The Levelland Daily Sun News (Levelland, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 252, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 21, 1957 Page: 2 of 6
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V
TWO THE LEVELLAND DAILY SUN NEWS, Levelland, Texas, Wednesday, August 21, 1957
CHANNEL 13
WEDNESDAY
7 00 -clfiaST Kanftroo
7:46—CT§ Morning New
7:55—Teuu News
Mhfred Waring Straw
mopolitan
WSS
KJWetsr
10:30- Search for Tomorrow
10:45—Club Day
11:00—Net work New*
11:10—Stand .Up and Be Counted
11:30—As.T>e World Turnr
12 00-Our Mias Brooks
12 30—NoofoNews
1:00—The7 Big Payot/
1:30 Bob Crosby
T:0O—Brighter Day
3:15—Secret Storm
3:30—Edge at Night
3:00—Jimmy Dean Show
3:30 -International Playhouse
<1:00 Home Fair
4:30-TBA
5 oo Looney Tones A Bugs Bunny
5:15—Comedy Theatre
5:45—Loonjy Tunes
6:00 -News. Weather, Feature Seethes
6*: IS — Doug Edwards
6:SO—MyFnend Flieka
7:00—Tho Millionaire
7:30—I’ve Got A Secret
3:00-30th Century Fox Hour
-^•moneShow
. rice
gather. Feature Section
Bros. Showcase
12:00—sign, on
THURSDAY
VaO^OsrS— Kangaroo
.— _— ng News
7:55—Texas News
6:00—The Fred Waring Show
8:30—Godfrey Time
»: SO—Strike Tt Rich
10:00—Hotel Cosmopolitan
10:15—Love at Life
10:30—Search for Tnnaorruw
10:45—Tlmetf Toptr.
11:00—Network News
11:10—Stand Up and Be Counta
11:30—As the World Turns
12:00—Our Miss Brooke
12 :30—Noon News
” PayuO
______sal
3:00—Brighter Day
3:15—Secret Storm
1:30 Edge of Night
3 :00—Jimmy Dean Show
3:30—Police C*B
4:00—Home Fair
4:15—Beauty School of the Air
4:30—TEA
5:00—Looney Tunes
5:15—Comedy Theatre
6:45—Looney Tunes
6:00—News,Weather.Feature Sec
6:15—Doug Edwards
6:30—Whlrly Birds
7:00—Bob Cummings
7:30 -Climax
8-30—State Trooper
8:00—The Tracers
»:St Playhouse ”90"
11:00—News, Weather. Feature Sects.
11:30—Chicago Wrestling
13:30—Sign oH
FRIDAY
6:55—Sign On
7:00 - Captain Kangaroo
7:45—CBS-Jgomlng Newa
7:55—Teras News
6:00—The Fred Waring Show
6:3:—Godfrey Time
0:30—Strike It Rich
10:00—Hotel Cosmopolitan
10:15—Love of Life
10:30—Search for Tomorrow
10:45—Home Demonstration Day
11:00—Net Work News
11:10—Stand Up and Be Counted
11:30—Aa the World Turns
12:00—Our Miss Brooks
1:00—The Big Payoff
1:30—Bob Crosby
2:00-Brighter Day
2:15—Secret Storm
2:30—Edge of Night
3 00—Jimmy Dean Show
1:30—Play of the Week
4:00—Home Fair
4:30—TB A
5:00—Looney Tunes A Bugs Bunny
5:15—Comedy Theatre
5:45—Looney Tunes
6 00—News. Weather, Feature Section
6:15-Doug Edwards
6 30 -Beat The Clock
7-00—Mr. Adams and Eve
7:30—Susie
CHANNEL 11
WEDNESDAY
7:00—Today
8:00—Arlene Francis Show
8:30— Treasure f
•:t*»—The Price i
3:30—Truth or i
10:00—Tic Tac I
10:30—It Cbuld Be You
11:00—Tex and Jinx
11:30—Club 60 — Color
12:30—Bride and Groom
1:00-NBC Matinee -f Color
2:00—Queen ter * Dtfr
2:45— Mjdem Romances
3:00—Cnannel 11 Matinee
4:30—Six Gun Theatre
5:30—Looney Tunes
5 45—Hospitality Time
8:00—News. Sports Weathee
6:15—Here’s Howell
6:30—Disneyland
7:30- Navy Log
8:00—Father Knows Best
6:30—Masquerade Party
9:00—This Is Your Lifj
9:30—Famous Theatre
10:00—Crossroads
10:30—News Weather. Sports
10:50— Lady In the Lake”
THURSDAY
7:00—Today
8:00- Arlene Francis Show
8:30—Treasure Hunt
6:00—The Price Is Right
9:30- Truth or Consequences
10:00—Tic Tac Dough
10:30 It Could Be YOU
U 00—Tex and J’nx
11.30—Oub 60 — Color
12:30—Bride and Groom
1:00—NBC Matinee — Color
2:00—Queen Fur a Day
2 45— Modern Romances
a :00—Channel* 13 Matinee
4:30—Roy Rogers
5:30—Looney Tunes
5:4—Hospitality Time
8:00— News, Snrrts. Weather
6:15—Here's tteweH
1:30—Science Fiction
1:00— People's Oioloe
7:30—High-Low
8:00—Lux Theater — Color-
1:00—Best of Groucho
9:30—Dragnet
10:00—Dateline Europe
10:30—News. Weatner. Sports
10:50—”Up Goes Maisle”
FRIDAY
T:0O—Today
8:00—Arlene Frances Show
8:30-Treasure Hunt
3:00—The Price Is Right
9:30—Truth or Consequence*
10:00—Tic Tac Dough
10:30—It Could Be Yor
11:00—Tex and Jinx
11:30—Club 60 — Color
12:30—Bride and Groom
1:00—NBC Matinee — Color
2:00—Queen For A Day
2.45— Modem Romances
3:00—Channel 11 Matinee
4:30—Six Gim Theater
5:30—Rin 1m Tin
Unwed ot 27, But There's Still Hope
Princess Gets Plenty
Of Romantic Advice
8:00 — West Point
8:30—Destiny
i#: 00 — Undercurrent
,9:b0—Pantomine Quiz
10:00—Talent Scouts
10:30—News. Weather. Picture Section
11:00--Columbia Showcase
Tramp. Tramp, Tramp
1$:00— Sign Off
SATURDAY
7:25—Sign On
7:30—Captain Kangaroo
8:30—Mighty Mouv Playhouse
9:00— Susan’s Show
9 30—Terry and the Pirates
10:00—The B»< Top
11:00—Let’s Take a trip
11:30- Country Style. U.S.A.
11:45- Dizzy Dean Show
11:55—Baseball Came of the Week
Braves at Dodgers
3 00 Saratoga Handicap
3 30—Championship Bowling
4:30—Joe Palooka
5:00—Wild Bill Hlckol*
5:30—Uncovered ¥
6:00—Hollywood Playhouse of
Stars
6:30—The Buccaneer*
7:00—Oh. Sesanna
7:30— SRO Playhouse
, 8 :00 — Jimmy Durante Stow
8 30—Code Three
9:00—G unsmoke
9:30—Jimmy Dean Show
10:00— 20th Century Fox Showcase
“Just Off Broadway”
Johnnv Comes Flying Home
11:00—Premiere Performance
Holy Matrimony
12:*D—Sian or
By EDDY GILMORE
LONDON iWi - Princess Mar-
garet became 27 today with no
prospective husband in sight but
with plenty of advice that it’s net
too late to hope.
Completely recovered from a
cold, the pretty princess cele-
brated her birthday at Balmoral
Castle in Scotland.
But here in London, advisers to
the lovelorn in the newspapers
chorused feminine advice to the
most eligible girl in the world that
27 is not too old to abandon hope.
One lady writer pointed out that
a former occupant of Princess
Margaret's Clarence House home
— Princess Patricia of Connaught
— didn’t ankle down the aisle until
she was 33.
Then it was with a commoner,
a royal naval officer who became
Sir Alexander Ramsay.
There can be little doubt about
Margaret’s beauty and charm at
27. She has a pair of fluttery blue
eyes, long lashes, a movie star's
figure, talent, humor and a cheer-
ful heart. Also, she’s rich in her
own right.
However, the circle of eligible
young men around the most eligi-
ble young woman is getting small-
er and smaller. Each year one or
more get married. But not to Mar-
garet.
Her prince charming. Croup
Capt. Peter Townsend, the man
whose love she rejected for the
sake of duty, is still unwed.
And, as one of the lovelorn ad-
visers wrote—Princess Pat wait-
ed 10 years before she married
her commoner.
Margaret turned down Town-
4:00—News, Sports. Weather
6:15—Here’s Howell
6:30—Adventures ot Jim Bowl®
7:00— “On Trial Joseph Cotten
7:30—Big Moment
8:00—Cavalcade of dports
8:45-Red Barber
9:00—Blondle
9:30—Oh Henry Playhouse
10:00—Overseas Adventure
I 10:30—News, Weather Sports
10:50—“Dr. Kildare Goes Home’*
SATURDAY
8:00—Howdy Doody
8:30—Cumby
9:00— Fury
9:30- Roy Rogers
10:30—Junior Auction
11:00-Little Rascals
11:15—Leo Durocher Warmup
11:25—Cincinnati at Pittsburgh
2:00 — Dr Kildare Goes Home”
3:30—Western
4;30—Gene Autry
5:30—People are Funny
6:00—Julius LaRosa-color
7:00— Trouble with Father
7:30—Dollar a Second
8:00—Encore Theatre
8:30—Adventure Theatre
9:00- Lawrence Welk
10:00—Country Music Jubilee
10:30—News
10:40—Weather
10:45—Sports
10:50—“Bataan”
send two years ago.
At least 15 of the dashing—and
some not so dashing— young men
of the Princess Margaret set
have married in the last 10 years.
Remaining eligibles include Billy
(Old Faithful) Wallace, Tom Eg-
erton and Christopher Loyd.
They are splendid dancing part-
ners. good conversationalists and
well - heeled, but Margaret's
friends say none of them make
her heart go pitter-pat. /
Up in the Highlands, the prin-
cess was celebrating her birthday
more quietly (socially) than usual.
There was plenty, of noise, for
after recovering from her sore
throat and red nose, she went out
with the guns to hunt the royal
grouse over the royal moors.
The shooters and the ladies who
followed them planned a picnic if
the fickle skies of Bonny Scotland
don't bring rain.
Departing from past Margaret
birthdays, no big evening party
has been scheduled for Balmoral
Castle.
Instead, a family dinner was or-
dered.
Boa Constrictor
Run Out of Town
For Second Time
SOUTH ORANGE, N.J. ttfl-The
long arm of the law has finally
curled around Jo-Jo, a six-foot boa
constrictor who has been run out
of two towns in less than a week.
The 6-year-old reptile was sen-
tenced yesterday to a lifetime
stretch at the nearby Watchung
Nature Museum.
Jo-Jo first came to public nor
tice last week, when the board of
health in Clifton ordered his own-
er, Abraham Kievit, to remove the
animal from his home and get it
out of town.
Kievit. who had raised Jo-Jo
from infancy, reluctantly turned
him over to 17-year-old Ronald
Piper of South Orange.
Piper, who hopes to make rep-
tiles his life's work, enjoyed car-
ing for his pet and feeding him
live rats. He literally became
attached to the animal, wrapping
him around his neck at times to
show his affection.
But the happy idyll ended when
police told Piper that Jo-Jo had
to go-go. The youth pleaded that
it would be nine years before thej
snake would be strong enough to
crush a man, but the law was
Possible Freeze
Danger for Late
Cotton is Cited
AUSTIN i.fi The Department of
Agriculture says harvest of feed
crops and cotton is moving along
steadily in typically hot, dry Au-
gust weather but warns of possi-
ble freeze damage to late cotton
crops.
The Department said yesterday
the North Texas and plains cotton
crop is two to three weeks late
and could be damaged by an early
freeze.
In a crop report for the week
ending Monday, the USDA also
said cotton yields in central, south-
east and upper coastal counties
were disappointing as a result of
dry weather and insect damage.
But it said yield prospects in the
north were generally much bet-
ter.
Rain is needed in Central and
South Texas where dry grass was
getting short and livestock be-
ginning to show some shrinkage.
Contracting for fall delivered
calves was brisk in a number of
western counties.
Activity in the commercial vege-
table areas was mainly clean up
harvest of summer crops, a light
harvest of early fall crops in the
northwest and planting fall and
winter vegetables in the south.
Tanker is Sinking
In Mediterranean
LONDON UV The 25000-ton Li-
berian tanker World Splendor was
sinking ‘in the Mediterranean to-
day but all survivors had been
picked up the ship's agents in
London reported.
The ship owned by the Niarchos
group was crippled by two explo-
sions 60 miles east of Gibraltar
yesterday She was on her way
from Southampton England to
the Persian Gulf.
The agents said a British -ad-
miralty tug had picked up the sur-
vivors but they could not give any
casualty figures. Reports from
Gibraltar yesterday said 32 in-
jured men had arrived there
DeMolay Meet Starts
EL PASO t®—The annual Texas
State DeMolay Conclave started
today. About 1,200 boys were ex-
pected.
THE WORLD TODAY
Eisenhower's Middle East Program
Helpless to Deal with Subversion
By JAMES MARLOW
Asfociated Press News Analyst
WASHINGTON The soft
spot in President Eisenhower's
Middle East program shows up
now in Syria where pro-Soviet of-
ficers have grabbed control of the
army.
That Eisenhower program was
intended to stop the spread of
communism into the Middle East.
Eisenhower proposed it in a
special message to Congress Jan
5. Congress approved it March 7
in the form of a resolution which
would let him.
Give economic aid and arms to
Middle East countries and use
American armed forces there to
stop Communist aggression if an
attacked country asked for such
help.
Confronted with this. Commu-
nists were not likely to take a'
chance on direct attack in the
Middle East But they still had an
alternative to try to take over
from within by subversion or even
j military means.
And Eisenhower's program had
no direct answer for the question
What does the United States do
if the Communists in any one
country or in one country after
another seized power by subver-
1 sion
Now the United States and its
allies seem puzzled what to do
about Syria. It still isn’t clear
whether the pro-Soviet officers’
j control of the army has made
Syria a Russian sateltite.
Yesterday the new Syrian army
I chief of staff MajGen Afif Bizry
j deriding American leadership al-
j though speaking kindly of Eisen-
j hower accused this country of di-
j recting an assassination plot
j against members of the Syrian
government.
Bizry was asked at a news con-
ference in Syria if he was a Com-
munist or pro-Soviet He avoided
a direct answer but said “Is it
forbidden for a person to carry
thoughts.”
HAL BOYLE SAYS:
Massey will Again Play Lincoln
In 72-city "Rivalry" Road Tour
Joking, Smiling
Slayer Executed
HUNTSVILLE. Tex. >m Wilbur
Hall 30 who walked to the elec-
tric chair smiling and joked as
he was strapped in was executed
today for the murder of his girl
friend's estranged husband.
Hall made no last statement but
Huntsville newsman Don Reid said
the condemned man smiled and
winked at him several times As
the guards strapped him into the
chair he quipped “My legs are
almost not long enough for these
straps."
Hall was convicted of the April
1956 shooting of Sam MacGregor
at Hufsmith near Houston Testi-
mony at the trial showed .Hall had
been dating Mrs Joy MacGregor
the victim's estranged w ife.
Hall who appeared in excellent
spirits in a death cell interview
yesterday would not discuss the
case in detail He said “Every-
thing wall be all right after mid-
night.”
Mention of Mrs MacGregor
brought jd twisted smile to Hall’s
face "Shortly after I received the
death penalty I got a note from
Mrs MacGregor in which she
wrote she loved me” Hall said.
adamant.
As he took Jo-Jo to the museum.
Piper sadly remarked, ”111 go to
see him every time I get a *
chance.”
NEW YORK (/PI :— A strange
thing has happened to Raymond
Massey.
Massey, a former tractor sales-
man who served as a soldier in
two wars, also has achieved rec-
ognition as one of the world's
leading actors.
He has appeared in 60 motion
pictures and 150 plays. All his life
he has clung to one thesis about
his profession — that an actor
should never identify himself per-
sonally or emotionally with a role
he plays, for if he does his per-
formance will be poorer.
So what happens? When awe-
struck strangers meet Massey for
the first time, they half expect
his first words of greetings will
be, “Four score and seven years
ago—.”
For to millions, Massey is the
man who took Abraham Lincoln
off the penny and made him a
living image again. To them he
is Lincoln.
“When people ask me if I don't
get tired of portraying Lincoln, I
get a definite homicidal urge,” re-
marked Massey, pointing out that
it is nearly 18 years since he
opened on Broadway in Robert
Sherwood’s "Abe Lincoln in Illi-
nois.”
“Since then I have played him
only a few times in radio and
television.”
But next month he will portray
the Great Emancipator again dur-
ing a 72-city road tour of Norman
Corwin's "The Rivalry,” the story
of the famed Lincoln-Douglas de-
bates.
Massey is happy to return to his
most famous role, but for his own
reasons.
“Actually, I'd kill any one with
my bare hands who tried to get
the part away from me,” he said,
cheerfully knotting his big fists.
"But not because of a mission-
ary urge, or because it suits my
politics — although I am so Re-
publican it makes my skin crack.
It's simply because the role itself
is so overwhelming. I'd be glad
to play the devil — if he gets
enough good lines.”
Herald-Sun News want ads pay!
Suicide is Verdict
In Beauchamp Death
LONDON A coroner decid-
ed today that Sir Winston Church-
ill's son-in-law. Antony Beau-
champ, killed himself with sleep-
ing tablets.
After a 19-minute inquest into
the death Sunday of the 39-year-
old society photographer, the mo-
tive was still a mystery.
Some friends had hinted he was
despondent over finances.
Missing from the inquest was
the woman Beauchamp tele-
phoned a few minutes before his
death, beautiful Lady Jane Vane-
Tempest-Stewart, 24.
Missing also was Beauchamp's
wife, Sarah Churchill, actress
daughter of Britain’s World War
II premier.
Beauchamp married Miss
Churchill in 1949, but they had
been living apart for the last three
years.
HONG KONG tfi — Reports
reaching Hong Kong say Chinese
Communist officials plan to move
an estimated 300.000 “unproduc-
tive people” from the city of Can-
ton before Jan. 1. A Chinese trav-
eler from Canton said today the
move was planned to help solve
the current food shortage and
acute unemployment.
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Brewer, Orlin. The Levelland Daily Sun News (Levelland, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 252, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 21, 1957, newspaper, August 21, 1957; Levelland, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1130113/m1/2/: accessed July 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting South Plains College.