The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 85, No. 77, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 2, 1963 Page: 1 of 8
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ELAINE MORGAN
brenda McKinney
01 the
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* *• oF Box
CALL 5-3141
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THE EVENING NEWS AND THE MORNING TELEGRAM CONSOLIDATED
-
V-
Til# to 8:30
T ' '
Forecast
VOL. 85.—NO. 77.
IN 1915. ABSORBED THE DAILT GAZETTE IN 1924.
SULPHUR SPRINGS, TEXAS, TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 1863.
Continues
Buenos Aires, A p r. 2
(AP)—The revolt against
the Guido government in
Argentina continued, de-
spite an earlier settlement
by Guido that the rebel-
lion had been crushed,
Guido now admits that the
revolt continues, for he has is-
sued an ultimatum to navy
holdouts to surrender.
It all started this morning
•When two retired army gener-
als proclaimed the revolt and
quickly won support from
naval units. Four hours latci,
Guido announced that the Re-
volt had been' crushed. How-
ever, later radio broadcasts
from the interior indicated that
navy units still were in revolt
and were said to be threatening
to head for Buenos Aires. Gui-
do, meanwhile, issued an ulti-
matum to navy holdout- to sur-
render. And an army broad-
cast from the interior ordered
tanks to crush the navy rebels.
8 PAGES—6 CENTS
- - •
MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS
New Foreign Aid Funds
Requested by Kennedy
TOUR BATTLEFIELD — Caroline Kennedy, left, the President’s.daughter, and her friend,
.Sally Fay, daughter of Undersecretary of the Navy Paul Fay, run through a field during a
tour of the historic battlefield at Gettysburg, Pa., with their parents. (NKA Telephoto).
Zoning Board Rejects
Trailer Park Permit
f ....... The city planning and zoning
The rebels seized radio stt- ( commission declined Mon day
tions this morning in Buenos
Aires and called for support
from the military and civilians
to oust Guido. Their announced
aim was to prevent national
elections in June which the
rebels claim would give con-
trol of the country to followers
of ousted dictator Juan Per on.
The navy dispatched marines
to the presidential palace in
downtown Buenos Aires. Other,
marines ordered businesses to
shut do-.vn and roped off whole
bank and business sections.
Frightened civilians scatter-
ed for cover hut there were no
reports of fighting.
Then, shortly before noon
Guido announced from his su-
burban home that the revolt
had been crushed and the rebel
effort had been neutralized.
Navy rebels have threatened
t, naval bombardment of Buen-
os Aires in an effort to oust
President Guido. A military in-
telligence officer, commenting
on the revolt in Argentina, said
the navy is leading the rebels.
He said the army and air force
are
c
there will be talks.”
night to recommend special use
zoning to permit development
of a trailer park at the inter-
section of Main Stret and Loop
301.
The designation was request-
ed by Valton Kennedy, owner i
he planned to remove old motel
building now on the site and
convert the entire area into a
trailer park. He and Kenne-
dy argued the change would im-
prove the appearance of the
site.
Others Object
Surrounding residents and
of the property. It was oppos- j property owners declared the
ed by a group of other proper
ty owners living in the area on
the west edge of Sulphur
Springs.
Henry Bobak, occupant of
proposed development would
decrease the value of their
hoi dings and would create
nuisance factors.
City Manager Carl Riehn
Gusty Winds
Develop Across
Most of Texas
New Procedure
For Blood
Donors Set -
A new procedure for hand-
ling blood donors at Memorial
Hospital was put into effect
Tuesday.
D. M. -Christian, hospital ad-
Gusty winds and a severe
thunderstorm forecast were be-
ing spawned by an advancing | through donations,
cool front over West Texas
Tuesday. ‘
The thunderstorm forecast
was issued to cover portions of
the Texas Panhandle, the South
Plains, and the northwest por-
tion of North Central Texas.
The alert called for a few se-
vere storms producing some
large hail from 3 p.m. until
9 p.m. today.
Wind gusts were reaching
up to 65 miles an hour in the
(Continued on Page Eight)
the premises at’the northwest I e*>>la‘ned the 9it* c on * 8 ined
corner of the intersection, said | c 0 n n e c 11 onn for 11 trailers
when the municipal trailer reg-
ulation ordinance was passed
last summer and that these can-
not be eliminated unless the
property should be vacated.
He also pointed out that
trailer parks are among a list
of uses'for which special zon-
■usjs
larfj®yffected. The West Main
property is zoned for light in-
dustrial use. - —......._r:=r
A petition opposing the Ken-
nedy request was signed by
Mrs. C. A. Mark, Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Gregg, “far. and Mrs. Jess
Goodman, Mr. and Mrs. R. C.
Burgin, Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Sunders, - Mr: ■*n d.....Mrs: • M:
Adams, Mr. and Mrs. C. L.
Anderson, I. L. Bain, Mr. and
Mrs. Carroll Black, Mrs. A. D.
Nance, Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Con-
nally, Mr. and Mrs. V. 0. Prim
and Mr. and Mrs. Buford Mark.
Two Checks Asked »
In the course of the discus-
sion, board members asked city
officials to check the status of
an auto wrecking yard in the
area and also of a single trail-
Christian estimated the pre- er parked under a special six-
month permit -with the under-
standing the owner would build
a home at the site within this
interval.
The commission recommend-
ed approval of final plats for
an expansion of Claude Milli-
gans’s Highland Hills subdivis-
ion and for Mack Morrell's new
Bellair Addition on the nort!
side of Highway 11 west of
Mockingbird Land.
Approval also was recom-
mended for a plat covering 17
additional lots in the J. C. Jack-
son Addition on the east side of
Carter Street,, The action was
made conditional on completion
of necessary survey and plat
Kennedy Picks
New Military
Chief for Allies
The arrest of law violators
in Sulphur Springs dipped to
the year’s low during March, a
report by, the city police de-
partment showed Tuesday.
Officers made 53 arrests dur-
ing the month, compared with
03 in February and 57 in Jan-
uary. The resulting collection
of fines also showed a de-
er e a s e, to $956.50 for the
month.
Parking meter receipts and
the collection of overtime park-
ing fines increased during
March, however, and the de-
partment’s income for the
month was the highest of the
year at *2,691.0-7. --------
Parking meter receipts were
$1,178.92 and overtime park-
ing fines totaled $456.25. The
latter figure was more than
$100 ahead of the past two
months and reflected a crack*
Washington, Apr. 2 UP
President Kennedy has named
Lieutenant-General Theod orel down on tickets placed on cars
Parker to be the new chief J bearing out-of-county tags “but
of staff of Allied forces in Eu- ! driven by persons living or,
rope. He also nominated Park- working in Sulphur Springs. j
A reduction in disturbance I
complaints accounted for the
largest portion of the arrest
er for promotion to full gener-
al He succeeds General James
Moore, who is retiring.
a week, Monday through Sat-
urday, to take Wood donations
on a walk-in basis.
Lac(k of such arrangements
in the past is held partially re-
sponsible for serious deficits in
the hospital’s account with the
Wadley Blood Bank of Dallas.
The hospital’s policy on blood
i transfusions calls for the fami-
j lies of - patients receiving Wood
to be responsible for replace-
ment of the. a m o \^jn t used
Parker is now deputy chief j decrease fior March. Only six
of staff) military operations,! ar r e * t s were made on the
of army. He’s being succeeded j charge, compared with 12 dur-
by Major-General Harold John-
son, who is nominted for lieu-
tenant-general.
sent deficit at approximately
40 pints and described the sit-
uation as a “tremendous prob-
lem.’’
Volunteer blood donors also
will be welcome at the hospital,
he added. -
City Council
Due New Look
At Meeting
The new comman
9Mh Army will he 1
General Frederick Brown, now
commander of Allied land
forces in Southeast Europe. He
replaces Lieutenant-G e n e r a 1
John Ryan, Jr., who is retiring;
Brown’s successor will be Lieu-
tenant-General John Michaelis,
commander of the Fifth U.S.
Army Corps in Europe.
*ivrwr<l To edmihand the Fiffh |
Corps is Major-General Creigh-!
ton Abrams, now assistant
deputy chief of .staff for mili-
tary operations for Army re-
quirements and programs. Ab-
rams was nominated to a lieu-
tenant-general
inf February
Drunkenness charges contin-
ued to lead the arrest category
list, with 16 complaints filed
f™* 1 idUflon.' That ffguWTs
high fur the year. There were
22 traffic violations of various
types filed during the month,
nine of them for speeding.
Downs Selected
As Chairman
Of 4-H Leaders
GLENDA HORN
JALANE ring
WIN STATE DEGREES—These Sulphur Springs High School
students have won the coveted State Degree in Fixture Home-
makers of America work and will be presented the honor at
the state meeting in Dallas Apr. 19-20. The degree is the
highest ^{Tt^ssible honor in FHA work. They are the daugh-
ters., of Jlr. and Mrs. Oscar McKinney. Mr.-and Mrs. Eldon ,
Ring, the Rev. and Mrs. L. B. Morgan and Mr. and Mrs.
Elmer Horn.
VEGETABLES AS CROP
Earl Downs was elected
chairman of the Hopkins Conn-j
ty Adult 4-H Leaders Assorm-
Kennedy also selected Major- tiojj Monday night at a meeting:
............. • *• ' • . •
General Frederick Wiesman of
the Marine Corps to be the new
of the association.
Other officers elected were
commandant of Marine Corps jRoy P e t r o s s, vice-president,
schools. He also was nominated j and Mrs. E. C. Kyke, secretary-
for promotion to lieutenant- treasurer.
general. He replaces Lieufen-j Other business included a
Membership Meeting
Called by Chamber
Washington, A pr> 2
(AP) — President Ken-
nedy asked congress to-
day for four and one half
billion in new foreign aid
money, slashing 420 mil-
lion from the totai he proposed
before General Lucius Clay’s
sid advisory committee report-
ed the current program is much
too big.
Last year congress cut the
President's four billion, 900
million foreign aid request to
three billion, 900 million and
opponents want' to pare even
deeper -this .year.
In a special message to enp-
itol hill, Kennedy outlined a
six-point program aimed at im-
proving the big overseas assist-
ance program. He, drew heavi-
ly on finding of the Clay com-
mittee With which he agrees.
Said Kennedy:
“Our world is near the cli-
max of an historic convulsion.’’
He declared that U.S. aid wiil
help determine whether large
segments of the world chose
“consent or coercion” as a way
of life. He added:
“Despite noisy opposition
from tiie very first days, U.S.
military and economic held has
advanced freedom and the U.
S. national interest around the
world. lie said past Democratic
and Republican presidents, a
bipartisan majority in congress
land among the people and the
Clay committee all agree on
this.
Battle Launched
The presidential message
launched the annual legislative
battle over the politically un-
popular aid bill.
A preliminary skirmish' has
already been set off by the
recent report of the Clay eom-
jmittee, a group of ten pronun-
t ent citizens appointed by Kcti-
j r.edy to take a look at the aid
j program.
| The Clay report said a “pro-
I periy conceived and implements
| ed” effort is essential, to U.S.
security—words which Kenne-
dy quoted. But the group con-
cluded the current program is
one half billion dollars too big.
It passed no judgment on Ken-
| nedy’s leqUest for the next1
i fiscal year. " j
Kennedy’s new money re-
. quest foe the fiscal year start-
ing next J u]y 1st is now $4,-
525,0()0,000, or 420 million be-
I low the $4,945,000,000 he cull-
j ed for in his fiscal 1964 bud-
get submitted in January be-
fore he got the Clay report.
Officials figured actual
ant-Generai Edward Snedeker,; discussion of the county-wide
who is retiring.
The governing body of the
City of Sulphur Springs will
take on a new look tonight
with -the installation of three j work
new members of the City
Council.
I’ete Wright, Earl Payne
and Byron Dickerson will take
tiie oath of office as the first
order of business of the regu-
lar council session at 7 p. m.
(Continued on Page Eight)'
Greenwood, Miss., Apr. 2 I/D
— Police acted quickly today
to break up a march of about
100 Negroes seeking to regis-
ter to vote in GrecnWood.
City police halted a mass
march about two blocks from
its o r i g i n and ordered the
marchers to disperse in smaller
groups.
It was the latest of several I
demonstrations by the Negroes
seeking to register.
Negro commedian Dick Gre-j
gory—who flew to Greenwood
to speak at a vote registration |
rally—appeared in the crowd!
hut took no active part. j
Police Chief Curtis I,ary fold
the marchers:
. “We have told you we wiil
jutfeJufrif *rn with .iwnniim ..CT PufiWsT
plications to register, but you
|XU. ... .. I -- ■ ---- - - "
Kennedy Plans
Tour of West
Washington, Apr. 2 OW —
President Kennedy will make
an inspection tour of military
(Continued on Page Eight.)
WEATHER
Texan Installed
iJBoy of Year
Washington, Apr. 2 fTP) — A
17-year-old^/T e x a n , Ignacio
Chavez of El Paso, has been
greeted by President Kennedy
at the White House. The pres-
ident installed Chavez, the son
of a blind broom seller, as the
boy of the year of the Boys’
A special permit authorizing i America. The club
Miss Daisy Sellers to include a
eaffRdft in the remodeling of
her home at 720 College Street
was approved under the undue
hardship clause of the zoning
ordinance. The building lacks
sufficient lotline clearance.
calls him a fine example of
juvenile decency. And Chavez
will receive u $1,000 scholar-
ship — a big step toward be-
coming a law student or a mid-
shipman at Annapolis.
A general membership meet-j tentative of the Campbell Soup
ing of the. Hopkins County i Company, currently building a | spending for fiscal 1964 prob-
4-H camp at Lake Trinidad and j Chamber of Commerce has plant at Paris, wit) speak at ab , d dl0P . s than
the exchange program by coun- been called for Thursday night1 the meeting. - j million dollars during the year
'”••• *• >"-1 Th« Pl„„i I. .chedulod •.;£
open in 1964 and the company hind appropriations.'''
vViil begin buying potatoes, $1.4 Billion for Arms
onions and carrots on a con- *ne ,H’'V money request,
$1,405,000,000 would go for
ty 4-H club members with the
4-H clubs in Aztec, N. M., this : poets of vegetables as a cash
summer. j crop in the county.
A summer camp food com-; The meetinp wiM be held
mittee was appointed. Named | jn the community room of thc
to thu gioup were Mis^oy Pe-is , h Springs State Bank at; tract basis next year,
tross, Mrs. Billie Anderson, and ! _ * ;
tross,
Mrs. J. r. Ledbetter.
Leftist Leader
In Laos Slain:
By Soldier
Vientiane, Laos, Apr. 2 i.f!—
A Neutralist soldier guarding
the villa of- leftist Foreign
Minister Quinim Pholsena of
Laos shot and killed the gov-
7:30 p. m.
Watt Morris,
tier’s agriculture
wii! be in charge.
i arms aid—a 75 million reduc-
The company is reported ,to*'tion from the January figure
be interest'd in seeking con-:—-and $3,120,0.00,000 for eco-
eommittee, tracts in a 100-mile radius of i r.oniic assistance, 315 million
Paris.
-V*"
of the Chani-
A lepre-
CONGRESSMEN REACT
Deeper Foreign Aid
Cuts Deemed Likely
Washington, Apr. g hf1
“The President and his peo-
dollar cutback.
Officials said most of the
economic aid savings stem from
postponements of the time®
when developing,countries are
expected to be ready to qualify
for loans and from reducing
[from -100 million tb 300 mil-
lion the amount of the presi-
dential contingency fund used
for emergencies. They said 300
mittion-seemed ample for ahy
j foreseeable emengencies.
| Sounding part of the. thou
Trussed-Up Body
Of Youth Found
Lake Charles, La., Apr. 2 i/D -When sheriff’s deputies
— The trussed - up body of a j found him, he took them to his
ernment official late last night [ Comments by U. S. congress- pie must be hearing from the, jn tbe ( jay rep0,.t Kennedy
Washington indicate j country too.” I said the main new initiative in
i as Quinim arrived home with men in
» - . J. ----- ---------------- "T fWKBIV " rtf m I ■*! I m I y-* y CW”. . - - -T* ft*
c a n 11 1) t proceed with grama..Widely scattenal slashed, but alive,
this lnrge thrrmgh the business
district.’* ______________
Charles McDew, student Non-
Violent Co-Ordinating Commit-
tee worker, told Lary:
' ‘‘You are interfering with
right of assembly and associa-
tion.” T ;
The Negroes dispersed ami
walked and road to the court-
house in smaller gr oups.
____..-.^mlicwirs !i:tc toiiinhl and cur-
ly Wednesday. LflUe cfiinitC In twn-
l>criiturt UniiKM. 5S-ti5. Hish Wciloett-,
day 76*84« „■•••
NOKTH CENTRAL TEXAS -Partly
cloudy Wednesday, Widtly
tliundershowara toniffht.. :
NORTHWEST TEXAS — Widely
acctti ltd thiimkrehow, rn early tunight.
Cl« r tr partly cloudy Wednesday.
SOUTH CENTRAL TEXAS — Con-
siderable clcudinefw windy and mild
tuuUrht becoming partly cloudy
Wednesday.
SOUTHEAST TEXAS — Mostly
cloudy and mild ton ip lit and Wednes-
day.
. j " | * .-oivi nit* iiuiiM new mutative ill
jnis wife from a reception giv- that congress is not likely to) The chairman of the Senate, j (Mi_j would be to
efi by the king. There is no j give President Kennedy the | Foreign Relations Committee, encourage private investment
immediate explanation of thefour billion, 500 million dollars j Democrat William Fulbright of j„ underdeveloped countries. To
soldter’^ action. < ihe Wants for foreign aid. The . Arkansas says Kennedy has | this end he proposed:
The guard riddled Quinim President has wW initiaUap-1 done much to meet suggestions f ' -^Amending tiie U. S tax
with 18 , machinegun bullets,! plausf for trimming his orftun- • made by the foreign reiatiohs so American firms can de-
theii finished him off with a/at aid'estimates by 420 m^J^m committee. And Ftilbright also | juct part of their investments
shot through the head. Quin- dollars. But many eongression-; says the President'has tried tof jn these lands from U. S. in-
— me lruK,™ „n niuiv «, » , ,M1M h wa^/^Hnded in al leaders say the cut isn’t j meet criteria laid down by the come tax*Q. Officials said’ the
— ine irusseu - up oouy oi a iouna mm, tie took them to his . .. , hut hm- cnnditi.m is deep enough, ... • Clay committee. This commit- • —----
h-year-old boy, his throat cut, mother, who was still trussed ! >,. ’ i Republican leaders contend^ tee, set up bv the " "
jnot beligved aeinouS. They had the p|esi<!ent ig in t,/
a royal ; protests of taxpayers in eut-
,. .... , reception at which the king ting budget requests. Says Sen-
knownassailant. —
was found in a wooded area
near Lake Charles in south-
western Louisiana at daybreak
today. His mother and
........ *" —
Neither could talk coherent- ! jupt’ returned from
ly but managed to tell officers j
tax credit prolmbly
President., will exceed ten per cent of the
! recommended that the foreign ; umi)llnt invested
air program be tightened up. j ^-Expanding U. S. govern-
yBfemoeratic Representa t i v e ; ment guarantees to American
last night, their throats alsa
-Sheriff Henry Reid said 12-
year-oid Mrs, Audrey T. Baden,
a doctorTs secretary, and her
two sons apparently were kid-
napped sometime yesterday.
Rodney Baden, 22, cut him-
A massive search was launch-
ed throughout the night for
the youth, ending when his mu-
tilated body was found.
Laotian factions to patch up
their differences and strive to 1
sen of Illinois:
"I .suggested recently a cut
{ chairman of the House Appro-1 es from expropriation and oth-
r i a-t i o n s subcommittee in el political causes. Officials
self free from his bonds with »^are ih cHUc^condition in!^
his pocket knife late last night.
Despite his slashed throat he
crawled more than a mile seek-
ing help. be determined.
______,.................... ______________________________________!____________|-p r , w-. . « o ,T„.,V . vvvv. ... , _ . j — _________
re-establish peace in’ the still1 - somewhere jn the htHgTib'drliodd f charge of aid funds, '(mils Kbit- {eftid' the guarantee program
divided- Southeast Asia na- of—ToOmHlirm- dol+ars.—By -a itedy’s foreign aid reqqests "ex- ; against such risks would be
tion. J careful Imebyline ^crutihy it; cessive.” • Passman interprets! raised from one billion, 300
The State Department^ in-t will not be difficult to scare up j the (day .report as.callipg for ' million to*two and one half tnl-
Both Mn RaHnn u A PnH Washington is withholding] of- i another 350 million or more j aid ^pend'lhjF of three billion, h°n under Kertnedy’s proposal.
- * ■ ' i ivimment fnv Ui» ujres- j jn savings.” 1400 million dollars, and he says: This does not require new ap-
ficial comment,, for the
But U. S. officials
a gh.e Charles hospital. Sher- the assassination could be the
iff Reid Baid no motive for
the triple throat-slashing could
House GOP leader Charles
Halleck of Indiana joins Dirk-
start of a very serious feud sen in saying Republicans, have
ih the shaky Laotian coali-j been advocating a cut in the
tiogugpvenuteat*
budget. And he adds;
“If the President had asked propriations.
for around three billion do!-' Agr«« on Point*
laps, it would have been a real- The President also requested
tetic program ami more than abolition of the ban congress
(Continued on Page Eight) (Continued on Page Eight)
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Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 85, No. 77, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 2, 1963, newspaper, April 2, 1963; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth830508/m1/1/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.