The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 84, No. 45, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 22, 1962 Page: 2 of 12
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Take
Advantage
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Offer Now!
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Section 1 THE DAILY NEWS-TELEGRAM Thursday, February 22, 1962
1
* !««;.» »\t 'f it I % h* • -.,L* » •"♦ Vi\f'M~Tr^
i-Personals-:-
» i'>r t •.« fv.t; i-Mt -vf lit.
Mrs. Myra Wright was a bus-
iness visitor in Linden today.
Mrs. Dan Holder is confined
to her home on Houston Street
with the flu.
Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Ranjs-
dale of Dallas visited her sis-
ter, Mrs. Roy Notes Wednes-
day.
Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Pratt,
Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Ashcroft
and Mr. and Mrs. Howard Hicks
visited in Dallas today.
jKTl
%
Food for Americans
Fricassee Liborio I* a
‘Castanet Circuit' Special
Wilburn Long is reported to
be slowly improving at his
home, 818 Cranford Street,
where he was removed from
Baylor Hospital during the
week-end. He underwent sur-
gery there several days ago.
Jim Brice was in Dallas!----— ■
Tuesday to undergo a medical! Mrs. Mackey Thompson of
checkup folowing major surg- Dallas, the former ina Adams,
cry which he had at Gaston
Episcopal Hospital s e v e Pa 1
weeks ago. He was aceompani-
By Gaynor Maddox Newspaper Entarpriia Aim
New York has the largest Spanish-speaking community in
North America. That explains the “Castanet Circuit,” in the-
heart of the city, composed of many Latin restaurants, serving
arroz con polio, paella and other specialties of Spain, Cuba,
South and Central America.
“Liborio,” one of the most popular restaurants, serves ah
outstanding chicken dish to the lilt of guitars. You'll ejoy it.
CHICKEN FRICASSE LlBOfUO (Serves 6)
1 heavy stewing chicken (about 4 pounds, cut up); Salt
and pepper; t/2 cup salad oil; Juice of 1 lemon; 1 garlic clove,
minced; 2/8 cup finely chopped onions; 3 tomatoes, peeled and
diced 1 1/2 cups giblet broth; 1/4 cup whole stuffed olives
(small one); 1/8 cup light seedless raisins.
Wash chicken; sprinkle with salt and pepper. Brown slow-
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Loye
Adams, has been transferred
from a Greenville hospital to ly on all sides in salad oil Remove chicken. Add lemon juke,
ed to Dallas by his wife and Baylor Hospital in Dallas forj garlic and onion to o« left in frying pan; cook until lightly
his sons, RoUie and Claude surgery- for injuries that she browncd. Return chicken to pan. Add tomatoes and giblet broth
Brtce. . 'received in a traffic accident
mm
*
. .
| Young Widow
Asks Damages
Fort Worth, Feb. 22 <B -
fha wife of g .National Guards-
man killed fei * car-truck acci-
dent in Ggapavino last Novem-
ber file# a $320,400 damage
suit at Fort Worth today.
She ia Mrs, Linda Owen.
Her 19-year-old husband,
Royce H. Owen, died of bums
and injuries received in the
crash. Mrs. Owen is seeking
the damages for herself, her
last Saturday. Her sister, Mrs.
Edith Griggs has been remov-
Cover tightly; simmer over low heat about 11/2 hours or until
chicken is tender. Stir in sherry or water, olives and raisins,
ed to her Tome in Dallas from'Cover; simmer 15 minutes longer.
the Greenville hospital where! Note: For giblet broth, simmer giblets, neck and bony
Mrs. W. J. Harris was host-
ess to the Thursday Luncheon
Club today. Lunch was served
at Sellers Cafeteria with games she was treated for injuries parts of chicken in about 2 cups of water to make rich broth.
of bridge in her home on North
Davis Street
suffered in the same accident
Mrs. Joe N. Chapman is re-
ported improved from several j Springs today,
days illness with the flu.
Charles Young of Dallas was
a business visitor in Sulphur
Mrs. Ruby Miller has resum-
ed her position with J. C. Peh-
ney Store after several days
illness in her home on Weaver
1 Drive. -.
Mr. and Mrs- J- L. Myrick
were able to return to their
offices today after being de-
tained at home by illness on
Wednesday.
Mrs. C. P. Barnett and son,
Robert .Duncan, of Midland
were here Wednesday to attend
the funeral of her unde, John
Westbrook in Omaha. They are
spending a few days with her J All Texans but two voting on
mother, Mrs. A. R. Westbrook the measure balloted yesterday
Texans Almost
Solid Against
Urban Affairs
V
Washington, Feb. 22 (A
and family.
in the House of Representa-
tives to reject President Ken-
M„. I.. E. G*e ™ in Om.H. crc.te . de-
W ednesday to attend the fu- partment or urban affairs and u0USt0n official:
ally opening the 80th Houston*
Livestock Show, and Rodeo.
Heading the long procession
of horseback riders, wagons and
bands were Governor Daniel
and the guest star, Rex Allen.
Lassie, the canine star of
television and the movies, rode
in a bright convertible. Lassie
also will be a guest star for the
19 rodeo performances that
will be held during the 12-day
exposition.
ne'ral of John Westbrook.
Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Garri- *dr- ttnd ^rs- Charles West-
son and Mrs. Mary E. Waits,!>rook. a”d ,dau£thfr’ Kathy-
were visitors in Dallas today.
Johnny Green and daughter,
Sueann were visitors in Paris
today.
were in Omaha Wednesday to
attend the funeral of his uncle,
John Westbrook.
housing.
The two exceptions, voting
for the President's proposal,
were representative Henry
Gonzalez of San Antonio and
Representative Albert Thomas
of Houston, both Democrats.
Voting against the presi-
Paul Glenn Westbrook has | dent’s proposal were Repre-
- ! returned to Denton, where he
Allen Rowe of Dallas is i is a student at NTSU, after
spending a few days here vis-j being here to attend the fu-
iting his grandparents, Mr. and; neral of his uncle John West-
Mrs. Avon Rowe. brook in Omaha Wednesday.
Mrs. Billy Tol$on will be
hostess to the Dial Study Club
tonight in her home, 114 Har-j
red Drive.
Mrs. Dick Caldwell was has- :
less to the Thursday Bridge;
dub today in her home on Gil-
mer Street
Hospital
News
Mrs. Clara Armstrong, moth-
er of Mrs. N. D. Gaflord,' has
been admitted to Baylor Hos-
pital in Dallas for medical treat-
ment. Her room number is 204.
Mrs. John Keeney attended
the funeral of John R. West-
brook in Omaha Wednesday.
Ronald Ashby, little son of
Mr. and Mrs. Billy Ashby, is
reported to be doing nicely at
Mother France^ Hospital in Ty-
ler where he is ill with pneu-
monia.
Stores Report
Increased Sales
(Hospital V Ur ting Hour*)
3 to 4 and 7 to 8 p. m.
Dallas, Feb. 22 (B—Sales of
reporting T e x a s department
stores increased eight per cent
during last week's fine weather
compared witt the year before.
The Federal Reserve Bank at
‘Dallas said Houston and San
Antonio sales were up 14 per
cent, Dallas seven, Fort Worth
four and El Paso department
stores sales up two per cent.
Admitted
Mrs. L. O. Moseley, Route
Two, Cumby, medical.
Mrs. Ken Hinton, city, med-
ical.
Mrs. James Miller, Star
Route, medical.
Mrs. F. A. Wieneskie, Com-
merce, surgical.
Mrs. Jim Kirby, 612 Lamar,
medical.
DiamUeed
Jim Putman, Route Four,
medical.
Mrs. Allen Stubbs, Route
Five, medical.
Larry Goodson, 200 Put-
man, medical.
Mrs. Paul Hudson, Route
One, medical.
Mrs. Rob Bunch, Route Five,
medical.
Mrs. David W. Davis and son
to Route Three.
Joe Joslin, Route Three,
medical.
Zonner Petty, Route Three,
medical.
E. R. Kennedy, 627 Gilmer,
sentative Bruce Alger of Dal-
las, a Republican, and the fol-
lowing Democrats:
Representatives Lindley
Beckworth of Gilmer, Jack
Brooks of Beaumont, Omar
Burleson of Anson, Bob Casey
of Houston, John Dowdy of
Athens, Clark Fisher of San
Angelo, Joe Kilgore of McAl-
len, George Mahon of Colora-
do city, Wright Patman of
Texarkana, W. R. Poage of;
Waco, Graham Purcell of
Wichita Falls, Ray Roberts of j
McKinney, Walter Rogers of
Pampa, J. T. Rutherford of j
Odessa, Olin E. Teague of Col-
lege Station, Clark Thompson
of Galveston, Homer Thorn-
berry of Austin, Jim Wright of
Fort Worth and John Young
of Corpus Christi.
Houston officials decided to
hold the traditional parade a
day later so it could coincide
with George Wathington’s
birthday.
ABANDON CARS—Motorists near Marshalltown, Iowa, aban-
doned their cars and sought shelter in nearby farm homes
after a snowstorm dumped up to 10 inches of snow in the
area. Weather reports indicate that more snow can be ex-
pected throughout the state. (NEA Telephoto)
Kennedy's Bid
For Cooperation
Given Chance
Ticker Tape
Parade Set
For Astronaut
New York, Feb. 22 IB— New
York’s Mayor Robert Wagner
says the city will honor astron-
aut John Glenn with a tradi
tiortd ticker tape parade. The
date is March 1.
Collapse Traps
One in Building
Abel Spy Case
Finally Reaches
Russian Paper
Moscow, Feb. 22 (AS — For
the first time, the Rudolph
Abel spy case has been men-
tioned in public in the Soviet
Union. The reference occurred
today, when Colonel Rudolph
Abel’s wife and daughter
thanked the Soviet government
for arranging the recent re-
lease of Abel from an Ameri-
can prison. The letter was pub-
lished in the government news-
Philadelphia, Feb. 22 IB.
The two top floors of » ^** |
story furniture company build- Abel was reWd in ex.
mg collapsed today, «mfingch for the release of ^
three employes to hospitals, a j^ot Francift G PoweM.
fourth was feared trapped in j___
the debris.
Try a Want Ad for Results
Houston Opens
Livestock Show
Houston, Feb. 22 IB — More
than 13,000 persons rode and
walked along a six-mile route
on slippery streets yt Houston
this morning in a parade form-
Masonic
Notice
Practice Friday night at
7:30, Sulphur Springs lodge
No. 221, AF & AM. — W.D.
Lemon, WM; Joe Pogue, sec.
Try a Want Ad for Results
Washington, Feb. 22 IB —
The view in Washington is that
President Kennedy’s new bid
for Russian cooperation in
space has some chance of sep-
arating the space race from the
arms contest. Kennedy’s latest
move was a note -to Premier
Khrushchev calling for a U.S.
Soviet meeting at a very early
date to discuss space coopera-
tion. That came only a few
hours after Khrushchev sug-
gested that the two nations
work together on space pro-
jects.
However, Associated Press
diplomatic affaire writer John
Hightower says the chance of
separating (he space and arms
races is not very great. And
he adds: “Nor is the time to
get results very long.”
Hightower says one discour-
aging factor is failure during
the past year to reach accords
on any of the pressing issues
right here on earth. On the oth-
er hand, Hightower says the
space problem is different in
one respect at least. He said,
“Although military boosters
and military men have figured
in space achievements to date,
space is not yet committed by
either side to warlike purposes,
so far as anyone in Washington
can say.”
In his reply to Khrushchev,
Kennedy said he is instructing
his officials to prepare what he
described as “new and concrete
proposals for immediate pro-
jects of common action.”
Administra t i o n informants
say these probably will take
the form of specific programs
to reach objectives already set
forth by Kennedy in earlier
statements. For instance, the
use of satellites for communi-
cations purposes and for weath-
er research and forecasting.
day. Key speaker at a presi-
dent’s luncheon Sunday will be
the U.S. ambassador to Mexi-
co, Thomas Mann. His aides
say Mann will deliver an “im-
portant policy speech.”
On the program for today,
the actual birthday of George
Washington, are band concerts
late in the afternoon followed
by a Mexican village fiesta.
Fiestas, picnics, parades,
dances and speeches mark the
remaining three days of the
celebration.
Governor Daniel will repre-
sent Texas when state officiate
and Mexican officials meet in
the middle of the international
bridge Saturday. This is a tra-
ditional symbol of friendly re-
lations between the citizens of
Texas and Mexico,
Power Survey
Nay Develop
Lower Rates
the basis of local or regional
interests, and without refer-
ence to any national standard,
are accepted as adequate to
serve the national interest”
The survey is planned to
suggest in broad outline how
the nation’s 8,600 electric sys-
tems can key their future ex-
pansion plans to a national
scale rather than on a local or
area baste.
It would provide for private,
municipal, cooperative, state
and federal electric systems to
coordinate their systems
through extra high - voltage
transmission lines, Large, ef-
ficient steam power plants,
hydroelectric generating ca-
pacity, and nuclear and other
new power sources would be
infant son and her husband’
parents. . , .
Named as defendants are
the Fort Worth Pipe end Sup-
ply Company and a truck driv-
er for the firm, Robert Ray
Mrs. Owen’s petition claims
Lane was negligent in opera-
tion of the truck. The suit is
in I7tb District Court,
Morale Good
Among Sailors
Bethesda, Feb. 22 IB—Mo-
rale reportedly remains good
among 100 Navy men spending
two weeks in an underground
fallout shelter at Bethesda. But
doctors have decided to add
morning and evening exercise
periods to their daily routine.
The men are on a low calorie
diet, but with, little else to de,
the exercises will help them
work off excess energy.
used as they became available, truck.
Houston Nan
Crushed to Death
Houston, Feb. 22 IB—A fork-
lift at a Houtson supermarket
warehouse went out of control
yesterday and crushed 37-year-
old Arthur E. Blair to death.
Blair was pinned against a
n CONSOLE BY
WESTINGHOUSE
Laredo Honors
Washington
Laredo, Feb. 22 IB —• Fiesta
is in the air as Laredo’s 65th
annual celebration honoring
George Washington’s birthday
moves into full swing.
And there is to be no letup
in the festivities through Sun- company
Washington, Feb. 22 IB —
Chairman Joseph Swidler says
the Federal Power Commis-
sion’s proposed national power
survey could lead to an abund-
ant supply of electricity at
lower rates fdr tlm entire
country.
Swidler makes his comment
in a speech prepared for the
Woman’s National Democratic
Club in Washington.
Funds for such a survey
were requested in the budget
President Kennedy sent con-
gress last month.
In his prepared
Swidler says:
“The purpose of our survey
is to point up the large savings
that are available if individual
companies can draw on a fully
interconnected and coordinat-
ed system of power supply,
that takes full advantage of
the economies of the new tech-
nology of the power industry,
and low cost fuel sources.
“There would be many ad-
vantages to the national co-
ordination of our power sys-
tems in addition to a lowering
of power costs.”
Swidler says that as far as
he knows, the United States te
the only industrially developed
country in the world where
there is no national plan or
goal for power system inter-
connections.
He says this is the only
country where “Company-by-
decisions, made on
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Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 84, No. 45, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 22, 1962, newspaper, February 22, 1962; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth827409/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.