The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 80, Ed. 1 Monday, April 5, 1954 Page: 1 of 6
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THE EVENING NEWS AND THE MORNING TELEGRAM CONSOLIDATED IN 1915. ABSORBED THE DAILY GAZETTE IN 1924.
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VOL. 56—NO. 80.
SULPHUR SPRINGS. TEXAS, MONDAY. APRIL 5. 1954.
e:
_
6 PAGfcS — 5 CENTS MEMBER ASSOCIATED TRESS
Commerce Men
Killed in Crash
Near Peerless
Nance and Fry
Sweep Election
With 103 Votes
Two Commerce men were
killed, while* a third escaped
with only minor injuries,
when their car overturned
on Farm Road 71 about six
miles west of the intersec-
tion of Highway 154, Satur-
day night. The accident oc-
curred southwest of Peer-
less.
The dead are C. J. Gilliam Jr.,! Unofficial returns from Satur-
of Route 1, Commerce, driver of day’s school elections virtually as-
the car, and Dewey C. Forten-1 sure that incumbents A., D. (Top)
berry, of 2023 Mangrum Street, Nance and S. Glenn Fry will be |
returned to the positions of trust-
ees for the Sulphur Springs In-
Com- dependent School District,
treat-
Commcrce.
\ The other occupant of the car
Ԥ (Howard A. Hath oat of
. if; nierce wus given first aid
III moot at Memorial Hospital ami
m released.
The impact of the crash, in
Both Nance and Fry received
a total 103 votes each, with no
write-in votes being cast. The
school hoard will meet Monday
which no other vehicle was involv-j of next week to officially can-
‘ ed, was such that the passengers! vass the ballots of the election.
of the ill fated ear were thrown
several feet front the point where
the car finally came to rest, ac-
cording to Patrolmen Jess Reed
and Joe Pruett, who investigated.
Both of the deceased, Gilliam,
age 31, and Fortenberry, age 4(1,
were former residents of Sulphur
Springs.
Fortenberry was employed by
the Echo Publishing Company for
several years, and was the father
of two sons, James and Jack, and
a daughter Joyce. James Forten-
berry is remembered here for his
performances on the local grid-
iron.
The car involved in the accident,
a 11)50 Chevrolet, was completely
demolished.
The bodies of the two victims
were removed to Commerce for
funeral services.
In another traffic accident over
the weekend, a car driven by Bob-
by D. Otts of Dallas, age 17, col-
lided with an auto driven by Or- j
bin Sterling Thacker, age 32 of Stoddard, X
Leesburg, at the intersection of Two missing
In the ejection at Miller Grove
incumbents Robert Gorman and !
Clarence Renshaw have apparent-1
ly won reelection on the basis of j
unofficial returns. Each received
3(5 votes with the other candi-
date, Leonard Petty receiving 28
votes. E. L. Bearden received 6
write in votes und Gala* Long 2
write-in votes.
Hopkins County Commissioners
Court will meet Monday to can-
vass ali voles cast in county school j
elections.
Results from other school dis-1
U ict elections were unavailable |
Monday.
'iwiftwV-'-’*
a.*
Dulles Says Chinese Reds
Pose Threat in Indo-Chma
SEVEN CHURCHES SPONSOR
Holy Week Services
Scheduled Downtown
LUCKY LEATHERNECK — Terrance Rrouse, one of 13 Marine
Corps recruits bound for boot camp at San Diego, Cuiif., react^
in an un-Marinelike manner to a semi off ki.-- from airlines stew-
ardess Pat Carney. T-Sgl, John MeCumlless, of tin* Minneapolis,
Minn., recruiting office, looks on in amazement, obviously thinking
that Brouse needs a lot of hoot Gaining before he lias the situation
well in hand. (NKA)
Future Farmers
Capture Honors
Plans for daily morning reli-
gious services ill downtown Sul-
phur Springs during Holy Week
were announced Monday by re-
presentatives of the sewn spon-
soring churche*.
The services will be held in the
Carnation theater from P I i pgld
a. in., Monday through Friday.
live loeal ministers will each
(trc-cnl a dad\ message.
Following up plans initialed ai
most a yeai ago, Holy Week will
Hearing Slated
To Determine
Status of Sears
Missing Scouts
Found Enjoying
Comfortable Life
H.
Boy
Apr. 5 IIP —
Scouts were
i Two team and two individual
[ first place honors were captured
! by Sulphur Springs chapter re-
j preseiitatives ut flu* Paris Junior
j College FFA Judging Contest in
; Paris Saturday.
! Sterling A. Beckham, adviser,
j reported that the Sulphur Springs
I dairy ami livestock judging teams
i wdn first place honors. Cliff An-
derson on the dairy team ami
David Reynolds on the livestock
State Highway 154 and Farm found comfortably situated in & team were individual high winners
Road 71, Sunday afternoon. , woodland camp today just as state
Neither driver was injured, hut police assembled sound trucks and Tj Su| . Springs
damage to the Otts ear was es- mobile radio crews and prepared ., . 1 ,
timated at $100. The Thacker car to recruit a 50-man posse. '* *v '
damages amounted to about $75, j Herman Simpson, 14, and Roy
High-1 Parker, 12, both of Marlow, had
! been on a troop hike. They told
| conservation officer George ().
] Stevens:
i “We got separated about 3
o’clock yesterday afternoon and
I we found this cabin about two
! hours later. We went in and lit
a fire to keep warm.”
The scouts also reported —“We
were hungry and there was all
this canned food there so we ate.”
j And when bedtime rolled a-
round the two lads retired to cab-
in beds. The cabin is owned by
Ernest J. Chase of Keene.
The hoys listened to the radio! Ernest Bearden, 17, of the
and heard ntkws accounts of the Flora community Monday an-
at most major ,............ them. inoum ed that he will be a candi
according to investigating
way Patrolmen Reed and Pruett.
5,000 Workers
In Sabine Area
Idled by Strike
Beaumont, April 5 IIP — An
estimated 5,000 construction
workers are idle in Beaumont and
the Sabine atea of southeast Tex-
as as a result of a strike by the
A. F. L. ironworkers.
The ironworkers placed pickets
industrial building j ‘"r
in the events.
Land
teams
won third plaeo. George Temple
was third high individual on the
crops team and Mike Hodge plac-
ed filth on the poultry team.
While the Land Judging team
did not place, Chester DcBotd
Ernest Bearden
Of Flora Plans
Political Race
Washington, April
; Si*naU‘ Investitfatmu
and Bohhy Parker were third and bus M hediiied
fifth high individuals.
Composing the Dairy team
with Cliff Anderson were Jimmy
Hatlgy, Don Thurman and lien
Beckham. , —^
David Reynolds, Dan link-,
Arlin Speed and Don Biichanhu
made up the Livestock team.
The Land Use team was rom-
Suheiiin
a meeting union
tomorrow inuiiiiiig to detei
mine whether Saimiel Sears of
Boston will remain as it,- special
counsel for the hearings into the
row belwign Senator McCarthy
und Army officials.
Tbc acting subcommittee chair-
man, Karl Mumlt, says there's
cc itajn to lie an announcement
la* observed as Church Loyally
Week in Sulphur Springs, with
other groups asked to refrain
from scheduling functions during
that period.
Directors of the Chamber of
Commerce adopted a resolution
la t spring designating Holy Week
of I'.t54 as Church Loyalty Week
and urging that this interval be
reserved for n lignins purposes. A
delegation of mini-tern requested
the action after other events had
interfered witli attendance ut pre-
Kaster church seivices last year.
Participating Churches
Churches participating in the
morning services are First Bap-
tist, Wesley Methodist, Church
of the Nnzareiic, First Methodist,
First Presbyterian, First Christian
and Central Baptist.
.The churches will hold theii in-I
dividual Holy Week services in
the evening.
The speakeis' schedule for the
services is: Monday, the
Rev. E. II. Hendrix; Tuesday,
Hie Rev. E K. Harvey; Wednes-!
day, the Rev. Alan Lynch;!
Thursday, Dr. Dnrold II Morgan,1
Fndav, Dr T n Perrin
posed of II. ('. Huigin, Travis some kind alter toinonow's meet
llirks, Woodrow Follis ami Donald j ("K
Green. Mike Hodge was the Foul- the
A laymen’s committee repre-j
senting each of the participating
< hurclics is working with the'
Ministers’ Association ill develop-1
ing plan.- for the observance.!
Mumlt mys the purpose of Eneh laymen announced the Holy;
meeting is to explore the* Week servnes in his own chinch i
try team.
The Crop, team veu- composed
of George Tempo-, 2 1 "*’v Crab-
tree and Rav Gene Baxley. Ches-
pledges Seal; already has made
that he can and -till will lie
i.eutial in the heai ings.
The unuoimccmciil of the* meel-
Bobliy Parker, Dan ; mg set for tomoiiovv followed a
Ben Anglin feu ined closed door conference this morn-
ing of Sears, Mumlt, and Demo
ciatie Senator John McClelnn of
projects this morning, tying up
millions of dolfats worth
,-truction work.
The strike* is u\dnst two man
They were found in the cabin date l’or County Commissioner,
of con- by H K'oup of woodsmen who were j
i among the dozen searchers led :
by the State police and conserva-
Piccinet, No. 3, subject to the ac-
ton of the* Democ iate primaries.
A stock-farmer who has horn
H ilot1 l" " lit*111 i • i * 'I
—the Sabine Area 1,0,1 officers. 1 he night search was and reared In the community
in eight degree temperature and
through a foot of snow.
Assistant Scoutmaster Paul
he two lads
lefore they
/Burns of Marlow said
were last seen just
became separated from the troop
which was hiking in woods on the
east side of Highland Lake at
2,15:;-fcct high Pitcher Mountain.
RAIN CLOUDS OBSERVED
ngement groups
Construction Committee and the
Associated General Contractors.
However, work is progressing
normally at two large building
jobs in the area. One is at the
plant d/f the Spencer Chemical
Company in Orange. The other is
at the Texas Company refinery
project in Port Arthur.
The business agent of the Bea-
umont Construction Building
Trades Council, J. E. Flowers,
said no pickets were placed at
thoue two projects because the
i ontraclors have promised to pa}’
retroactive any wage increase
granted in the future by the two
management groups.
Mrs J. H. Gibbs
Passes Monday;
Ridgeway Riles
Funeral services for Mrs. J. 1L
Gibbs, 72, will be Held at 2 p. m.
Tuesday at the Ridgeway Union
Church.
Burial will be in the Ridgeway
cemetery.
She died Monday morning in
ii Dallas hospital.
Mrs. Gibbs, formerly from ! 'n I*'* P“Hs of the state are unus-
Ridgeway. wn* born in Alabama u*,iv 'va,'m for the first week in
which he resides, Mr. Bearden
suid that this is the fir.-t time tHat
During the night the search-1 he has ever sought public office,
ecs lit bondfireis hoping to attract I He became the second annnunr-
the beys’ attention. I ed candidate for the post. Ear-
lier, Lex Kite announced that he
is a candidate for re-election.
Mr. Bearden said that he plan-
ned aji intensive campaign and team vv«- composed
ter Dellord.
Phillips and
the Lurid Judging team.
Set Sighti High
Ber kliHun said that Iris I* I'A
teams would' enter the Aiea VI
contests at Commerce on Halm
day. There, they will have sight-
-et on the state contests at Col
lego Station on May
The North Hopkins teams,
under the direction of Roger
Vino! I, also scored well at the
Paris route -t».
The Land Judging team won
first place, with Allen Pace and
Jimmy Goldsmith first and second
high individuals. Others on the
team were W. C. Lawson and
Clifton Groves,
The North Hopkins Poultry
team vvo<i rcconil. with Johnny
Herman and Jerry Lawerenee,
second nnd fifth high individuals.
Olliers on the team wen* Virgil
Stevens and Rayburn Cheshire.
Beil Chapman was .third high
on the dairy judging team, which
was composed of Glynn Withrow,
Bobby Vaden anil Billy Fouricks.
The North Hopkins Livestock
.1 (• 11 v
hoped to visit with all of the vot-
ers in the precinct before the
election.
. V
Swiddy, who finished loAirth high
individual, and Don Lawson and
[Charles Chapman.
Sulphur Springs
Ministers Change
Sunday. Ni*xt Sunday each will
U* truest . |M ukt*r at another
» hurch.
laymen's Committer
Miinbois of tin* laymen’s com-
mittee are Lester Murdock, First
Baptist; J. J|. MuLstcttler, Wesley
Methodi't; In. J. L. (’rawford,
of l he Na/.amie, Phil
Suit in ami Audley Moore, Kirat
Methodist; (ieiahl Prim and W. hi.
r»aLrhv, Fil 'd Ih e hvterian; Hor-
ace Miller, I'lMt ('hriHtian; Hoy!
Hailin, (Yntial Haptint.
Lora! employers are heiiiff n«k-
ed to allow employes who dewiie
to attend the services time off!
in w Inch t.o <|o .hi,
A mu ieal pi obt ain will he
hroadi ast fnun tne theater foi 1 f» j
minute.N hcfoie the Mait of each!
ser\ ice.
Laymen fioin the 'utious par-'
tieiputiiitf eh ik lies w ill assist with
• ai h Nervier.
County Judge..
To Face Trial
I.ulkin, April f» The trial
of Angelina County: Judge J, T.
Muroney Junior, o*t fm today
at Lufkin, lie is < harped with
John l>. PloodswoitIt, < haplain ; murder through a< u^l* rit \yhile in-
and/Hieiyi Woo<l, trustee^ * loxieatcd.
Hampton is sehcduled to name The eharpe grew out of an auto'
evoj al appointive ol filers. accident on S<>\■enilM.*r i in vAhuh
'I’he meeting will lie held at Mis. Myrtle Huvcnport was killed.
7 : >0 p. m. at the post home. Fight persons were in jured.
Arkansas ami Stuart Symingtom J
<>f Atissouii in Mundtoffice.
VFW Officials
To Install New
Officers Tonight
But Haulage of Maud, distiul
, commander of the Veteran,» of
Foieign Wais, will be in Sulphur
Spiingx tomglu to install offieer-,
lor the Ilopkin ( ouuty post.
Hardage will be accompanied
bv Norman Ra< lo I, di tiiel' ud-
intant.
Outgoing eonmmmler Artlmr
Mitchell repoi ts that the new slate
((I olticers im Hides Jimmy Hamp-
ton, post commander; Ira Holme-
■scnioi v ice i ommamlei ; J. VV.
Kite, junior vice ruimnnmici ; Del-
bert MeCleary, puai tei onuti i j
HE’S ARMY’S MAN — Joseph N.
Welch, Boston attorney, has been
appointed special counsel by the
Army to handle its case in the
Senate investigation of the Mc-
Carthy-Army dispute. Welch told
reporters that he was a "personal
anil professional friend” of Sam-
uel B. Sears, also a Boston at-
torney, who will handle the case
for the Senate investigating sub-
committee conducting the inquiry.
- ■ ------------------r**“ —-—’
Secretary Dulles
Asks Free World
To Help French
Washington, Apr. 5 l^t- -Secre-
tary of State Dulles railed on
nations of the free world Unlay
to rally behind the Frrfnth Union
forces in Indo-China, to teach the
Communists they can’t smash
freedom by what Dulles called
"Massive, suicidal assaults."
Said Dulles: "The need of the
hour is solidarity on the part of
the free world, and notably on the
part of all those nations which
have a direct and vital stake in
the freedom of the area.”
Dulles set forth this view in a
statement in which he urged the
House Foieign Affairs Committee
to approve the Eisenhower admin-
istration's request to keep a for-
eign aid program alive — though
cut down.
Illegal Heroin
Seized on Coast
1
Washington, April 5 W Hie,
seizure of inillioiiN of dollars,
worth of illegal lii'ioin in San
Francium h announced Hy Nai-
eoticH ( onmn*Moner Harry An-j
slingrr in Washington He said the
heroin wie smuggled in from
Communist China.
Kignt fierson• were arrested in
the narrotieN raid which Aik.
rlinger iIim Io e*v wU* made yesler-
day.
The commissioner say* the
heioin was hioiigtit to the t/’nited
Stales for the most part by mer-
chant sea men who got it in Hong
Kong. I
Washington, Apr, 5 (AP)
—Secretary of State Dulles
said today the Chinese Corn-
muntsts are coming awfully
dose to committing the kind
of action in IndoChina which
mi^ht call for massive retal-
lation. He said only techni-
calities save them from a
charge of blatant new ag-
gression,
Dulles told the House Foreign
Affairs Committee that freshiy
verified information shows that
Chinese Reds are manning anti-
aircraft guns in the battle of Diet!
Bion Phu in northwest IndoChina.
He sBld, too, that u Chinese gen-
eral and Chinese technical ad-
visors are stationed at staff head-
quarters of the Communist-led
rebels attacking the strongpoint.
Republican Congressman Albert
Morano of Connecticut asked Dul-
les: “If the Chinese Communists
are firing anti-aircraft guns, does
that mean the ‘active participa-
tion' you were reported to have
sajd would bring retaliation on the
Chinese mainland?”
Dulles recalled that he had said
last September that If the Chinese
sent Communist armies into Indo-
China, it would he apt to produce
action which might not be con-
fined to Indo-China. The Secre-
tary of State continued:
"Technically they have not done
precisely the thing I defined." But
lie added:
"They're coming awfully close
to it."
Ill response to another question,
Dulles said the United Stales hid!
not made any commitment to send
troops to IndoChina.
Dulles appeared before the
House committee in connection
with the foreign aid program for
the coming yrar. He dUrlosed that
Congress will lx* asked to author-
ize as much military and econom-
ic assistance for IndoChina ill the
coming year as it did during the
past year — more than one billion,
200 million dollars.
In IndoChina, the French high
command says the Union forces
have filled up every gap puahed
in the northwest defenses of Dlen
Bien Phu. The French say the
Communist led rebels have lost
more than 1,000 killed in that'See-
tor. Heavy fighting has been rag-
ing there.
WEATHER
Nnimi CKN1RAL TEXAN Partly
HobIv and "arm TiK’adajr-
W itlriy m hM« r« »| •ficriHMin »nd evrithne
thuntlrrahowen in thr «nuf)ira»t portion.
KAHT TEX AM (‘gtnakpFallr cDhmII*
n«8H ami «v«rm l< nlirttt wml T««M«y
ly M’aUrrvtl nnd awnltiir limit-
•IrrnhnWW*
ROirVH CHHTHAle TEX A* 1‘artljf
l Uimly ami warm D«nl»l»l and Turadajp.
Paradise
F.n Kmite To Coy ton, Apr. 5
(11 - Quoon Eliaobeth and tbo
Duke of Edinburgh left the lin-
er Gothic todey for in hour and
half visit to Home Gland in the
Coio! iroup. The entire popula-
tion of the coral isle — 350
prisons — turned out to greet
the royal visitors.
Drrssrd in their gaily cofored
sarongs, thr islanders waved
vigorously but said not a word.
It seems that in Cocoa, noise
is considered bed manners.
Temperature Soars
To 82 Degrees Here H“eol&0“1'
. SuliiiKir Sp'ing? iv, in inters
Sulphur Sp'ing- ministers ehnng-
| ed the numu of their organization
Elsewhere 1 j|ont|a to t|H, MniHters' Aiwieia-
i the 80V Uon •
| except m East Texas. Clouds there Thu a,ion previously has
up to 82 ; kept temperutures down, it was 75jl e„n Kl,m,ut||v k,l0Wn „ the Mm-;
..e-os'Jot Tyler. I ,-teriul Alliance.
The unusually warm weather for
Clouds threatened rain in Sul-, Laredo, 90 at Del Rio..............
phur Springs Monday as summer} the temperature was in the 80V
temperatures continued.
The temperature shot
degrees at noon Monday, exceed-
“r Hiu, onii-ui s.
c-iouds in the* western part of the j Kepi thentatives of the a*&ocia-
.server.
m. »r .. CIWHUB III UIC WCMYII
THC hUnmiitV
per cent.
tio.-i will speak in
and junior high
A low pressure area is moving April 13.
the high school
on the topic j
in 1881, coming to Texas as a
child. She was married in 1898
to J. H. Gibbs at Mt. Zion,
She wa; a member of the Meth-
odist Church.
Survivors include four daugh-
ters, Mrs. Jess Butler of Sulphur
Springs, and Mmes. B. H. Led-
better, W. S. Mahaffey and Andy
Hill, all of Dallas; nine grandchil-
dren and ten great grandchildren.
Day and Day Funeral Home is
in charge of arrangements.
April.
The association voted an ex-
in from the west and may set off’
n . , . « | some scattered thundershowers inj presgion of appreciation to the
Uverntght temperatures ranged East Texas this afternoon and Chamber of Commerce ami
ft om a low of 41 at Daihart to . evening. There may be some wide , eityJehool official
the high of 72 at Brownsville. The
temperature at Daihart is the re-
sult of a cold front that has edged
into the northern part of the
Texas panhandle, In the rut of the
top of Texas overnight readings
were in the 50’s.
ly cattered showers in North Cen-j operation
tral Texas this evening.
Here 1 arc* some minimum
temperatures during
Fort Worth 67, Dalla:
for theii
to
co-
in
program.
Attending
the night :|iAlan Lynch, W. S. Wester, T. 0.
68, Austin' Per*)", John Rice, (S, T. Killion.
the JLoyalty Week
DEATH IN THE LIVING ROOM —Eight persons asleeprin this
the meeting were (,0UMe „t Baton Rouge, I«a., escaped death when this stolen Cessna
Serious Hurdle
Faces Pay Bill
..... Si________1 i...Ltj,L|,;C--"h’lMf!i
Final Riles Held
i%et
and Waco 68, Texarkuha 67, Cor- K* H’ HendllJ<* Ni' h.dson,;
n n “..... " E. M. Jones. J. P.
Harvey, Richard
Caldwell and Ko I
Yesterday the temperature hit f>us { hriati 71, Laredo 70, A mar- Ltitom Farl
100 at Presidio, the highest in' IHo 80, Lubbock 55, Salt Fiat 47, Moore H II
Texas. It was 93 at Cotulla and] Wink 53. , i bert Graves.’
140 crashed into the living room between, the, bedrooms, but failed
to burn. Student pilot Edwiir White, Jr., 19, of MahaTfeld, La., died
in the crash, and passenger Robert M. Heard, 18, son of Louisiana
State University’s athletic director T. P. Heard, was seriously in-
jured. Police said the flight was unauthorized, and that the ship
had been reported stolen by its owner, Joe Hair. (NEA Telephoto)
Austin, • April 5 '/P — Approval
of the tax bill by n .Senate com-
mittee has given fresh rise to
hopes-the special session ran fin-
ish* its job by April 13, the end
of the .'lil-day limit.
The special session faces one
othey serious hurdle, rival plan*
before the lower House on teach-
er pay plans. One is the |402 a
year pay taise compromise sup-
ported by Shivers, the other ii a
plan for locally granted merit
raises by Representative* Charles
Murphy of Houston.
Murphy and Shivers conferred
this morning at Shivers’ invita-
tion. There i» no indication they
reached any agreement and Mur-
phy has indicated it was not an
amiable meeting. x \
Murphy raid be told Shiver*
the Governor will live to regret it
if the adminietration bill 'is paus-
ed, thus forcing local districts to
raise the teachers’ pay even If
tax increases are necessary.
■' ,’4; ' -*'41
ForMrs. Adams
At Dike Church
Final rites for Mrs. R. Adam*,
former resident of Pine forest,
were held Monday at 2 p. m. at
the Dike Methodist Church, with
the Reverend W. M. Wilkinson of-
ficiating. Burial followed in Con- V
nor’* Cemetery, with nephews aa
pallbearers.
She died Saturday mornipg at
the home of a daughter, Mra.
Claude Alford, 2139 South Har-
wood Street, Dallas.
Mrs. Adam* was born in Umar
Countv In 1883, and was mareted
in 1904 to Rutherford Adams at
was a1 member of the
Church. ;jgj'
°n Pw s“> '
. -W.
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Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 80, Ed. 1 Monday, April 5, 1954, newspaper, April 5, 1954; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth812613/m1/1/: accessed July 2, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.