Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 68, No. 92, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 14, 1957 Page: 1 of 8
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Gainesbille Satin Register
AND MFSSFNGER d® AV
GAINESVILLE, COOKE COUNTY, TEXAS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1957
NUMBER 92
(EIGHT PAGES I
68TH YEAR
I
pj
2
They are demanding
A
(2
/
1
2
Paris from Nazi occupation in
and praised
k
or motion pictures.
(AP Photo)
needed to neutralize the
J
Missile Program Hit
of the heavy preponderance of
Frozen
TEIIRAN, Iran (P) — A post
go for the 1,500-mile missile.
than three tons. For this reason,
he said
the
maximum -range
iment dearly was designed to
JAMES WILDE
The sources said precaution-
you make me go,
minute after a fireman touched gray kitten ever since she met
Sukarno continued making
moderate Nationalist, is sohed.
tion calmed down a bit after
flurry of rumors
I
tion and Premier Djuanda actu-
had been deposed.
Resolution Rejected
of
However, Sen Salton tall (R
the committee, headed by Sen.
Ala., aS Mie fit st several wit--'WASHINGTON
nesses to be examined today.
"If we have conducted a one
comment;
ion expelled?"
The
8
? 2
]ei
way proposition, to explore
IF
I
✓ I
♦
A
4
L
1 '
... tu
d
Indonesia Takes
Dutch Business
Athens Bombing
Shocking to U. S.
SATELLITE TRACKER—Small-missile telecamera
(SMT) at Aberdeen, Md., Army Proving Grounds has
30-inch mirror, 100-inch focal length and takes still
er; Coleman Harwell, editor of
the Nashville Tennessean; and
George M. Reynolds of Little
ranks on the basis of testimony
brought out by the committee.
Mundt is a member of the in-
l vestigating committee. He made
his statement to a reporter in
rejecting charges expressed by
doing of management.”
Sen. Curtis (R-Neb), another
member of the committee, also
the Netherlands.
Antara also said Chinese Com
munit Premier Chou En lal told
its correspondent in Peiping that
Red China would give concrete
help to Indonesia In its efforts
WASHINGTON (P)“-- Maj.
Gen. John B. Medaris testified
today that lack of funds held up
for at least a year the Army's
plans to speed development of a
1,500 mile missile.
Medaris told the Senate Pre-
"that one of your nice policemen
go to a pet shop for me and get
this little girl a kitty that putts
with a red ribbon and a bell on
its neck."
Brian said he would have sent
one himself but “it would cost
me too much money to send one
by frait tsict.”
Chicago's busy police machin-
.cry jumped into action and late
yesterday afternoon a gray "kit
ty that purrs" was presented to
Kathy at her North Side home
by Capt. Leroy Steffens and Po
liceman James Bes Palets.
* 4
*
and back them up with some evi-
dence, Mundt said, if he knows
of wrong-doing hy employers
that the committee has author-
ity to investigate. He said the
committee would investigate
any such cases as fairly as it
investigates union people.
Curtis said, Mazey-shnuld
come forward with evidence if
Ite has any.
- . tain f-rotn other countries essen-
authoritativeltial goods formerly supplied by
Weather Forecast
Partly cloudy, mild through
Sunday.
(Complete report on Page 6)
JAKA R T A, Indonesia (A) ary steps had been taken to ob-
The Indonesian news agency An-
France is Praised
Eisenhower praised Fiance’s
"wisdom, gallantry and honor”
. 3"
। promote anti-labor legislation.
' The resolution also alleged that
Girl is
Thawing
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (P—Doc-
tors described the condition of
a 15-year-old girl — her legs
"frozen just as solid as if they
had come out of a deepfreeze”—
as poor late last night.
Rosella Auxier was found un-
conscious and in shock in an
abandoned store at Prestons-
burg, Ky., yesterday and rushed
to a hospital here. She had been
missing five days.
Her legs were packed In Ice
to control thawing. Doctors, say-
ing the girl was in no pain and
had eaten her first meal since
her disappearance Sunday, said
no immediate surgery was
fected by sel/urpy nf fine h hu-u
nesses to protest Dutch posses-
sion of West New Guinea.
James J. Kilpatrick, editor of
the Richmond (Va.) News-Lead.
Much of Palm Springs, Calif.,
is built on an Indian reserva-
tion. So the Sehuilla Indians
are getting rich by lease lending
tethe Palm Springs tenants.
plans to leave the country with-
in a week for a rest period of
unspecified length. Parliament
The girl's mother, Mrs. Rich-
ard Auxier, said Rosella went to
visit her grandmother with her
father, but the grandmother was
not home. She said Rosella left
the house to telephone her
grandmother, but apparently
went to a movie at Prestonsburg
without making the call.
She was too weak to explain
what happened during the five
days before she was found half
frozen by workmen who spotted
her through a window.
Dr. Gegrge Archer, who gav
the girt emergency treatment,
said "nothing but a miracle”
would Save her legs. He said he
found a sixteenth of an inch of
frost on fhe bottom of her feet.
_ _keME
THE ANNUAL COLLEGE CHRISTMAS BANQUET was held Friday evening in
the McMurray school and proved a very special event. Herbert Haynie, student
body president, is shown as he served as master of ceremonies and in the fore-
ground are Dean J. H. Parker and Mrs. Parker. (College Photo)
Today's Chuckle
Some people have made an
art of being slow to pick up the
check. You’ve got to hand it to
them.
(Copyright General Features Corp )
.... 7
8
4
........8
5
6
.. 3
strength
des-
in war and peace. The Presi-
dent recalled the liberation of
"We have had many reports
of improper gretivities on the
part of the UAW," Mundt said,
"and the only way to affirm or
invalidate such reports is to
conduct an objective investiga
tion, which is precisely what
He said tile recommendation I
was made to the Army chief of and telegraph official reported
used to harass nions and to
---------------------- ---------
",Mu. •
,*,-a •
•"51
"~uA
Trade ministry circles said
there is no cause for worry
that internal trade would be at
banks.
There was no immediate reac.
K DEC ",
A 14 ”
Saturday Sa
PAa
ately:
"Feday we live + ene—ef
those periods of test not only
for France but all of France's
friends and allies, my country
among them. It is for us, to-
gether. to determine whether
men shall contiue to live in free-
dom and in dignity or whether
they are to become more vas-
sals of an all-powerful state.”
The answer to this challenge,
he said. Is the development of a
“true partnership” in “spiritual,
military and economic strength.”
The statement was Eisenhow-
er's first public speech since
his slight stroke Nov. 25 that
had affected his ability to speak
Markets .........
Sports
Weather
Women's News
Ike Says NATO Faces
Challenge From Russia
President Asking wpu
True Partnership 2mmgbem
A
tveleed a sharp rejection of the
resolution’s allegations in a sep
arate interview.
The A FLGIO resolution
singled out Mundt, Curtis and
Sen. Goldwater (R-Ariz), anoth-
er member-of the eight man hi-
SMALL TOT
KEEPS TIME
DETROIT t.4') — Two-year,
old Kenneth Rogers Is ticking
away today. X rays show he
is keeping good time.
Kenneth swallowed his
mother's wrist watchsyester
day—after first removing the
band, of course.
The fact that hr* a walking
timepiece apparently hasn't
phased Kenneth. Doctors sent
him home for observation last
night after X-rays revealed
the watch in his’fummy. It
was still running.
More X rajs will he taken
and then doctors will deride
how to rid Kenneth of the
watch.
His mother, Mrs. Betty
Rogers, 24, aske d Kenneth
where her watch was when
she returned to the bedroom
where he had been napping.
“I eat it,” said Kenny truth
fully.
New Type Tree
'Too' Dangerous
DALLAS (P) A new type
Christmas tree its branches
seemingly laden with snow,
went up in flames less than a
a cigarette lighter to a
todey.
ally will run things.
More Dutch refugees left to-
(ay om routine f fights to Singa-
committee resumed public hear-
lings in its inquiry into the mis-
sile and satellite programs.
He said the Army had begun
work on the Redstone missile in
1951 with the idea that it could
be fired at a maximum range
of 475 miles. He said the Red
stone had a rocket engine rep-
resenting an improvement on
Wernher von Braun, formei
planned.
Rosella left her grandmother’s
with these part-
tor. a 1.500-mile range missile.
County
May Be
Cut Up
MONTGOMERY (P-White
segregationists, fearful that Ne-
gro voters ultimately may con-
trol troubled Macon County,
propose to abolish the county if
need be in order to prevent it.
A constitutional amendment
which would give the Legisla-
ture authority to erase Macon
County from the map and di-
vide its landed area and popu-
lation among neighboring coun-
ties will be voted on in a state-
wide election Tuesday.
Negroes, many of them col-
lege educated, outnumber white
residents of the county nearly
7 to 1. Sponsors of the abolition
amendment hope to break up
the heavy concentration of Ne-
groes by dividing them among
counties which have white pop-
ulation majorities.
Twenty-four other constitu-
tional amendments will be rati-
fied or rejected in the special
referendum. Eight of them are
of statewide significance, pro-
viding funds for river develop-
ment, medical and educational
facilities and financial relief for
small towns. The remaining 16
are purely local, affecting only
one county or another.
A relatively light vote is like-
ly in the offyear election.
Ratification of a constitution-
al amendment requires a ma-
jority of the voters throughout
the state even thought it affects
only one county. And the af-
fected county’s vote alone has
no bearing on the outcome.
If the people in Macon Coun-
ty should vote against abolition
and a majority elsewhere vote
for it, for example, the amend-
ment would carry.
State Sen. Sam Engelhardt of
Macon County, a White Citizens
Council leader and sponsor of
the amendment, is pushing a
campaign for ratification. Negro
spokesmen by contrast have had
little to say but they are known
to be opposed to the abolition
measure.
Macon county, the home of
the famed Negro school Tuske-
gee Institute, has long been the
center of facial tension because
seizures of Dutch property is-
sued last night. Workers of a
home Sunday
Ing words: “If .
I won’t come back.”
nomic and military
fied the order by the army chief ' . ... ,
of staff and took over a number Was not specified,
of small Dutch businesses and
would carry would be more
nied -that President Sukarno
(•using the committee of bias on
the sific of management.
The resolution, adopted by the
AFL-CIO Thursday at its con-
vention in Atlantic City, con-
tara said today
stand up in courts.
The diversiorary tactics of
some elements in the South do
not represent the attitude of all
the region’s leadership. Harwell
said. •
partment estimate in 1955 fixed
the population at 27,334 Negroes
and 4,703 white residents.
Rock. Ark., president of Win-
rock Enterprises and former
editor and publisher.of the San-
ta Fe New Mexican.
tion to the new seizures by the ,
army chief, Maj. Gen. Abdul speaker.Saronto, a .56-year-old
vr N, ... mnnrinreta N ntinnalie+ ie eaha.
Harris Nasution. This island ha
a uled to become acting president,
which he de A government spokesman has
indicated, however, that Nasu-
Slate Department
bough Brian while vacationing near his
Birmingham, Mich., home two
staff that this work be expand today that 1.287 persons were
ed because "we knew we could killed by a severe earthquake in
" Western Iran yesterday.
.1a 1 A newspaper correspondent
one of the first to seek the
creation of "the defensive shield
we know as NATO.”
He said France recognized
that "only in true partnership
could the five nations develop
and maintain the spiritual, eco-
Dutch business in Indonesia
now under state control.
The report followed defiance
of an army ban against further
the V2’s fired in World War II i "The financial situation would 1
by the Germans. ! not permit us to go ahead,” he
However, he said, the Atomic
Energy Commission (AEC) es-
timated at the time the weight
of the warhead the Redstone
the AFLCIO in a resolution ac-
the UAW against the Kohler Co. '
of Wisconsin "is only one facet ;
of our investigation ” He de
_2 i dined to be more specific at
.3 this time.
The CAW is headed by Wal
ter Reuther.
said, “that in the supreme
Ss™ ROMANCE BLOOMS
Much of the President's state-
quarters reported almost all
as inadequate the Eisenhowei Ar In A fn
administration's move. to spece |JT Hinme A tter
preduetien of mi-Sties and -st- VI IIVIII HilvI
communist dominated union de owhatnlh"theip miehtinndive
hower flew into Paris today and full support of France's position
declared the NATO alliance can in North Africa as a price of
meet the "despotic and contin- unity and are ruffled because
uing threat" of Soviet Russia, they feel Britain and the United
Arriving for a summit meet- States are trying to assign them
ing of the North Atlantic Trea- a subordinate role in the Atlan-
ty Organization opening Mon- tic Alliance.
CHICAGO (Ah A summer
time romance blossomed into an
■early Christmas yesterday for
year-old Bnian Concrant and
4year-old Kathy Toto Brown.
But it took a bit of doing from
Chicago police.
Little Kathy, of Chicago, had
expressed a wish for a cuddly
I By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER bid for the good will of the
PARIS (A*)—President Eisen French.
Fair Weather
Blankets State
By The Associated Press
Heavy fog blanketed much of
Texas Saturday morning but
warmer temperatures prevailed.
The fog belt obscured visibili-
ty in all of Southeast Texas and
most of North Central Texas
Fair weather prevailed on west
of a line from Mineral Wells to
Laredo.
Temperatures rose sharply in
the foggy areas, ranging mostly
in the 5s except for some 60
degree weather along the coast.
Temperatures in the clear area
/ of West Texas were mostly in
the 308 except for the Panhan
. die. The low was 25 degrees at
Dalhart and Amarillo. Freezing
temperatures extended east to
Wichita Falls and south to Lub-
bock,
potic and continuing threat
from the East.”
"The heads of NATO are
meeting in this beautiful Paris
to analyze the challenge we now
face,” Eisenhower continued.
"We shall meet it effectively.
We shall meet it in unity,
“We all know that fear alone
has neither the power nor the
nobility to fulfill the ultimate
destiny of the Atlantic com-
munity.
"Therefore, we shall be striv-
ing not only to strengthen the
NATO shield, but we shall also
address ourselves to other as
pects of our alliance.”
and made ' pronunciation of
some words difficult.
Speaks With Care
Eisenhower spoke carefully
but appeared to mispronounce''
only a couple of words. At one
point he said "addless-address;"
at another the word “art” gave
him a second’s pause, but he
repeated it and went on.
"Your presence here," Gail-
lard said, "shows your interest
for the future of 'this Atlantic
alliance, which includes coun-
tries whose life rests on the
same history, the same civiliza-
tion, ami the same morale and
said 500 of the victims were in
sid” - one West Iranian village alone.
’ . ..... The government said only that
Medal i- explained that the 16 bodies har been recovered in
recommendation did not go be the village of Seraab. Officials
yond the Army ehief of staff lie de liner to estimate the final
cause of budget restrictions. foll
The 1.500 mile missile lias Truckloads of food, medicine
been promised lo I S allie oil hi its w i te being rushed into
particular l Britain. to shore up the mountainous area where the
Western I urope’s defenses. fi tw ominute quake struc k before
was recently ordered into Igo dawn yesterday. It was de-
duction along with the simhar — fibed + equal in violence to
Air Force Thor missile one that killed an estimated
a _ _ _ • a • _ _ _ _ _ _ will not be avail ddo to the al ...... “
OVER GRAY KITTEN- -- ■ CarRamsPorch
lied armies and an appeal for
greater unitv in the North At- Army got a go-ahead signal. He
lantic coalition. said this came after a study by
r The United States faces iron- a committee headed by Dr.ne sain. me maximum \ „
ble on both,* Eisenhower ap- James R. Killian, now President was lowered to 200 miles
pea red confident of success. Eisenhower’s scientiic adviser. I Since then, Medaris said, the
"We are all confident," he Medaris testified as the sub ‘warhead has been lightened. He
down in duplicating respensibil-
—lities"despite-administration
-preupefforf s "Nobody but
| the President can bring order
Yesterday morning Commis.
sioner Timothy O’Connor re
ceived a note addressed to the
"Honorable Chief of Police."
He said the situation can be The people of the South,
called hopeful if "you of the Reynolds continued, are being
non-South view our problems "completely misled by their po-
patiently and with tolerance, liticaj leaders’” who have passed
and Congress and th Supreme what he called "silly laws” in
Court provide the breather that opposition to integration.
will permit friendly persuasion." i These laws, Reynolds said, are
Some 1,000 persons heard a a “product of the intellectal
panel discussion by Hays; dishonesty of our legislators."
‘----- t "2 —- ‘ -12" r Reynolds said the legislators
have passed their anti-integra-
tion laws knowing they will not
.............. — - -..... Majority Leader iyhdon b raffic Collision
Enclosed was $5 and a request Johnson of Texas said in ad • VV--IVII
vance of the Senate Prepared A car driven by Mrs. Bessie
ness subcommittee's resump llodge Warren, 17, of 1703 Buck
tion of hearings on the pro ’Si went out of control and
grains. “It is apparent that our erashed into the front porch of
basic need is for 1 he hme dri v e a house after being struck bv
and energy at high levels that andthe auto at Fletcher anil
we have at the working levels’ Throckmorton streets Friday.
Johnson said the subcommit Mi- Warren received slight
tee lie heads is looking for po i injurie i small facial cut and
five, aggressive proposals" to -bruise in the 3:33 p.m. accL
match Russian saticlite and mis. .dent
paredness subcommittee t h c
Army was convinced in *1954
that "It could go for the 1.500-
which can be threatened by the mile missile. - •
same danger" But Medaris, who heads the
Eisenhower arrived with an Army Ballistic Missile Agency
offer of atomic missiles for al- at Huntsville, Ala., said it was
not until October, 1955, that the
“A tree like this is entirely too years ago. Brian and his five
dangerous to lake into anyone’s, sisters all have kittens of their
house," Fire Chief H. L. Futch own,
said of the tree being marketed The young lad decided this
in Dallas. would make a fine Christmas
The tree had been treated gift for Kathy.
with a puffy white substance But. faced with geographical
sprayed onto the tree after it and financial .obstacles, he took
was treated with a shellac ed his problem right to the top—
herenf. Chicago’s police commissioner.
pore One airline official said it g 1 > F MW*_____1 t • m
saa/ UAWMi sdeed Reports
m2mhaasmmmmna:: Eyed by Senate Probers
nesia, . " ..... . . . . , ,
“ " ' ------* - — ----* — charges. should specify them
we propose to do,” < _ .
tended the hearings have been Emil Mazey, UAW secretary- violence made by both the com 1
Itreasurer, who made the i pany and the UAW. I
side of tier vehicle.
i— Mi s.—Win i en—-
in a separafe inter v iew the nil
sile program remains "shroud-
cd in confusion and hogzed
. into i iiIk miiiai inn. ■ t nr i emir
see senator said
cemher wind.
After a welcome to France
from President Rene Coty and
Premier Felix Gaillard, Eisen-
hower made the keynote state-
mm A ■ mm ment of his mission to try to
j EA breathe new life and vitality in-
■■■■ M BM M " ■ ■ I E. • m M to an ailing Western alliance.
IO p 6 T UI KdCC dtpfomnaryy n ond:
■ i w indswept Orly Field, Eisen-
a ■ ■ Am I hower said slowly and deliber-
Outlook Seen
SHARON, Conn. (P) Rep. Kilpatrick said he believed in
Brooks Hays (DArk) says the Ilie "essential separation”’of the
long term outlook for full racial two races in the South/specif i-
integration in the South is hope- cally in the public schools,
ful, if the South is given a "llere is the one area in which
breather. , i the white and Negro races
i.4’’ • Tne
says it has
Bv G. MILTON KELLY
I W A SH I N GTON (A) Sen.
W| |f InIrrw Mundt (RSD) said today the; , _
| F"i E I [\| | J f Senate R a i k e t s Investigating McClellan (D Ark). has not
" Committee is exploring "reports shown as much "enthusiasm and
Cnmiis CrosKW ords 7 of any improper activities" by determination to expose wrong-
Deaths 8 the United Auto Workers Union.
Editorials ' 4 I Mundt said the committee's
investigation of violence in the
still unsi'itled Lyenr strike—by
Hays, one of four Southern-, would be brought into social re-
ers who spoke here last night. , lationship at once intimate, per-
said the South must have timesonal and prolonged,” Kirk-
to persuade its people that the ! Patrick said.
rule of law must be accepted. | "This cannot be accomplished
"That's what we are living to without a hloody revolution of
do.” he said, "and that's what our society, he added. t
we must do. It is fair of the Reynolds said the response of
South to ask for a breather-most people tQwhat was hap-
___________ ... not for power to resist but a pening inthe South was largely
Negroes, A State Revenue De: Horather for friendly persua smaIonaeluheidratorinutwohg
_'. . .. 1 of the moderates and liberals
nhis.he said, may take 1 or who are coping with the prob-
-V ears. lem.
ii we nave conauc tea a one . .......... - ;....., c instructed its embassy, in Ath-
sided and biased investigation," iermenscientistanddireelor.ol ens to "express our profound
C’urtis demanded “why were Ilie DeVlopmenl (perations 1 1- sht k it the I hursday night
the Teamsters ousted by t he 1 vision of the Huntsville center, homhing f l’ s property in
partisan committee for criticism.- AFL(107 Why was the Bakers was to follow Medan . the Grerk capital.
Goldwater w as not available for and Confectionary Workers Un- Secretary of the Navy Giate i he department said a pre-
.n o,ion Ilie AFL-CIO and Adm Arteigh Burke, chtef limmars report indicated there
has ousted hot fi unions IrnrriJIs also werewere three, explosions — one
listed to testify. which almost destroyed a U. S.
Johnson praised the testimony Information Agency library, and
The committee pinvjously had bpfore the committee last pight two others which ’ rendered in-
indicated its investigarion of the of Lt. Gen. James W. Gav in, operative two generators of the
Kohler stiike would lie a two- who said it is all important for U S. Ait Force.
. ............ ..p:..o the I nited States to beat Russia That report, t he department
charges and counter charges of to the moon. said yesterday, indicated four
• —- —•- h h-t •......- "We have got to get out there Amer ii an airmen and one Greek
4 (Continued on Page 8) I suffered superficial injuries.
I <■ described AKe accident
tin-. W a) M
Mi- Warrenas going north
on Thros knffon w hen Mrs.
andron-"r, traveling east on
Fletcher, struck the left rear
day, the President told a thin
airport crowd of 200 persons'
the West must meet Russia's
space age challenge or lose its
I freedom to Red despotism.
Eisenhower, stepped from the rrom
four-engined presidential plane World War II
C olumbine III mto a sharp De- France’s postwar progress.
Eisenhower said France was
However, there have been of 2.000 persons last July on Iran's
filial statements that Jupiter ’ a pian Sea coast
sile development and his not Driver of the other rar Jivas
found them in the top levels of Mi Sue Lurnett CondrK, 22,
those handling the program. of 1 11 J l leather Rd. ShgKKas not
Sen. Kefauver < D Tenn ' said ii 1I ied M
Massi another' subcommittee
member, said he thinks the line
of command is clear, reaching
directly up to the president.
"The President is the czar of
the missiles program but I don t
think he will have to m ike
many decisions because I thifk
the confusion is being cleared
up rapidly,” he said
The subcommittee (ailed Mai
Gen. John B. Medaris command
ing general of the army ballis
tics missile center at Huntsville.
1,287 Die
declined to give a ‘details in In Iran
public session. -r-
in 1951, he continued the IrerArc
Army started work on the Jupt I | • I I IVI •
her auto which crossed the
street and struck the cement
porch of a home on the north-
west corner of the intersection.
Damage to the Warren car
was estimated at $250. Mrs. Con-
(Iron’s auto received $15 dam-
age There was no damage to
the home, police said.
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 68, No. 92, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 14, 1957, newspaper, December 14, 1957; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1571980/m1/1/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.