The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 34, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 10, 1955 Page: 6 of 10
ten pages : ill. ; page 23 x 17 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
■■.s/tS?/-;.
i •-•-s'-ySw
■ ■' >*T
.THE DAILY NEWSTELEGRAM, SULPHUR SPRINGS, TEXAS
Section
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1955.
Jtei
-; . ' '‘v
i:V‘0
GROCERY SUPPLY Company
of Sulphur Springs will expand
warehouse facilities upon comple-
tion of a new building under con-
struction on Oak Avenue. The new
building, adjacent to the north of.
present facilities, will add 7,500
square feet of floor space. The
building will be- of sheet-iron con-
struction.
Today and Friday
sH*-
Taught and Friday
LEASE ACTIVITY wag report-
ed lively across a wide section
from Mexia through- Hopkins
county early this week. Many
open leases in Hopkins county
were purchased in the wake of the
new oil play following a deep
Smackover producer nlnpg the
fault line.
STAMP FOR THE ROTARY — The Post Office will issue this
eight-cent stamp) at Chicago, 111., oh Feb. 23 to commemorate the
50th anniversary of Rotary International. Designed by W. W..
Wind, the stamp will have a globe for its central subject, j^g-
gesting the world-wlde scope of the organization, The flaming
torch is symbolic of Rotary’s purpose—to carry enlightenment to
all parts of the World. (NEA). ,'<v..
COMMUNIST ATTACK
Chinese Communist tro ops penetrate deep ipto Nationalist-held Yikiang
Island during an attack, according to caption with official Red Chinese photo released In
Tnvasloh was made with naval and air support, arid, according to Reds, two hours of fighting saw
surrender of the island. (NEA Telephoto). /
ROBERT IRONS and Woodrow
Harrison, stei otype-pressmen for
The Daily News-Telegram, are
having a difficult time keeping up
with the temperature. Some one
stole their thermometer which had
been placed on an outside door
near their department.
FOUR HOPKINS county schools
plan to attend the annual Citizen-
ship and Career conference at
Texas Sailor
Marking Time
To Court Girl
will depend on how much time,
work and money you are willing
to put into it.”
No Quick Formula
Senter was introduced by
Brooks Emmons, county agent,
who also cited the city’s favorable
location for a market and pointed
out that such projects take time
to develop.
“A market is not built in one
year,” Emons said. “It takes time
to do Such things. I doubt if our
farfners will be able to produce
enough to use a market’s capacity
for several years. Good truck
farmers are not made overnight
any more than good dairymen
are.” s> .
Trenton, N. J., Feb. 10 Ml—
The state of New Jersey has fil-
ed a court suit against a bank
to recover $300,000 which the
state says was diverted by for-
mer Republican Governor Rarold
Hoffman. In a letter opened af-
ter his death last year' Hoffman
told of embezzling $300,000 fcp
cover his political campaigns and
to pay a blackmailer.
The state’s Suit filed in Tren-
ton today is against the South
Amboy Trust Company. The
state had money on deposit in
the bank, and Hoffman was the
bank president;
Havana, Feb. 10 Ml—A Texas
sailor by the name of Lloyd Park-
er was on shore leave at Ports-
mouth, England last year when he
met pretty 19-year-old Maureen
Tooze, the daughter of a retired
British army captain. Parker was
going to sea in a few days and
he didn’t have time to court the
English girL So he begged the vi-
vacious Maureen, a model, to visit
his sister on a ranch in South Cen-
tral Texas until he is discharged
next December. Then, Lloyd
promised, he’d try to convince the
girl that she should marry him.
There was a long exchange of
letters among Lloyd, his sister
and Maureen and the upshot of it
was that she finally made the trip
to Texas last November. Maur-
een says she definitely will stay
on the ranch until Lloyd returns
home. When a newsman asked,
“Do you think you’ll marry him?”
the pretty English girl replied,
‘‘Well, he has a chance.”
Parker, now on duty in Cuba,
frequently telephones his sister,
Mrs. Ruth Leelare. “You’d better
hurry, boy,” Mrs.-Leelare told the
sailor on his last call. “These hill
country cowpokes keep dropping
in for visits on the flimsiest ex-
cuses.”
Livestock Market
Fort Worth, Feb. 10 Ml— Cat-
tle 700; caLves 350;- slow and
steady. Cows weaker; calves
steady ; medium and good slaugh-
ter steers 16.00-23.00; beef cows
11.00- 13.00; bulls 10.00-14.50;
medium and good stocker steer
yearlings 15.00-20.00; good- stock-
er steer calves arbund 20.00.
Hogs 100; butcher hogs steady
to 25c higher; sows steady to 25c
lower. Choice 190-240 pound
butchers 17.50-75; choice 245-325
pound butchers 16.00-17.00; sows
13.00- 15.25.
Sheep 500; ‘ slaughter lambs
steady. Choice wooled slaughter
lambs 21.00.
KMLIttlKII-tSLCM
mnM mak urn
United Fund
Cold Weather
(Continued from Page One)
Clifton Webb and Arlene Dahl are seen together in the Techni-
color-Cinemascope drama, “Woman’”s World, which is showing
at the Hi Vue Drive-In Thursday and Friday.
LEGIONNAIRES WILL ob-
serve their regular social night
»t a meeting get in the American
Legion building on Church Street
(Continued from Page One)
Chicago, Feb. 10 M'-—Salable
cattle 2,000; salable calves 200;
steers, steady; prime grades ab-
sent; heifers fully steady; cows
steady to 25 higher; bulls fully
steady;1 vealers steady to weak;
Stockers and feeders steady; a
part load choice to prime 1,200 lb.
steers 30.00; a few loads and lots
commercial to low choice steers
and yearlings 17.00-25.00; a few-
utility steers 15.25 down; good
and choice mostly good grade
heifers 19.25-22.00; commercial
to low good 15.00-19.00; utility
and commercial cows 11:00-13,00;
a few commercial up to 13.50;
most canners and cutters 9.00-
11.00; utility and commercial
bulls 14.00-16.00; good and choice
vealers 24.00-30.00; cull to Com-
mercial 8.00-23.00; good and
choice replacement steers and
yearlings 19.25-22.00; a few med-
ium grade 800-825 lb. 16.50-
18.00. ..... . " ______________ „
Laredo Citizen
Charged With
Forging Letters
President Coty announced he
would start new consultations
seeking a political leader capable
of winning majority . support in
the assembly.
Coty was expected to call next
on Pierre Flimlin, a member of
the left-of-center Popular Repub-
lican movement. But observers
said they thought Flimlin’s chanc-
es of forming a government were
slim.
Pinay’s failure had been ex-
pected since the Popular Republi-
can movement refused to let any
of its members take places on the
predominantly conservative cabi-
net the ex-premier was trying to
build. — '
The two biggest factions in the
assembly, the Socialists and the
Communists, were opposed to Pin-
ay from the start, Pinay needed
the support of 300 or more mem-
bers of the 627-seat assembly.
And he had been promised the
support of only about 135 when
he gave up his effort to form a
new government.
France is seeking a successor to
Pierre Mendes-Francc Mrjiose gov-
ernment fell last Saturday.
(Continued from Page One)
from irrigated land.”
Senter said many types of mar-
kets exist and local sponsors will
have to decide the kind best suit-
ed to Hopkins County needs. The
Grand Saline market is owned by
a group of farmers as a closed af-
fair, he explained, while Mineola
has a free market that anyone can
use.
The speaker declared East Tex-
as is in better shape than it ever
has been, with agriculture and in-
dustry beginning to strike an ef-
fecitve balance. He predicted that
present farm over-production will
be offset by the growing popula-
tion and by continuing world ten-
sion,.
“The idea for a farmer market
here is basically sound,” he con-
cluded. “The success you will have
appointment oi tne organizing f - , f 35 t
committee followed f.rm.l eo- °.'od 1„„T M-o!
dorsement of the United Fund t ■. • • ,• . ..
. ■ , , . ,. ‘ . freezing—in other sections of the
plan by chamber directors at their . van„v
January meeting. At that time the . - , j , , „ ,
board endorsed a report from a , T,m wouId threaten the valley s
special committee headed by II. C. ar^e spring tomato crop.
McGrede which recommended The county agent of Hidalgo
adoption of the consolidated cam- countv, J. A. (Red) Oswalt, says
paign plan here after an invest!- tomato cott t0 cabb
gatien of the fund-raising prob- ’
jem- and lettuce could be hurfcjby the
———-— cold front.
A hailstoric six inches in dia- The temperature.is expected to
meter was reported from Nebras- drop to oetween 15 and 20 de-
ka'in 1928. glees in East Texas.
Laredo, Feb. 10 Ml—A federal
grand jury has indicted two prom-
inent Laredo residents on charges
of forging letters of employment
and credit and selling them to
Mexicans seeking entry to the
United States.
The indictment charges Ar-
mando Gutierrez and Miss Aman-
da Krueger. A third person—a
Mexican national not yet arrest;
ed—-is also named, , *•
Coffee Prices
Levelling Off
Teenagers Bring
German Babies
Across Ocean
New York, Feb. 10 Ml—-Coffee
sources discount the possibility of
any great further drop in coffee
prices. f
Spokesmen for the major chains
Walter Reuiher
Challenges Ike's
Economic Report
New York, Feb. 10 UP — Two
teen-age sisters have arrived in
New York by air, completing a
trans-Atlantic baby-sitting assign-
ment. Geraldine Palmer, 13, and
12-year-old Carroll Jean arrived
with thre^ tiny German orphans
on their way to new homes. The
sisters are daughters of a, San An-
tonio couple, Mr, and Mrs. Ray
Palmer. Their father, a Church of
Christ missionary, has been sta-
tioned in Franjkfurt, Germany and
recently arranged for the adop-
tion©F three -German boys by
American families.
Geraldine artd^Carrol Jean were
recruited to escort the babies to
Oklahoma City. After they deliv-
er the babies, the sisters plan to
continue to San Antonio to visit
tljeiri grandmother, Mrs. Lola
Lewi's.
said that any further cut would
have to await another drop in
green yoffee prices. Chain-store
reductions in the last few days
ran to as much as 15 cents a
pound. Independent roasters low-
ered their wholesale prices to
meet the competition.
Some of the bigger independent
distributors haven’t lowered their
wholesale prices yet. But inform-
ed sources in
Kansas City, Feb'. 10 UP—Cattle
500; calves 100; load good . to
choice 666 lb, feeder heifers
18v16; prices little changed. Can-
ner and cutters, cows and utility
mainly 9:00-11.50.
Shopping Starts in the Pages of This Newspaper
Washington, Feb. 10 'UP—CIO
President Walter Ueuther took
President Eisenhower's economic
report to task today. The labor
leader told congress that 'the
President’s ^recent optimistic re-
port . on the' economy failed to
take into consideration what Reu-
ther calls the second phase of
the industrial revolution. This is
the development • of electronic
assembly lines in which automatic
devices do much work which has
been done by hand.
Reutber also said the President
also passed over the fact that
more and more jobseekers are
coming into the labor Taree with
the growth in the nation’s popu-
lation.
Similar criticism of the. Eisen-
hower economic message was
voiced by John A. Baker for
jNew York predict it
will only bq a matter of. time.
Chicago Grain
Chicago, Feb. 10 UP—Wheat—
Mar 2.24 7*8 - 3-4; May 2.22 1-2 -
6-8; July 2.10 3-4.
Corn — Mar 1.51 3-8; May
1.54 1-4 - 1-8; July 1.56 1-8-56.
Oats-»,Mar 76 1-4 -• 3-8; May
74 5-8; July 70 3-4.
Rye—^Mar 1.19-18 3-4; May
1.21 1-2 - 3-4: July 1.23 1-2 - 3-4.
/Soybeans—-Mar 2.81 3-4 - 1-2;
May 2.77 3-4 - 78; July 2.74-73
1-4. *
Try a Wao.t Ad for Results
P OI NTS
Rich Nan's Wife
Fatally Wounded
favor
Beverly Hills, Cal., Feb. 10 UP—
A millionaire's wife, 71-year.old
Mrs. Katie Hayden, was found dy-
ing of ax wounds yesterday in the
kitchen of her costly mansion in
Beverly Hills. According to ac-
counts’ of the slaying, Mrs. Hay-
den’s .financier husband, Samuel,
had left for "work in the morning
when,^ according to a maid, Mrs.
Hayden went to answer the kitch-
en doorbell. The maid continued
that a short while later, the tele-
phone rang, and she" discovered
Mrs. Hayilen when she went to
Rome, Feb. 10 (Ml—Rome’s new-
ly opened subway got down ‘to
business today — .but business
wasn’t good.
The 33-miHion-dollar line which
Benito Mussolini started 20 years
ago to- link the railway station
with- Rome’s suburban exhibition
grounds carried only a trickle of
paying passengert. ~i.-~
As the hours Wore on, it be-
came doubtful' that - more thaiv
1,005 would pay, the equivalent of
6 1-2 cents for first day, tickets,
President Luigi Einaudi head-
ed an official throng that packed
a 3-car train on the free iriugurjif
run yesterday. But subway auth-
orities conceded there’s a handi-
,cap. lie the.fact...tile. 7»«iile, line does
not touch the center of the city or
the main, residential districts. And
money for1 expansion isn’t avail-
able now.
It’s a proven fact! A
cake of ice on top of
a Dearborn Cool
Safety Cabinet gifts
heater melts only
slightly faster than
elsewhere in the room.
This amazing proof of
Dearborn’s sensational
tloufch-cool cabinet is
your guarantee of
extra safety..extra
comfort». extra con-
venience..extra clean-
liness.
The s.ensatronal ice
test also demonstrates
Dearborn’s forward
heat flow—heat
floor and chair level-r—
heat where ypu want
it ..where youcan
feel it!— ———
Pinay Abandons
Efforts to Form
French Cabinet
Here are the points that pay off
to you when you hitch your busi-
ness to the proven salespower of
advertising in this newspaper:
sunimhn the elderly woman to an-
swer a call for her. Mrs. Hayden
died soon after she was found.
Detectives say a dresser at the
end of * hsjfway in the home had
been ransacked, and tha,t Hay-
den's doBtet and other drawers had
bqen ransacked, tqo. The ai>par-
-ent-nwder- - weapon;' a ban d ‘SOt;J
was found In the kitchen. Author-
ities are seeking a former man
servant in connection with the
case.
The Hayden home is across the
street from the former home of
Bugsy Siegel, a riotorious gambler
who wps slain in 1947.
Paris, Feb. 1,0 ‘Ml ^ Eerincr
Premier Antoine Pinay abandon-
ed his efforts today to form a new
French government.
Pinay reported personally to
.^resident Kerie .Coty tht^t he was
Withdrawing, The President urged
J>inay-4o eontwue his' attempt".to1
,organize support for a neW gov-
ernment, but Piqpy told the presi-
dent he felt it was impossible for
him-to form a cabinet that would
be approved in the National As-
setnbly. ; 1
After conferring with Pinay,
0 You reach people when they’re
pre-shopping . . . making decision!
to Buy. v.
You get complete coverage of your
market at lowoet cost.
Your advertising will have “stay-
ing power” . . . Can be referred to
again and again . . . cm be clip-
ped out and consulted. \
Newman to Head
Howard Payne
or more pay-off
' . j : ••U-'. r 'j ■ a v’f •
*777with figures
just call 140.
If You Miss
Your Paper
Your . advertising will he “in good
company” . . . cari partake of the
confidence that our readers have
ia their favorite newspaper.
John Dubose, 64,
Dies al Celeste
Blown wood; Feb. fO W—A vice
president of Baylbf University-will
beconjp president of Howard
Patfjie’Tullege at Browriwood June
!?!• ’ ’ '
Dr. .Guy D. Newman, promo-
tional Vice, president of Baylor,
Will take over: follayying the re-
tirement of the present head, Dr.
Thomas Jf*. Taylor. Dr. Newman
nas proposed a five million dol-
lar program for improvements and
endowment of the school. > •*!
If you fail to receive your
copy of The New9iTelegram by
5:80 p. m., please phone 140
or 481 before 6 p. m., and a
copy will be sent to ypu by
special carrier after 6 o’clock.
The News-Telegram office is
open Between 7:16 and 8:30
a. ni. Sundays to receive deliv-
FREE INSTALLATION WITH
' COPPER CONNECTIONS
L. B. Wester
. FURNITURE
Funeral rites were cppductcri
Tburisdiy night in the .JVt. Oiiv|'
Baptist Church gf Celeste, for
John Dubose, 64, who died Tues-
, <»*y. \
‘Interment was Ttt McWright
Ceiryrtery.' ’ " -TrT.‘“"T'
Re Is survived by his wife and
, ope step-son.....Dean McDonald,
both qt Celeste.
vfc Tapp Ptmenrt flame directed.
•' cy complaints. Special- deliver-
ies are made after the office
closes at 8 :30. - . f
Special delivery service Can-
pot be extended outside of
The Daily News-Telegram
these hours. ,L T.-Harper, cir-
culation manager.
Try a Warit Ad for Results
..
^fission
MARLON
BRANDO
Oh Tike
hsateifant
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 34, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 10, 1955, newspaper, February 10, 1955; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth827058/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.