The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 80, No. 218, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 4, 1958 Page: 1 of 16
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Shop Today’s Ads for Northeast Texas’ Best Food Bargains
If You Miaa Your Paper—
CALL 5-3141
Before 6 p. m. Week Days
7:15 to 8;30 a. m. Sunday*
c
Butltj jBfetua-Sfelpgram
Weather Forecast
Partly Cloudy
VOL. 80.—NO. 218.
THE EVENING NEWS AND THE MORNING TELEGRAM CONSOLIDATED IN 1915. ABSORBED THE DAILY GAZETTE IN 1924.
16 PAGES — 2 SECTIONS —5 CENTS. MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS
SULPHUR SPRINGS, TEXAS, THURSDAY, SEPT. 4, 1958.
Lange Advises Starting
Better World at Home
The place to start a bet-
ter world is right at home,
Fred Lange, executive vice
president of the Dallas
Community Chest Trust
Fund, told the Rotary Club
Thursday.
“Don’t send missionaries to In-
dia before you do the right thing
in Sulphur Springs,'' he added.
Lange, who is widely known for
his civic and religious activities,
was the principal speaker on a
program devoted to the approach-
ing annual Hopkins County Unit-
ed Fund campaign.
W. A. Carothers, United Fund
chairman, urged county residents
to give the big, ten-agency drive
the support, time and energy
needed for success.
Planning Big Things
“We are planning great
things,",” he declared. “We have
to put it over. That is all there is
to it. Our goal is $29,000.
Carothers said a fair figure for
a United Fund gift can be de-
termined by adding together con-
tributions formerly made individ-
ually to participating agencies
and increasing the sum by ten per
cent.
A change in the kickoff date
for the UF general campaign to
Wednesday, Oct. 16, also was an-
nounced Thursday.
The date was advanced one day
because of a previous conflict
with the annual Chamber oLCom-
merce Banquet the night of Oct.
13. The advance gifts drive will
start Sept. 30, as planned.
Psinciple* Discussed
Lange described
FRED LANGE
Colton Pickers
Escape Injury
In Collision
effort for meeting the needs rep-
resented by the United Fund as a
prerequisite of a full and com-
plete community and aa a source
of civic pride in relations with in-
dustry and with new residents.
He declared a sense ef concern
for the responsibility of meeting
the requirement* of the needy is
a vital expression of Christian
principle and alao a necessity in
the struggle against communism.
“Disease and hunger come to
all men,** he mid. “For the sake
of and the glory of God we must
answer it because we are his fol-
lowers.”
Mr. Lange was introduced by
Weber Fouts, vice president of
the United Fund, Don Rawlings
was program chairman.
Robert Forte presided at the
meeting, which was attended by a
group of United Fund leaders.
Phil Hansen was introduced .by
Jack Gibson aa honorary student
Rotarian for September.
A truck load of cotton pickers
and a Sulphur Springs Negro buy
escaped injuries in a truck-car
crash at 6:10 p. m. Wednesday
— . approximately five miles west of
successful Brashear on Highway .67.
Prepares io Flee
Fury of Storm
Cameron, La., Sept. 4 UH —
Cameron Parish, the main target
of a deadly hurricane 15 months
ago, prepared for possible evacu-
ation as a tropical storm threat-
ened the Gulf coaat again.
Sheriff O. B. Carter said
“We're prepared to evacuate any
minute. 8chool classes have been
cancelled. Wa have a fleet of
trucks standing by.”
Hurricane Audrey left more
than 600 dead or missing in Cam-
eron Parish last year.
Damage was said to be consid-
erable to a 1956 Ponttae* driven
by Clifford Ray Hall of Sulphur
Springs. Twenty dollars in dam-
age was o*tiri*tod to the Interna-
tional truck, 4
Deputy Sheriffs Doil Deaton
and O. C. Earle said the accident-
occurred as both vehicles were
headed west.- Hall passed the
truck and pulled off the road.
Before the truck could pass, he
backed across the road and his
auto was slammed into by the
truck.
The truck driver was not im-
mediately identified. He was haul-
ing a load of Hopkins County
Nigroes to McRIhhdy to pick cot-
ton.
Shreveport Group
To Visit Here
September 16th
The annual good will tour of
the Shreveport Chamber of Com-
merce will visit Sulphur Springs
and Hopkins County on Tuesday,
Sept. 16, according to an an-
nouncement by Jim Anderson,
manager of the Hopkins County
Chamber of Commerce.
The Shreveport Chamber of
Commerce representatives will
host approximately 20 Sulphur
Springs business men, city and
C-of-C officials at a luncheon at
the Louisiana* and Arkansas Rail-
road loading shed.
Immediately following the
luncheon, the public is urged to
extend a genuine Hopkins Coun-
ty welcome to the Shreveport peo-
ple. Ralph Henderson, commercial
manager of the Shreveport Cham-
ber of Commerce, has requested
that the color charts of the beau-
tification program of Sulphur
Springs be placed on display.
The tour includes 160 Shreve-
port business men and C-of-C of-
ficials traveling in a ten-car spec-
ial train.
Travis A. Wh:‘'*//president of
the ShreveportJJ iibcr of Com-
merce, and v James C. Gard-
ner of Sh- \ ft, will participate
FISHERMEN — President Eisenhower and Hlg~ rtofT^friend,
George Allen, right, are vhown aft 6n their fishing boat With their
fiahing gear close at hand just before taking off for a deep sea
fishing trip off Block Island, R. I. (NEA)
in the t<
—
Don’t Fuss
- Elizabeth, N. J., Sept. -4 tft—
A clerk at the traffic violations
dock in Elizabeth resorted to
pootry to hnelz complaining
motorists at his window.
He posted this verse over the
window:
The ticket* ware izzaod
But not by as.
So dew’t com#- boro ‘- -1'
And fume end fuzz.
High Waves Pound
Texas Coast Area
DISCONTINUE LOCAL PURCHASES
3 Dallas Processors
Balk at Milk Hikes
Us&tlg *
J, O. Woodman of Arlington, I cision to discontinue purchasing
general manager of the North milk from local producers,” he
■4*
Texas Producers Association, said
Thursday only four companies
among the 26 processor plants
supplied by the organization have
not agreed to the milk price in-
crease announced this week by
the North Texas dairymen.
Negotiation* are continuing
with one of the four concerns,
Foremost Dairies.
Woodman said three Dallas
processors no longer are buying
milk from the association but
are hauling in supplies from as
far away as the Chicago milkshed.
. "Wa regret that Metzger, Bord-
en and Cabell have made the de-
h— High waves and tides pounded
the Texas coast Thursday in ad-
vance of a tropical storm in the
Gulf of Mexico.
Weather observers were keep-
ing a close watch.on the disturb-
ance, which originally was Hurri-
cane Ella but which had lost its
top classification in its trip across
Cuba and through the Florida
straits.
The New Orleans Weather Bu-
reau reported at 2 p. m. that the
large, poariy defined center of
the storm was about 460 miles
south of Pascagoula, Miss., a n rf
was moving west-northwest at 10
to 12 miles an hour.
“Weather Bureau radars along
the central Gulf Coast indicate
Ike Warns Red China
Hell Defend Formosa
With American Forces
Drunk in Car
Charge Filed
In City Court
Night patrolmen of the^.Sul-
phur Springs Police Department:
reported a lot of activity over-1
night Wednesday. R a y m oiid
Horner and Gerald Morris were i
on duty.
Two Paris residents, a man and
a woman, were arrested at 2 a. m.
Thursday on respective charges of j
drunk in a car and drunkenness.
The man paid a $50 fine on the
first charge and the woman paid a
$15.50 fine on the second count.
A Sulphur Springs man paid a
$20 fine for affray and disturb-
ance and a second Sulphur
Springs man posted a $17.50 cash
bond on a charge of disturbance
and abusive language in a priv-
ate home.
Jimmy Goldsmith
Due to Receive
High FFA Degree
Jimmy Don Goldsmith of North
Hopkins is one of 34 Future
Farmers of America members
fronn Texas scheduled to receive
that RHlzr’ heavy squalls are oc-
curring hear the coast,” the bulle-
tin related. “Burwood, Louisiana,
at the mouth of the Mississippi .. ....... . ..
River reported several squalls ^ org.n.z.t.on s h.ghest degree
with gusty Winds 40 to 50 mph ; f Farmer, at
this morning. Tide, are generally **™*&«n+
around two feet above normal J*®" ™A ln K*nsas ^ Mo”
Oct. 13-16,
FOB SCHOOL STUDENTS
Improvements Added
To GuaqLJnlML.
declared.
Terming the aituation unreal-
istic, Woodman said the three pro-
cessors refused to pay the 30-cent
per hundredweight i n c r e a a e
sought by the dairy men‘a associa-
tion but are paying considerably
more than (hat amount for the
imported milk.
“We do not believe their stand
is really a question of cheaper
milk,” he said. “We know quality
is not involved. We feel the issue
has been raised because the dairy
farmers of this area have had the
audacity to stand up and ask II
cents a quart — two-thirds of a
cent more — for the milk they
produce.”
The association is asking a 30-
cent a hundredweight increase ov-
er the minimum price posted un-
der the federal marketing order.
The federal minimum price was
$5.60 for August. The September
price has not yet been announced.
Orbin EUedge
Added to City
Police Force
sites
along the southeast Louisiana
coast.
May Regain Strength
“Ella is expected to continue
moving west-northwest at about
the same rate for the next 12
hours, and conditions are still fa-
vorable for it to regain hurricane
force within the next 24 hours.”
Small craft were urged to re-
main in port from Port O’Con-
nor, Texas, to Pensacola, Fla.
Winds in the storm were de-
scribed as from 40 to 70 miles
an hour. Hurricane strength is
classed as 75 miles or stronger. |
Tides were running about a
foot above normal at Galveston,'!
wheite a s'hri mp boat filum |
The 34 Texans, including Gold-
smith, have been recommended
for the award. The recommenda-
tions were approved by the na-
tional headquarters in Washing-
ton, D. C. This approval is tan-
tamount to election by the dele-
gates.
Football Kick
Snaps Power Line,
Causing Alarm
Pdlh> Chief Vaughn I)eaton «'«ves and the strong tide. Three
crewmen were rescued.
has announced the employment of
Orbin EUedge as a new night pa-
trolman for the Sulphur Springs
Police Department, .......
EUedge will begin work on Sent.
15. Hq will walk
downtown io* STwT *“. *
and vi-indows in an effort to curb ®®*rch was bem« conduct‘
the rash of recent burglaries.
The Sulphur Springs Fire De-
Brownsville smashed to pieces partment reported no damage as
against the port’s south jetties the- result of a fire call at 5:55
last night while battling high p. m. Wednesday at the home of
Mrs. Lillian Boucher at 225 Col-
lege Street.
Fireman Tom Clifton said the
alarm was turned in after the im-
pact of a football had broken a
power line near the huu.«e. I'hr
broken line fell on the house, but
there were no flames.
John ami Jim Hagen, twin
Boat Skipper Lost
John Calvert, 34-year-oJd fish-
■ i«g hoist ridppwr fnim Pen**, »ln.
Fla., fell from his craft during
rough seas 11 miles south of Gal-
| Newport, R. I., Sept. 4
I (AP)—President Eisenhow-
er h«s given a solemn warn-
ing to Red China. The Presi-
dent declared today he will
not hesitate to commit Unit-
ed States armed forces to defend
the offshore islands held by the
Chinese Nationalists if he finds
this necessary to the security of
Formosa.
Sen etary of State Dulles gave
the President’s position in a state-
I ment authoiized by Eisenhower.
The statement was issued at the
summer White House at Newport
after Eisenhower and Dulles had
conferred for an hour and 46
minutes.
Dulles said Eisenhower will not
hesitate to conclude that Formosa
is threatened in the event of at-
tack of Quemoy, Matsu or other
offshore islands. The Secretary of
State emphasized that the Presi-
dent has not yet made any such
finding under the authority con-
gress gave him in 1955.
Said Dulles: “Presidential de-
termination, if made, would b«
followed by action both timely
and effective.”
Here are some of the highlight
quotes from Secretary ,of State
Dulles in outlining the position of
the United States today in regard
to the situation in the Far Eastt
“Neither Taiwan (Formosa)
nor the islands of Quemoy and
Matsu have ever been under tha
authority of the Chinese Com-
munists. Since the end of the
2nd World War, a period of over
13 years, they have continuously
been under the authority of Free
China, that is. the Republic of
China.” .
“The United States is bound
by treaty to help to defend Tai-
wan (Formosa) from armed at-
tack and the President is author-
ized by joint resolution of tha
congress to employ armed force*
of the United States for the se-
curing and protection of related
positions such as Quemoy and
Matsu. Any attempt on the part
of the Chinese Communists now
to seize these positions or any
of them would be a crude viola-
ported Wednesday a» -9*560 (pet. tion of the principles upon which
The Raines is an effort to *eS-'!'W0,¥ordier>. based, namely that
tend southwest the Smaekover no country should use armed force
production discovered last March j selze new territory,
in the Gfelling Estate'. No. 1 O. “DesPlte- however, what the
M. UttMaa Communist* *ay, and *®
Bluff. Formations are running ^ar *1Mve done, >t ,s n°t .v5l £er’
lower than in the Bassham. taln that the,r Purpose is m fact
_______ j to make an all-out effort to con-
quer by force Taiwan (Formosa)
; and the offshore islands. Neither
| is it apparent that such efforts
1 as are being made, or may be
: made, cannot be contained by
the courageous, and purely de-
j'-fenwiva,--- -effort* of the forces of
I the Republic of C hina, with such
substantial logistical support
HF.L.P EN ROUTE—Vice Adm.
Roland Smoot, senior Ameri-
can commander on Formosa,
said» “American help” was en
route to the Nationalist Chin-
ese to overiome the Chinese
Communist attacks on offshore
islands of Quemoy. Smoot do-
declined to specify the nature
of the 'felp. (NEA)
Raines Wildcat
Nearing Contract
Depth Thursday
The Dick Scott No. 1 Raines
wildcat Smaekover oil test north-
east -of®Sulphur Springs wajs re-
(wrtert drilling at 9,422 feet
Thrsday morning.
Ttie test was nearing the depth
at which core drilling operations
had been planned. This was re-
Hammarskjold
Confers With
Arab Leaders
Airplanes Moved
From Mission
Mrs. J. A. Dial,
Nairn Citizen,
Claimed by Death
Mr*. J. A. Dial, 74, a lifetime
resident of Sulphur Springe, died
at 11:60 p. m. Wednesday at her
*0« Gilmer 8treet residence fol-
lowing an extended illness.
Funeral service* will be held nt
10 a. m. Friday nt the Tnpp Fu-
neral Home chapel with Dr. Ed-
win J. Maya, poztor of First Bap-
tist Church, in charge. Interment
will be in the City Cemetery, j
Mrs. Dial was the former Grjet-
then Smith, the daughter of Mr.
(Continued on Pago Eight)
Installation of several improve-
ment* in the National Guard arm-
ory building, which is being used
ns a temporary location for aix
***** 4kW1 riaaaroozn.,
wa* announced Thuraday by Jack
F. Gibson, superin t a h d en t of
schools.
Evaporative typo coolor* have
been placed in t h e two second-
floor classroom* to relieve the ef-
fect* of unusually high prevail-
Forgers Draw
Prison Terms,
From Judge—
inf temperatures.
Large
fans are used in the four
ground-floor classroom*, which do
not get so hot.
Window ladder* alao are being
provided for the up*tain room*
to serve as fire escape*.
A second electrically refriger-
ated drinking fountain was; plac-
ed in the building after the first
unit appeared inadequate to meet
the demand.
A man and a woman were pick-
ed up hero Thuraday morning by
Rod River County officers to (ui-
*wer to forgery charge* in Clarks-
ville.
The couple, Mr. and Mr*. W. A.
Doneghey, was in custody of Hop-
kin* County officers for forgery
counts here. Judge L. L. Bowman
heard three separate forgery
chees against the pair in Graen-
ville Wednesday and sentenced
h of them to three two-year
prison terms. The sentences will
be served concurrently.
Deputy Sheriff Joe Kellum, Jr.
(Continued on Page Eight)
A 26-milc wind was blowing at
Galveston today. Wind and tides
are expected to increase along the
Texas coast tonight and Friday.
Hot weather and clear skies
prevailed over moat of the rest of
Texas.
j Temperatures moved into the
Miss, Sept. 4 (C—Spokesmen at middle 90's in Sulphur Springs
Moorg Air Force Base near Mis- again after falling to a cool 66
sion in the lower Rio Grande Val- degrees early this morning. Wed-
ley said 117 aircraft would be nesday’s high reading was 93.
moved to James Connelly Air! Ralph Hill, local weather ob-
Force base in Waco this after-j server, reported the temperature
noon because of the tropical • at noon as 90 degrees, relative
storm in the Gulf of Mexico. The humidity as 40 per cent and baro-
2 ~Mn~~ ttW nm~~w is ’*n1riitl]r i as,.30.02 inches
'* precautionary meagre.” and steady, -
Red China Posts
Keep-Out Warning
as
Cairo. Sept. 4 IP — U. N. Sec- the United States is providing.”
grandsons of Mrs. Boucher, were j ,-ctary-General Dag Hammarskjold I “The President has not yet
playing football in the yard when mct f„r 3 hours today with For- made any finding that the em-
a punt went astray to lueak the eign Minister Mahmoud Fswzi of * ployroent of the armed forces of
wire. Both lads are out for the the United Arab Republic on his the United States is required or
Junior High grid squad after fine i<idle East peace mission. To- appropriate in insuring the de-
showings with Houston Element- I nj(fht Hammarskjold meets Presi- fense of Formosa. The President
ary School last year. dent Nasser at dinner. j would not. however, hesitate to
Eleven firemen were on duty Meanwhile, the Cairo press is '»*ke such a finding if he judged
onty 15 minutes. They included mir fit'r evacuation of U. S. that the circumstances made this
Tom ( lifton. A. It. MatUn, L. H. un(j British troop* from the Mid- necessary.”
Penson, Frank Jobe, Billy Mar-1 wt_ (Continued on Page Eight)
tin, H. W. Miller, Horace Miller.. -.....-.....................
Durwoud Peugh, Roby Kagan, Bill
O. B. FISHER OF PARIS
Sachs and WoodroW Wilson.
Mrs. Barnes, 76,
Dies Wednesday;
Riles on Friday
Local School Board
Employs Attorney
.w--
t'rt-v -'h-'ir' .<
Employment of O. B. Fisher,
Paris lawyer, as attorney for the
.....Mrs. Walter.....W. Barn**. 7$. .......... .
resident of Sulphur Springs for Sulphur Springs Independent
41 years, died at 11:35 p.m. Wed-. School District, was announced
nesday st the family residence at Thursday by a school board
1209 Fisbot Street. spokesman.
The Rev. Roy Martin, pastor j Tiustees of the district receni-
of the First Christian Church, will ly were named defendants in a
officiate at funeral services set, district court action brought by
for 2 p.m. Friday at the Tapp a group of property owners ask-
The Peiping regime extended is"raying'“keep" out”"t<Tany^US |fnn«r^ _**“» Bt,rW ^ U>r * ' injunction :
A ! ordering a new election on No important trt*»p*naur*
Tokyo, Sept. I IP—Community must have permission to travel In
China posted **_ new keep-out the new area. As Associated Press
warning to the United States to- correspondent Robert Tuckman
day. put it, the Red Chinese regime
WEATHER
DALLAS-rOftT WOITTH P > r I I y
tkuily and warm t£ia a/trrmoa ttrOfMffe
Kndtty High both days in tl>e 4* w Rb*.
Lew tonight in? tha middle "tha. Winda
•outhnljr 10 t*’ ?0 rniLa per hour.
£A«T TEXAS A frw mualto near tha
co**t this a(U rm.cn htx ■ mmg mote num-
its territorial waters to 12 miles ships or planes that might be sent b* in the ( ity Cemetery.
Mrs. Barnes was the former $400,000 in
Della Eugene Johnson, the daugh- have been authorized
ter of Mr. and Mrs. A. J. F. issued.
offshore. The extension takes in to help the Nationalist Chinese
Quemoy and Matsu, which lie on Formosa and garrisons on the
close to the Red China mainland, offshore islands,
and Formosa and the Chinese Na- Meanwhile, the US continued
tionaJista’ Pescadores Islands. to bolster it* forces on Formosa.
The official New China News U8 authorities announced the ar-
Agency said in a broadcast that rival of more Sabre jets hut did the First Christian Church,
all foreign ships and aircraft not say how many. j (Continued on Page Eight)
/ ii. , t/ ... / * r is*
■>
schoyf bonds that1 chante.
but not f SOUTH CENTRAL TEXAS
Johnson of Alabama. She married
Mr. Barnes on Dev. 19, 1901, at
Kaufman. She was a member of
The bonds in question repre-
sent the bulk of a $650,000 issue
approves! in a special school elec-
tion last May to finance a new
high school building.
Parti*
I cUruriy with a few sbowgra mainly n<*«r
the a<Mt. No important temperature
thange __ \
NORTH CENTRAL TEXAS \ Partly
rkody threuvh Friday wrth no Ifcnportant
temperature ihangr
WEST TEXAS Partly cloudy through
EiMiay with a few mostly niiffct time
thiia<!« i 4**ua*'-. Nn iiM|*t*«tani umpfalMra
change. 'y
'
_z_
■
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22
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Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 80, No. 218, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 4, 1958, newspaper, September 4, 1958; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth827292/m1/1/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.