The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 86, No. 80, Ed. 1 Monday, April 6, 1964 Page: 2 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Hopkins County Area Newspapers and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Hopkins County Genealogical Society.
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These WiD Never Fade Awajr
Washington _ (XEJL) — J» MtwnpMBg to MUM petter
weapons, U. S. scientists are running Intp m»jor gape in thejr
knowledge I "
Reports from Moscow show Khuahchev is taking a <lif-
ka £ **&-
chec is not investing heevily in today's ICBIfa.
On the day be anaounced bu^gW plan, for cUU*b, Ms
conventional armies, ha mods clear ho waa Aarply incaansing
the pace of Soviet military scientific reaearth. That thereat
-oL. u
zSrJSS.
r^u induatrr- It ia not good in national dofanae,
The Bueaiaas, on <*» contrary, are apendingr a food deal
of money and effort ia *Vajr out" and "saateric” weareh.
Moat of it wiH fail. But one succeas, like their achievement*
with the ICBM and Sputnik, could give the Red. a u^jof ad-
Vant^e Ruasisa* are tenarttretlng tferir work ia a flear criti-
cal fields. fWy'» letting (he United Btrtee awry (he hulk
a tie*
ialature and “every attempt one ««»»««
will he made to have « thor- Major »unr«y must be per- Tbrt*i |
ough redistricting conaiaUnt formed on the district* neat 1960the
with the opinion* of the 80- year. And while they are earv- and
preme Court and (the Houston) lag, *tat* I ngi abatersia MS pash- Eras
ability will have ty
I DlDNTT TMtbihf
B/ Mai!: In Hopkiu and adjoin in.
lie 1 thru* month, (cash in atnaa
(cash in sdsaan) $4.M>; ana rau (a
Ouuid* Hopkins and adjoinld. eouai
Area months l cash in advanea) Hi
In adsanaaj tt M; ama rmr (cm* to
Member Aaaoeiated Pram and litA '
rapohUcatlosi at
I SEEN HIM BEHIND TH' 6I6N~
HE TURNED HI6 COAT INSIDE .
OUT, STUCK HIS DERBY HAT <
INSIDE HIS SHIRT, AN'PUT ON
A CAP AN' FALSE MUSTACHE!
v HE'S A DETECTIVE SHADOWIN'
V_, H CROOK— AAAYftE A r
MURPEgER! J:
ff9K «*«
' * -
THE DAILY NEWS-TELEGRAH Monday, April 6,1964
.. .
!
Editorials
Things Sulphur Springs Needs
• Hospital Etpanaioa
• Cooper Reaerroir
• A Health and Snnitntion Pro.rnm
Continued Industrial OeireiopmeaC
g More Parkin. Facilitiea
• Bo it dam. Modernization
g Intensified Trade Promotion \
g Expanded Fire Protection
• Public Library Modernixation
g A More Prosperous A.riculturn
• A New Armory
f Enthusiastic Citizen.
ALL MEN S GAINS ARE THE FRUIT OF
VENTURING — HERODOTUS
industrial workers to wear hairnets if
they affect Beatle hairdos.
We’re strong for safety, but we
don’t believe this is going to work. It
has taken American safety workers
several years to persuade even a mi-
nority**of drivers to wear seat belts,
f^tlFWuWf^havl5 beeri p^ua^drtt
wear hairnets the Beatles will have
disappeared from the scene,
and all.
hairdos
MacArthur Lives in History
The old soldier is gone, slipped into
the shadows of history. \\ hat the
rigors of a score of campaigns, the en-
emv shells on a dozen battlefields, the
dangers and demands of three wars
failed to. do, the remorseless hand of
time has accomplished.
The death of General of the Army
Douglas jMacArthur is mourned not
only by his countrymen but by millions
the world over.
The name MacArthur immediately
brings to mind the picture of the stern-
faced hero of the Pacific war with the
scrambled egg insignia on his cap and
corncob pipe and tieless, open collar,
who in the darkest days of World War
II uttered both a promise and a battle
cry with the words: “1 shall return."
Yet MacArthur had already com-
pleted 38 years of distinguished serv-
ice in the Army before his name be-
came a household word.
Graduated from West Point with
highest academic honors in 1903. he
took part, as a captain, in the Verii
Cruz expedition of 1914. In World
War I, although a brigadier general,
he saw personal action in the bloody
St. Mihiel and Meuse-Argonne offen-
sives, among others, and was wound-
ed twice.
By thfe time the war clouds were
gathering again in the 1930s, he had
served as superintendent of Dest Point
and had reached the top of the mili-
tary ladder is Chief of Staff.
Then came World War II, and as
if he had not lived and done enough
to fill the lives of any number of men,
MacArthur’s contribution to history
was far from ended
of the peace. It is to MacArthur. who
as occupation commander virtually
wrote the postwar Japanese constitu-
{ion, that the Japanese owe their de-
mocracy.
Brilliant and wise administrator
that he was, however, MacArthur was
foremost a warrior and a victory as
startling as any in American military
history was his with the landing at In-
chon during the Korean War.
But the world had changed, and
complete victory in Korea waa not Tor
him or any man. His removal by Presi-
dent Truman, said to have been dic-
tated by the realities of the nuclear
age, served only to increase his stature
in the eyes of many Americans.
At last came the long-delayed tri-
umphant return to his homeland, the
paradys and accolades, ail capped by
his moving speech before Congress.
His “fading awysy’’ from public life
was but the beginning of a new career
as a corporation board chairman.
Now MacArthur the man is dead at
84. Yet, as he truly said, old soldiers
never die. Not the great ones.
Championing the Champ
The alleged sport of boxing is in
bad-enough shape without the World
Boxing Association making noises
about taking away the heavyweight
title of Cassius (Muhammad Ali) Clay
because they don’t like the way he
combs his political-religious convic-
tions (if that is what they are).
The New York State Athletic Com-
mission is right in opposing the WJ8A
nonsense. It will continue to recognize
Clay as the champion, as w ill most oth-
er devotees of the sour science.
Not that there are very many of
them around, however.
The Literary Guidepost
By W. C. Rogers
TOMORROW WILL BJE MONDAY. By
Katinka Looser. Atheneum. $4.50.'
To say that this series of stories is mostly"
about children and mother* is not enough.
Partly it is about thing* mothers have to
cope with, such as a dead kitten, or a little
boy’s dread over his unknowing mother’s ap-
pearance at a vitally important baseball game.
These parts of the book are a fragile mirror
held up to the ways in which the big people
have to measure up in the little people’s eyes.
And partly it is a mother's tender, tenuous
remembrances of a far - 'away childhood, a
backward look into another world. One story
is a night-piece, a nocturne, on the wry nu-
ances of being a faithful wife and mother. An-
other is a stark, clutching scene in a hospital,
where maternal fortitude must assume a cas-
ual mask in the face of a terror a child can-
not comprehend. There even is a story of old
age and its strange effect* on other genera-
tions. ..m-i . ,____
So there is an ambivalence in this book, 0URton *e *2
that flows between glad and sad, between
chiidnood and age. '
There is a clarity of eye, ear and mind in
this author's tesponse to Ufe, and it is ex-
pressed in plain, vital and compassionate
words.
hi Tariff-
• "V". L
mi
Ur RAY CROMLEY
Wash!****
jglfSpK
:iil
Austin—A migljfy head of
tension which had built up ft
the aMfc capitol oasud •» the
**«fd
I®
Why don’t more married men and women
wjtn the Signing ^top to think that it's going to do the same
thing to their children when they break up?
Tulips come up in the garden and four
lips in a parked car. , , .
Parents of teen-agers would like to
a V»t of records though they're not interested
in sports.
A Bible Thought for Today
He that beiieveth on him (ChrUt) i« not
condemned: but he that baiieveth net is con- tricts unless the
demned already, because he hath not believed ' ", ! T T~
in the name of the only begotten Son of God.
—John 3: If.
How clear are the teachings of God, and
how patient the Teacher.
adopted a redistrkrting bill.
As it is, although the court Senate candidate from Maw-
postponed effective date of its ton who filed the suit with four
ruling, it kept the erne on its other GOPs, said the group
docket and wiH take further would file no appeal since “fur-
gjresfional redistrieting order actj0B if * constitutional dis- (her delays. . . Vwauid lead to
until the next elections. trusting hill is not passed by turmoil'"
Top Democratic officiate fftd August 1, 1W*. Democratic Congressman-ajt-
merabers of the Legislature Major officials applauded large candidate Bob Loancy,
kept elosc watch on the pews ^ ruling, an iutervenor is the aetiaa,
wires out of Houston as they RepubIiclmgt w fa 0 brought ***** «*™e and -
sweated out the decuuou fob ^ ori|dnlrl 8oit, were disup- **w appwl to the V- * Su----
Jovvuig four days of hearings mt,,d th.t ^ preme Court for redmtrtctoag
and argument. tion-for-each-district order will y«*r. He |lr» called on j
Their optimism had wilted in not tHk^ffcrt^nttl congress Te**«» to Rrtitiof Goveruor ^
the last 24 hours before the after heaL But tfcoy took com- Connally for a spw»al leglsta- *#e*rd Voter Lirt—Ykare two eategorlap «ouM
ruling was announced. More fort in (the fact that their prim- *»* rttekui oa the aubject, art more TexasTSA/en this Tear qualified voter list
than one legislator reportedly cip|j goal was achieved. For aU practical p—gsiis, than ever. than 3,900,000.
. had his bag packed ready *o Governor ConnaHy said w ** <**••» «• ***► A «eo*d totel of XASS.IM
, mtigm ho Austu for a a»ee*l distrtette# wfflbTS«r*T>igh. trictlhg is closed for Bw fj*. haw paid poll ta*e«or obtain-
break sjjg. eat priority”* in the I960 Leg- CwWWW* will run * (heir od exemption JwMflrMf. A* the
Gor. John Connally appar- jMature
entiy had indicated he would
call the session immediately if
the court stuck by its original
October 19 order for atdarge
8a% NeuiB-Seirgn
The Net Result
It was bound to happen, perhaps,
and it did.
A 17-year-old factory worker in
England his Beatle haircut caught
in a machine.
So the British Safety Council has
put out 50,0<X> safety posters urging
National Advertising
Lcorue, Hartford
Crty, Chkanro, III., Lg t
Calif., 8t. Id*m, D«ovrr,
Tetephovver: jBnsinemi,
nnd Sociidr ~
AS-27M.
Marine
TOJUiwift
The put.Hshen «
t»potrrxphie*! erro
occur in udvertoinc
»'>r it is bronght
tVsis m» ueesptsd «■ ah _ ,,,
FTV. rVsilsr. Editor ud
Jo. —
OUT OUR WAV
R. WILLIAMS
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Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 86, No. 80, Ed. 1 Monday, April 6, 1964, newspaper, April 6, 1964; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth824607/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.