The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 83, No. 285, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 5, 1961 Page: 3 of 10
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THU DAILY NEWS-TELEGRAM Section 1 — S
Tuesday, December 5, 1961
Pinocchio’s Christmas
MSAK WHILE, JlW’.MV
CFICKST WU*«ieS AFTER ;
HIS CHARGE,., In, in.....Mi r
POST *>lMV
' A W06UE AIM, MV X
SOV^IJT VOU'Rf
„ TOO TAUWTEO to
\ WASTE VOUR >
time ud school'L
tM LAO, THERE'S A
"T\ PAR EASIER ROAD
TO FAME ! __
J.WOKTHINSTOM FOULFELLOW,
RASCAL.lv SCHEMER, INTERCEPTS
’ PtNOGCMIO!
COME BACK!
PiNlQCCHlO ON HlS WAV TO SCHOOL
TO HELP
VOUR FATHER
c WITH THE <
7 CHRISTMAS
\ TtTMs! J
t» - TiRagB8!F“ Mi s. 3oe’~Kar-
here With Mr. and Mrs. Byron ney, have retBrned from a
Sailders- visit at Niagara; Frflls, N. Y„
„ 1 T71 tI, . ,4 «"d a visit with Mr. and Mrs.
1 an,f M;s- r\ ' ' Arthur Horn in' Chicago and
r'W (3CWJS Tn STUOV
HARD'AMP MAKE ^
W FATHER PROUO!)
Mrs. Fred .Jackson and Mrs.
Skfllman Bird have returned
lrotn Kyle where; they went for
Bill Thornton left Tuesday
nwrrting for Camp Chaffee,
Mk,j where he has been called
tractive diity with the1!!. S.
Af-my.
the COth wedding anniversary
and open house for'Mr. and
Mrs. E. J. Krotzmeier, parents
of 'Mrs. Bird, hoid on Surtday.
! Former Couple
To Observe
Golden Wedding
contractor. Mrs. Hill was form-; _
eriy Miss Lona Hazlewood of
Their c h 1 Id r e n are Mrs. . \
Frank Ivey, 6819 Woodard
Street, Horace W. Hill, '4420 j
Cooper Drive and Miss Velma 1
Hiil of 7019 Wofford ail of
Dallas. One gi anddaughter, \
Mrs. Paul Mark well lives in!
Phoenix, Ariz. Two members of the Texas
Highway Depaitment of Public
EGOTIST! Safety presented a program on
Miami UP) — Sign painted on I a shooting exposition at the
a jalopy seen driving down a I Lions Club meeting today held
Miami street: I in the Woman's Club Building.
“Cuba — No. U. S. —No j They were Lt. Edd Majors,
Russia — No. Me — Si." head of the Tyler district, and
Patrolman George L. Reese,
! stationed in Canton.
Pistols used in the program
i were the 22 calibre, 38 calibre
i and the .157 magnum, the type
Mr.iaml Mrs, J. L. Myriek re-
turned from a business trip
to Shreveport and Dallas.
M r s. Marjorie Melton of
Mineola was the weekend guest
of Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Scott
and family.
usee by the highway patrolmen.
Dr. John Weddle was pro-
gram chairman.
J. W. Btanscome, president,
presided. The invocation was
spoken by the Rev. Felix Kin-
Mr. and-Mrs. H. C. MoGrede
will visit in Longview Wednes-
day.
Mrs. Joe Clifton is confin-
ed to her home on South
Moore Avenue by illness.
Mr. and Mrs. James Harve
Hill, 7019 Wofford Street in
Dallas, will celebrate their 60th
wedding anniversary on Dec.
GETTING READY —‘Texas Western College co-ed, Ann
Spinks, puts in some overtime preparing for the Dec. 30
Sun BoWl-game in El Paso between Wichita (Kan.) Uni-
versity and-Villanoua. Ann hopes to have the ‘'Sun Bowl”
well imprinted on her bpek by the tanning rays of a warm
southwestern sun before gape time, Ann is not a twin; she
is smiling happily from a mirror. (NEA Telephoto)
Drue A. Connally is report-
ed to be doing uicely at the
home of relatives in Dallas,
where he has been dismissed
following redent? major surgery
at Baylor Hospital.
Miss Ruth Minter is report-
ed to be improving nicely I at
Memorial Hospital, Where she
has been a medical patient for
several weeks.'
Mr. and Hvn. L- C, Hill and
family of McGregor and Mr.
and Mrs. Wayne Jones and fam-
ily of Ridgeway visited Mrs.
Dollie Jones- and Cleo Satur-
da ami Sunday.
Mrs. H. A. Snow, who un-
derwent recent major surgery
at Baylor Hospital in Dallas,
is reported to be doing nicely
at the home of relatives in
Dallas where she was'dismiss-
1 od during the week-end.
Red Cherries Top Noggin Pie
Make Christmas shopping easy
on your budget
By Gaynor Maddox Newspaper Enterprise Aten
Mrs. Carl Stirling visited rel-
atives in Daingerfieid Monday.
This year, many women are returning to personal Christ-
mas giving. We have decided to bake cakes for relatives and
friends who wor)c, or whose kitchens are too small to permit
much festive cooking. They plan to send their Christmas cards
out early, stating on those cards that on Christmas Eve a home-
made cake will be delievered to enjoy at the festive dinner.
Nice idea. You may want to do it for some of your friends.
Chrittmas Cake (Make* 10 to 12 aervinfi)
1 package yellow cake mix; 1 1/2 cups water; 2 eggs, un-
beaten; 1/2 cup fine graham cracker crumbs; 1/2 cup finely
chopped nuts; 1 family size chocolate pudding and pie filling
mix; 2 1/2 cups milk; 1/2 cup whipping cream; J/4 cup sugar;
Confectioner’s sugar.
Empty cake mix into large mixing bowl. Add water, eggs
and graham cracker crumbs. Beat about 3 minutes; then fold
in nuts. Pour into 2 greased and floured 9-inch layer pans. Bake
in moderate oven (350-degrees F.) 35 to 40 minutes. Cool.
Meanwhile, combine pudding mix and milk in a medium
saucepan. Cook and stir over medium heat until mixture comes
to a full boil. Then chill, stirring occasionally. Whip cream, add-
ing sugar gradually. Fold whipped cream into chilled pudding.
Then split cake layers horizontally to make 4 layers. Spread
chocolate mixture between layers. Sprinkle top of cake with
confectioners' sugar. Chill. . \
Holiday Fruitcake
1 package apple spice cake mix; 1/2 cup applesauce; 4
eggs, unbeaten; 1 teaspoon salt; 1 teaspoon orange extract; 1
pound (about 2 cups) cut dates; 8 ounces (4 slices) candied
green pineapple, cut in narrow strips; 8 ounces (about 1 1/2)
whole red candied cnerries; 1 pound (about 4 cups) walnut*
halves; 3/4 cup flour.
Empty cake mix into bowl. Add applesause, eggs, salt and
extract. Beat 3 minutes until smooth and creamy. Combine fruit
and nuts and mix well with flour. Then stir into batter. Line
two 8x4x3-inch loaf pans with triple thickness waxed paper;
grease well. Poor batter into pans. (
Bake in slow oven (275 degrees F.) about 2 3/4 hours.
Cool cakes in pans on cake racks until thoroughly cold. Remove
from pans. If desired, wrap cakes in cheesecloth, which has been
Mrs. Tim Clary is moving
to Paris to make her home with
Mrs. L. Darnell.
youTpenneycharge accoun
Washington — Pirates are
j again prowling the Celebes
| Sea, a crossroads of shipping
in the Southwest Pacific.
The outbreak of sea robbery,
reports say, is the worst since
early in the 18th century. It
creates a familiar but serious
problem for the Indonesian is-
land of Celebes (Sulawesi), the
National Geographic Society
says. The seafaring Celebes
people have suffered the rav-
ages of pirates many times in
the past.
Long before the first Euro-
pean caravels bobbed into local
: waters, huge Celebes praus
' were sailing along the Cathay
coast and west to Madagascar,
! navigating by stars with as-
tounding precision.
Makasar, the chief port of
Celebes island, has sheltered
'ships of Portuguese explorers,
i Netherlands merchants, Arab
i slave trades, Japanese invad-
ers, and the island’s own Bugi-
nesse pirates of former days.
Itland Hat Curious Shape
Celebes is an oddly shaped
tentacled island which has been
likened to an octopus, starfish,
dragon, spider, and orchid. It
consists of four outfluag pen-
insulas with myriad harbors,
Color Glows
In Nylon
T ricot
GOWNS
(Hospital VUiting Hour*)
1 to 4 and 7 to 8 p. m.
Admitted
Mrs. Tip Sparks, Route One,
surgical. >,? ”
John Orr, Park Street, med-
ical.
H. B. Dabbs, Fuller Street,
medical.
Mrs, E. P. Reed, Star Route,
medical.
Mrs. Emma Sherlock, Put-
man Street, medical.
L e n d e 11 Thompson, East
Ross, medical.
Mrs. Laura Brown, Gilmer
Street, medical.
R. L. McDaniel, Route One,
medical.
Mrs. J. A. McDonald, Beck-
ham, medical.
W. R. Doughty, Atkins
Street, medical.
Edwin Elliott, 616 Houston,
medical.
Dumitiod
Jerry Hays, Route One,
medical.
Mrs. Ray Farrell, R o u t.e
Three, medical.
Wrap HER
In A Lush
All Nylon
Quilt Duster
Coral! blue! lilac!
t'\ seafoam! apricot!
f l candlelight make
M
m\ the late news in a
waltz gown (sizes 32
to 40), a new short
shift. Small, medi-
um, large sizes.
Flirts a nylon satin
bow, handy side poc-
kets. Hand washa-
ble, too. Your warm-
est greetings in
french blue, aqua,
sprinkled with sherry, rum or brandy. Then wrap in aluminum
foil or cellophane and store in refrigerator or in cans at room
temperature 2 to 4 weeks before using.
dlelight, white
number only 6,600,000 out of
Indonesia’s 92,600,000 people,
they play a highly important
part in archipelago life as car-
riers of interisland cargoes,
National Geographic pointed
out. Their land is rich. The
north is a prime copra area,
the southern part a rice basinet.
North, South Differ
Like the United States, Cele-
bes has a distinct north and
south.
Northern Celebes is the land
of the Minahassans. These peo-
ple welcomed Portuguese
priests and the Dutch conquest
with a fight, settled down
promptly to providing clerks
and stenographers for Java.
They are largely Christian,
well educated, outgoing, and
intensely Westernized,
The rice-eating Makasaresc
and Buginese of the south are
Islamic, much more introspec-
tive and steeped in warlike his-
tory. They are- the island’s fin-
est shipbuilders and sailors;
many are descended from pi-
rates.
But Makasar, the gateway,
has also deposed the proud
southerners to Western life.
Even before the war, Kakasar
was a ni o d e r n, cosmopolitan
seaport. Cars, radios, cameras,!
islets, and bays.
Early explorers believed the
mountainous land mass was a
whole group of islands, thus
the romantic misnomer, “Is-
lands of the Celebes.”
Curiously, no one knows the
origin of the word “Celebes.”
The island’s Indonesian name
is Sulawesi, to which it revert-
ed after Indonesia won sover-
eignty from the Netherlands
in 1949.
One fanciful story says
“Chlhbes” evolved from lang-
uage difficulty. Asked by Por-
tuguese the name of their is-
land, the local rajas misunder-
Shop the Convenient Way -
Open Your Penney Charge
Account!
Gifts for HER
LACE TRIMMED NYLON PANTIES
Give her . . . frilly nylon panties smart-
ly trimmed with lace and embroidery.
Choose from our selection of soft fem-
inine colors.
stood and gave the name of
their weapons, “sele besi”
(iron kris).
Celebes was first visited by
Portuguese in 1512. The Dutch
began trading with Makasar
early in the 17th century, grad-
NYLON SATIN SLIPS
Give her ... the softest, smoothest Ny-
lon tricot Slip ever. Penney’s has her
favorite color. Full shadow panel.
GAYMODE SEAMLESS NYLONS
Give her ... dressy, sheer Nylon Hose.
Select regular, bard heel, micro-mesh,
knee high, or stretchable style in her
best shade.
COZY TRIMMED
LEATHER SLIPPERS
Soft sole, cushion heel.
Warm lining. Sizes 5
to 9.
$2.99
DYED SHEARLING
LAMB SUPPERS
Comfy soft soles . . .
padded heels. Pastels.
Sizes 5 to 9.
$2.99
COTTON KNIT SKI PAJAMAS
Give her . . . snuggly warm cotton knit
Pajamas. Sport top styling for the mod-
ern gals. New fashion colors.
GIANT PORTRAITS — Two Ghana women balance '•baskets
on their heads as thay view huge portraits of Britain’s
Queen Elizabeth II and Ghana’s President Kwame Nkrumah.
The pictures were erected in Accra in connection with the
British monarch’s tour of the young African nation.
(NBA). a .
electric ranges, aspirin, and
movies were an accepted way
of life.
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Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 83, No. 285, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 5, 1961, newspaper, December 5, 1961; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth827475/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.