The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 59, No. 37, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 13, 1957 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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Widn^ti rmOkUt ycws-tgumaAB
— s
/
!-v
r
^Personais*
Alice Alberts, 11 -year -old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Delbet-t
Alberts of Sulphur Bhsff, is a pa-
tient hi Scottish Rite Hospital for
Crippled Children in Dallas,
City Manager Jack Henderson
was a business visitor in Lufkin
Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Watkins
were in Dallas Wednesday after-
nooi*
Mrs. tflyne Adair ami Miss. Bar-
bara Wyatt were in Dallas Tues-
day to participate in a hair styl-
ing contest. . " \
nil i it ..... ■ ■ ■ in I ■ ll ■
m
Here’s French Apple Pie
Without toifiplications
Mrs. Bill Goodman, son Rusty
Idtng of
of -Mr. i
0 to bring their three grand-
children, Alan, Shbila and Karen
Watkins home . with them for
visit.
and daughter Ronda of Houston
and brothter Dub Boldini
Porte, were guests of Mr. And
Mrs. Claud Palmer an3 Mrs. Em-
ma Bolding Of Palmer Heights
and Mr. and Mrs. Hillie Perkins
of Sulphur Springs last week.
Gienn Edwards of Paris was a
busihesa visitdr in Sulphur
Springs, Tuesday.
Mrs. R. D. Conner returned to
her home here Wednesday from
Port Arthuf where she visited her
son-ln-htw and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Comer Wilson and children
for several days.
Paul Johnson of Midland was
her4 Wednesday to attend the
funtflrt of Joe D. Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Ponder- of
Paris spent Monday and Tuesday
herd with relatives.
Mrs. E. E. Hagy is confined to
her home by. illness.
. The Rev. and Mrs. Roetner Hud-
fer of Paris were guests of the
Rev. and Mrs. Alan C. Lynch
Tuesday evening.
Mrs. Scott Gibson will be In
Wrico Thursday and Friday to be
with her sister, Mrs. E. P. Me
Garity, who is ill.
Carr Smith is in Nacogdoches
on a business trip Wednesday
and Thursday.
Mrs. Tony Chance of Paris was
here Tuesday night to attend the
Business and Professional Wom-
ens Club annual “Guest Night”
banquet.
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Campbell
And daughter, Barbara were din-
ner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Avery
Mayes and children Saturday eve-
ning. They spent the week-end
With his mother, Mrs. Whig Camp-
bell and her sister and brother-in-
law, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Wood.
Charles Johnson of Ft. Worth
was here Wednesday to attend
the funeral of Joe Dale Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Binkley and
daughters, Charlotte and Tom-
mye are in Dallas to be with Mr.
Binkley’s father^ who is ill.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas .-Carries
And family of Dallas spent the
week-end with her mother, Mrs.
Reed Wright and his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. J. M. Carnes.
Mr. and' Mrs. Sam Ratliff and
children, Brad and Jim have re-
turned to their home in" Austin
after a visit with her mother, Mrs,
C.. A. Rector.
Hospital
News...
(Memorial Ho.pitil riltftlrig hoi
X to 4 «M 7 to 8 p.m.J
Patsy Howk of lit Jennings has
been admitted to Memorial Hospi-
al for medical treatment.
Zaek Edwards of Main Street
Was dismissed ftom Memorial
Hospital Wednesday after medi-
cal treatment.
Hubert Houston Of 108 Front
Street has beeri dismissed to his
home alter recfcnt surgery at Me-
morial Hospital.
L. A. Newkirk of Route Two,
Como has been removed to his
home after medical treatment at
Memorial Hospital.
Larry Berry, city, has been dis-
missed to his home after medical
treatment at Memorial Hospital.
David White of Saltillo has been
removed to his home after medi-
cal treatment at Memorial Hos-
pital.
Dick Harmon has been remov-
ed to his home on Fisher Street
following medical treatment at
Memorial Hospital!
Mrs. Sallie Hargrave has been
removed to her home at Dike aft-
er medical treatment at Memorial
Hospital; -
Billy Pickett Is reported to be
improved at Memorial Hospital,
where he is a medical patient.
Mrs. Z. F. Tramel of North Da-
vis is reported to be resting better
the last few days at Memorial
Hospital, where she is a medical
patient.
The condition of Mrs. J. G.
Reynolds, Sr., is reported as fair
at Memorial Hospital, where she
has been seriously ill for several
days.
J. Ri Rhodes of 511 College
Street, who has been a medical
patient at Memorial Hospital, was
transferred to a Dallas hospital
Wednesday.
Mrs. Billy Richey of Route
Three has been removed to her
home from Memorial Hospital,
.where she was a surgical patient
The condition of J. M. Pickett
was reported as poor at Memorial
Hospital Wednesday. Mr. Pickett
suffered a heart attack Monday
night.
Durwood Peugh has been dis-
missed to his home on Whitworth
Street from' Memorial Hospital,
where he was a medical patient
for several days.
By GAYNOR MADDOX, NEA Food and. MarkaU Editor
Apple pie, the old favorite, with a different touch—that’s pleas-
ant news, isn’t it? It has the richness of a french recipe.
French Apple Pie (Yield: 9-inch pie, 6-8 (erring*)
One-half recipe plain pastry, 4 cups diced green apples, 1 bgg,
1 cup sour cream, 8-4 cup sugar, 3 tablespoons quick-cooking rice
cereal, 1-4 teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon vanilla extract, 1-2 cup brown
sugar, 1-4 cup butter, 1-3 cup flour.
Line 9-inch pie plate with pastry. Spread apples evenly over
pastry lining. Beat egg, then beat in sour cream, sugar, rice cereal,
salt and vanilla. Pour over apples. Bake in hot oven (400 degrees F.)
for 38 minutes.
Meanwhile blend' together the brown sugar and butter, then
blend in the flour to make a dry crumbly mixture. Sprinkle this even-
ly over top of the apples. -
Continue baking until top is bubbly'snd brown, about 2D minutes
longer. Serve warm.
For a special party, try this zippy tomato dip for shrimp.
Zippy Tomato Dip (Make* 1 cup)
One No. 303 can tomatoes, 1-3 cup dark brown sugar, 1-3 cup
granulated sugar, 1-4 teaspoon celery salt, 1-4 teaspoon onion salt
(optional), 1 teaspoon prepared mustard, 1 tablespoon Tarragon
vinegar, 1 teaspoon aromatic bitters.
Put tomatoes through a food mill or strainer. (Makes 1 3-4
cups.) .
Place tomatoes; sugar, celery salt, onion salt, vinegar and mus-
tard irt deep saucepan. .
fioii for about 10 minutes or until mixture cooks down to half
of original volume. Add bitters,, stir well and chill. '
LINCOLN’S BIRTHDAY DINNER: Shi imp with zippy tomato
dip, roast rolled top sfffoin of beef, pan-roasted potatoes, gravy,
stuffed baked potatoes, lima beans, enriched bread, butter or mar-
garine, celery and olives, French apple pie, cheese, coffee, tea, milk.
County Council
Holds Meeting
More than 500 persons at-
tended a one-day membership
rally held at the Hilton Hotel in
Fort Worth, Tuesday. '
The purpose of the meeting
was to equip volunteer workers
for the job of soliciting new mem-
bers needed to assure Texas’ lead
in the South this year.
Enthusiasm ran high at the
Fort Worth meeting as campaign
planners mapped out their stra-
tegy. Favors', surprises, and “fun
galore” set the stage for the aft-
ernoon and night given to gen-
erating inspiration and a spirit
of determination toward accom-
plishing the avowed objective!
Registration began at noon,
and the rally got under way at
2 p. m. Featured speakers were
TFB President J. Walter Ham-
mond and T. C. Peterson, mid-
west, region organization direc-
tor for the AFBF.
Those that attended the rally
from the Hopkins County Farm
Bureau were: Harlan Craig,
president of the Hopkins Coun-
ty Farm Bureau, Julian D. Hum-
phrey, T. E. Attaway, Clarence
Dixon, Dorsey Hammonds
Wayne Dykes, B. J. Fisher, Glen
Mehaffey and Edgar Mathews,
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Campbell
of Dallas were here during the
week-end visiting his mother, Mrs.
Mick Campbell and her mother,
Mrs. Mathews.
Mrs. Beatrice Wilson of Dallas
Is visiting in the home of her
daughter, Mrs. O. C. Sewell, Jr.,
and family.
Deadline Set
For Signing
Soil Contracts
Mr. and Mrs. Lee O. Talley of
613 Bellview, had as dinner
guests Wednesday, Mrs. Talley’s
sister, Mrs. Artie Holt of Milton,
Texas, and Her nephew, Rev. By-
ron Holt and wife of Maud, Tex.
An interesting film on Salk
vaccine for the prevention of
polio was shown to members of
the Kiwanis Club meeting here
Wednesday noon. Dr. Ben Wood
was program chairman.
It was announced that several
Kiwanians will be at the high
school Thursday morning to dis-
cuss the proposed youth center
with students. Several members
also plan a trip to McKinney on
Thursday, Feb- 21, to study the
operation of the youth center in
the Collin Cotmty city.
Guests were Larry Munsey,
Dallas, Bill Romack, Hugh J. Mc-
Clendon and visiting Kiwanian Ed
Shilling of Paris. ....
Grover Bailey
Of Reilly Springs
Dies Wednesday
Grover Baiiey of Reilly brings
died unexpectedly while visiting
' in the Sandfield community of
Hopkins County Wednesday morn-
'* in*.
' Funeral arrangements art ptnd-
Quitman—Through March 1
farmers of Wood County have ftp
opportunity to sign contracts to
put part of their cropland in the
Conseravtion Res e r v e Program.
The reminder comes from Robert
A. Bryant, acting chairman of the
Wood County Agricultural Stabil-
ization and Conservation Commit-
tee.
Essential points in the program
which farmers should have in
mind, according to the Acting
Chairman are: Land put in the
Conservation Reserve must be
land which otherwise would be in
crops. The total acreage in crops
on the farm must be reduced by
the number of acres put into the
Conservation Reserve, and a farm-
er is ellgjKle to participate in the
Conservation Reserve only if he
does not exceed any acreage allot-
ment established for his farm.
He reminds farmers too, that to
participate in the Conseravtion Re-
serve the farmer must sign a con-
tract to keep the designated acre-
age in an approved conservation
practice for the required period
of years. Approved practices in-
clude protective vegetative cover,
water storage facilities or forest
consenting Use.
No crop may be harvested from
the land-put in the Conservation
Reserve. The only exception is
timber from trees thinned out as
required by sound forestry man-
agement. ‘ *
Contracts run from 3 to 5 years
if Vie land already is in an ip-
proved cover, 6 to 10 years of
approved cover must be establish-
ed and 10 years if trees are to be
planted. j, i.
For participating in the pro-
gram the farmers may earn an
initial payment representing up
to 80 per cent of the cost of the
practice and an annual paymei
for the period of the contract.
23 High Pupils
Absent Tuesday
The following students were ab-
sent one-half day or more Tues-
day, according to High School
Principal Truman E. Drake’3 of-
fice;
Virginia Alberts, L. F. Bridges,
Jeantife Baird, Junior Baker, Bob~
by Dixon,
Patsy France), June Gregg, Jim
Gill, Doh Gowan, Larry Harmon,
Larry Landers, Nanette Ma-
thews, Patricia Morrison, Dalton
Morehead, Jerry McCool, Sandra
Minter,
Linda Mathews, Don Skinner,
Choyce Springer, Patsy Sanders,
Frankie Turner and Jo Ann
White.
Fifth Marine
To Face Probers
Parris Island, S. C., Feb. 13 Wl
-A spokesman at the Marine
Corps training base at Parris Is-
Didn't Cough
ALL NIGHT
CREOMULSION
BRINGS SPECTACULAR
V RELIEF
to cold* right now, with-
out narcotics or antihista-
mine*, »tops tickle—pro-
motes sleep-—taste* good
too. Get—
CREOMULSION
land, says a 5th drill instructor
is under investigation for alleg-
ed maltreatment of recruits.
Four instructors have already
been removed ffom duty with one
recruit platoon where several re-
cruits, including private Daviki
Porter of Hartford, Vt., charged
they were struck by the instruc-
tors.
Base information officer Cap-
tain James Mahoney said the 5th
instructor is with another platoon
but would not name him or the
recruit who made the charges. No
other details were given.
Captain Mahoney said the form-
al inquiry into charges againgt all
5 instructors is continuing and
may be completed by the end of
the week.
Bradshaw Offers
To Change Name
Of Denton School
Austin, Feb. 13 (M — A state
senator from Weatherford, Floyd
Bradshaw, introduced a bill to-
day which would change the name
of the Texas State College for
Women at Denton.
Bradshaw proposed the all-girl
state-supported college be named
the- Texas University for Wom-
en. '
The bill’s emergency cl
says the college’s present nai
is insufficient to “properly des-
ignate the purpose for Which "the
university was founded.
VeferaB Reporter
Claimed by Death
At SenAttienlo
San Antonio, Feb. 13 UP! — A
man who hjld b'eert ft refoktter for
the San. Antonio New* fot 28
years .&4J3UI tUfifnlnk. ln.,San
Antonio’s Baptist Memorial Hos-
pital.
He was 52-year-old H. M.
Deems, known by his friends as
“Dummy” Deems.
He had been admitted to the
hospital 8 days ajgo fob a car-
buncle on his neck, near the spin-
al column.
Physicians say Deems also had
suffered fiom diabetes the past 3
years. He had been in a coma
since Friday. .
During his career as a news-;
man, Deems cohered the San An-4
tonio city hall and the courthouse,
but his main beat was police. Be-
fore being hospitalized. Deems
boasted he had missed only 6 days
of work in 28 years.
Deems attended . Midwestern
University at Wichita Falls and
the University of the South iq
Sewanee, Tenn., where he played
football.
Survivors include his mother,
Mrs. Laura Deems' of San Anton-
io; rind a son, Miles, a college stu-
dent at Corpus Christ!.
2 People Thrown
To Safety From
Apartment Blaze
Detroit, Feb. 13 UP — A 39-
year-old Detroit man tossed his
2l-yerir-old daughter and two-
year-old grandson from the win-
dow of their burning third floor
apartment yesterday. They were
caught by two men standing on
the ground below. The man then
leaped to safety himself. The two
men broke his fall; but he suf-
fered back injuries and cuts and
bruises.
Arnie Turbyfill acted after
flames swept through the apart-
ment building in which the fam-
ily lived. Turbyfill said he went
to the window after the door-
way was blocked by smoke. His
daughter — who is expecting —
fainted, and he had to drag her
through the smoke-filled room to
the window. He threw the young
woman, Mrs. Rose Trivettc, aj,d
her son^ Philip, into the arras p*
a leg January 12th and was hos-
pitalized ibout 3 weeks for its
treatment. She added that his genh
brtil health was considered"good.
Dr. Brown, a native of Oska-
loosa, Iowa, founded the co-edtv-
ratfonal Jphn t Brown University
in 1919. I-ater he minded or pur-
chased four California schools.
Hr-v(aS chairriian -of the board
of the Jofifi BrowM Foundation,
owner of radio stations KO.NK,
Ttrlsa, Okfa.; KUOA and KUO A,
FM, Sfloatn Springs; and KGKR,
Long Beach, Cal.
Armed Robberies
Solved al Waco
Waco, Feb. 13 UtI—Waco police
sfiid this morning the arrest of
seven youths has solved five re-
cent armed robberies and several
burglaries in the Central Texas
areri.
Charges are to be filed against
six of the youths. The 7th, a 15-
year-old 3-time former inmate of
the state school for boys at Gates-
vllle, Was turned over to juvenile
authorities.
Indian Denies
Plane Report
New Delhi, Feb. IS (A— An of-
ficial Indian spokesman said to-
day there was no truth in a re-
port that An Indian riirtrnft had
forced an American Olobemnster
carrying arras for Pakistan to
land at New Delhi airport.
The report was carried by the
Sdvict news agency Tans and
quoted a story in last weekend’s
Delhi Times, an obscure Weekly of
leftist leanings.
The report said the American
plane was flying.from Singapore
to Karachi over Indian territory.
A spokesman for the U. S. air liai-
rion office in Singapore said no
U. S. military aircraft had left
Singapore or passed through there
in the past few days.
Educator Says
Man Dishonest
Six Marriage
Licenses Issued
Romance apparently is on the
upswing in Hopkins County after
a January moratorium. Six mar-
riage licenses have been issued
during the last week by the of-
fice of County Clerk Hazel Min-
ter.,
The licenses went to Albert
Raymond Mikeska and Miss Myra
Jean Hathaway; Tony Loyd
Couch and Miss Lois Annette
Floyd; Thomas Burton Nowlin
and Mrs. Ruby Lacefield; Mor-
ris Miller, Jr., and Miss Ruby
Jean McGill; Weldon Baxley and
Mrs. Vivian Ashby, and Rayford
Lee Stevens and Mrs. Patsy J4ne
SteVens.
iiv* oviiji a »•* 'v
46-year-old Rudolph MorySkUe
and another man. Then hg jump-
ed himself., ?"• f .
The fire, which .gQtfted from ri'
match In ft
basemerft apartment, drwri 24
persons from the building. Theta
were . no fatalities. Damage was
extensile. : ’
Educator, Radio
Executive Dies
*• v.
I.eucadia, Cal., Feb. t8 Ar-Dr.,
in El ward Brown, Sr., fotnirafc
-John Brown University at Si- »
loam Springs, Ark-, died unexpect-
edly la*t night at his home here
Cincinnati, O., Feb. 13 (21—An
Atlanta, Ga., educritor says:
“It can be argued with great
eloquence that man In 1957 is
just as brutal, dishonest, hypro-
critical, and mean as he was in
mo BJ?* V >
c The assertion comes from Dr,
Betrjamln T?.' Mays, the president
of MoTphousr College, to the an-
nual Christian education confer-
ence of 'the National Council of
Churches in Cincinnati. Dr. Mays
odds:. ''
“After 335 years of residence
In N. ok t h Aril erica, 16 million
Negrq?s are battling today for
the status of first class citizen-
the U.K. Segregation bas-
ed tan race ahd color exists in
housing, education, hospitals, rec-
reation, .transportation, and em-
ployment.”
FREE!
SEARS
ROEBUCK AND CO.
Bring in Your
Ham, Roast,
or Chicken . .
»;
lift.
In Leuclpdiri. He was 77.
Dr. RroWn, also active In the
man
er
stations,
in California and in Siloiiri
Springs. 0F
His secretary, Miss Luellri Smith,
said the veteran educator broke
Accident Claims
Second Victim
Dr. Brown, also active fit the Dallas, Feb. 1
nagbment of a number of oth- old Garland ma
schools ana !toi several tridiri this'terming of
tions, maitairied holnis. both Friday in a ear
Dallas, Feb. 13 UH—A 31-year-
man died at Dallas
injuries received
accident. He was
Jftek Ingram. Killed outright in
the crash was Ingram’s stepfath
er, 46-year-old daude Ersha
Harrett of Garland,
Are These Your Insurance
Needs?
Family Protection
Educational
Retirement Income
Mortgage Cancellation
Insurance for Business or
Tax Purposes.
Hospitalization plan that
pays up to $ftMK)0 for Hos-
pital Expenses and Nurse
Care.
See Dick Carpenter
IBS Glover St
Sulphur Spring*
TU5-S124
Announcing
THE SPRING OPENING
DAIRY
QUEEN
THURSDAY—
FEBRUARY 14th
• BAR-B-Q
• HAMBURGERS
• STEAK
SANDWICHES
• Mot dogs
• FRENCH FRIES *_
DR. PEPPERS —
• SUNDAES
• CONES
• MALTS
• MILK
m
SHAKES
HOM-PAKS
« COCA-COLAS
ROOT BEER
«*• -i
FOLLOW THE CROWD TO
The Dairy Queen
WE'LL BARBECUE IT
FREE
During Our 3-Day
BARBECUING
DEMONSTRATION!
Thursday. Friday rind Saturday
BIG ^rTlMOTOmZED
BAZIER WITH HOOD
Handles Biggest- Out-
door Feasts With
Less Effort!
11EMT19J7—
Shpg. wt. 76 lb*.
ONLY
Cadi
>
$5 Down, $5 Month
I 8x16-in. .Formica top
•cutting board
S' Chromed spit and revolv-
ing grid
I Hand crank adjusts grid
height
8 Expanded metal tray
for storage / ,
Everything hut the steak' This deluxe, feature-filled Kenmore bra-
zier Hs the answer to outdoor cooking at its best! Removable black
steel hood holds Heat in, speeds cookinifi 2 big rubbei-tired Wheels
and wheelbarrow-type handles make it erisy to move about.
mm
—ri
nMK3
Mm
Kenmore Picnic
Wagon Grill
11EM1920—Shpg. wt. 45 lb*.
30.97CASH
33.50 DOWN, $5 MONTH
Rust-resistant aluminized steel grill
has electric motor to turn spit con-
tinuously. Large “windbreaker”
hood. ■
24-in. Motorized
Bhazier, Hood
11 ETi924L-Ashpf. wt. 48 lb».
25.97
ms
:
m
Ifi
i
CASH
$3 DOWN. 35 MONTH
Chromed adjustable revolving grid
Is 2 ft. in . diameter . . . holds 8
steaks OR J6 hamburgers at once!
Eaay-roll wheels.
Portable 18-in.
Steel Brazier
11E02817—Shp*. wt. 19 lb*.
9.67
Small, sturdy, easy to carry or keep
in car trunk . . . legs detach; 2 car-
rying handles. Chromed grid raises
or lowers with hand crank. 26 1-2
*fn. high.
Apron and
CheF* Cap Set
11EB1992—Shpg. wt. 13 o*.
r—
2.29
Sanforized heavyweight twill with
assorted print designs. Apron is full
size; cap has full width headband*
with elastic for fit. In poly film
bag.
Self-Basting
Spit Basket
11E1988—Shpf. wt. 3 lb*. 12 o*.
4.70
For motorized grill*. Holds steaks,
chops, fish, pieces of chicken. EH-
minrites turning. Positive locking
action; sdjusts to meat, size, . . jr.
18i9x2-in.
SS’ffllli
. /. 230 Maia Straat
Salpfcwr Spring*, Trisa*
Dial: S-titt
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Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 59, No. 37, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 13, 1957, newspaper, February 13, 1957; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth828090/m1/3/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.