paid for. Others who
the i vv's'1 to attend may do so by
no j paying Si per plate.
A. C". Bishop, Board of City
Development manager,
Wednesday:
"This meeting is open and '
invite everyone. However
tm
Ssfl
IP
Stt&
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. i '
HERE'S MAN WITH FLYING DISC—-Dr. K. W. Kay, of Glendaie, Calif., demonstrates his
model flying disc which he believes will revo lutionize aviation. His 41-inch, 20-lb. test model
gets off the ground and spins in a 36-foot circle at 72 miles an hour. Vanes on the disc's rim
open by centrifugal force when the disc rotates, making it act like a helicopter. At altitude the
vanes are closed and it seats away like a spinning top. L!. S. Air Force officials recently wit-
nessed a test flight of a model at Dr. Kay's pla nt. (NEA Telephoto).
Contracf
Sylvester
Let Upon Propaganda
Highway Beat ch,na
With the letting of the contract yesterday by the High-
way Commission for the paving of the connecting link on
the highway between Longworth and Sylvester, a long time
dream of many citizens in that area and in Sweetwater has
j come true.
Outstanding Men
Of Year Listed
WACO, Jan 11. (UP) — Tex-
as' outstanding young men for
1949, to be honored by the Tex-
as Junior Chamber of Commer-
ce at the annual distinguished
service awards banquet here
Saturday night, were announc-
ed today as follows:
Rep. Lloyd M. Bentsen. Jr., 28,
McAljen, Congressman from the
15th Texas District.
The Rev. Robert H Tate, Jr.,
aid |33. pastor of the Oak Park
Methodist Church at Corpus
we j Christ i.
we I John G. 1-lurd, 35, Laredo oil-
would appreciate any one plan-j man-attorney-rancher.
ning to attend telephoning the M. C. Walker, Jr., 31, Houston
B. C. D. office Thursday morn- \ florist.
ing, 1681. so that we can plan j Sidney Lee. 33. Dallas manu-
for the crowd." Ifacturing- chemist.
DQI awiiuiai i
projects that
See COTTON
Hold-Up Man Had
Wife And Baby
In Car With Him
HOUSTON, Jan. 11 (UP) —
A grocery store bandit, accom-
panied by his wife and two year-
old daughter, crashed a stolen
car into a telephone pole while
trying to escape from police
around midnight last night.
Harlen C. Beckley, 24, ad-
mitted he held up the store lo-
calise he was out of work and
his family was hungry.
He decided to rob the Midget
Food Market when he went
home last night and his wife,
Betty, 20. told him there was
no food.
"I told Harlen I wanted to
go along no matter what hap-
pened. There was nobody to
leave Carla Jean (the baby)
with, so 1 took her along," Mrs.
Beckley said at police headquart-
ers.
Beckley held up Wilford Simp-
son, 22-year-old clerk, with a
small-caliber pistol, taking $83
in cash from the register.
Police spotted the car an hour
later and the chase started. It
lasted for 15 blocks, until Beck-
ley lost control and the vehicle
careened Into the utility pole.
B-47 Jet Bomber Built For
600 M. P. H. In Production
WASHINGTON, Jan. 11, (UP)
The Air Force has put in pro-
duction a new version of its
Nine Scouts Of
County To Have
National Trip
Nolan County will have the
right to send nine boys—one for
each Scout unit—to the national
Jamboree at Valley Forge, Pa..
June 30-July <i.
This was announced at a dis-
trict scout leaders' meeting in
Colorado City Tuesday night to
discuss plans for participation in
the Jamboree where 40,000
scouts will assemble.
Each district will also have the
right to nominate one scout-
master and two assistants for
the trip.
Those attending the meeting
from Sweetwater included Paul
Terrell, Bill Rice, Edgar Garner,
Perry Garner, Ben McDonald and
H. D. Norris.
Thursday night, the district
Scout committee will meet at
the home of Chairman J M. Law-
rence, 1001 Hailey, at 7:30.
A training course for Cub
Scout leaders to be held each
Thursday, will start tomorrow at
the Youth Canteen, from 9:30 to
11:30 a. m.
MARKETS AT A (iLANCK
Hjr I'nitert Pi*m
Stocks firm in active trading.
Bonds firm.
U. S. Government bonds easier
in moderate trading.
Curb stocks irregularly higher.
Midwest stocks irregularly
higher.
liver unchanged in New York
fine ou
ounce.
at 73U cents a
Cotton futures steady.
Grains in Chicago: wne
oats, rye and soy bean
steady-
it, corn,
futures
B-17 jet bomber that flies at bet-
ter than (>00 miles an hour at
about twice the range of early
models, it was learned today.
A fair est.-mate is that the new
plane can fly more than 1,000
miles, making it the fastest,
j longest-legged jet bomber any-
j where.
] It would have within its bomb-
sights many prized targets
which once were out of reach of
jet-powered craft. In the view
of many exj>erts in and out of
the Air Force, shooting down a
stratojet crowding close to the
speed of sound would lie a for-
bidding assignment for today's
defensive weapons.
Unlike the B-36 superbomber,
whicn achieves relative safety
from fighter attack by mounting
heavy armament and climbing to
extreme altitudes, the B-17 re-
lics chiefly on its speed. With
a three-man crew, it has only
tail guns for defense. If need
be, it can fly higher than 10,000
feet.
The B-47 series, with the dis-
tinctive swept-hack wing, was
introduced publicly last year
when an experimental model
flew from Seattle to Washing-
ton in 3 hours 40 minutes. It
averaged 007.8 miles an hour
over the 2,289-mile course.
Fifteen production versions—
10 A and five B models—are on
order. The Air Force soon will
announce orders for about 80
more of the B models.
As fast as operational jet
fighters and heavier than the
B-50 Superfort, the six-engine
B-47 will go into Lt. Gen Curtis
E. Lemay's Strategic Air Com-
mand. The big Boeing planes
promise sensational advances in
the art of strategic bombing,
atomic or otherwise.
The Strategic Air Command
will have two B-47 groups un-
der present plans. The first
planes should be available late
The 7.45 miles of paving will
cost $12,319, which includes
grading, structures. flexible
(wise and single asphalt surface
treatment from Sylvester to
Longworth. It will mean a thro-
ugh paved road to Ilamlin.
The firm of Strain and Brown,
lnc. San Angelo was awarded
the contract.
From the amount of money
being spent on the Fisher Coun-
ty project the Commission prob-
ably has in mind designating
the setup as a state highway in-1 that
stead of a farm-to-market road
as was originally planned.
It was through the excellent
cooperation of the commission-
er's court of Fisher county,
farmers who donated land for
the right of way, and the until-
ing efforts on the part of the
Transportation Committee of the
Board of City Development, that
enabled the final development
of this project.
The Transportation commit-
tee. with H. W. Broughton as
chairman, has been working on
the project for several months
and secured from local mer-
chants approximately $800 with
which to spend on the project be-
fore the Highway Commission
could proceed with letting of
the construction contract.
Others who contributed many
hours of work on the project
include A. C. Bishop, manager
of the BCD and Highway Engi-
neer Treadway.
Contracts were also let for the
'^instruction of 8.12 miles of
farm highway in Scurry County
from Hermleigh to the Mitchell
Countv line.
She Found
SAN FRANCISCO. Jan. 11 —
<l'P) — Mme. Chiang Kai-shek
flew toward Formosa today, con-
vinced that propaganda "beyond
i anything ever set before a na-
tion" has turned Americans
, against her plea for aid to the
I Nationalists.
"In the deception the Commu-
nist trheat is as great for them
(Americans) as for China," she
warned during a four-hour
| pause in San Francisco last night
before she boarded a Pan-Ameri-
can clipper en route to make a
"last ditch" stand at the side of
her husband in the Nationalist'
island retreat.
"The American people do not
know the truth.' she said, adding
"soon the map-makers will
j print China in red ink and chil-
| dren may be taught that China
| is a satellite, a puppet, a prov-
i ince of the Soviet empire.
| "They have been deceived by
1 See CHINA On Page Eight
Board Opens
Studies Into
Development
The Sweetwater Independent
School District board will go into
a careful study of the urgent
expansion needs of the schools at
a aclled meeting Friday night,
Chairman Carl Anderson said
Tuesday night following the
board's regular January session;
At the invitation of the board,
representatives of three bond
houses were present to discuss
the school bond situation. The
bond men recommended that the
school district can "safely and
conservatively" issue $700,000 in
bonds for improvements.
They recommended that the
board consider calling an elec-
tion for that amount after ex-
pansion needs are fully consider-
ed. Even though only $250,000
would be needed to erect one
building, It was pointed out,
bonds need not lie issued until
additional nroWt« ^re developed
Other schools ;>rc following
this policy, they said, because
bon i buyers are reluctant to bid
on school bonds where the Is-
sue is clearly inadequate and
there remains likelihood of is-
suance of further bonds later.
Supt. C. W. Tarter reported
that the schools have increased
568 in the white schools also
since the start of this school
year.
The board is contemplating
construction of a modern new
school near East Ridge.
However there is such press-
ing need for two additional rooms
now at East Ward that the board
has a hard decision to make. The
new East Ridge school would re-
lieve pressure on East Ward. At
the same time the emergency is
pressing for room now.
In South Ward school the cam-
pus is designed for 500 and al-
ready 563 are in the school.
Whether to add more rooms to
this school or to locate a new
school in the south portion of
town where several additions.are
in prospect and the long rang de-
velopment of the city clearly
points to another school plant;
is the question.
Tarter said that a new teacher
is needed now at Philip Nolan
School but the problem is to find
another room for teacher and
class.
At Emilio Carranza school for
children of Latin-American des-
cent. a fourth teacher soon is in
prospect. The third teacher. Miss
Bobby Morrow of Brown wood,
is being added to this school
now.
Members of the school board
are: Carl M. Anderson, president;
John R. Cox, vice-president J. M.
Lawrence, secretary; Hudson
Lincoln, C. B. Whborton, C. E.
.ambert. Wade Forrester.
year or early next.
WOMAN APPOINTED
AUSTIN, Jan. 11, (UP)— Ap-
pointment of Miss Mary Pearl
Hall, 21-year-old woman attorney,
as an assistant Attorney Gener-
d of Texas was announced to-
day by Attorney General Price
Daniel.
VFW National Leader Visits
Sweetwater, Rotan Today
S12,<KMI AUDITION
TO START AT VFW
H KADQl.'AKTERS HERE
Plans for a $12,000 addition to
the Veterans of Foreign Wars
home here on Avenger Loop
were discussed at the VFW meet-
ing Tuesday night with a large
crowd in attendance.
Definite arrangements are be-
ing made, it was announced, to
start construction on the 00 by
06 foot assembly room addition
to the VFW home.
Formal obligations were given
('has. R. Scott, Wm. B. Starr,
Milo W. Prlskitt, Cecil Brittin.
I. I). Henderson, Billy D. Dudley,
Byron Riddle. This work was
conducted by the acting degree
team composed of R. E. Amos,
Myron Wagnon, Clyde South-
worth, Chas. Stamps and George
Ausburne.
Greet Commander
A delegation was arranged to
meet Commander-in-Chief Clyde
Lewis and Texas Department
Commander Jul ten Dickerson at
the airport here Wednesday af-
ternoon. The local committee
will also accompany the distin-
guished visitors to Rotan for a
banquet there in hqnor of the
Rotan VFW post having reached
its 1950 membership quota by
Jan. 1.
Desperadoes Wanted In Massacre_
Of Three Negro Children Caught
KOSCIUSKO, Miss.. Jan. 11,
(UP) — A prison trusty today
bid .for his freedom from a 100-
year sentence by capturing two j
desperadoes wanted for the
massacre of three negro child-
ren. |
C. B. G rammer, who claimed
he won the world light-heavy-
weight boxing championship in
1939, trailed the hunted men
with bloodhounds to a one-room
shack in the Mississippi hill
country.
He made the capture after
shooting Leon Turner, 38, alleg-
ed trigger-man who put to death
three children at the home of
Thomas Harris, a negro tenant
farmer.
Turner was shot in the back
and one knee but was not be-
lieved seriously wounded. Al-
though bleeding slightly from
the back wound and at the
mouth. Turner was given do
first aid at the
Captured with him was Wen-
dell Whitt, 24, one of two broth-
ers who escaped with Turner
Dec. 30 from Atlanta County
jail. The other brother was cap-
tured earlier.
Police said they apparently
engineered the triple murder and
the wounding of Harris and an-
other of his children two days
ago out of revenge. Harris had
signed a complaint that led to
their previous arrests.
Grammer said he fought un-
der the name of Hog Jaw Mul-
len and defeated Tiger Burns at
Madison Square Garden for the
light heavyweight title In 1939.
The ring book did not liat any
such fighter, however.
Regardless of his
he c t full credit i
,'4 cHmftX to
'Leadership' Is '
Talk Given At
Jaycee Luncheon
"There is a challenge to every
club and church in Sweetwater
to provide leadership for those
boys and girls who do not at-
tend church," said the Rev. Bor-
ert E. Bowden in a talk before
members of the Jaycees at Wed-
nesday's luncheon in the Blue
Bonnet Sky Room.
Centering his talk around
leadership," the Rev. Mr. Bow-
den stated that the city "needs
leaders who can build character
in boys and girls who otherwise
will end up in Juvenile courts."
Audrey Ballew introduced the
speaker. George Etz, club presi-
dent, presided at the weekly
luncheon.
Bob Kinney, head of the Jaye
building committee, rep
that fine progress is being i
on the proposed new office i
ture for Sweetwater and
m
prospects are better now
new building than any
the past."
The Jaycees
a banq
invite
to ai
fori
"mV'W
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Baker, Allen. Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 9, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 11, 1950, newspaper, January 11, 1950; Sweetwater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth290411/m1/1/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sweetwater/Nolan County City-County Library.