Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 207, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 2, 1951 Page: 1 of 22
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Listen To
Station KXOX
Your News and Pleasure
Station
1240 On Your Dial
Sweetwater Repurteii
The Weather
Temperature, high Friday, 103. \ow
Saturday morning. 72; barometer, 29 92.
steady
change In temperat
Hy, 40 per cent.
>uds, not much
stive humid-
54th Year Number 207
Full Leased United Press Wire Service
SWEETWATER, TEXAS, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1951
NEA Telephoto Service
Price Daily 5c, Sunday 10c
ft
3
NO ONE INJURED—This auto crashed through a bridge
guard rail and hangs precariously by a fender above the
Rock Island railroad tracks near Kismet, Kan. The occupants,
Mr. and Mrs. Carlos Garrison, and his brother Paul, were un-
hurt but had to slide down the 50-foot-deep cut and walk a
quarter of a mile before they could leave the tracks. (NEA
Telephoto).
Teachers Assigned,
Registration Tues.
With registration in all Sweet-
water schools set for 9 a. m.
Tuesday, faculties for all schools
are reported by Supt. Cleo Tar-
ter to be complete except for
two places, a teacher for excep-
tional children at the high
school and one for music in J. P.
Cowen Elementary School.
Supt. Tarter has announced
that all students will register
Tuesday morning at their respec-
tive schools except for first
graders of Philip Nolan and J.
P. Cowen, who were registered
last Spring. Buses will make reg-
ular runs Tuesday morning, re-
turning students to their homes
at noon. Regular classes will
start Wednesday morning.
Assignments of teachers and
administrators have been listed
as follows:
Cleo W. Tarter, superintend-
ent; Miss Barbara Bennett, sec-
retary to the superintendent;
Mrs. E. J. Woodward, elemen-
tary supervisor.
NEWMAN HIGH SCHOOL—
Olaf G. South, principal and as-
sistant superintendent; Mrs. Rob-
ert Wyatt, secretary to the prin-
cipal; Winfred Halbert, assistant
principal and chemistry; Louise
Nolan County's First
Cotton Sells For 65c
Nolan County's first bale of
1951 cotton, produced by H. F.
Saunders Jr. on the Lucille Viv-
iian farm west of Blackwell, was
tpld at auction Saturday morning
or 65 cents per pound.
A group of 13 local business
men pooled their money in order
to run the price up to the - 65
cent mark.
Fisher County's first bale, pro-
duced by Frank Cantu on the T.
C. Tolar farm near Longworth,
was sold at auction and brought
40 cents per pound. The Sweet-
water Reporter was the success-
ful bidder.
In addition to the 65 cents per
pound Saunders was awarded a
check for $100 by the Sweetwa-
15,000 Bales May
Be Ginned In County
Highway And Street
Construction Is Up
AUSTIN, Tex., Sept. 1 (UP)—
More than $3,500,000 worth of
highway and street awards high-
lighted construction business ac-
tivities in Texas this week.
The trade journal Texas Con-
tractor reported tonight the to-
tal of all contracts let was §9,-
389,060, up some $400,000 from
the previous week and raising
the year's total thus far to $761,-
824,642.
Aside from the highway and
street contracts, totaling $3,-
555,293, most other serments of
&ho industry found the going
dull.
Non - residential building
slumped to $3,162,701, of which
$1,213,002 was for schools and
$1,127,236 for business build-
ings. Church and theater build-
ing contracts, combined, added
some $831,000 to the non-resi-
dential value.
Residential contracts trailed
rlist, at a total of $1,307,700,
which $763,000 represented
agreements on 59 houses to cost
more than $7,000 each. Lower-
priced home contracts numbered
72 at a gross of $468,700, and
there was 12 duplex contracts
valued at $76,000.
Oil Well Flows
J5 Barrels Per
Hour On Test
Nolan County apparently has
another oil well in the making.
On a test Friday the Seaboard
Oil Co. of Delaware and Conti-
nental Oil Company No. 1 Billie
Hanks of San Angelo, southeast-
ern Nolan County, showed gas
in 15 minutes and oil in 65 min-
utes. It flowed oil to pits for
10 minutes at a rate estimated
at 15 barrels hourly.
Operators were coring ahead
Friday and Saturday from 4,609
feet after heading oil from the
Canyon reef.
No water was encountered
from the test which was made
from 4,583 to 4,609 feet for
1 1/4 hours. The test was
through a five-eighths inch
Wattomhole choke and a one-inch
top choke.
Open flowing bottomhole pres-
sure ranged from 0 to 1,300
pounds. Shutin bottomhole pres-
sure was 1,470 pounds. Hydro-
static pressure was 2,200
pounds.
The testing tool was left in
hole overnight. When 10 stands
£ee OIL WELL—Page 6
•a
A news release ^5y the West
Texas Chamber of Commerce
states that the cotton crop in
West Texas will fall short of 2,-
000,000 bales this year The area is
comix,sed by 132 counties.
The estimate for Nolan Coun-
ty is 8,000 bales.
Local cotton officials and gin-
ners state this grossly under es-
timated as the outlook at present
is for approximately 15,000 bales,
or almost double the WTCC esti-
mate.
The report states further:
"While prospects are materially
brightened on the South Plains
by mid-August rains, continued
extreme heat and drouth almost
everywhere below the Cap Rock
reduced the forecast for 30 roll-
ing plains counties 100.000 bales
during August. Observers said
that may drop another 100,000
bales if i>. general rain is not re-
ceived prior to Sept. 10".
While it is no secret this year's
crop will be short, there is evi-
dence that Nolan County's total
will not drop as much as in some
areas. Also, there is more cotton
acreage this year than last..
Fairly good crops south of
Roscoe and parts of the Divide
area will help boost Nolan Coun-
ty's total.
ter Board of City Development.
Manager A. C. Bishop made the
presentation.
The *100, given by the BCD
added to the 65 cents per pound
made the total price paid for the
403 pound bale $361.95, or almost
00 cents per pound.
Since the market price for the
cotton was 33 cents per pound,
Saunders receeived $229.96 pre-
mium money for having grown
the first bale.
In addition he received num-
erous prizes contributed by local
merchants. 1
Trust Company, National Bank
of Sweetwater, Levys', Sears
Roebuck, Russells, J. C. Penney,
C. R. Anthony, Sweetwater Cot-
ton Oil Mill, Carl Pratt, C. M.
Arbaugh, International Harves-
ter, Clayton Williams Insur-
ance, and Sweetwater Production
Credit.
The bale was ginned August
2S by the Planters Gin Company,
A1 Kendrick, manager.
The first Fisher County bale
was ginned on August 21 by Plan-
ers Gin.
Bollinger, homemaking; Ben
Brock, journalism; Hoyt Byrd,
diversified occupations; Pat Ger-
ald, head coach and physics; J.
M. Grigg, assistant coach and
commercial; Marie Haney, librar-
ian; J. M. Harlow, general met-
als; Marie Hill, music; James
Hobbs, band; Clyde Jetton, coun-
selor; F. M. Larner, vocational
agriculture; Mrs.«Richard Mc-
Afee, Spanish and English; John
R. McKay, industrial arts and
algebra; Leona Morrison, history;
K. E. Newton, assistant coach
and history; J. G. Overton, math
and tennis coach; Jerry Powell,
speech and dramatics and Eng-
lish; Reba Jean Roberts, biology;
Leila Mae Sivells, secretarial
training; Tommy Teal, algebra;
Paula Jean Terry, girls physical
education; Mrs. E. J. Yates, Eng-
lish; Laura Sheridan, English.
REAGAN JUNIOR HIGH—
Thos. S. Whittenburg, principal;
Mrs. Virginia Wann, secretary
to the principal; Mrs. D. B.
Brown, eighth grade language
arts; Mary Calloway, eighth
grade language arts; Nona Cobb,
eighth grade arithmetic; Mrs. G.
I. Diehlmann, librarian; George
Faulkner, general science; J. B.
Gibbs, boys physical education
and coach; Raymond Hefner, lab-
oratory of industry; Mrs. John
R. McKay, girls physical educa-
tion; Ed F. Neinast, seventh
grade social studies and arith-
metic; Mrs. J. G. Overton, sev-
enth grade language arts; E. B.
Posey Jr., ninth grade math;
Mary June Posey, music; Mrs.
Jerry Powell, seventh grade lan-
guage arts; H. D. Reed, seventh
grade arithmetic; Mrs. W. R.
Swaim, eighth grade language
arts; Mrs. T. T. Thomas, seventh
grade language arts and social
studies; Mrs. Garland Vinson,
ninth grade English; Jeanette
Wade, eighth grade social stud-
ies; Mrs. Pearl Walker, seventh
and eighth grade art; Billie Sav-
age, assistant coach and seventh
grade social studies.
PHILIP NOLAN ELEMEN-
TARY—Joe Douglas, principal;
Oma Lee Bell, sixth grade arith-
metic; Earline Bennett, second
Firms making up the premium r „ . - ,
money included: Texas Bank ^'n'lIe T'.ee Coates, • sec-
— — *t. ., - i r rwi rrrsif o' Mro limmio I li i m nn\r
d grade; Mrs. Jimmie Dulaney,
third grade; Mrs. Robt. Faver,
fourth grade; Mrs. A. D. Gaith-
er, first grade; W. C. Garner Jr.,
fifth grade and arithmetic; Mrs.
Leo Jones, first grade; Bobbie
Morrow, third grade; Mrs. K. E.
Newton, fourth grade; Mrs. Ale-
ta Pinnell, first grade; Mrs. Chas.
G. Powell, second grade; Mrs.
V. O. Reagan, second grade; Mrs.
Harvey J. Robertson, fifth grade
and music; Bettye Sumner, third
grade; Mrs. Bob Owen, sixth
See TEACHERS—Page 8
Borger Fire Now Under
Control, 11 Injured
eds, By The Thousands,
fream To Korean Front
STOOGES OF KREMLIN IN STATE DEPARTMENT—Sen.
Joseph R. McCarthy, (R. Wis.), speaking before the 52nd
Annual Encampment of the VFW in New York, tells his
audience that he would resign from the Senate if he failed to
prove there are "communists and stooges of the Kremlin" in
the State Department. McCarthy, who came to the encamp-
ment armed with photographs and transcriptions of testi-
mony at various Congressional hearings, waves some of the
letters to emphasize a point. (NEA Telephoto).
Screaming Commies
Back Allies
TOKYO, Sunday, Sept. 2 (UP)—Thousands of Commun-
ist soldiers streamed out of the Reds' Manchurian sanctuary
today toward the Eastern Korean Front in an effort to
stem a new Allied limited offensive.
The Communists shifted one fresh North Korean divis-
ion from the Kaesong area and front dispatches said the
enemy was counter attacking heavily to hold his eastern
flank.
More than 1,000 screaming Reds firing automatic ma-
chine pistols attacked at one point in the battle of "Bloody
Ridge" and drove United Nations off high ground. An
Allied counterattack failed to win it back.
United Press Correspondent Warren Franklin reported
from the front above Yanggu that another enemy attack
west of Bloody Ridge grew from two companies to two
battalions and forced the Allies from another hill Sat-
urday morning.
BULLETIN-
TOKYO. Sunday, Sept. 2 (UP)
The Communists demanded to-
day that Gen. Matthew B. Ridg-
way "conscienciously and re-
sponsibly deal with the alleged
allied violations of the Kaesong
neutral zone if he wants to re-
sume the Korean armistice talks.
A determined UN counterat-
tack retook the crest before noon
and the hot and sweating infan-
Russian Tactics
Work At San
Wont
Francisco
WASHINGTON, Sept. 1 (UP) |a Japanese peace," the depart-
grade; Mrs. LUliarTBrown, fourilUState Department said to- m,*nt sab!, "unless it leaves Ja-
- ~ da/ that any Russian effort no pan economically prostrate and
block the Japanese peace treaty militarily defenseless."
at San Francisco will fail and Nations which had a construc-
the most the Soviet can do is tive interest in the treaty, it
New College
Enrollment
Begins Soon
BEAUMONT, Tex., Sept. 1—
(UP)—The first class of Lamar
State College of Technology will
be enrolled Sept. 12-15, and of-
ficials of Texas' newest Senior
College expect a registration of
about 1500.
The school, formerly Lamar
Junior College, officially chang-
ed its name and status today.
Emphasis will be on engineer-
ing and technological training,
although other types of study
will be offered.
Bachelor of science degraes
will be granted In chemical, civ-
il, electrical, industrial and
mechanical engineering; busi-
ness administration, home eco-
nomics, physical education,
chemistry, petroleum geology
and medical technology, and the
biological sciences.
Lamar Tech will finish a $1,-
000,000 building program at Its
65-acre campus shortly. Addi-
tion of a new engineering build-
ing, named for Anthony F. Lu-
cas, discoverer of the famous
Spindletop Oil Field, and a home
economics building gives the col-
lege eight major buildings.
Lamar was founded as South
Park College in 1923.
BORGER, Sept. 1 (UP) — Ex-
plosions and fire ravaged a
square-block area of the govern-
ment-owned Plains Butadiene
plant today, injuring 11 persons
and driving an estimated 1,000
families from their homes.
The spectacular blaze began at
dawn with a chain of 12 or more
blasts which rocked this Panhan-
dle industrial city and created
flashes visible 40 miles away.
The plant is located four miles
west of Borger.
The fire was brought under
control this afternoon, but small
fires set to burn off dangerous
vapors from twisted and broken
pipe lines continued.
The fire raged through five of
16 towering columnar tanks fil-
led with highly-volatile buta-
diene, a natural gas by-product
used in synthetic rubber manu-
facture.
Most damaging explosions
came In quick succession when
two 40-foot high storage tanks
detonated. Eugene Lyons, first
ambulance driver at the scene,
witnessed the second blast and
said pieces of one-inc'n steel pipe
"went sailing through the air
like toothpicks."
The Federal Bureau of Inves-
tigation began an inqury Into
the cause of the blaze, but spe-
cial agent H. O. Hawkins of Dal-
las said there was no indication
of sabotage.
He said the probe was ordered
because the sprawling plant, op-
of chemicals for mixing with
Bueadiene, a process called "step
four" In the production of syn-
thetic rubber.
Plant manager A. D. Leonard
was amog the 11 workers treat-
ed for burns at the Phillips-own-
ed Casa Serena Medical Center.
Flames spurted 100 feet in
the air and a shroud of black
smoke covered the area. Intense
heat and the smoke prevented
an aggressive fight against the
flames, and police and highway
patrolmen roped off the area to
hold back thousands of curious.
Circling The Square
erated for the government b;
Phillips Petroleum Co. through
its subsidiary, Phillips Chemical
Co., is engaged in defense pro
duction.
The plant, in the Bunavlsta in-
dustrial community, was manned
by a crew of about 60 men when
the explosions began near a con-
trol room which guages the flow
Dr. Allen Kyle, 80,
Dies At Houston Home
HOUSTON, Sept. 1 (UP)—Dr.
J. Allen Kyle, 80, the distinguish-
ed Dean of Houston's practicing
physicians and surgeons, died
early today at a hospital after
a brief illness.
Kyle had been in active prac-
tice until he was hospitalized.
A statistician says the aver-
age American takes 18,908 steps
a day . . . that's a lot of steps
for one to take when he doesn't
know where he is going.
You van get everything but a
cold off your chest by telling
jour friends about it.
Schools open in Sweetwater
Tuesday morning . . . Mom can
now have her vacation.
—o—
See by a nearby publication
that Ciil Montgomery keeps a
pretty honest bunch of boarders
in his jail.
——O——
A1 Kendrick, manager of the
Planters Gin, is a persistent work
er for his clients.
A. I'. Bishop, and a commit-
tee from the Board of City De-
velopment composed of J. N. Du-
laney, Irving Ijoeb and Clayton
Williams did a good job in pro-
moting premium money for the
first bale of cotton.
General conditions must be Im-
proving ... we found a small
piece of beef In a bowl of beef
stew today.
The next publication of the
Reporter will be edited by the
regular i ditor, Allen Baker . . .
nt are glad .because having peo-
ple fall you and ask what has
happened to the paper this week
doesn't set very well.
"denounce the result."
It said flatly that the treaty
will be signed soon after the
conference opens Tuesday whe-
ther the Soviet delegates like it
or not.
The representatives of the
free world are "in no mood to
brook obstructionism" the de-
partment said in a 12-page back-
ground report on the conference.
"Shortly after the opening
ceremonies on the evening of
Sept. 4—in a matter of days," it
said, "the treaty will have been
signed by so many allied pow-
ers . . . that there will be no
doubt in any quarter as to the
fact of peace or the terms of
peace."
The department said It "sin-
cerely hopes" Russia will take
a more constructive attitude at
the conference than it did dur-
ing the treaty negotiations. But
it indicated the hope was for-
lorn.
It said, in an obvious refer-
ence to Russia, that "there may
be a few among the delegates
present who have been sent to
block the treaty." This could
also take in other Communist
delegates.
"The Soviets just do not want
Swimming Pool Open
Until September 10
The Sweetwater swimming
pool will remain open after La-
bor Day this year, it was an-
nounced Saturday.
Heretofore the pool has been
closed immediately after Labor
Day, but due to many requests
from parents, officials decided
to keep it open until about the
10th of September.
It will open each day at 9 a.
m., close at 11; open again at
4 p. m. and close at 9 p. m„ it
was announced.
said, "voluntarily subordinated
a special interest to the impor-
tant end of world peace and se-
curity." But it said the Soviet
Union "distinguished itself by
very active non-cooperation."
The department noted that
some countries notably indva,
decided their objections to the
treaty were such that they could
not sign. But it said "to have
first attempted to settle every
other problem of the Far East
in a vain effort to get unani-
mous consent would have
meant no peace with Japan "ei-
ther in this day or any other
day."
Sun Nearly Blotted Out
When Two Orbs Crossed
NEW YORK, Sept. 1 (UP) —
The moon nearly blotted out the
sun today when the paths of the
two orbs crossed at a celestial
intersection in the first annualar
eclipse visible in the United
States since 1940.
Only a small circle of light
from the sun could be seen from
a small patch of the eastern Uni-
ted States at dawn, as the moon
passed between the earth and a.
the sun.
There won't be another eclipse
like this one in the United States
until 1984. but New Englanders
will see a total eclipse in 1959.
The Havden planetarium of
the American Museum of Natur-
al History chartered an Eastern
Airlines " transport and took
newsmen and photographers out
over the Atlantic Ocean to see
the spectacular performance,
which lasted nearly two hours.
The sun rose shortly after 4
m. (CST), 93,857,000 miles
Saturday's 107
Degree Weather
Tops Local Mark
It got downright hot in
Sweetwater Saturday.
In fact, it was the hottest day
of the year, according to Weath-
er Observer M. C. Manroe.
Saturday's temperature jump-
ed to 107 degrees. The previous
high in Sweetwater was 106.
Manroe also revealed that
the temperature here during 18
of August's 31 days was be-
tween 100 and 106 degrees.
Rainfall in Sweetwater dur-
ing August amounted to 2.40,
bringing the year's total to
15.37.
trvmen counted 472 North Ko-
rean dead on the position, vic-
tims of 27 Allied air strikes that
hit the eastern sector.
Allied fighter-bombers claimed
800 enemy casualties in the Kum-
song area alone while Naval gun-
fire raked enemy ridges and val-
leys near the coast with thund-
ering salvos.
Censorship held up the hard
facts of how much ground the
Allied attacks had gained, but
the doughboys were moving for-
ward across a third of the Ko-
rean peninsula despite scattered
local setbacks.
In the air 15 F-86 Sabrejets
battled 40 Russian • built MIG-
13 jets in northwest Korean
and claimed one enemy plane
probably destroyed in a vicious
20 minute battle fought nearly
seven miles above the earth.
B-29's hit an Important rail-
road bridge across the Taedong
River at Sunchon with 60 tons
of bombs while fighter-bombers
raked over the enormous enemy
buildup that may presage a ma-
jor Communist offensive.
Allied officers said they be-
lieved the Communists had
brought a fresh North Korean
division into the fighting in east-
ern Korea to replace heavy cas-
ualties suffered in the first UN
limited offensive that jumped
off Aug. 13. An Air Force report
said convoys filled the roads
leading to the front from Man-
churia.
CX officers said they did not
believe the frontline reinforce-
ments meant the expected Red
offensive was imminent.
The new UN attack started
Friday on a 30-mile front and
the 8th Army reported big gains
in the early hours of the fight.
Five key hills were captured in
the first 24 hours and gains of
at least two miles were reported
all along the zigzag battleline
running across the steep ridges
from the east coast to Kumsong.
from the earth. Then the moon,
244.030 miles away, dropped a
black eyelid over most of the
sun. Those in the plane saw a
partial eclipse — one in which
a crescent of the sun's light may
be seen. In other areas, viewers
could see the annual eclipse—
in which the moon is surround-
ed by a thin circle of the sun's i
rays.
A cloudy overcast spoiled the |
show for early birds in most of !
the eastern states. The eclipse; . OTTT1,T„m„,.. « „ ,IT_.
would have been visible, at least. ] WASHINGTON, Sept. 1 (UP)
partially, over nearly all of the j —The American version of Brit-
U. S. east of the Mississippi Riv-: ain s Canberra jet bomber may
er had it not been for clouds, have a major role in plans for
Atlanta. Ga„ Pittsburgh, Pa., Bos- using atomic weapons against
ton, Mass., and Chicago, reported large enemy ground forces, avia-
the overcast eclipsed the eclipse. tion sources said today.
Gen. Hoyt S. Vandenberg, air
Jet To Play
Major Role
In Atom Use
Business Firms Will Observe
Labor Day, No Paper Monday
Sweetwater will be.closed Monday.
Monday, Sept. 2, national "Labor Day" will be observed
generally as a holiday in keeping with a custom of many
years' standing.
The Retail Merchants Committee of the Board of City
Development included Labor Day as one of its holidays
designated by general agreement to be observed.
The banks will be closed as well as county offices and
the nost office. «
Postmaster M. J. Swecdcn said there would be no mail
deliveries, neither would the nost office windows be open
Monday. Only a skeleton crew will be maintained to
handle snecial deliveries and fast mail.
In keening with its custom of manv vears, the Sweet-
water Reporter will give its employees the holiday and
there will be no paper Monday afternoon.
Ridgway To Suggest
New Conference Site
TOKYO, Sunday. Sept. 2 (UP)
Belief grew today that Gen. Mat-
thew 11. Ridgway would attempt
to salvage the cease-fire talks toy
suggesting the Conference site be
moved from Kaesong.
An unidentified warplane
dropped flares over the United
Nations truce camp Saturday
night shortly after the UN had
rejected us; fraudulent the latest
in a long series of Communist
claims hat allied planes bombed
Kaesong.
Peiping radio alerted the world
for a special broadcast at 11:30
a. m. today (7:30 p. m. Saturday
CST). Although no Indication
was given of the subject of the
broadcast, the Red radio In the
past has used this method to In-
dicate important announcements
on the truce negotiations.
The Communists piled up neu-
trality violation charges so fast
the UN was hard pressed to
keep up with them and observers
believed the supreme commander
might suggest moving the sus-
pended armistice negotiations to
a new and untainted site.
force chief of staff, said last
week tactical use of A-weapons
against large enemy ground
forces was high priority. He did
not go into details.
The goal would be to disrupt
communications and transporta-
tion in front of advancing land
forces as well as to destroy the
forces themselves wherever they
were grouped in enough strength
to justify use of atomic weapons.
The Canberra, one of which
spanned the Atlantic from Ire-
land to Newfoundland in four
hours, 19 minutes on Friday, is
the only light bomber presently
planned for manufacture for the
air force. It will be used in con-
junction with fighter-boijfibers in
tactical air forces.
The official doctrine for air-
ground operations, jointly work-
ed out by the army field forces
and the tactical air command,
now lists atomics as among the
weapons to be used by tactical
air forces.
That is distinct from use by
strategic air forces against in-
dustrial, transportation and
communications targets far to
the rear of the battle zone.
■
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.
Mil
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Baker, Allen. Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 207, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 2, 1951, newspaper, September 2, 1951; Sweetwater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth310521/m1/1/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sweetwater/Nolan County City-County Library.