The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 86, No. 80, Ed. 1 Monday, April 6, 1964 Page: 3 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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1 m
Personals-:-
Food for Americans
■ S,,
...
TKU Meat Loaf I» Unusual
. ; %;
Radical Party
In Chili Seeks
Power More
■
Uf. «i<r Mr*tiff MflrmitiA r *»; ©ah e*hfcttnrM»* Lse-
man Tettes and Mrs.
«nd family of Cooper visited---. „„„---— ----- —
faf tiie home of Mr. and Mrs. Hines will be in Quitman to-
They night to attend a
the firemen’s Gamma meeting.
Mr. McMillan is --—--, _ ■ —v.
Mr. and M^fa. 1 aclc Bruton ingredients-
1___L fU-1. aea iris.
, ! Sunday.
also attam
convention. _
fire ehtof at Cooper.
A meat loaf in the oven ia good news to a hungry family.
, Farikutarly when three meat# are combined as in tto
recipe—ground beef,, pork and veaL Bed tomato juice, oregano
for spicy flavor and rolled oats are the otb*r interesting
of Broke* Bow, Okla., are vi*-
Mr. and Mrs. Jack K. Wil- iting Mr. and Mia. Jim Bruton.
and four children of Dal- ■ „
Mrs. Patti Flippiu, Ml. and
m *«*
is* were the
of haw parent
week-end guests
I__parents, Mr. aad Mrs.
LOOU Leggett.
Mrs. Raymond Anglin mad Mrs.
Parnell attended a fe»-
If mother is too busy to make a brown or mushroom sauce,
she can us* one of the several very good canned brown and
mushroom sauces.
, MEAT (.OAF (* aerviegs)
1/2 lb. ground beef; 1/2 lb. ground pork;
There will be a fellowship
Church
moating tonight at the
of God at Bogota. Tha Rev.
,m Oft* Stacalt will he la charge
pf the sendee. The Bey. Julius
Lahn ia minister of the church.
n7rt»"i»" at the home of a veal; 3/4 cup rolled oats (quick or old fashioned,
niece, Mrs. Leonard Taylor, in 1 1/2 teaspoons salt; 1/4 teaspoon pepper; 1/4 t<
an • n___a .. a < . L..^.___1 4 nnM l.notnM • f ottn I
Texarkana Sunday.
gano; 1/4 cup chopped onion; 1 egg, beaten; 1 eupl
Heat oven to moderate (350 degrees). Cog
into an 8\4x4^
Mrs. John B. Stringer »n- ^di^ta thoroughly. Pack firmly i
derwent eye surgery Monday toaf Bake in preheated moderate oven (350
in Baylor Hospital In Dallas. ^ houn< stand 5 minutes before seeing.
r*fe»1
C. C. Hippy, who Is Mra. John Mouse of New
• a« . 1 „ Lnni /Ineinflr tho
. „ here,
_ J also visited with her moth-
er Mrs. Gua Hargis.
the Braunfels was here during the SPECTACULAR FIGURE
week-end visiting her husband's
mother, Mrs. Lela House.
* Mr. and Mrs. Harry Edwards
and Mr. and Mia. Jim Ltwis
•If “ mm
i«ki9n »
day-
Waste of Mr.
ion Baker
IfriL Jem Stanley and Mm.
Ben Dickarso* were in Balias
Sunday to attend the marketer
Sun-
Richaxd Watson ia confined
to his home with tha mumps.
MacArthur’s Car#
Covered Three Wars
jam. D. M. Gordon, a senior
Student at East Texas State
mentisry School ia Paris.
Mr. and Mrs. C%rr Smith
were ia Rockwall Sunday vis-
iting her mother, Mrs. J. H.
Baaaham, aad other relatives,
Mr. sad Mra, Treat* Ns
mtmti
have returned from Dallas
where they were with their
daughter, lisa. Q. M. Gardes
of Baris, who had dental sur-
gery. While in Dallas Mr. and
Mrs. Nance alee visited with
Mr. an<| Mra. Than Seams
..ere I* Tyler Monday for him
to lave a medical checkup.
•mother daughter, Mrs. Stuart
Tan Auken. Mr. Nance also re-
Mr. aad Mrs. Jewel Hodge
and Mr. end Mra. Jesse Sim-
mons were In Tyler Sunday to
view the azalea trails.
Melvin Strasner, Mrs.
Madden, Mra. A. A.
and Mrs- LndcUe
eyre in Tyler Sunday
to, visit t|e again trails.
Mrs. David Levine eras a
bushiest visiter hi Italian Mon-
day.
Gall Stephens has been ad-
mitted • to Memorial Hospital
for medical treatment.
Sam Steele was a business
victor in Dallas Monday.
■» Mr. and Mra. Bay Glenn
Hurley aad sea. Skipper, spent
the week-end in Dallas vi*it-
hf Ui sitter, Mra Grove t;
F|MP Jr., and Mr. Fagg end
Mr. and Mrs. Cody Greer
are on vacation this week from
their positions with tha Echo
Publishing Company.
m I An
A FNA’er
Hospital Viaitiag Heaps
2 to 4 ami T t* 2 a a.
By Associated Press
General Dougina Mac Arthur
was one of the most spectac-
ular military figures in the his-
tory of tha United States. His
remarkable military career
spanned 62 years. It ended in
• world-wide uproar, write
President Truman outsing him
aa UL S. commander in the Far
East But in his twilight years,
new honors came to the gen-
eral — from congress, from
Japan, the nation h# defeated;
aad from tha Philippines,
which he liberated.
In World War 1, MacArthur
was chief of staff and later
commander of the famous
Rainbow Division. He was the
youngest division commander
of the war. Secretary of War
Newton Baker called him the
greatest front-line general of
that conflict.
After the wax, he became
the youngest superintendent
West Point ever bad. Be bald
tha post from 1919 to 1922.
He was the youngest man
aver to bo chief of staff. He
held that post for five years,
longer than any predecessor.
When MacArthur became a
major-general ia 1926, he wae
the youngest of that rank.
But it was in World War II
that he gained his greatest
fame. Secretary of War Henry
Stirasoa called him the princi-
pal architect of the Pacific
victory. He was Supreme Al-
ed speech before congress. He
ended by recalling an oM bar-
racks ballad which proclaimed
that old soldiers never die—
they just fade away. Mac-
Arthue concluded:
“And like the old aoldiv of
that ballad, I now close my
military career aad jMtt fade
away, an old soldier who tried
to do his duty as God gave him
the light to sec that duty.
Good bye."
MacArthur was horn at Lit-
tle Rock, Ark., Jan. 26, 18*0.
He was married twice. His
first marriage was ip 1928 to
a divorcee, Mrs, Louise Crom-
well Brooks. They were divorc-
ed in 1929. In the spring of
1937, he married Miss Jean
Fair cloth of Mur freeshoro,
Tenn. They had one son, Ar-
thur. (
Chile, Apr. 9 <*-
Chile’s Radical Party has de-
cided to rite ite own candidate
in the presidential race in an
attempt ta utold tha fealawe
of power in the election.
The Radical Party persuaded
Senator Julio (Mura*, » fellow
party member, to rua as can-
didate of the powerful centrist
group, thus opening now pros-
pects fog the Sept. 4 election.
Duran quit recently aa stand-
ard bearer of the ruling Demo-
cratic Front coalition after the
Communist-led Popular Action
Front score an upset victory in
a special congressional elec-
tion. This was viewed as a
foretaste of the presidential
vote. f"'"'’ i"’
Dura n’s withdrawal left
Christian Democrat Eduardo
Free the chief opposition to
Salvador Allende, the leftist
candidate. Two of Hi* three
government parties, the Con-
servatives §nd Liberals, decided
to support Frei, whose party is
pro-Westem, moderately left-
ist and tee largest ia congress.
Duran has no hope of win- If Aftm Wanfc
ntng. But under Chile’s cop- 4H vW •* *■
stitution, if no presidential can- up. ,wu § % ___
didate gets at least 51 per cent I Q 11603111 A| gri
of the total vote, a joint ses- * ** 5r'*'
siOP of congress picks the win- TJA1J L„ D.J.
ner from the two highest can- UwlU Uj XlvUe
Hill
M
ml
SPIRITUAL DIARY—A life-long tear? oS tl* late Pep* John XXIII wall be appearing in
bookshops in many natioua. Titled “II Gironaie Delianima** (Diary of Soul), the book con-
tains the life story of the late pope from ages 14 to 81 as see* by the pope himself. Shown
above, in Home, ia oae o* the manuscript pages inserted in the book. (NRA)
didates.
Czechs Support
Soviet Stand
New Delhi, Apr. 6 Iff __ „ ,
Prime Minister Nehru said to- conceasjons.
day India W preparing to re-
gain territory along its north-
ern border, now occupied by
troona.
as major industrialised coun-
tries to ensure this is brought
about.*
British sources a gid their
government expected the Unit-
ed Staten and Europe to pro-
vide far greater access to goods
from the developing nations,
inside and eutaid* the common-
wealth, ia retiua few aay such
Witness Says
German Drove
Jews to Death
Frankfurt, Germany, Apr. 8
iff—Spectators , shouted “Kill'
Kite I Rang him F* today at the
Auschwitz war crimes trial in
Frankfurt after testimony link-
ed a defendant with the death
of Jewish children.
Prague, Apr. 6 iff—Czecho-
slovakia’s Communist govern-
ment published its support to-
day for Premier Khrushchev
in his fight with the Chinese
Communists.
The party newspaper Kude
Pravo repotted the pro-Soviet
stand in quoting a speech by
President Antonin Novotny
yesterday at Banska Bystrica.
Novotny declared that the
Czechoslovak party “fuUy
agrees with the analysis made
by the central committee of
the Communist Party of the So-
viet Union which takes realis-
tic and objective stock of the
harmful and adventurous coarse
of the Chinese representa-
tives.”
He endorsed Khrushchev’s
call for an international Com-
munist party conference to set-
tle the Chinese issue. He said
such a conference preferably
should be held this year.
208 East Had commander In the South- y,js when a wltn
Admitted
Johnny Dobson,
*2 J*D#dd*' 1082 Gilmer, braced land, sea and air fore
medical.
Ztmrnie Bell, 1008
Davis, medical.
Mm. £. J. Goodman, Como,
Rebels Ambush
***u ™mn«uun ... «—«* -----ms reet wnen a witness team- TV ! .
west Pacific. His command^em- fjetj that he personally drove lQQ0Q6SlO UlOlip
Former SS (EHte Corps) ser-
geant Oswald Kaduk jumped to
North
MacArthur was in
(n the 'Philippines when the
Mrs. W. B. Saunders,
Peach, medical.
Patricia Gail Stephana
Locust, medical.
607
Mm
| -’i
George Argenbright, Senior
Citisen’s Best Home, medical.
318 South
1
j Thaw tire 426,000 girls and
km tel 9.460 ehaptera that are
FUAara. | am proud to be oaa
----- these,
Georg* Gu!ledge,
Locate, medicaL
George Payne, 1007
bama, medicaL
R. J. Moses, SIS
^Gratae I.indley, 1239 Mate,
medical.
Baltin Thomas, 1006 Harri-
son, medical.
Charlene Wright, 826 Ful-
ler. medical.
Mrs. Sid Bromley, 716
Cranford, medical.
Mra. L. C. Rol
Japanese attacked Pearl Har-
bor. As the American poaitlon
grew hopeless, MacArthur left
the islands in March, 1942. He
traveled in a small torpedo
boat under cover of darkness.
Avoiding Japanese ship# and
planes, he reached s rendez-
vous with planes sent to carry
him and his party to Austra-
lia. On reaching ^.uftqalia, he
declared:
“1 came throogh and I shall
return.”'
He did. He organised the Is-
land- hopping campaign that
took him back to Me islands,
triumphant, ia three years.
The atomic bomb, of course,
ended tile Pacific W«r, Mac-
Arthur promptly flew to Tokyo
to direct the occupation and
the children at pistol point to
gas chambers of the Auschwitz
concentration camp.
Ludwig Woert, once chief
trusty at Auschwitz, said the
children, aged feuv te elevem,
had turned to him after they
baa beea selected to be gaaatid.
Woert said:
“They clung to my legs. They
cried, ‘Please help vs. We are
to be gassed.’ Even the fume
sad five-year-oM* knew
was going to happen to
Communist Chinesearoops. He
told parliament:
“We want all our territory
back.”
Nehru made the same type
of statement shortly before
the outbreak of the China-ln-
dia frontier war in 19(52. The
Chinese drove back the Indian
troops and occupied some of
the disputed territory.
Defense Minister Y. B. Cha-
van told parliament the Chi-
nese buildup along tike border
now is heavier than in (962
but India has made prepara-
tions against any more set-
backs.
Nehru said the Indian de-
fense preparations were aimed
at not only meeting aay future
Chinese threats but also — as
he put It — to regain the ter-
ritory lost te China, including
Akssi Chin.
Aksai Chin is a high plateau
in the northern Ladakh area.
The other disputed area is
about 1,000 miles to the east,
in the Himalayan Mountains
separating Chinese-held Tibet
and India’s northeast frontier.
The prime minister’s state-
ment was broadcast by the gov-
ernment’s all-India radio.
Heath also stressed that
where preferences are the sub-
ject of agreements with com-
monwealth countries, Britain
could not act without the con-
sent of those gbvernments.
The ten point plan was out-
lined to a number of com-
monwealth leaders in private
Weekend talks with Heath. It is
expected to be a major subject
fbr discussion at the common-
wealth prime ministers’ confer-
ence in London in July-
Short Strike
Ends at Center
Houston, Apr. 6 Iff — Con-
struction at the Manned Space-
craft Center was halted for al-
most two hours early this
morning by a strike of about
60 painters.
Members of the painters
union threw up picket lines at
the center’s three entrances
Jury Trials
Denied Two
For Contempt
Washington, Apr. 6 Iff—The
Supreme Court decided today
that former Governor Ross Bar-
nett and present Governor Paul
Johnson, Jr., of Mississippi are
not entitled to a jury trial on
criminal contempt charges. The
charges stem from their actions
in 1962 when Negro student
James Meredith sought to en-
roll at the University of Mis-
sissippi.
Barnett was governor at the
time and Johnson was lieuten-
ant governor. Johnson won the
election to succeed Barnett and
was inaugurated as governor on
Jau. 21.
The contempt charges follow-
ed an order by the US Circuit
Court in New Orleans that Mis-
sissippi state officials net in-
terfere with Meredith's admis-
sion. Barnett and Johnson were
accused of ignoring the order.
Federal marshals and troops
were used to get Meredith into
the university in , September,
1962. He bas since been grad-
The governor and lieuten-
ant governor demanded a jury
trial ef the charges, but the
about 7 a. m. and other con- circuit court deadlocked four-
struction workers refused to four on that question. The
cross them. I ninth circuit court judge was iM
About 8:45 a. m., however, I and did not vote. Thus stymied,
pickets were called off when , the circuit court asked the Su-
two union representative* met preme Court to decide the issue.
Jakarta, Indonesia, Apr. 6 Iff
—The official Aatara news .
SBritain Offers
enlisted men were killed and a
enlisted men were killed and a qi 1 V\ 1
rebel group ambushed the In- T T2Q0 U63lS
donesian regional commander-
Antara said area chief Colo-
1 »» v .1. -„,™i Geneva, Apr. 6 I*—Britain
nei M. Yusuf, who escaped, . 1Wi
and his men were en route to , n .__1
a meeting withta ”ffl' mary commeditioe from all the:
cer tor peace developing,nations of the world!
with painting contractors’ rep-
resentative* and members of
tile U. S. Corps of Engineers.
The pickets egrried signs
charging that Cripso Painting
Incorporated had violated the
union's contract. There was
no other word on the alleged
violation.
Judge Claims
Climate of Hate
Prison Tena
was rokig to Happen to tkai» rihrMiaAr Kahir Muaakkar (te^P*M na^0118 ^ wofld vw i j a#
SS. X • SoSJSrZXX Handed Man
” tetoay mmtte,, north of the ^ c<MBmonwealte.
provincial capital of Macassar.
‘?Sl fowl Rifes
“ *“ *“ Law Violated
cable to lb« commonwealth.
Tbs British offer is contain-
ed in a ten point plan present-
_.. _ ...__has strength-
en tedteteten to the pro-
of good home and com-
« taken a keener inter-
the appearance of my
u, „ ...___
«-»» dated at the official surrender
^ 0* Bruheir, !0f J$pan aboard the battleship
meiiieaL _ _ Missouri in Tokyo Bay.
strong, w# can work.
Woerl said he went to fi*d
out if anything eonld be
to save the children.
“1 was told there
tag to be done, that U
order from Bertta.”
When I returned I saw tita
aS^5== s% s?af at
violated anti-trust law. directions.
Los Angeles, Apr. 6 Iff — A
third defendant, John Irwin,
•d today to the UN Trade and ha* been sentenced *" tea te-
Developmeut Conference fc natra kidnap case. A U. S.
—. • M . M SB J _ *» *- ? -A- x 1
Ge^vTby Secretary of Trad* dsttrita court jiateete UaAn
geles scitsnced the 42-year-
•ld house pointer to 16 years
and Industry Edward Heath.
$(e&th ffutM if Dm pro- .,, __________ _ __ .__
imm. e-ft ss.jcrtasi.
sharing tariff prefer- been sentenced to terns of life
..... ‘ " plus 76 years. They, were nc-
Dollsa, Apr. 6 iff — U. S.
District Judge Ssrah T.
Hughes, who swore in Lyndon
Johnson as President, says the
Dallas political climate contri-
buted to the assassination of
John F. Kennedy.
Judge Hughes told 40 Latin
American journalists visiting
Dallas on a government-spon-
sored tour that “there was a
climate of hate in Dallas that
was not evident in any other
place.”
The judge swore in Johnson
shortly after President Ken-
nedy was slain in downtown
Dallas last Nov. 82.
Try a Whnt Ad tor Results
Five years later, MacArthur
___- . took command of the fro#
Gtih Abti* murid forces In defending
South Korea from Communist
attack.' The UN forces all but
d Communist Norte Ko-
But then, the
[the defendant’* bench. “Thin is
not true. Yon’ranut quite
<» your baud,
i «%
u m rr ">
73» * -w Mmi MHM to-
* "f* £ iSLZLtzz'iz <4r
m with findings bv a US district judge nve
cused •t the actual kidnaping,
of Frank Stouten. Jte, In which
He told the 122-uatiou eon- Irwin did not take part
findingTby'a^US district judVe *^e "“ould thmrefoxe need
: ” .. . . ri*w to act in concert with the oth- wey »
__..
„ _ attacking tee Chinese Red
SouA mainland with Chinese Nation-
futart teoops. He also wanted a
These stands run counter
WmdLJftehi^'ltanghSr p jL /PpI. TT||
Suie eoJtSi^if hT^- Tracking unit
Pi* out jug* w»ta UtoBwdiU)
statement on^mjor mil-
Manti. Fla., Apr. 6 W" Ha
vana radio said today that So-
viet technician* have complet-
ed in stalling Cuba* first sa-
tellite tracking station.
Th» broadcast, monitored in
JMteate did wet Mta where tee
Washington, Apr. « Iff—The tracking station was builA
THE PUBL
INVITED
to hear
_______in only »TA autos south
Florida’s Cap# T
toll L
and Otter space probing ve-
hicles.
Millard Shivers
Camtid&te for
eemmissieMr «f Agricutture
8900 P. M.
, SWARMING
TFBMITF^ am
l(aniiu are,
A WARNING 4
TO HOME-
OWNERS.
GUARANTkLB PRWCCTIOti, CALL
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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/m1/3/?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.