Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 32, Ed. 1 Monday, February 7, 1955 Page: 3 of 8
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I
w
n
lop
Texas Tech, Buffs
Clash In Crudal
Border Loop Tilt
By UNITED PRESS
Texas Tech's revenge-minded
Red Raiders make their big pitch
to recapture the Border Confer-
ence basketball lead and at the
same time spoil pace-setting West
Texas State's hopes this week.
Coach Polk Itobison's Raiders,
who bowed to West Texas at Can-
yon 87 to 78 two weeks ago, catch
the highflying Butfs at Lubbock
this Saturday night and hope to
duplicate their last year's perfor-
mance when they unraveled West
Texas' chances under similar cir-
cumstances,
But, before they play West
Texas, the Raiders must dispose
of Arizona at Lubbock Monday
night to keep their chances bright.
West Texas has 1 7-1 record and
Tech stands at 4-1 after each
posted two victories last week. The
Buffs walloped Tempo State 97 to
72 and Arizona 82 to t>(i, while Tech
bested Hardin-Simmons 72 to 59
then went on a rampage to bounce
Tempe 107 to 81.
Arizona, with a 2-2 record, will
have to get by Tech Monday night,
Hardin-Simmons at Abilene Tues-
day night and New Mexico A&M
at Tucson Saturday night to en-
tertain any hopes of keeping with-
in range of the lead.
In other games this week, Har-
din-Simmons hosts Tempe Monday
night, then journeys to Tulsa Sat-
urday night and Texas Western
plays at Tempe Saturday night.
In three noil conference games
last week, Border teams made a
clean sweep with Arizona knocking
off Bradley 88 to 77, Tech beating
Texts 79 to 74 and Hardin-Simmons
defeating North Texas 64 to 58.
Border Standings
By IMTKD PKF.KH
HKASON HTWIMXfJK
Team W
West Texas . . . 13
Texas Tech 13
Texas Western 7
IT-Simmons .... o
Arizona ....... 7
N. Mexico A&M 5
Tempe State 5
CONFKKKNr
Team \V
West Texas .... 7
Texas Tech .... 1
Arizona 2
Tempe State . .'I
Texas Western 2
H-SLmmons 2
N. Mexico A&M 0
lias! Wt'c
Texas Tech 72.
O Arizona 88. Rradley 77: Hardin-Simmons
fit. North Texas 58; Texas Tech 79. Tex-
as 74; West Texas 97. Tempe State 72;
Texas Tech 107, Tempe State 81; West
Texas 82, Ai izona ♦;« ; Texas Western 80,
New Mexico A&M 01.
This Week's K< ImmIiiIc
MONDAY — Hardin-Simmons vs Tem-
pe State at Abilene; Texas Tech vs Ari-
zona at Lubbock.
TUESDAY — Hardin-Simmons vs Ari-
zona at Abilene.
SATURDAY — Hardin-Simmons vs
Tulsa at Tulsa non-con!.; Tempe State
vs Texas Western at Tempe; Arizona
vs New Mexico A&M at Tucson; Texas
Tech vs West Texas at Lubbock.
f4
Flying Mailbox
Injures Women
GALVESTON Tex., Feb. 7—UP
—Mrs. Mary Esqueda, 69. and
Mrs. Mary Esqueda. 19, were hos-
pitalized briefly Sunday when they
were struck by a flying mailbox.
The elder Mrs. Esqueda and her
daughter-in-law. both with the
^ same home, were standing on a
street corner waiting for a bus. A
tire on an automobile driving down
the street blew out, and the ve-
hicle struck a mailbox, knocked it
loose and sent it sailing into the
two women.
Both received minor injuries.
o
Ziske-Smith Duo
Wins Tournament
HOLLYWOOD, Fla., Feb. 7—UP
—Brilliant iron play and near per-
fect putting enabled Joyce Ziske
of Waterford, Wis., and Wiffi
Smith of Los Angeles to win the
women's international four - ball
golf tournament Sunday.
Miss Ziske and Miss Smith cap-
tured the tourney title with a 2
and 1 victory over Vonnie Colby
of Hollywood and Cookie Swift
Berger of Buffalo. N.Y.
An unerring 20-1'oot putt by Miss
Smith on the next-to-last hole of
36- hole final round proved the
clincher.
Miss Colby and Mrs. Berger held
a one-up lead at the end of the
first nine holes but fell behind on
the back nine. They evened the
match in the afternoon round when
Miss Colby parred the 19th hole.
After falling behind again, Mrs.
Berger and Miss Colby rallied by
taking the 29th and 30th holes, but
lost the match on the 35th.
Sweetwater Reporter, Texas, Monday, February 7, 1955
FOREIGN NEWS
Soviet Leaders Shift
Back To Tough Policy
Pit.
72*2
P .
1 100
1210
7
.500
984
948
8
.421)
1088
1109
10
.112
1 172
1262
8
782
891
13
.2«:t
1417
1513
STANDINGS
L
Pel.
Pts.
Ops.
1
.875
677
560
1
.800
420
338
2
.500
200
314
•1
.425)
532
570
\
.400
359
357
•1
.333
405
429
5
.000
282
396
•M
Results
iarrlin-Simmons
59;
" ' " Resources
Tax Hike Advocated
Bf Young Democrats
AUSTIN, Feb. 7—UP—Leaders of
Texas' Young Democrats called for
higher natural resource taxes to
finance state government Sunday
instead of the legislative tax pro-
gram recommended by Gov. Allan
Shivers.
The group's executive committee
also urged that investigations into
the veterans land program be
broadened and that a resolution in-
troduced last week by Sen. Kilmer
Corbin of Lubbock be brought to a
Senate vote immediately.
Corbin, who backed Shivers' op-
ponent last .summer, Austin attor-
ney Ralph Yarborough, said the
scope of investigations should be
extended to alleged "personal busi-
ness deals" he charged were made
from the governor's office by Mau-
rice Acers, an executive aide to
Shivers.
Shivers' tax program called for
boosts in the state's gasoline and
cigaret taxes. The executive com-
mittee denounced this program.
The Young Democratic organiza-
tion represents the "loyalist" wing
ol young Democrats which won na-
tional recognition last year over pro
Shivers "conservatives."
On Corbin's resolution, the young
Democrats called for a vote so
"the general public may be inform-
ed of the actual operations of the
veterans land board and the trans-
actions involved, including Hidalgo
county."
By W. A. RYSER
Written for United Press
LONDON, Feb. 7—UP—The ideo-
logical dispute that has raged in
the top echelon of the Communist
party of Russia since the death of
Premier Josef Stalin has led full
circle right back to where Stalin
left off.
Soviet experts here detect a
clear and significant shift toward
"tough" policies in every field of
Russian endeavor. This is their
conclusion based on an analysis of
the latest speech of party secre-
tary Nikita S. Khrushchev and the
new budget presented to the Su-
preme Soviet last week.
The experts also doubted wheth-
er any conciliatory gesture could
be expected from the Kremlin on
foreign policy.
They noted the apparent con-
tinued growth of the authority of
Khrushchev as the exponent of the
views of the entire presidium of
the central committee of the party
—that is, the nine men who rule
Russia today.
Emphasize Heavy Industry
The shift was pointed up by the
renewed emphasis on heavy indus-
try which was proclaimed both by
Khrushchev in a speech to the
central committee and Finance
Minister Arseny Zverev's an-
nouncement of a significant in-
Crewmen Rescued
Off Burning Boat
GALVESTON, Feb. 7—UP—Three
! crewmen were rescued from their
burning shrimper Sunday night and
j the craft sank later about three
! miles off Galveston's west beach
< the U. S. Coast Guard reported.
The crewmen were identified as
Capt. Joseph Cardinalc and Floyd
Schion and Cullen Bowman, all of
j Aransas Pass.
The crewmen were taken from
1 the burning shrimper about 7 p. m.
I Sunday by a seismograph vessel,
j the GSM-1, and brought to shore.
: There were no injuries.
The shrimper was listed as the
DB, and was stationed at Aransas
Pass. A Coast Guard spokesman
I said it was valued at S30.000. The
j fire apparently started in the gear
locker room below decks, one of the
' crewmen said.
CORRECTION
Mr. Lon Bacon
from
9*T
Will Present A
Display Of Spi ing & Summer Fabrics
Monday & Tuesday
NOW OPEN .. NEW LOCATION
Briley & Brown Furniture
— In Old Montgomery Ward Bldg. —
ON THE NORTH SIDE
OF THE SQUARE
Flood Warnings
Posted In Two
Southern States
By UNITED PRESS
Flood warnings were issued for
parts of Alabama and Georgia
Monday as cold rains pounded
much of the Deep South.
The southland was soaked by
rains that measured nine inches
deep at Pensacola, Fla., Sunday
and sent floodwaters pouring into
the city's streets and low-lying
areas.
Many southern rivers swirled
dangerously towards flood stage
Monday as the rains continued.
Elsewhere in the nation, heavy
snow warnings were issued for
Vermont, New Hampshire and
Maine and the mercury plum-
meted to 14 below zero at Grants-
burg, Wis.
The rains which swept Dixie
i Thursday posed a threat of torna-
j does in Alabama and Georgia for
a while and took the form of se-
vere thunderstorms in Louisiana,
| Mississippi and Alabama.
Four inches of rain in just 45
minutes hit New Orleans with 61-
mile-per-hour winds which tore off
roofs, downed trees and shattered
plate glass windows.
Temperatures were chilly in the
Midwest, but strong southwesterly
winds which hit gusts of 65 miles-
per hour warmed up the northern
Rockies.
Hospital Notes
Sweetwater Hospital
Saturday admissions to Sweet-
water Hospital included Ervin L.
Thornton of Sweetwater: Mrs. War-
ner Lewis Strobel of Longworth;
Albert Lee Kiser of 812 Circle
Drive; Mrs. Robert S. Lewis of 706
Sam Houston.
Dismissed Saturday were Billy
Marie Clark, R. H. Ililley, Janet
Lee Bell, Robert Carson. Roy Car-
rigan, Lewis Hall, and Sandra Tor-
rest.
Sunday admissions were Truman
Taylor of 909 Poplar; Billy Elton
I Barton of Star Route, Sweetwater;
Mrs. Mabel Merrifiekl of 612 Pe-
i can; Thos. E. Cain of 511 Alamo:
Mrs. Merlin Toler of 1402 Bristol
Drive.
Dismissed were Mrs. Bell Peck,
Sara Cave, Harold Glenn Dooley.
Young Medical Center
! Saturday admissions to Young
| Medical Center included C. A.
| Sims of Route 1, Trent; J. D.
j Moon of Route 2. Hal linger.
Dismissals included Mrs. E. O.
j Evans.
Admitted Sunday were Wm. Earl
| Gunnells, son of C. E. Gunnells of
i Longworth; John Hawkins of 606
West Third.
Sunday dismissals were Rosa
Garcia, Mrs. R. G. Pendergrass.
crease in Soviet defense spending.
The new general party line is
seen here as meaning the "new
course" emphasizing consumer
goods production, begun in 1953,
is now officially dead and buried.
A combination of reasons is seen
for the change, But the main ones
are believed to be the necessity
of producing more tractors for the
gigantic land reclamation program
in Kazakhstan and Russia's Mili-
tary and industrial commitments
to Red China
According to official British
sources, the size of the Soviet mili-
tary establishment has not in-
cretsed during the last 12 months.
It is believed, therefore, that the
additional money for defense will
be used mainly to step up Soviet
research and development of spe-
cial weapons.
Stiffening on Foreign Affairs
The stiffening of the Soviet line
in foreign affairs has become more
noticeable day by day.
Observers point to Moscow's un-
compromising support of Red
China on the Formosa question
question and the violent anti-
American campaign in tho Soviet
press as evidence of this. They ex-
pect no let-up either in Europe on
the question of Austria and Ger-
many.
No matter how prominent a role
some of the members of the party
presidium play in the present ses-
sion of the Supreme Soviet, it
appears evident that the nine top
men want to tell the world they
are as united as ever.
So far, the entire "collective
leadership," has appeared at the
sittings of the Supreme Soviet and
their names were given in the
press in alphabetical order, as
usual.
Whatever the intensity of
Kremlin, no one sems to have
Kremlin, no one seems to htve suf-
fered seriously from it so far.
There is a new general party
line now. But the men who will
carry it out are the same.
Boy Friend Quizzed
In Rape-Slaying
01 New York Co-Ed
NEW YORK, Feb. 7 —UP— Po-
lice questioned Monday a boy friend
of Anne Yarrow, a New York Uni-
versity co-ed whose raped, stabbed
and mutilated body was found in
the bedroom of a Greenwich Vil-
lage apartment.
Mi. s Yarrow's nearly nude body
was sprawled across a mattre?:: on
the floor of the sparsely furnished
apartment.
She had been stabbed 4(i times 1
and mutilated from her neck to her
ALINE MOSBY'S HOLLYWOOD
Free Of Health Worries,
Liberace Returns To TV
FOMBY
SAND antf GRAVEL
TRACTOR WORK
Lawn Terraclrg and Grading
Phone 2138
HOLLYWOOD, Feb. 7 — UP—
Liberace, healthy again, returns
to work on his TV show Friday,
free from his secret fear he suf-
fered a heart attack.
When the pianist first was re-
vealed to be bedded at home on
doctor's orders, oemmuniques
from his boudoir called his ailment
"mild heart strain."
But Liberace revealed today
ankles. Only her tace was not dis-! doctors actually thought he had
figured ! suffered a heart attack, but de-
Chief medical examiner Dr. Mil-: cided to keep the startling news
ton Helpern said ;;he a'.so had been i '10m his countless tans.
raped. i "My cardiograph readings were
Helpern said the 23\vear-o.'d honor not normal. Some of the doctors
graduate of a Quaker college in : sa'c' ' had suffered a coronary
Five hundred cans of beer and a
quantity of whiskey and gin were
seized in two raids here Saturday
morning staged by the sheriff's
... . . , department, police department,
North Carolina died as the result ,hronlbosls; hut later others dee d- Constahl N D Reeves and mem-
....... " a„ en I definitely had not. the? erav- .
orated with a huge bar of music
in cutout wooden figures. The mu-
sical notes spell out Liberace's
song. "Rhapsody by Candlelight "
"But that wasn't work," he add-
ed. "1 was relaxing."
Quantity Of Liquor
Seized In Two Raids
CHINA PAINTING
Lessons given at our Studio by
Mrs. Irving Fields, excellent
qualifications and wide experi-
ence in China painting.
We carry a complete stock of
China painting supplies and fine
white imported China Blanks
for decorating.
—Contact Us For Details—
The Little China Shop
Mrs. Ocie Hunt, Merle Allen,
Owners
1700 Pease St. Phone 2302-3052
of "homicidal sexual assault." An
autopsy will be performed Monday
to determine whether exact cause
of death was "strangulation, multi-
ple stab wounds or multilation."
Police Capt. William Schnabel
said the case was "one of the
most brutal murders I've ever
seen."
Police brought in several friends *'n9 enough sleep.'
of the dead girl for questioning,
ed I definitely had not," the gray
ing matinee idol explained as he
got ready for work at his San Fer-
nando Valley home.
"They have me on a high pro-
tein diet now. They think the
trouble is a combination of over-
eating, overworking and not gat-
hers of the State Liquor Control
Board.
The 500 cans of beer were found
behind underground trap doors in
a raid on a residence in the 1200
block on West Texas St.
Officers seized a small waKon
and said that the beer was evi-
dently in storage and hauled in the
i wagon to other houses.
among them Ernest Jackson, 30, a From now on, continued Liber-1 A complaint charging possession ,
Negr0 | ace, his life will be changed. He
Jackson, described as a "quite; will give up waxing floors, for
close" friend of Miss Yarrow, was °ne thing
questioned almost continuously for "I have a terrible habit of driv-
14 hours. He was picked up by j ing myself," he continued. "Some-
i police Sunday at 3 p.m. and re- rimes I'll get the crazy notion to
leased at 5 a.m. Monday.
Clear And Cool
Weather Prevails
Over Texas
wax all the floors in the house.
I must realize there are people |
who do those jobs, and I must ex-
pend my energy in other ways. |
"I'm healthier than I ever was
before and it's up to me to keep ;
that way. The illness was a bless- j
ing in disguise. Everything I do!
from now on must be in modera
the
suf-
HERE'S
County Records
DEEDS
C. T. May Jr. to J. W. ITankins,
lot 10. block 13, Hillcrest addition.
D. L. Mooney to E. J. Wood-
j ward, lot 20, block 50, Hughes
; s/d.
E. C. Wells to W. R. Hobson, lot
11, block 5, Highland.
J. C. Morris et al to Don B.
Lambert, lot 7, block 16, Hillcrest.
J. C. Morris Jr., et al to M. C.
| Alston, lots 3. 11. 12, 13, 14. 15, 16,
17, 18, block 15; lots 19, 20, 21, 22,
27. 28. 29, 30, 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36,
| block 11; lot 26, block 12 Hillcrest
addition.
i A. E. Pool to Dewey F. Nelms,
NW/45 feet lot 6, SE 25 feet lot 7,
I block 10, Hillcrest.
Bailey G. Choate to S. J. May,
i lot 7, block 7. Bradford addition.
S. J. May to Carl H. Panzer, lot
6, block 1, Highland addition; lot
4, block 20, Highland addition.
A. E. Pool to George Coston,
• lot. 6. block 14. Hillcrest.
i Clyde R. Tidwell to R. L. Boyd,
| part sec. 45. block 22. Vol. 160-182.
Jennie Beall et al to ,1. F. Elk-
| ins. lots 10, 11. 12, block 33. High-
! land.
Frank C. Stevenson to Melvin C.
Martin, lots 9. 10, E. 10 l'eet lot
6, block 17, Bradford.
ROYALTY DEEDS
Ross G. Baker to Rex G. Baker
Jr. and Robert H. Baker, sees. 65.
110, block X.
Adolph Koether to B. R. Wat-
son, E/2 sec. 144, block 1A.
C. M. Lister to Audrey H and
I Pauline Ballew. sec. 5, block Z.
OIL AND GAS LEASES
Amos L. Garrett et al to Fred
| C. Ohlenbuseh, sec. 10, block 24.
Mrs. Ellen O. Dellis to Richard
R. Bloomer, SE/4 sec. 13, block
23, T&P survey.
it jjww uu uiuai ixi a- : . r .
By UNiTED PRESS j tion—eating, playing, pleasures." 1 9 c'uarts beer
Temperatures in the 50s and fair1 Liberace, like Mario Lanza,
; skies were the rule over Texas pared off excess pounds with the
Monday. help of a trainer. The pearly tooth-1
1 he day dawned clear in most led pianist has dropped 22 pounds.!
; areas and early morning cloudiness j Exercise of his hands has kept
in the southeast portion of the j them in shape, "and outside of a j
I South Plains extending southward j little lapse of memory of some of ;
| into the lower Rio Grande Valley ! my numbers," he said his contro-|
I was expected to decrease during | versial act hasn't been damaged j
[ the day. j by more than two months of re-1
I The weather bureau said it would ! cuperation.
1 be generally fair and cool Monday
night with continued fair weather! "It feels good to be back at;
and slightly warmer temperatures ! work," he added. "I've been chaf- ■
Tuesday. ing at the bit. Until two weeks ago,
Early morning lows Monday I wasn't allowed to play the piano,
ranged from 10 degrees at Dalhart | not even at home."
to 55 degrees at Brownsville.
Other freezing points were Amar- Liberace did no! keep idle, how-
illo and Lubbock 15, Wichita Falls ever In fact, he blazed new trails.
27, El Paso 29, and Fort Worth ; He started collecting recipes for j
and Abilene 31. 1 a combination autobiography-cook-'
Other overnight lows included ! book. He added a projeetio" room j
Dallas and Midland, 32, Lufkin 34, j to his fabulous house that ..Jy
Presidio 36. Waco and San Angelo features "Liberace" mono ;
37. Austin 40. San Antonio 41. Beau- grammed potholders and hundreds j
mont 42, Del Rio 45. Laredo 46. of candlelabra. And around his]
and Corpus Christi and Galveston j piano-shaped swimming pool he
or beer or purpose of sale was
filed before County Judge Lea
Boothe against Dick Toland who
was released under 3500 bond.
The sheriff's department and
liquor board arrested Ada Pearl
Johnson in another liquor iaid
made at 605 West Avenue A Sat-
urday.
She entered a plea of guilty to
charges of possesion of intoxicant-
ing liquors for purpose of sale and
was lined S150 and costs.
Seizures included 36 half pints of
whiskey, 12 half pints of gin and
Run out of deodrant, Try baking
soda, patted on. It should last a
day.
CAR SERVICE:
OUR BUSINESS
Drive in for honest-to-goo<inas
top notch auto service ... at
honest prices! You can alway*
trust our work.
Wayne Smith Motors
LINCOLN-MERCURY DEALER
106 Pecan
EXTRA RELIEF"
FROM
MISERIES
666 ATTACKS ALL COLD SYMPTOMS
AT ONZ Tlf.'E ... IN LESS TIME!
No ordinary pain-reliever can make
this claim . . . but 656 can. The 666
formula contains a combination of
prescription-type ingredients not
found in any other cold medicine.
For tha. "extra" relief, try 666
liquid or tablets. lie-member . . . 666
docs more because it i.as more.
UID
BLETS
666 DOES MOPE BECAUSE IT HAS MORI
48.
built some "music"—a fence dec-
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C. S. Perkini Jr.
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Phone SOSO
— Rufttnena
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fkrathweatera Life
Inauraace
VI
[M
We Give s&h Green Stamps
Russell's Dept.
Store
110-14 LocuM
Piggly-Wiggly
307 Paca- 1113 Lamar
Geep's Gulf Sta.
401 E. Broadway
Bowen Drug
Ootchar Bldg.
BENDIX
Laundrymatic
907 E. Broadway
Globe Cleaners
304 B. 3rd
Cox Jewelry
110 E. Broadway
Briley & Brown
Furn.
317 Oak
Lane Mobil Ser.
301 E. 3rd
Hartgrave Bros.
Pirattona Sarvica Stora
Harvell Mobil Ser.
toil Lamar
ENJOY YOUR STAY IN L. A
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Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 32, Ed. 1 Monday, February 7, 1955, newspaper, February 7, 1955; Sweetwater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth284356/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sweetwater/Nolan County City-County Library.