The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 12, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 16, 1955 Page: 8 of 24
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•TELEGRAM, SULPHUR SPRINGS, TEXAS
SUNDAY, JANUARY 16, 1956,
Section One
Markets
Livestock Market
Chicago, Jan. 15 (*)—Salable
cattle 200, total 200 (estimated);
compared week ago: slaugther
steers unevenly steady to 2.00.
1
m
higher; generally 50 to 1.50 up,
heifers steady to 50 higher; tows
50 to hidstiy 1.00 lower; hulls
weak to 1.00 lower; vealers grad-
ing good and better steady to 1.00
higher; other grades weak to fully
1.00 lower; stocker and feeders
active, 50 to 1.00 higher; early
bulk high choice and prime steers
29.50-33.00; late bulk 30.50-
34.50; with around a dozen loads
average prime to high prime 965-
1250 lb weights 34.75-36.00; top
36.00 for two loads 1097 and 1237
lb. weights highest in two years;
weeks bulk choice steers and yearl-
nigs 26.00-30.00; good to low
choice largely 21.00-26.00; sev-
eral loads 1661-1715 lb weights
21.00 and 21.25; commercial to
low good steers 17.00-20.50; util-
ity and commercial 1296 lb Hob
worn) CALtWMk. _
the Fountain
m ; ■ ■ (
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mam
Listen Ladies
(Continued from Page Five)
Major Indicted
For Murder
Try a Want Ad for Results
colors and texture into their
meals. In her words, “they give
‘efcry-day’ dishes a sparkle of
glamor.”
She points out that parsley al-
ways is good for adding touches
of green to all kinds of main
course dishes. And it is easy to
grow parsley indoors in your own
kitchen window box, or in your
rofw of garden herbs.
Fresh celery and - carrot tops
also are excellent garnishes. Rad-
ishes and carrot curls planted in
aihowl of ice will keep fresh and
eijisp and add a spark of color to
Kilimanjaro, a 19,321-fopt peak
near the Equator in Africa has
glaciers on its slopes. i"
Try a Want Ad for Results
Elizabethtown, N. Y„ Jan. 15
(iD—-The Essex county grand jury
has indicted Major James A. Call
on a charge of first-degree murd-
er in connection with the shooting
of a Lake Placid policeman.
.Call, an Air Force deserter,
was arrested in Reno, Nev., Ipst
■November. He was charged with
killing Patrolman Richard Pelkey,
who died last August after he had
been1 shot at an unoccupied Lake
Placid summer home. Call, who is
29,, also- was named In 6 other in-
dictments char g i n g attempted
first-degree rbbbery, burglary and
petty larceny, '
ydur dinner table, too. i
. Com for Cook*
Nutmeg is a spice that has lots
of other \useg besides apple pie
flavoring. lUse itin other baked
goods, saato^-pttdmngs. and cus-
aps. Try lnutmeg for a topping
fer whipped cream, or on caul-
iflower, or spinach. It's the best
spice flavoring for doughnuts.
When you serve those light-as
a-featner rolls, give them added
.....giamoi' by accompanying them
with money butter-mixed half
and half and whipped until fluffy
and light. ' f
Cook bacon at low5 temperatures
so the fat you pour off will be
white, and fresh-tasting. Use the
hacon fat when you are frying
ehjeto, fish or potatoes— it gives
them-iwe flavor.
Scotland Yar d
(Continued from Page One)
was taken from the office Of Sir
Henry Self, deputy chairman of HONOR DISCO1
tl\c British electricity authority, Jtew rtarpp honor
that he-^missed it Monday when century of the bin
he* was about to leave for a, sec- Vebpucci, navigflt
ret conference on the use of atom- America, was nan
ic energy in industry, Detectives issued by the Ita
have" questioned all 80 employes fice. This blue si
of the„ authority, hut there was a likeness of, Vei
no indication they had found the worth 60 lire,
thief.-• ,'f . . j( ' Photo).
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mmssm
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Hi- Vue
DRIVE-IN
NEW WIDE SCWflHI
Hem ef Cinemascope Pictures
-
Tonight and Monday
YOU HAVEN'T LIVED UNTIL
YOU'VE LOVED IN ROME..,
CinemaScop£
vows
Feared Torch
Victim Reports
On Whereabouts
Fort Worth, Jan. 15 OH — A
rttan who was feared to 'have been
the charred corpse found in a
Fort Worth man’s station wagon
in Oklahoma last October has
turned up alive. Relatives had
said that Floyd Hammond of Fort
Worth had been missing since Oc-
tober and that the soldier fitted
the description of the dead man.
Hammond called his mother
last night from Fort Bliss, El
Paso, and said he had just ne-
glected to write since October.
David Hagler, Jr., of Fort
Worth is charged in the Imyste
rious Oklahoma torch slaying.
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.........}.......(............. ■*-?$-
WORLD CALENDAR — Sue Feit, of Philadelphia, Pa.", shows a
new world calendar which is being considered by the UN. The
calendar would divide the.year into four quavers of 91 days eaqh.
An extra day called Worldsday Would be added at the end of De-
cember, and during leap year, an additional day called Leapyear
Day would be added to, the end of June. The extra days, lettered
“W,” would be world holidays. In her ‘left hand, Sue holds a*
month of a 1582.calendar and a month of a 1752 calendar. (NEa
Telephoto).
SLATED MONDAY
Judges to Consider
Bail for Sheppard
Douglas Teachers
Attend Parley
■ L,..
Representatives of the Douglas
high school homemaking depart-
ment were in Longview Saturday
to attend an advisory and execu-
tive council meeting relative to
.vocational homemaking education.
H Representing Douglas school in
the area-wide conference were
Rose Dell Sims and Mrs. Elizabeth
Cotton.
Out of the meeting emerged
plans for an Area 1 education
workshop for Negro homemaking
, teachers. Detailed plans for the
contemplated meeting will be
worked out later.
In Longview Miss Sims and
Mrs. Cotton participated in a
study course in matters relating
to the development of the home-
making program.
Oldest Patieni
Ready to Leave
Laredo Hospital
Laredo, Jan. 15 ft—Laredo's
oldest surgery patient wants to
go home.
He’s tired of sitting around
Mercy hospital, where yesterday
he underwent anaesthesia twice
for major surgery. He also had
a broken wrist set.
The man is Matias de Collado,
a spry 112-year-old.
DeGallado, a native of Mexcio,
has lived in Laredo since the turn
of the century. For many years
he was employed as a handyman |
at the International Bridge across
the Rio Grande. Then someone
found out his age, and he was dis-
missed. -
DeGollado is the father of 30
children-T-16 of them still living.
His oldest son is 82.
He has been married . 3 times,
and his present wife is 50.
Tyler Oilman
To Gel Refund
New Orleans, Jan. 15 ft—A
federal appeals court in New Or-
leans has ordered the government
to pay an income tax refund to a
Tjfler oilman. D. K. Caldwell is to
receive more than $300,000, plus
6 -per cent interest.
The case started in Dallas in
1953,
0.;l,
Plane Makes
Emergency Slop
Pine Bluff, Ark., Jan. 15-ft—
A twin-engine plane with six Tex-
ans aboard made an emergency
landing at the city airptvrt in Pine
Bluff last night.
One engine of the plane caught
fire about midnight, When the
plane was a few miles from the
airport.
Fortunately, the pilot broke
through overcast skies ami found
the airport.
The plane was bound for Dal-
las from an undisclosed location.
The men—all Daliasites—iden-
tified themselves as W. W. Over-
ton Jr., Glenn Cos tin, H. N. Mal-
lon, O. W. Hammond, L. S. Mon-
tigny and Joe Uhlers.
...-AH. boarded a commercial air-
liner and continued their home-
ward trip.
Cleveland, Jan. 15, Iff)—Three
appellate judges will consider
Monday whether to free Dr. Sam-
uel Sheppard on bail or allow him
to remain in county jail until they
dispose of his appeal from a life
sentence.
If they do neither, Sheppard
will begin serving a life term—
with a chance at parole after 10
years—no later than next Wed-
nesday. He gets no credit on his
term spent in county jail.
Under the law Sheriff Joseph
Sweeney could delay the 150-mile
trip to 1 Ohio penitentiary until
Wednesday, which is five days
after a stay of execution was lift-
ed. Sweeney said last night that
if appellate judges did not issue
a new stay, he would take Shep-
pard to Columbus Tuesday or
Wednesday,
Sheppard was coqVicted Decem-
ber 21st of 2nd-degree murder in
the July 4th bludgeoning of his
wife, Marilyn. Judge Edward Bly-
thin passed sentence the day of
the verdict and has since denied
a. new trial on a defense motion
which claimed there were^ll er-
rors in the two month trial.
Judge Biythin had allowed the
31-year-old osteopath to remain
in county jail at Cleveland. But
yesterday he dissolved his stay-of-
execution order, explaining:
“Now that the matter vs to be tak-
en up in a higher court, I have
nothing further to do. with it.”
An appellate court decision on
whether to grant Sheppard a new
trial is not expected before mid-
summer.
SIvllIS 1 U«Uw | bllUIUv -<* 11 (i |l I lilll
heifers and mixed yearlings 28.00-
30.50; good and choice heifers
largely 20.00-27.50; commercial
to low good heifers 15.00-19.00;
only a few commerical cows late
12.00- 13.00; late bulk utility to
low commercial cows 9.50-11.50
with canners and cutters largely
8.00- 9.50; few strongweight cut-
ters on the dose 9.75 and few
light canners 7.00-7.50; late sales
utility and commercial hulls 13.50-
15.50; week’s top 16.5,0; heavy fat
bulls 11.00-12.00; good and choice
vealers 23.00-29.00; cull to com-
mercial vealers ‘ unevenly 5.00-
22.50; good and choice feeding
steel's and yearlings largely 19.50-
22,50; load or so up to 23:00;
medium to low good grades 16.50
19.00; choice 440 lb stock heifer
calves early 20.50; choice 675 lb
yearling feeding heifers 18.75.
Power Failure
Hits Dallas Area
Dallas, Jan. 15 OPt—Dallas resi-
dents started searching for can-
dies after a power failure black-
ed-out parts of the city about 10
p. in. last night.
However, lights were back on
in about 19 minutes.
A power company spokesman
said the black-out was caused by
a short circuit in a switch.
Hospitals and the police radio
station switched to auxiliary pow-
er during the emergency.
Torch Burglar
Active in Houston
Houston, Jan. 15 W—A so-call-
ed torch burglar ik hitting swanky
Houston hoirfcs. Police think he
is armed with a mysterious heat-
ing device. He enters the plush
homes by burning out a small
circle in door glass—just big
enough to reach through and un-
lock a door.
BABY’S COMPANION — Twenty-month-old Johnny Bixby, and
his mother, Mrs. Maxine Bixby, inspect the features of a new
baby-bed seat at the Chicago', 111., furniture show. It can serve
as a car bed with built-in shock absorbers, a car seat with play
tray and as a bassinet when its telescopic legs are extended.
(NEA). ' , ' •
_____ t . / . ■ - ........_______................* .........- * ...
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Wars Often Won Before
Fighting Ever Begins
By H. A. SCHENDORE
Washington, (ft—A war can he
won or lost long before the first
shot is fired.
It is won by tin) side that has
enough troops in uniform and
ready to defend against sudden
attack.
Yet, it is won by the side which
has not sapped its economic
strength by maintaining a top-
heavy standing army too long.
It is won by the side that has
plenty of good weapons. ‘
On the other hand, these must
Swiss Demand
Czech Recall
Bern, Switzerland, Jan. 15 (ft—
Police,haye revealed that Switzer-
land demanded, the recall of »
Czechoslovak officiul three weeks
ago because of espionage activi-
ties. He is Lieutenant Colonel Lud-
vik Sochor, a military attache.
Police say that the colonel, an
aide and a clerk in the Czech
legation ferreted out military se-
crets. ,
. The Czech legation has,denied
the charge. ' •.—
• ; r - . .. • ■ .. - , , , ■ ■, . *
Louis Jourdan is the ontooked* as Maggie McNamara stops, Clifton
Webb in mid-art gallery in “Three Coins iri the Fountain,” Cinenia-
Scope hit in. color-by iPeLuxe at the Hi-Vue Drive fyi Sunday and
Monday. -............... .......... ..........
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Wilmer Man
Shot to Death
Dallas, Jan. 15 (ft— A 44-year-
old man is dead and his estranged
wife seriously wounded in a dou-
ble shooting at the couple’s, home
in Wilmer near Dallas.
A verdict of suicide has been
returned in the death of the man
—an employee of a utility com-
pany, Ernest Eugene Renvmer. -
His wife, 40syear-old Mrs.
Nellie Mae Remmer, is in serious
condition at a Dallas hospital
from bullet wounds.
Remmer had been -living away
from home for two weeks.
A son, Melvin Remmer, found
Rentmer’s body in a hallway about
J:30 this morning.
He found Mrs. Remmer in the
bathroom on a pile of blood-soak-
ed clothing.
Plane Crash
Injures 5 Men
London, Ontario, Jan. 15 Iff)—
A plane crash during a snow
storm near London has injured
five persons, one of them serious-
ly.
Robert Sanders of Toronto is
described by London Hospital as
being in serious condition, while
John Schwelia of Van Nuys, Cal.
and Dennis Dark of TorontO_aie
listed in fair condition. The pilot
and the Co-pilot, both from Tor-
onto, were discharged from the
hospital after treatment for min-
or bruises.
Saunders is head of the Ontar-
io hydro-electric power commis-
sion. -•
First Woman
Flier Succumbs
London, Jan. 15 Iffi — Captain
Jane Hervcux, pioneer aviatrix
and reputedly the first Woman to
fly solo, died -hCa"London hospital
after a lingering iilness. She was
63.
The daughter of a French
Countess, she learned to fly in Ithe
same airplane ■ in which French-
man Lojiis Bleriot flew the Eng-
lish Channel from Calais to Dover
for the first time, in 1909. Her
active flying carter ended 30
years later.
She was married to Philip Cat-
alano, an American living in Lon
don.
include newer weapons that are
better than the enemy’s.
On the other,"the older, proved,
conventional weapons cannot be
discarded before there is a better
substitute.
And, perhaps most of all, a
war is won by the side which has
flexible forces, working as a team.
All these considerations went
into the president’s military mes-
sage, when he recommended mili-
tary training for all, a stronger
reserve and a continued draft. The
plan is to continue to build up
the Air Force, while somewhat re-
ducing the standing Army and
Navy.
Even if it is said by some
that the Air Force is being built
up at the expense of the ground
and sea forces, that is not to say
that we are relying exclusively on
a policy of “massive retaliation.”
However, the conclusion has been
reached that — should we he at-
tacked again—We ^ave r0
time to tool up and build atomic
bombers and recruit and train mil-
itary and technical crews.
The best place to destroy an
enemy plane is on the ground,
before it has taken off ... if not,
indeed, in the factory, before it
has been built. The same goes for
atomic missiles, which ’appear to
be in the nht-too-distani future.
Destroy Nests
It is the job of the Air Force
to destroy these nests from which
enemy atomic bombers would op-
erate, and the factories in which
they would be built. And the de-
struction must be accomplished
before our ability to retaliate has
been lost. , i
MoreoVer, it is the Air Force
which operates the first line of
continental defense against at-
tacking bombers—the jet inter-
ceptor.
Behind that screen of air pro-
tection, we might expect some
time to mobilize. Geography is in
our favor, for there are wide
oceans to be crossed by any likely
aggressor. Enemy bombers may
destroy, but they cannot occupy.
And without occupation, , there
cannot be victory.
But there are two other factors:
We probably could not expect
as much time to mobilize as we
had in the., past two world wars,
and so we must be prepared to
field combat troops quickly. The
administration believes that the
best-bet Is: ready reserves of part-
ly-trained men, who can be mo-
bilized almost as rapidly as train-
ing camp facilities can be prepar-
ed. * ,
And even in peace, the military
establishment is a powerful argu-
ment. One factor in diplomatic
negotiation is the ability of a na-
tion to back up its arguments with
force, if need be. War has been
described as an extension of diplo-
macy, where other means failed.
That is particularly true in the
case of) so-called small wars. Just
as a pdl^’eman does nqt normally
use a howitzer to capture an en-
trenched gunman, it is unlikely
that he will - use an atomic bomb
to find a limited disorder.
is CONSTIPATION
Warning You Of
Something That May
Be {Dangerous?
Chrcaic e«n«tfa»ticn h v*<i»dv 5et~e
(jtHMuw in itwlf; n, is often a, symptom of
•omethinf else that "Dills" cun give little
help to. WKy not find out now, from an
nutlnrlUtive source,
whet ycur constlp*-
ticri may mean 'anft
the .modern treat-
ment for it? Write
today for 1 roportant
FRKR hia* of facts
wry
SIS
_______m
Springs, Mix
'Mission
aVJL c..ltuijn <
Sunday and Monday
COMBINING THE EXCITING TALENTS OF
FOUR ACADEMY AWARD WINNERS!
HUMPHREY BOGART
Academy Award winner for "The African Queen”
AUDREY HEPBURN
Academy Award winner for'Roman Holiday”
WILLIAM HOLDEN
Academy Award winner for "Stalag 17”
tVodurod am) Directed hr
BILLY VULDLH
Aradway Award producer of
"TWlaolWt
IMlklt / •
.WALTER HAMPDEN - JOHN WILLIAMS • MARTHA HYER . JOAN VOHS —w
Wiintn to iha Screw, k, BILLY WILDER. SAMUEL TAYLOR ,nd ERNEST LEHMAN M
lew, ik. y., k, spim uiLvk. a paramount hours .lag-L
Dulles and Lodge
Visit Father
Of Omaha Pilot
Omaha, Nab., Jan. 15 (ft—The
father of an Omaha pilot held by
the Chinese Rev. W. G. Parks,
satd today he was quite encourag-
ed by his unexpected personal
visit with Secretary of State
Dulles and Henry Cabot Lodge,
chief American delegate to the
U.N.
Parks said he has reported by
telephone to two other families of
imprisoned airmen on his talk with
Dulles and Lodge. They are the
families of Lieutenant Lyle W.
Cameron of Lincoln, Neb. and
Captain Harold Fischer of Sea
City, Iowa. Parks said he had
Lodge’s permission to , tell them
what he had learned from Dulles
afid Lodge about efforts to have
their sons freed.
The Omaha World-Herald had
disclosed in a copyrighted story
that Parks had dinner with Dulles
and Lodge last night at the head-
quarters of the Strategic Air Com-
mand in Omaha.
Parks’ son is Lieutenant Roland
Parks. He and the others were
j captured by the Reds during the
Korean War. They^should not be
confused with the eleven bomber
fliers, also taken prisoner during
the Korean war, but who have
been jailed by the Chinese Com-
munists as spies.
Sulphur-Graphs.
WESLEY WORKERS Class of
First Methodist church will hold a
social Tuesday evening in Fellow-
ship Hail of the Church. The par-
ty is to begin at seven o’clock. "*■
MARTHA CRABTREE, a mem-
ber of the junior class at Baylor
University, has been initiated into
Alpha Chi, national scholarship
fraternity. She vyas among 59
students ranking in the top five
per cent of the junior, senior and
graduate classes initiated into the
fraternity. She is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Crabtree of
Sulphur Springs.
PLACE OF meeting has been
changed by the Sulphur Springs
Kiwanis Club. Kiwanians will
meet at the Educational Building
of First Christian Church for
thteir luncheon on Wednesday and
thereafter.
ROBhKT JONES of Sherman
spent the night and part of two
days with Dr. T. O. Perrin the
past week. He is field represen-
tative of Austin College and as-
sistant to the president. This par-
ticular visit, according to Dr. Per-
rin, was to contact former stu-
dents and graduates of the college
and learn something of the pres-
ent seniors and juniors of the lo-
cal high school with the idea of
future contact.
Try a Want Ad for Results
MARCH OF DIMES
PFC. DWAIN Woodard left by
plane from Dallas. Wednesday for
Camp Kilmer, New Jersey after a
30-day furlough and visit with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wayland
Woodard.
FIGHT
INFANTILE
PARALYSIS
AMONG THE out of town rel-
atives and friends here to attend
the funeral of Mrs. Roy Darlin
were Mrs. Frank Wood, Ft.
Worth; Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Wood
of I)allas; Mr. and Mrs. Pete Dar-
lin, Garland; Mrs. Loyl Seymour
of La Marque; Mr. and Mrs. Gar-
land Jonas of Oklahoma and Mr.
and Mrs. O. R. Cook of Com-
merce.
A MEETING of the civic beau-
tification committee is set Mon-
day morning. Miss Adell Hale,
chairman, said the meetirig would
be held at 10 a. m. in the Cham-
ber of Commerce office. >........
JANUARY 3-31
FOR T^E
BESTBUY
• ■; in
EAST TEXAS
Try a Want AS for Results
.....* ;.
SEAT COVER
CLOSE - OUT!
Making Room for 1955
Pattern* ’
ON A NEW
-55
FORD
SEE
IIR.,,.....Sf
, y-
1
Ashcroft
Motor Company
* * . ,
Jefferson Street
y
CUSTOM SARAN
Reg. $29.95 - Now $19.9$
CUSTOM FIBRE
Reg. $19.95_- Now $15.i
-"V
. Free Installation
Free Parking in
__..r Rear •
BABCOCK
BROS.
Arthur Boyd, Mgr.
Kenneth Alien, Salesman
Elmer L. Caetnor, Salesman
204 Main £t.
Ph. 206
;,-v
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Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 12, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 16, 1955, newspaper, January 16, 1955; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth830363/m1/8/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.