Stephenville Daily Empire (Stephenville, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 34, Ed. 1 Friday, October 20, 1950 Page: 6 of 6
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Convention with
Photo by
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DAILY EMPIRE
[WANT Apj]
FOR SALE
1*49 CHEVROLET two-door, like
mw, and/or 1950 Dodge Way-
farer, two-door, like new. See
LATE MARKET REPORTS
Stephkhvdllk Dim Empub Poet Disregards
Need for Sleep;
PrMny, Ori,19M
FINAL WEEKEND
OF STATE FAIR
Dnvia at 1327 West Jones, or call
1451.
PLENTY 4x8 building board—
Qrwyftte — answer to sheet lock. O.
4k C. Clawson Lumber Co., Fort
Worth Hiway.
FOR RENT
NEW 2-bedroom modern house, un-
furnished, 1*4 blocks of new school
building, 3 blocks college. Call 1046
3-ROOM furnished duplex apart-
ment, private bath. 683 So. Min-
ter.
3-ROOM furnished apartment, pii
Y»te bath, electric refrigerator.
328 W. Collins, phone 100.
-n*-
ROCK house, 214 West Long St
2 blocks from square. Recently re
decorated throughout. Five rooms
bath, hardwood floors. Available
Oct. 21. Phone 1623 in Stephenville
or contact Page Hand in Dublin.
LIVESTOCK
Fort Worth, Oct. 20, 'If* (U8DA)
— Livestock:
> Cattle 200: cows fully stead/,
other classes scarce, nominally
steady. Common and medium cows
19-21, canners and cutters 13-18.60.
Calves 150: steady. Good slaugh-
ter calves scarce at 26-28, common
and medium 22-25, culls 20.
Hogs 200: butchers 75 lower
than Thursday’s best prices or
steady with Thursday's close, sows
'steady, pigs scarce. Good and
choice 190-270 lbs mostly 21.50,
good and choice 150-180 lbs 19-21.
Cows 18-50-20.50.
Sheep 250: slaughter lambs
strong, feeders steady, other
classes scarce. Good shorn slaugh-
ter lambs No. 1 pelts 27.50. Me-
dium feeder lambs 24-26.
STARTS FRIDAY
The final big week-end of the
greatest state fair the world has
even seen got under way Friday.
The 1960 State Fair of Texas Mid
Century Exposition will end Sun-
day, Oct. 22.
Causes Death
Cut if you will, with slip’s dull
knife
Each day to half its length, my
friend
The years that time takas off my
life
He'll take off from the other and.
—Edna St. Vincent MUlay.
• Austerlitz, N. Y.. Oct. 20. W—A
coroner’s report said today that
Pulitzer prize-winning poet Edna
St. Vincent Millay died of a heart
attack after writing poetry all
Friday is High School Day at the night with the same disregard for
i ■ n/1 koedma ,.f Aw«s4u J i ’ alaan tkai aka ak/itlfsul in kan-------
LARGE 3-room duplex, furnished,
private hath, lots of built-ins, elec-
tric refrigeration. Close in at 258
W. Long. Adults only. Mrs. Jennie
Moss, 546 S. Graham.
FURNISHED 4-room house.
Hughes Realty Co., phone 766.
3-ROOMS and hath, newly finish-
ed, no objection to n small child
W. R. Hickey, office phone 801,
residence phone 866.
POULTRY AND EGG
Fort Worth, Oct. 20, (Ut (USDA)
- Wholesale dealers egg and poul-
try prices to producers and truck-
ers. delivered Fort Worth:
Egg market steady. Candled
basis: Grade A whites large 13.60-
1^.40. Grade A mixed 11.40-12.15.
Mediums 9.90-1050.
Live poultry market steady. Per
!b heavy hens 23-24. I ight 18-20.
Roosters 12-13. Fryers local best
26-28 cents ordinal” uuality light
weights lower. Turkeys: toms 25-
27, hens 33-36. Mostly around 35
<■< nts.
UNFURNISHED apartment, 5
rooms, sleeping porch, and bath.
Mfs. R. W Hufsfetler, 819 W
Vanderbilt.
GAKAGK loom ami bath, nirely
furnished, for men. $lf> tier month.
*>60 Tarleton Ave., phone 1512.
3-ROOM apaitnient, unfurnished,
hardwood floor*. Ixu-ated 7H5 N\
Clinton, across from hiirh school.
WANTED
l.ADY to care for children and do
general housework while mother
works. White or colored. 814 N\
Paddock. Phone 1209.
Nitrogen cun he added, to ll.i
soil for five rents per pound if it
is done by plowing under a legumo
crop. The cost will bo at least
three times that figure if the mtio-
; en is purchased by the sack.
FOR SALE
GRAIN
Fort Worth, ( it. 20, <1P (USDA)
| ' 11 u i n:
Estimated t
led wheat 21. corn 5, oats 4, sorg-
I hum 119, millet 1 and rye 1. Total
! 151 c« is. .
j The D. S Department of Agri-
culture’s Pioduotion and Market-
| ing Administration said milo ad-
| yawed 2c. yellow corn and wheat
| atxut le and oats, as other
• grains held Steady,
t No. 1 hard wheat sold at $2 39-
2.1) per bushel, bulk, in carlots,
fi eight r.r.d lax naid t<> Texas rom-
| mon points. No. 2 wheat moved
i l-2c lower.
No. 2 white coin closed at
SI.76’ I XI 1, No. 2 yellow corn
} <1 61 ’,-1 67’,, and No. 2 barley
$1.39-1.44.
No. 2 yellow milo realized $2.11-
2.17 per hundred pounds.
No. 2 white oats brought 98-
I 99*4 cents ner bushel at Galveston,
and 95' -96 'y cents at Fort Worth.
fair, and hordaa of excited teen-
agers descended on the 137-acre,
$35,000,000 fairgrounds.
It's also Rotary Day and thou-
sands of Rotarians from through-
out the state are on hand.
North Dallas will play Sherman
in a football game at 8 p. m. Friday
in the Cotton Bowl.
Armed Force* Day
The growing military might of
the nation will be reflected on Arm-
ed Forces Appreciation Day Sat-
urday, Oct. 21. All branches of the
armed services will be represented
in the greatest display of power
since the war. War planes will
zoom overhead and will be exhibit-
ed in cutaway models on the
ground. Other displays will covet
thousands of square feet of space.
A free fireworks show at 8 p. m. in
the Cotton Bowl will salute the
armed forces.
A big free Cotton Bowl fireworks
show also will be presented Sunday t
night, Oct. 22.
This final day of the great 1950
Fair will see a Time Capsule bur-
ied, not to be opened until the next
Mid-Century Exposition, in the
year 2050 A. D. The capsule, con-
aleep that she showed in har verses.
Coroner Lawrence J. Andrewa
said the frail, 58-year-old poet ap-
parently suffered coronary occlus-
ion as she started upstairs to bed
yesterday at dawn. Her body *u
found crumpled at the foot of the
staircase in her Berkshire Hills
farm home yesterday afternoon by
a caretaker.
Grand Champion
Steer Brings $4
Pound at Royal
Arkansas and Louisiana and other
historical data, will be buried at
ceremonies beginning at 3 p. m.
Sunday.
Russian Paper
Calls Stassen
Letter ‘Trick*
1 5-room house and hath, *raiahr<\
on wwer, thie** nice lots, or. hiirh-
way, two chicken house*, an ideal
locution, close in, suitable for
business location. Terms, priced to
sell quick. Only $5,500.00.
Rhone 969
Golden Rule Realty
Hugh llerrinu
Res. I*ho. 729
l^-onard I aroSe*-, | Staph
Res. 1‘ho 2931
FREE LESSONS
How to I’aint Figurine?, at
RAY’S GARDEN
800 Dodge St. Stephenville
COTTON
Ilalluii. Oct. 20. nyi—Approximate
hi ices uf cotton in the Dallas mar-
ket as reoorted tod.i.v to the Agri-
cultural Marketing Service for
basic middling lots on brokers’
tables and F.O.B. Dallas trade
territory, flat; basis calculated on
closing of 38.88 on Dec. contracts,
New York:
Middling
Basis
225 off
7/8 175 off
29 32 125 off
15 16 50 off
31 32 25 off
1 inch Even
i 1 32 40 on
1 t /1C, 65 on
Strict middling 65-75 higher.
Strict low middling 155-220 low-
e r.
Brice
36.55
37.15
37.65
38.40
38.65
38.90
39.30
39.55
Farms and Ranches
LIST YOURS
Dies of Injuries
Received at Fair
left*
HEATH & CO.
Telephones: Stephenville 611
Fort Worth Pershing 7256
Dallas, Oct. 20 Ip — Levi Temple-
ton, Durant, Okla., died at a hos-
I pital here today of injuries rc-
| reived Saturday when he was
j trampled by a frightened cow at
the State Fair of Texas.
Witnesses said the 70-year-old
j man was walking down an aisle
j between herds of dairy cattle when
i a startled cow broke loose, knock-
' ing him to the ground.
Moscow, Oct. 20, 'IP—The offi-
cial Communist party newspaper
Pravda today rejected Harold E.
Stassen’s hid for “peace talks”
with Premier Josef Stalin as “a
self-seeking, self-advertising
trick.”
A three-column article by Yakov
Victorov on the back page of Prav-
da called Stassen’s letter to Sta-
lin “a dirty game ... it being ob-
vious from the very first words
of the letter that even elementary
good faith is alien to Stassen.”
Pravda accused Stassen of an
"electioneering maneuver” design- j
ed to influence “the broad masses
of American voters who are pro-
foundly alarmed by the aggressive
course of the policy of American
rulers in an unparalleled arms race
and preparation for a new war.”
Stassen, president of the Uni-
versity of Pennsylvania, former
governor of Minnesota and twice
an aspirant for the Republican
presidential nomination, disclosed
his Utter to Stalin Oct. 4.
Writing as a private citizen,
Stassen suggested they confer on
steps to he taken to achieve “a
just world peace.” He said that the
Soviet Union vaguld have to change
its present course if the drift to-
ward war was to be stopped.
He reminded Stalin of their con-
ference in 1947 and said that all
he had told the premier then had
proved true. Despite Soviet pre-
dictions, he said, there had been
no American depression.
Boys Town Lad
Sets Fires to
Hide Burglary
Casper, Wyo., Oct. 20 UP)—A se-
ries of fires damaged or destroyed
almost a dozen downtown build-
ings early today and a freckle-
faced youth from Boys Town, Neb.,
confessed he set them to conceal
a burglary.
Red-haired Don Bennett, 18, told
Police Administrator Leslie Saw-
yer that he set the first fire in a
record shop to cover a theft there,
and “liked the excitement” so much
that he set several more.
His fiery spree cost an estimated
$100,000 in damages. Firemen, one
of whom suffered minor injuries,
worked for three hours to put out
fires in a liquor warehouse, a lum-v
her warehouse, a taxicab head-
quarters, a publishing concern and
a hardware building.
Sawyer said the youth left Boys
Town only recently and has a po-
lice record “as long as your arm. ’
In order to
country, the U.
itself more than ready to supply current
It mutt be, and is, able quickly to meet increased
dsrasnris Since World War II, oil companiea have
plowed hack about 18 billion to find more oil,
to Inertia oil production, to extend pipe lint
and build tankers, to increase and fa»
■irk
HUMBLE OIL • 01 FI R 118 00.
More War Awards
Are Made in Tokyo
Tokyo, Oct. 20 UPI—Capt. Carl
C. Simpson of Lawton, Okla., was
awarded a Silver Star today for
leading a volunteer party through
a hail of small arms, artillery and
machine gun fire to successfully
contact an enemy command post.
He also was cited for assuming
the duties of a cannoneer and di
reeling fire that destroyed two
enemy tanks.
The award was one of six made
to two enlisted men and four offi-
cers at Eighth Army headquarters
in Korea.
Among 16 others who received
Bronze Star medals were Lt. Harry
Corsicana, Tex., and
M/Sgt. Robert C. McCune, Ama-
rillo, Tex., who was awarded his
first Bronze Oak Leaf Cluster to
his Bronze Medal.
Seaman Held as
Suspect in Labor
Day Murder
Galveston, Oct. 20 (IP)—Police
said today they had picked up a
20-year-old seaman for vagrancy
and was questioning him in con-
nection with the Labor Day hatchet
murder of 27-year-old Otelia Rou-
let.
The seaman was taken in cus-
tody yesterday by Detective Wil-
liam Whitburn shortly after he
returned to Galveston. He is one
of three “hot suspects” in the case
and had been the object of a
nationwide hunt.
Mrs. Roulet, the mother of a six-
year-old boy, was chopped to death
in her newly-opened liquor store,
one of two she operated with her
husband. The killer also robbed the
cash register of some $200.
Police Chief William J. Burns
said police weren’t’ katisfied with
Horse mounted patrols were em-
ployed by Marines in Santo Domin- ‘‘what he has told us.
go and Nicaragua in the 1030’s.
TWO I nIN TI n AI w f X 5
OR IMF
“He has told ua he wasn’t in
Galveston at the time of the-mur-
der, but we know otherwiae from
reports of persons who saw him
here. We’ll hold him until ws are
positive that he isn’t our man.”
Wage Hike Given
Goodyear Workers
Cincinnati, O., Oct. 20 OTI—The
Goodyear Tire A Rubber Co. and
the l
United Rubber Workers (CIO)
have signed a contract providing
for a 12-cents-an-hour wage in
crease, it was announced today.
The wage hike, which set a
fifth-round wage pattern in the
rubber industry, was agreed upon
re-
aa the rubber workers union
sumed negotiations here in an ef-
fort to reach a peaceful solution of
their wage problems.
Empire
I m | psis
Speak at Banquet
Kansas City, Mo. Oct. 20 (IP)—
Blue ribbon winning livestock of
the 1950 American Royal wei
under the auctioneer’s gavel today,
with the grand champion steer sell-
ing for $4.01 a pound to lead the
pay-off for those who spent the
last year grooming their entries.
“Jug,” the grand champion steer,
shown by Sim Reeves Jr., Fort
Stockton, Tex., was bought by Ed-
die Williams of the Williams Meat
Co., for a total of $4,751.86.
That compared to $1.50 a pound
for last year's grand champion an!
represented a spirited increase in
bidding as Col. Roy Johnston
gaveled the blocky Hereford into
the ring in a barn near the Royal.
It was the highest price paid
for the grand champion steer since
1947. The highest ever paid here
was $43,000, by Eddie Williams,
for the 1946 champion, shown by
Jack Hoffman of Ida Grove, la.
After that bidding, in the horse
show ring, the auction was moved
into, the barn.
The happy 16-year-old owner of
the animal said that he’d use the
money for his education.
"I’m going to go to Texas A&M
College,’’ he said.
Williams said he would use the
meat for an employes party.
On Saturday, Oct. 21, at 12:10
p.m„ the Gamma Zeta Chapter of
Delta Kappa Gamma will be hott-
est et a luncheon in the banquet
room of Tarleton State College,
honoring the teachers who attend
the English Conference on the
campus Oct. 20-21.
Dr. Autrey Nell Wiley, pro-
fessor and director of the English
department of Texaa State College
for Women, will be guest speaker,
and her subject will be “English
Every Day at Our Lives.”
A native of St. Jo, Tex., she has
been a Denton resident for a num-
ber of yean. She received her B.A.
degree in English from TSCW in
1922, M.A. from Columbia Univer-
sity in 1924, and Ph.D. in 1931
from the Univenity of Texaa.
In addition she has done post-
doctoral research work for several
years, including more than one
year as a post-doctoral fellow in
the Humanities of the American
Council of Learned Societies, do-
ing research in England and Scot-
land; radio work also in the Radio
Workshop, New York, and research
in the rare libraries of the United
States relating to English dra-
matic literature.
Her book, “Rare Prologues and
Epilogues (1642-1700)” was pub-
lished in London in 1941, and she
has contributed to many American
and English magazines.
Offices held include: Regional
president of Alpha Chi, 1941-42;
branch president of the American
Association of University Women,
Denton, 1938-39; councilor of the
Conference of College Teachers of
English, 1942-44; secretary of the
Eighteenth Century Section, South-
Two Resolutions
Aubrey Nell Wiley
Central Modern Language Associa-
tion, 1942; member of State Fel-
lowship committees, AAUW, 1936-
38, 1941-42; and she held the
1 Margaret E. Haltby Fellowship by
the American Association of Uni-
versity, Women in 1980^)1.
She is listed in the first and sec-
ond editions of “Women of Dis-
tinction in America,” “Biograph-
ical, Dictionary of American Scho-
lars," “Texas Writers” and “Who’s
Who in Texas.”
The women of Stephenville are
invited to attend, and should make
their reservations with Miss Lola
Thompson, librarian, at Tarleton;
State College, by 9 a.m., Oct. 20.
Tickets will be on sale at the ban-
quet room Saturday for $1.25,
Waco, Oct. 20 IW—United Texas
Drys closed their annual conven-
tion yesterday With a double-bar-
reled set of resolutions aimed at
stopping the sale of alcoholic bev-
erages on military posts—or any-
where else jn tne state.
Delegates approved one resolu-
tion asking the 52nd Texas Legis-
lature to subftiit a prohibition ap-
peal to the voters.
A second resolution, addressed to
President Truman, the secretary
of defense and “military author-
ities,” requested prohibition of liq-
uor sales within the bounds of
military establishments and with-
in a 25-mile radiug of such posts.
Abilene was voted site of the
1961 convention, with MeMurry
College serving as host.
Baylor President W. R. White
was re-elected president of the
UTD and named chairman of a
nine-member committee which will
ask Gov. Allan Shivers to get be-
hind the proposed prohibition
amendment.
Other officers elected included
Dr. Harold G. Cooke, president of
MeMurry, tfice-prcsident; Ralph
Baker, Dallas, vice-president for
laymen, and Mrs. T. C. Jester,
Houston, vice-president for women.
Houston Official
Indicted for
Wife's Murder
—Hfiuaton, Oct. 20 (W—Woody Fife,
director of si
sanitation foe the city
health department, today was in-
dicted for murder in the fatal
shooting 18 months ago of his
attractive wife. The death previ-
ously had been ruled a suicide. '
Three other grand juries had
considered the “mysterious” death
hut,had taken no action.
The attractive 42-year-old wom-
an was. found shot to death in her
country home near Waller March
31, 1949. A justice, of peace ruled
it a suicide. ? *
Careful planning of space and
equipment in the small home will,
allow the rooms to be used for
more than one activity, yet will
provide the space and privacy that
every home needs.
In 1921 and 1026 during a vio-
lent outbreak of armed robbery
the U. S. Marine Corps provided
a- force of about 2,500 men to
gugrd the U. S. mail throughout
thfftcountry.
'BAX’
means
Better Photography
_ P.
YANKEES PLACE 4 ON IIP MYTHICAL
AMERICAN LEAGUE ALL STAR TEAM
By CARL LUNDQUI8T
United Press Sports Writer
NEW YORK, Oct. 20. Wl—The
New York Yankees, as befitted
their role of pennant winners and
world champions, placed four out
of 10 men today on the annual
United Press American League all-
star team. It was selected by a
board of 24 baseball writers, three
from each city.
''Phil Rizzuto, one of the
great
shortstops of all time, led the bal-
loting for the Yankee players by
being selected unanimously, along
with rookie Walt Dropo, the slug-
ging first baseman of the Boston
Red Sox.
Two other Yankees, pitcher Vic
Raschi, who won 21 games and
game shutout in the World Series,
beat the Phillies with an opening
and his batterymate, catcher Yogi
Berra, was nearly unanimous
choices, being named on 22 opt of
24 ballots. The fourth Yankee, sec-
ond baseban Jerry Coleman, had
more of a tussle, winning out by
only three votes over the veteran
Bobby Doerr of the Red Sox.
Youth Dominates Outfield
Youth dominated the outfield
where comparative newcomers Vic
Wertz and Hoot Evers of Detroit
and Larry Doby of Cleveland, took
over the spots formerly held by the
vaunted DiMaggio brothers and
tpuchy Ted Williams.
Anothet solid choice was George
Kell of Detroit at third base, whe
was named, on 22 ballots, while the
second pitcher on the mythical
team, Bob Lemon of Cleveland, re-
ceded 21 voteB.
Rizzuto, the littlest player in the
league, and Dropo, the biggest, had
absolutely no valid opposition at
their positions and were clearly the
league standouts. Rizzuto, who set
new league records for consecutive
errorless games and consecutive er-
rorless chances, was the Yankee
playmaker, the guy who cut off the
threatening rally with the great
ztop or throw, or the destructive
double play. He and Coleman were
easily the best keystone duo in the
majors and along with Rizzuto’s de-
fensive brilliance he also hatted a
lusty .324, tops for his big league
career and tops for the Yankee
regulars. He also played in all 155
of his team's games and was a
World Series star.
Dropo, who started the season at
Louisville, got a hurry-up call to
take over at first base when Billy
Goodman was injured, and despite
mining nearly a month of the cam-
paign, batted !n 144 runs and hit
34 homers while compiling a .323
average.
Berra, Raschi and Kell were
nearly as outstanding in their
spots and. reflected it by getting
those 22 votes apiece. Berra be-
came of age as a catcher and hand-
ler of pitchers, spark-plugging the
team, throwing out runners on the
base-paths and batting .320, driv-
ing in 125 runs and hitting 28
homers.
Raschi, the henchman who went
out and chopped down opposition-
in vital games won, 21, and lost but
eight, and with Lemon, who had a
23-11 mark, emerged as the only
pitchers in the league to pass the
20-game victory mark.
Goad nr. a Shades Kell
K411 had his second batting ;ham«
pionship practically sewed up, fin-
ishing with a .341 mark along with
playing his usual line game at third
base, when Goodman returned to
the lineup as the champ utility man
of the majors and beat him out
with a .364. Like Manager Steve
O’Neill of the Red Sox, the writers
could find no regular spot for jack-
of-all-trades Billy, but commented
freely that he reserved special rec-
ognition for his versatility.
At second base, Coleman, a short-
range hitter, was deadly from his
number eight slot, batting in 68
duns with a receiving .287 average,
and he had few to challenge him in
the fielding of his position.
Selection of Wertz, Eversan and
Doby was not surprising in view of
their slugging consistency, their
defensive adequacies, and the shad-
ing of Yankee Joe DiMaggio, his
brother Dom DiMaggio of the Red
Sox, and the injury of Williams.
Wertz, Evers and Doby each batted
in more than 100 runs and were
consistent long ball threats, all hit-
ting well oveY .300.
DON’T MISS
THIS REVEALING f |
UNDERCOVER EXPOSE... (?
TH®
Of*
cJBSfo
-.—I Files
'J**1 to
9I0’Sl Hid «boo‘
»»hOB * ,Yxpos*' °* ..
prate* «*£ idling, -cia' A
f sterr}* rm 4**S*
Giance Vought
Boosts Wages
Dallas, Oct. 20 IW—Union and
company officials at the Chance
Vought Aircraft plant were sched-
uled to sign a new wage contract
today giving some 3,000 production
workers a 9-cent-an-hour wage in-
crease and providing an automatic
cost - of - living wage adjustment
clause. >9 . •
NOTICE!
.....
The office of the tax collector of the
Stephenville Independent School District
NOW LOCATED IN
COURT HOUSE
First Floor—North Door
W. F. HENSON, COLLECTOR
Telephone 605
★ Giant color comic section
★ The iateist war news and pictures
if ‘"This Week” Magazine
★ The Southwest’s Biggest Sports Section
★ Texas* most complete news coverage
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Osar ibi
1 **n<* m* "•** Sunday's Big Dellas Morning Nsws end • _
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For which I agree to pay the regular Sunday Only aubscripUon ] |
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Stephenville Daily Empire (Stephenville, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 34, Ed. 1 Friday, October 20, 1950, newspaper, October 20, 1950; Stephenville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1133442/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Dublin Public Library.