The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 143, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 16, 1942 Page: 4 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Hopkins County Area Newspapers and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Hopkins County Genealogical Society.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
naiMii
w ■
3, Dallas 6.
niu 4, Okla. City
■American Lesigue.
ime scheduled.
National League.
Yorit 8, Pittsburgh 2.
Chicago 6, Brooklyn «.
papw . ■
mf** If.njffl W*s&tim£m
THE DOTY NEWS-TEKEGKAM
H
'
GUILTY”
=
iX-j
■ /
i
m
HOW THEY STAND
‘ Tnu League.
Club- W. L.
pi 44 19
Antonio----.34 31
n......... 36 32
33 31
rt 32 33
___ Orth 27 81
Oklahoma City ... 28 88
Dallas ........... 23 39
' .;.y •■.. .1 • .
Amtrifin Usfue
Club— W. L.
York.......41 18
32 28
i:..-. 31 28
______31 30
y..- 28 32
W.. 25 37
22 33
n..... 22 80
National League.
w. L.
J L,
Mm
■<**-
ka «• **Ve»tafk
delphia
r-
CANDIDATES ARE
m
(Continued from first page)
...............—.....-T-—............
which Is to be printed In the fol-
lowing order:
Unofficial Ballot.
United States Senator; W. Lee
O’Daniel, Dan Moody, James V
Allred, Floyd E. Ryan.
Congress let District: Wright
Patman.
/ Governor: Hal Hi Collins, Hope
Wheeler, Alex M. Ferguson,
Charles Lavergne Somerville,
Coke R. Stevedson, Gene S. Por-
- Lieutenant Governor: Doss Har-
din, Harold Beck, Virgil E. Art:
old, Alton M. Mead. J. Dixie
Smith. Boyce Ilouag, John D-
Smith, Vernon Lemons, Arthur R
Comptroller: Clifford K. But-
ler, Geo. H. Sheppard.
State Treasurer: Harvey Mc-
Kee, Gordon Smith, Larry Mills,
■ •
.••Os*
1gaps
Wh
Baacom Giles.
General: Gerald C. |
Mann, John F. Hair.
State Superintendent: L. A.
Woodkj; Charles JK Target-son. tA
Commissioner Agriculture: W.
N- (Bill) Corry, Bailey B. Rags-
dale, J. E. McDonald, W. W. King.
R. R. Commissioner; Ernest 0.
Thompson, Lester Boone, Baker
Saulsbury.
R. R. Commissioner (unexpired
term): Pierce P. Brooks, Clem
Fain, Pat McGreai Armstrong, T.
Leo Moore, CarT L. Lovelady.
Byron Pat Patterson, C. E. Mc-
Cormick, Beuford H. Jester, Will
D. Pace, Richard B. Humphrey,
James E. KMday.
Chief Justice Supreme Court:
James P. Alexander.
Judge Court Criminal Appeals:
Walter H. Strength, Harry N.
Graves. ’’
Asst. Justice Civil Appeals, 6th ■
District: I. N. Williams.
District Attorney: Ramey A.
Smith.
Representative, 39th District s
Thuhtas Walters.
Representative i2flth District:
J. W. (Coon Creek) Gandy.
County Judge: W. B. Kitts.
County Attorney: Artie Steph-I
etis. ,’i^ ‘ t,
District Clerk: Bayless W. Ev- 1
ana, R- 0. (Buddy) Moseley,
George «. Williams, Oliver Pharr.
County Clerk: Ben D. Woods,
Tracy Williams.
Sheriff: W. E. (Bud) Melton,
Frankie Mote.
Assessor-Collector: Paul Flip-
pin, Robt. E. Anglin, Fletcher
Froneberger.
County Superintendent: W. C.
(Will) McKay, Troy E. Kern, J.
y. Wiler.
County Treasurer: Wayne Gee-
County Surveyor: — .
County Chairman: R. D. San-
ders.
Commissioner No. 1: J. J. (Jim)
Warren, Edgar White, Allen Sun-
ders.
Commissioner No. 2: Sam Ti
cer, W. T. Wilson. Maple Ross.
Commissioner No. 3: Parker
McAuley.
Commissioner No. 4: S. M.
(Sid) Palmer.
Public Weigher No. 1: Joe Tom
Wood.
Public Weigher No. 4: U. C.
Cleve Glossup, J. I. Cook,
J.P. No. 1: Ben A. Smith.
J.P. No. 2: W. E. Barnett.
J.P. No. 8: L, O Talley, O. P
Wallace.
J.P. No. 4: Joe 8, Keenuin, H.
C. Cort Mathis Charles Leroy
Eastmun,
J.P. No. 6:—
J.f. No. «; J. G. Passmore.
J.P. No. 7: C. F. Wise.
J.P. No. 8: J. M Heed.
Constable No. I: J. M. (Miles)
Pickett.
Constable No. 2: G. R. (Bob)
Poor, M. E. (Llff) Moore.
Constable No, 3: M. H. Man
sell.
Constable No. 4: Harry War-
ren, J. T. (Judge) Blunt, J. A.
Litchfield.
Constable No. 6:—
Constable No. fi: Tom Carpen-
ter. J. N. Pool.
Constable No.’7: John"B. Cor-
bett, J. R. Cutts.
Constable No. 8: M. F. Young
er, A. C. (Doek) Callaway, T. B
Lewis, John A. Groves, Theodore
Thompson.
■
m
m# m
M
WIRT TATE
CRITICALLY ILL
Percy Tate of Sulphur Springs
received a wire this morning from
Dallas advising that the condition
of his brother, Wirt Tate, was
critical and very little hopes were
held for his recovery. He suffered
a second stroke a short time ago,
and has gradually grown worse
since.
Wirt Tate is well known in
Sulphur Springs, having lived here
for many years, during wETch
tin^e he was connected with the
publishing of The Hopkins Coun-
ty Echo and later The Daily
News-Telegram-
WADE RESIGNS AS
llNTSVILLE WARDEN
(By XwkMU J*r*M>
Houston, Texas, June 16. — A.
C. Turner, director of education
and rehabilitation for the Texas
prison system, has been appointed
warden of the penitentiary at
Huntsville to succeed W. W. Waid,
who resigned effective July I.
HUNGARY-RUMANIA
ENMITY FLARES ANEW
(By itiaw aiMS PrrM)
SlaptheJaps" "SevertheAxis
On
BROADWAY Mission CARNATI
N BYERS
IN AUSTRALIA
James Britt Brown, 25, of Por-
tales, New Mexico, is led from the
justice court in Portalfs where he
entered a plea of "not guilty” in
connection with the slaying of his
mother, Mrs. Dolly Brown. A
week after a coroner’s Jury re-
turned a verdict that Mrs. Blown
met "death by her own hand”,
young Brown signed a confession
that he shot her as she sat in a
chair in their home, (NEA Photo).
GERMANS EXECUTE
18 IN POLAND
V
Mr, and Mrs. Ben Byers, of
Commerce, have received a let-
ter from their son, Jimmie D, By-
ers, who la in the medical corps
of the U. S. Army, stating that
he was somewhere in Australia,
but well and o.k.
Young Byers was reared in
Hopkins County and lived in the
Center Point community before
moving with hi* parents to Com-
merce.
Beni, Switzerland, June 16.—
The old enmity between Hungary
and Rumania flared up again
when the Hungarian Premier,
Nicholas Kallay, replied lo new
anti-Hungarian measures in Ru-
mania with a warning that Hun-
gary would defend it* present
frontiers to the death.
TODAY
Humphrey Bogart
—in—
“THE MALTESE
FALCON”
WEDNESDAY AND
THURSDAY
SOLDIERS
I1UNII
6 MORE JAP PLANES
DOWNED AT DARWIN
I By XmoAhu* Pnm)
London, June 16.—The Polish
telegraph agency said Monday
night that eighteen Poles had
been executed by order of a spe-
cial German tribunal.
Weather
East Texas— Thundershowers
this afternoon in east portion, lit-
tle temperature change tonight.
West Texas—Continued warm,
mild tonight.
$25,000 INCOME
(Continued Irani first page)
HAS GOOD COTTON
Bryan Stewart, progressive
farmer residing southeast of Brs-
shear, has two stalks from his cot-
ton field on exhibit in The Echo
display window.
Both of the stalks are very
fine, and if the balance of his 16
acres are as good as the ones he
brought in, Mr. Stewart hus good
prospects for a good crop this
year.
JACK GAFFORD
WRITES FROM HAWAII
6|r. and Mrs. E. T. (Doc) Gaf-
ford of Sulphur Springs are in re-
ceipt of a letter from their son,
Jack Gafford, a member of the
U. S. Marines in Hawaii, adviaing
that he was well and that he had
just received his first copy of
The Echo, which he enjoyed read-
ing very much.
The letter was written May 28.
I By smaOM PrM>
Melbourne, Australia, June 16.
-Six Japanese fighters escorting
27 bombers which attacked the
northern Australian city of Dar-
win Monday for the third lime in
three days were shot down by Al-
lied fighters, General Douglas
MacArthur's headquarters an-
nounced Tuesday. Two Allied
fighters were lost.
TANKFUL
OF FUNI <§
YOU Rf WOT
■ « 1 .41 4 iAIa< A
■V#.
CLETUSBESHEARS
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Besheurs
have received a letter from their
son, Cletus, in the U. S. Army,
that he hud been transferred to
San Francisco, where he will at-
tend a gunner’s school.
Buy War Ronds and Stamps.
ALLEY OOP
with the declaration that a natimi
at war cannot afford luxurious
living for a few.
The idea of such a wartime tax
. was first advanced h.v President
Roosevelt in his April 27 message
to Congress outlining his anti-
inflation program. Monday, Kuo
dolph Paul, tax adviser to Secre
tary of the Treasury Henry Moi-
genlhuu, laid the specific plan
la-fore the House Ways ami
Means Committee.
Although aimed generally at
holding spendable income to the
>25,000 and $50,000 levels, the
plan would permit a deduction
for debts up to 16 per cent of
income after payment of |»ro4etit
income taxes.
LOOKS BAD, DOC
JAPANESE CRUISER
(Continued from first page)
from Australia in the Southwest
Pacific and Midway Islands in the
mid-Paeifir,
No American Uun Hr,.tilled
Breaking a three-day silence on
Japan's uttempt to gain a hold on
the rocky islands at the tip of the
Aleutian chain, a Navy commu-
nique and a report which enme
indirectly from Lieut. Gen Henry
11 Arnold, Army Air Chief, gave
this accounting of Japanese loss
es:
Sunk—One cruiser.
Damaged -One aircraft carrier,
three cruisers, one destroyer, one
gunboat ami mu- transport. (The
damage to several of these vessels
was severe.)
HOMECOMING DAY
AT ARBALA
The annual Homecoming und
Memorial day at Arbala will lie
held Sunday, June 21.
The Sunday School is giving the
pugcunt, "Immortality of Service”
at 10:30 a. m.
Preaching by Bro. Hoy Hazel
ton of Gunter, Texas, at 11 10.
Dinner on the ground. Please
bring well-filled baskets.
District Singing convention
meets in the afternoon.—Commit-
tee.
FARMERS
(Continued from first page)
Let us make this campaign a
complete clean up of all scrap
rubber in Hopkins County. To
keep scrap rubber on your furm
might mean gasoline rationing,
which in turn might mean five
months schools.
American hoys are dying daily
to preserve our way of life. The
most We can do to tielp is too lit
tie.
It is our patriotic duty to get
in the scrap rubber. If you don’t
have time, give it lo the children
Get in the scrap rubber!
BY V. T. HAMLIN
YES.TUM Hits BE SEARCHES
IN EXPLOSIVES were
AVIOUMPIWO / BY
THE WAY, MOW IS
OSCAC. 'THESE
PA/S?
> ' t.lLW WELL,
DOC.THE ES I.
THOUGHT VOL I
COLU-P THROW
dOW'E UOMT
ONI THAT ,
WE9M
VIM * 'AXJ CEE,WE JUST happen
ro KMOW YOU'VE MADE SOME
Chemical purchases lately
A an OM THE UWUSUALCdl’C
l-OR Yi.XI...THAT lS,UUl.eSS
YOU'VE GOME IM FOR
-^EXPLOSIVES...
, -4 ~~y-
NrM
...THAT, COUPLED WITH BOOM'S \
WE.CeMT rSCAPE FROM PRlSOW
M-JD REFOLDS OF UNEXPLAINED
EXPLOSIONS Of ’ THE VAl l E V .
WHICH DID NOT CVICSWAIE
L>P AT THE RAPE R ROC K
S-- OlIARRY.' s
/
RED RYDER
COMPLETELY STUMPED
BY FRED HARMAN
~E*RNINS THE 6TAG£ l
TSfeBSg£!£*
,7
ES
f DRIVE# ^
THIS VOONAN PASSENGER
, ISALLlVNANTt-t).'
V 7
N
m
The Daily News Telegram is
authorized to make the following
announcements, subject to the ac-
tion of the Democratic Primary
in July:
For CoiigreM, First District:
WRIGHT PATMAN
( Hr- Klfftiuli I
For Rfprei«nlativ«, 39th Dittt
THOMAS WALTERS
* i Hr Klortteo»
For Representative, 12Gth Diiiti
JOK W. (Coon Creek) GANDY
I Hr Klrrtion)
For Sheriffs
FRANKIE MOTE
W. E. (Bud) MKl.TON
I Re Klrrlion)
For District Clerk:
OLIVER PHARR
i H» UMioii)
GKO. K WILLIAMS
BAYLESS W. EVANS
K O. (Buddy) MOSEI.F.Y
Fur Count, < Irik
HEN WOOD.
I KrXIe-t uio)
TRACY WILLIAMS
For CummiMionar, Prec. I.
J. J. (Jim) WARREN
J. E. (Edgar) WHITE
ALLEN SANDERS
|Kr<Helltai
For Committioner, Prur. 2.
SAM TICER
(Re-F!lerti«m >
MAPLE ROSS
For Commiiiioarr. Prer. 4l
, S. M (Sid) PALMER
t Kr-hirrtion I
For County Attorney:
ARTIE STEPHENS
\ R«'-Rlectiue 1
For AtKMOr-Collector.
FI.ETCHEK FRONEBERGER
PAUL FLIPPIN
K E (Robt.) ANGLIN
iHr- Llrclio.il
1 For Count, .Superintendent-
W. C. (Will) McKAY
TROY E KERN
For Count, Treasurer.
WAYNE GEE
iRr-Klertlont
Fur Count, Judge:
W. B. KITTS
I He tiled ton .
For Commie^fuaer, Prrc St
PARKER McAULEY
|Re-Elect lunl
For Jualica Peace, Prec. It
BEN A. SMITH
i Re-fleet tor I
For Public Weigher. Prec. No. ll
JOE TOM WOOD
(Rr-Elect toot
! For Conatable, Precinct No. It
J. M. iM.lci) PICKETT
iipM
ftiA'Isi
-i
TODAY
ErroU Flynn
t4THEYDIED
WITH THEIR
BOOTS ON”
WEDNESDAY AND
THURSDAY
irt A OMt
AT TMt
•4JM6TIADS ..
and e man-died dot
on the Kraonl
'I
TODAY,
Boh Hope
and
Madeleine Carr!
“MY FAVORf]
BLONDE”
WEDNESDAY AN!
THURSDAY
MEET THE!
Thay'll b# m yout
whan you •••-
JIMMY DURANTE >:
PHIL SILVERS
—AIho—
MARCH OF TIME
All S*«U 11c
(Taa Included)
STORM DAMAGES
SHELBY COUNTY
(Hu A»»vct*U4 rr«M'
Center, Texas, June 16.—Rain,
hnil and wind Monday caused
heavy damage in widely separat-
ed areus of Shelby County. Es-
timated of the damage range from
$50,000 to $75,000, mostly to to-
matoes in the northern part of
the county where a heavy hail-
storm swept over much of the
tomato producing area of the
county following a cloudburst
during which an estimated eight
inches of rain fell in the Flat
Fork Creek headwaters.
Buy- War Bonds ami Stumps.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
S'NOIITON .Tr?
—Also—
NEWSREEL
and
• FLAG OF MERCY’’
(Thu Red Cron)
17c and 11c
(Tax Included)
BRITISH ABANDON
—Also—
WATER SPORTS
and
TRAVELOGUE
28c and He
(Taa Included)
(Continued lrum first page)
or captured
in s
been destroyed
break through.
Britiih Counterattack.
Everywhere in this overflowing
cauldron of desert battle the
British forces were counterattack
ing in an attempt to smash the
Axis spearheads, which, it was ar
knowiedged, were endeavoring to
cut off Tobruk, stanch bastion
which is the key to defense of the
Egyptian border, from forces to
the west.
CHINESE PLEAD
(Continued front first page)
as Teng-Pu, 100 miles from
•hang and about the same
tnnee from Kwangfend.
Monday night's Chinese eth
n.unique reported a furthe
vance for this column. After
ing Friday and Saturday i
tempts to cross a river at
l’u, it said, the Japanese
their crossing Sunday and
vunced several miles eastwa1
a point where it ran into i
mined Chinese and heavy fig
followed.
Buy War Bonds and Rtanc
CnSCX
"Heavy fighting is in progress
on the Chekiang Kiangsi border
the areas south of Kiangshau,
southwest of Yustmn, and at the
outskirts of Kwangfeng.” the re
port said Street fighting, in
which both .sides suffered heavjy ■ Pf|Qp£§§|0NAL CAI
casualties, was Saul to lie raging
within Kwangfeng, which the
Japanese entered Saturday night
Another column believed to he
of about equal strength hus ilriv
cn southeast from Nunchaug. Ja-
pan's Kiangsi base, at least as far
at
Co
1 r|)
• '
A Dab a Day
keeps
P.Ol away!
J. k. BRIM
Altorney-At laiw
Sulphur Springs State Bank
l)rs. J. M. & Myi
McDowell
chiropractoj
Colon Correction XJ
Kstliumr and Tpm||
real Correctiaa
3X6 Church St. Phu
J I. KIN1ER1M
CHIROPRACTOI
“THE PLACE TO GET WE|
402 Connally Slr*«l
One Block Wo»t of Poat Of
YODORR
, DE0D0RRI1T CRERIT1
— lin t ttiff or aticky! 8o*i —It
■pra*da like face cream.
— la actually aoothuif! Uee rifht
after shaving - will not irnteia.
— haslif ht.pleaaant scem Nosicklf
acueU to cling to hngers or clothing.
— will not spoil delicate fabrics. ^
Yet teau in the tropics made by nureee
prove that Yodoia piotex is under try-
ing condition*. 9m mr /oft, Kk, He, AO«
kLKt+um I Bobktm, lee , •. t.i -**
(IIovim E. St(*wa
PUBLIC ACCOUNTA
Phone 926
Office over Hall F»rr»r Dr
Store
BUSINESS CARD
Ardis Transfer C
Move Anything, Anywher
Anytime
Licen.ed Moving Van
BONDED — INSURED
Day Phone 137 Night Phum
The City National Ban)
We handle yo»r business safely, courteously,
promp'ly. An ideal banking institution.
Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
Menu., r of Federal Reserve System.
•ai
5C
mm
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Bagwell, Eric. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 143, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 16, 1942, newspaper, June 16, 1942; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth826033/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.