The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 86, No. 10, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 14, 1964 Page: 2 of 16
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2 _
THE DAILY NEWS-TELEGRAM
Tuesday, January It, 1964.
Mtarfak
Things Sulphur Springs Needs
9 Hospital Expansion
t Cooper Reservoir
0 A Health and Sanitation Program
S Continued Industrial Development
• More Parking Facilities
0 Building Modernization
0 Intensified Trade Promotion
0 Expanded Fire Protection
0 Public Library Modern.aation
0 A More Prosperous Agriculture
0 A New Armory
0 Enthusiastic Citizens
ALL MEN'S GAINS ARE THE FRUIT OF
VENTURING — HERODOTUS
rial.
How Time Doth Fly
Among the more difficult larks fac-
ing virtually every person throughout
the nation these days i.« keeping up
with the changing times. The prob-
lem has limitie'S facets, and is imt re-
stricted to citizens in metropolitan
areas.
if as resident- .>t the Sulphur
Springs area it seem- at times that you
are being unfairly asked to shed time-
honored traditional viewpoints as the
city and county strive •«> move forward
and obtain their shale of American de-
velopment. keep in mind that times do
change.
n to
for her father is a painter. Her mother
it breeder of fancy goldfish. The whole
-r-joihted family loves to take exotic
on trips.
There are some obvious parallels between
aathor and her heroine, for Miss Glyn
a-.-i-d he; 1 tfa birthday whily weiking on
Uti- manu-cript, and ha- done soau poetiy
and jutir.tine herself.
Sum* American riaders may find the early
c.f th'- book a tittle baffling for its \yp-y
Kiicf-h atmosphere. But once you get on to
rrat.' yfer-firgrr rmprtr>se'(t'!"&y ffre~ vivid™'
:t <<f the young mind. Soon it dawns
- e-j ec-ially in the episodes at the
. —that a deft, mature perception
;■ v .ok. creating a satirical view of the
tc e , # and the pompous conformity of the
ci ini system.
.-"iiieh'iw this teen-age author has caught
: • i:.right intw the meaningful but mercurial
. tbiough which children go. and at
t ".•• -ante time has followed her precocious in-
t .;ti'.-. min an understanding of adult relu-
t.u....hi;- too. Certainly as a craftsman she is
akin to those amazing prodigies occasionally
erupting prodigies occasionally erupting in
the musical world; foi few makers of words
c :m acoomflish whet she does at 15.
She hajipens to be the great-granddaughter
of Elinoi Glyn, who years ago shocked naive
Anjencans with a sexy novel called “Thiee
Weeks”
Caroline Glyn ha*, written a book that is
it rare phenomenon.
‘Mind If I Look Over Your Shoulder?
%'"W*
Don’t feel too jiroud of yourself if you get
ahead only on New Year’s eve.
An object In-
dus? ID year
the United Sir?'
Commerce’s list
young men in th
Texan of particular
His name—Billi
ise-your way :
ago ?hi- past week
.Liiib-r <'h;,tni.er • >f
l« ! 10 out.standing
nation included one
Estes.
in winter autos, like people, don’t get any-
v. belt just stalling around.
A Georgia girl was ai tested for driving
while under the influence of liquor. A* bran-
died peuch.
Shades of Wells Fargo
Surely Matt Dillon and the hordes
of legendary and factual contempo-
raries of hi- in the Dodge City area
spent a period of tinea-mess this past
m eek.'
It wasn’t widely circulated, but
there was an attempt last week to un-
dermine the spirit of law enforcement
at the very bediock of enforcement
“Old West” style. County commission-
ers of Ford County. Kansas, sitting at
Dodge City, ordered the sheriff’s bud-
get cut by slicing off four of his five
patrol cars, cutting phone service and
ruling out ‘‘expen-ive’’ blood alcohol
tests for person- suspected of drunk-
enness.
Perhaps the economy move wa.-
mafie with some thought, though. For
as near as it can he determined. Matt
Dillon didn't require five car- to dean
up Front Street and message- could
always be relayed by Chester or Doc
without the aid of modern conven-
iences.
But it remained for one of the com-
missioner- to revert to the true spirit
of the Old West when he advised ihe
sheriff concerning the blond alcohol
te«ts:
“We don't need to go spending all
that money. If a man'- a drunk, arrest
him. If he’s not. let him go,”
Tiie-Literary (i milepost
By W. C. Rogers
DON’T KNOCK THE Ct MINEKS OFF. By
Caroline Gly n. ('.i-.oiij Mo a n .gl.Wi.
Young Miss Glyn - r.o.t I o!>■.■• * an '
tional child i.- subtly
mole ways than ■
She relate- tin- an- cot i
Rutherford, an Kt.gli-b .-i-btu
proximately her 10tn to jn-i ].
Mostly it is a story of the o
happen to Antonia among tbi
liters of what \\e wo thi mil a
then among the lattei Li ;>i -
teachers of a private school foi
nally back in a grammar school.
Antonia i- i:o vrdii.niv ci:i'■;.' She is
bright—except th.it she g,.r - hopei* • -Iv lo t
in math—and -he write- poetry that i- good
enough to be published i; the . me..
She also does some painting, hi. h j. oat-
OUT OUR WAY
It really isn’t too early for a man to worry
about hi.- figure—on hi- income tax form.
When there is snow
off the hit and run,
lots of little kids pull
Santa ha- gone on his way but most peo-
ple still love a fat man.
about payments
makes people
a- well as
lose control
Carelessm
plain carelessness
of their ears.
You’re a right person if you do right by
the boys in service by writing.
SENATOR * * *
Yarborough’s Report
uttended the joint session an all-out battle against pov-
the House and Senate erty, disease and despair.
Judging fium the few we’ve had
don't eat chestnuts in the dark.
year,
I <i.
funny how
by suin'
a keepsake is given to a
he the person has forgotten.
Even o homely
all traffic light
man can get safely through
on his good looks.
'limouy i- xfe-iiat one person often pays
the mistake two people made.
A Bible Thought for Today
yet xinneri Christ died for
While we were
u«. — Romans 5:8.
Hei •• is : u unsolved
s "! God should die for
mystery,
the godle:
that the
where a Texan in the White
House. President Lyndon John-
son, issued a ringing challenge
to the best in every American.
It was his first State of the
Union speech, the seventh I
have been privileged to hear a.-
your Senator—four by Dwight
D. Eisenhower, two by the late
President John F. Kennedy and
now one by President Uyndqi^ J'e-tJ
B. Johnson.
With more experience in gov-
ernment leadership than any
other first-y e a r president in
our recent historv. President
Johnson has proposed an out-
line of hope loi achievement
of a new security, a new sense
of purpose to our Union, a new
opportunity to move forward.
We may now enlist together in
It is a positive approach that
will make our country stronger
and greater than it has ever
been before. 1 am gratified
to see the emphasis placed on
the growing needs for more
classrooms for students, more
libraries, more teachers, more
job training. It is also good
that we are facing early in this
1904, the emergency na-
ture of the unemployment in
this country, by concentrating generation
on proven programs to relieve
unemployment such as the Area
Redevelopment Administration,
which creates new jobs.
Texas has already benefited
by taking part in the Area Ke-
develo p m cut Administration
program, of which I was a co-
author when it was passed in
1961 as the first measure of
the Kennedy administration.
It is also good that Presi-
dent Johnson has called for
youth employment legislation,
to prevent the tragi' waste of
tin- mind- and energies of our
young people out of school and
unemployed. More, than a mil-
lion and a quarter of our young
people move out of the schools
into the work f o r c e every
year, and another million and a
quarter adult- are put out of
jobs each year by automation.
Where will these youths
coming out of school find jobs?
I support creating a National
Service Corps to help young
people help others, inspired,
dedicated v o u n g Americans
have made the Peace Corps our
greatest success abroad in this
If given the oppor-
By RAY CROMLEY
Washington Correspondent
Newipiper Enterprise Aun.
Washington, (NEA) — “It is now clear we have been
too optimistic in *our assessment of how we were doing in South
T iet Nam,'” said a high-placed goveidinierit official privately’.
He's a lifelong Far East specialist.
"We know Diem and his officials gave us overly favorable
reports. Worse y^t, we believed them.
“It is going to be a long war. We hope we've stopped the
downhill drift and that things are leveling out. But -this level-
ing will take some time. Then the climb upward will be slow.”
The fight, it apjiears, won’t be won completely until the
1970s.
Tiiis man is as close to the situation as any man, both
through his present post and by experience. His worry is echo-
ed by other officials at the Pentagon and Sigte Department.
Announced “victories” have usually been battles. But in
“winning” battles, this mail says, we may be making as many-
enemies as friends.
In attacking a Communist-held village we often play into
Red hands. For we’re killing Vietnamese, numbers of whom
are not Communists and all of whom have non-Communist
relatives.
The United States is not used to. war in which the number
of battles won and the ability to march anywhere and occupy
any territory has no meaning.
Mao Tse-tung’s Chinese guerrillas built their strength in
territories occupied by Japanese armies in World War II. The
Japanese had the ability to go anywhere in China, take any
city, occupy any plot of ground. But they couldn’t occupy it
all at once. No army can have that number of men.
The Reds built up their government' and their power in
the plots between Japanese strong points. When Japanese
troops moved into an area. Communist troops moved out and
abandoned their underground government.
When Japanese troops moved on to another Communist
area, the Communist troops moved back to the first. While this
was going on. the Red organization grew stronger.
Thrsis the cat-and-mouse game the Red Viet Cong is play-
ing in South Viet Natn, .-ay US. officiers who have operated on
that front. "
U.S. officials believe that Diem did not understand this
simple fact about guerrilla war—that it's not a fight for troop
victories, but a war for people’s minds.
Early in the game, China’s Red Mao learned from sad ex-
perience that his guerrilla troops could never win in an area
where they had not first won tne villagers.
Key U.S. government officials now worry that the new
military rulers of South Viet Nam are also “ruling class” types
who do not understand the farmer, peasant and tribesman.
“If they don't solve that problem, it doesn't matter how
many skirmishes we win,” says one American specialist, ‘‘We're
specially worried about the Delta region, where Communists
have been entrenched for almost two decades. The French
never did control the area.”
tunity for a National Service
Corps at home, young people
will do as well at home.
Already the Senate of the
XHth Congress has passed a
Youth Conservation Corps
measure. It would do in the
great parks and national for-
est- what the Civilian Conser-
vation Corps did. It will train
young men and improve these
great recreation areas at the
same time.
We also need a program of
hospital for for the aged under
Social Security. We needed it
last year and the year before.
For many of our aged citizens,
time has run out. The clock is
moving. Time must not run
out on the hopes and dreams
of America. We are on the
threshold of a new govern-
mental greatness if we work
together and if we work hard.
,<1 - u.u u: ...il ,u
- of Antoni*t
girl, from up-
t'i birthdays,
rid tilings that
e young mon-
lie -chool,
e i i >i!s and
giii-. ami fi-
Where tin abounded, grace did much more
abound -Romans 5:20.
No matter how widespread the malady of
the Great Physician has the cure.
X?wG-'&rt?xpam
Main Str*ft.. Sulphur Spring*. Tex«
‘ '• > d « u * i '«v< x j t . and Sunday morning.
F' • • • i iUt- Office in Sulphur Spring*, Texas ua
ii i i ma 1If r
srii.seKin ion katbs
l!y M. in HupRin* and adjoining counties, one month,
. r».* ft . , month* ira*«h in advance! 12.10; *ix months
!<:«-di ir. iuivarict*i i*nc ycaj- iciub in advauice! $7.50.
OuU.ric li*. i'Mrg and adjoining counties, on*.* month $1.00
thr*« tf -•■!!-h in *idvnn<*« * $2.85; nix months (cjmh
in \tIv:ifir«-1 #5.5o ; ime year <ca»h advance; $10X0.
M 'nli* r Ar».'<«> iat«-d and NEA SoryicdjL Ail right* at
ret ddnNitn-n • »f 8p«m-»hI I»t«t«.t4-h«^ are rwerved.
N;.ti<»n»l A I»* rtining K*-iire*ent«tivva Texa* Dally Prc*s
Lee.: utq 'tL1' Hartford Hldy., Daiiad. Texa*. New York
City. Chi. a o. 111.. Lo* Anglic**. Calif., Sun Franciaco
C'liif., St. M<>.. r*r-n\cr. Colo radix
1 *!r|h ones : bus mens. Advertising. Ciatwifir^f Ad. Editorial
and S,. i.-ty Dr{>artinents 8S.O-31141, Hporta Department
I JUST
r CAN'T MAKE,
IT TODAVU
YOU mean
YOU'RE SICKfy
GOT
“SPRING '
FEVER.
PEAL
BAD.
BUT A MAN
CAN’T have
SPRING FEVER
IN MID-
WINTER!
rr
• r- hrr n«.t rwponjill»lt* for copy omission,
i I’r'i.p. or any unintentional error* that may
«-rti«inK ot.itr thi.n Ut ccrrcct it in iu*xt ia«ut
Ur. iyht to their attention. All advx'rtiHing
**'■«•!>**■<1 « n tliih ha-sir only.
W Fr.xiL*y. F^iitor and Pul>ii/tb«*r
,1.^ Wiol(7. Minairing Witor
HB
By J. R. WILLIAMS
r it
/ listen--VJ7UK sister amd
HER KirrAREHEKE AWDI
1 PONT WANT ANY ROJ6H-
H0U5INo WITH THEM/ SHE’S
ALWAYS COMPLAINING TO ME
THAT THE VRE LEARNING
TO BE ROWPiES
FROM YOU.’
7
v
WELL, I’M GONNA SHOW \
YOU THAT COPYIN’ ME HAS
NOTHIN' TO PO WITH IT/
I’LL TlSTtSUIETLYSrrHERe
AN’ REAP A BOOR AN’ YOU
WATC H IF THEY COPY THAT
KINPA BEHAVIN’OFFA
ME .' THEY WON’T, ’CAUSE
IT AIN'T BORN IN 'EM.'
-^UrndUTT-1 lii.i Li ill
•si
!
?.Va
y/.
yawn/
They Seem To
start yawn-
ing when they
HIT THE POOR /
we ye either eorib
GET RID of it or SHUT
ITS MOU7TI /
LiBrak?!
'
0, Nt», I»C JM U* U S
e-
1 i|i r
■
DTf
1 ‘.re.
SetiSTi*
wm
WHY MOTHERS GET <3RAY
Bi,$ER6SA*ir;
WA^ TH’ THIEF
UA88EP T00AY
AS HE BCARDEP
THAT SMIP FOR
RlO WIT* TH1
PLATINUM ?
TH6V NAWEP TH’OPPdALLS SEEN
BEHIND TH’ PLANT THAT Nlfruf WITH
A HEAV/ BAa...gUr ITWAS FIX’. CF
fRlCKSj CALLEP THEMSEiVfIKAk
VES. THEY SOON PROVED TCO DUMB
WOT I ' jo HAVE puued this job ..and were
ORW AN \auowed to SAIL --—-<
BUSTER l TOR BRAZIL! J THAT'S Owe N
consolat icm!
THOSE PESTS
SHOULD BE OUT
OF MV HAIR
FOR WEEKS 1
WE'RE BACK WHERE WE STARTED! NO
PLATINUM..WO CLUES. EVEN CL0ONE>?S
replacement turns oot Toee
AN OPINIONATED nincompoop;
A COLLECT
Calcutta Riots
Claim 160
Calcutta, Jan. if OP — Two
incidents of violence have been
reported today in Indfa’s larg-
est city —* Calcutta. The In-
dian army is keepinp one sev-
enth of the city under military
control as the result of violence
betw een Hindus and Moslems.
The Bengal government reports
160 persons have been killed
and G24 injured in the rioting.
Accident Kills
Maryland Man
Fort Worth, Jan. 14 (ffl —•
Travis Brown, 34, of Serersop,
Md.. was killed early today in
Fort Worth.
He was helping attach a tow
chain between a car and a
stalled pick-up truck when an-
other ear rammed into the ve-
hicles.
Texas Soldiers
Injured in Riots
Balboa, Canal Zone, J*n. 14
'if* — Two soldiers from Texas
were a m o n g US servicemen
sent to hospitals with injuries
suffered during riots and dem-
onstrations at the Panama
Canal lione border since Thurs-
day.
They aie.i^Private First Class
William 1). Campbell of Mona-
hans and Specialist Fourth
Hass Jerry I). Montgomery of
\piarillo.
Officials said neither mnn is
n critical condition.
WELL
WHATCHA
KNOW
ABOUT
THAT?
OOFS NOT VERY
MAD ABOUT
HIS STATUE
BEIN’ BUSTS!
IS HE?
WELL, HI,
THERE,
OOOtA!
SEE, DYA SUPPOSE
M
MV POPULARITY?
Zi
wm
m
•CYVl
SUGAR 95 LBS.
s
z
An average American con-
sumes some 95 pounds of
sugar a year. Half of it is used
directly in homes and restau-
rant* and the remainder is
processed with other
and drinks.
i
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Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 86, No. 10, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 14, 1964, newspaper, January 14, 1964; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth824882/m1/2/: accessed July 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.