The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 80, No. 231, Ed. 1 Friday, September 19, 1958 Page: 6 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 23 x 17 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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business carps
Markets
sit,
, t •
I
Electrician*—
Electrical
Contractor*—
Repair*, etc
M
UGHT FIXTURES
Fan* — Supplies
Wiring and Repairing
Milligan Electric
Main Street Phone 6-46*7
Livestock Market
If It’S Electrical
Call
CARTER’S
Electric Shop
401 Gilmer St. Phone 6-4351
ELECTRIC MOTOR REWINDING
—Prompt Service—
Repairing and Rewinding
Any Size Electric Motor
Pickup and Delivery
Hogue Electric Shop
406 Old Jefferaon Phono 6-2332
Fort Worth, Sept. 19 OP—Hogs
10; not enough to test values.
Cattle 300; calves lOO; rattle
and calves fully steady; two loads
of choice fed steers topped at
27.00; most of the other offer-
ing were cows and calves selling
at nominally steady prices.
Sheep 50; offerings were feed-
er lambs, at 20.00-21.00: other
grades and classes untested.
I
1
I
Building
Contractor#—
* Materials, ate.
quality ready mix
CONCRETE
Sand, Gravel, Cement
BELL CONCRETE
PRODUCTS CO.
Tth * Cotton Belt Tr. Ph. 6-2721
lumber
Loan#—Plans Estimates
F. H. A. Title 1 Loan*
Build Anything Repair—-Add A
Room - New Bath, Build Grade
A B*rn—Hay Bam, Garaga.
Up to $3,000.
West Building Supply
PAPERING—
painting—
jgXTONlNG—•
f;a* Estimates___________
Woodrow Wilson
6-2644
6-4469
Paper Hanging,
Wasrtoning
ESTIMATE
Chicago, Sept. 19 if — Cattle
550: calves 100; not enough steers
or heifers offered to test prices;
cow? steady; bulls weak; vealers
fully steady; a few commercial
cows 20.00-21.00; utility 18.00-
20.00; canners and cutters 15.00-
18.75; a few heavy holstein cut-
ters 19.00; a few light and shelly
canners 14.50 down; utility and
commercial bulls 18.50-20.50: can-
ner and cutter bulls 18.50-20.50;
good and choice vealers 29.00-
33.00; utility and standard 20.00-
29.00; culls 15.00-19.00; a pack-
age of medium 725 lb. stock
steers 24.00.
Kansas City. Sept. 19 i3>—Cat-
tle 700 ; calves 50; not enough of
any class to test price.
Chicago Grain
Chicago, Sept. 19 if — Wheat
—Sep. 1.87 1-8-1-2, Dec. 1.92
1-8-92, Mar. 1.96 S-4-5-8.
Corn (old) — Sep. 1.21 3-4-
20, Dec. 1.15-15 1-8, Mar. 1.19
1-8-1-4.
Corn (new) — Dec. 1.15 1-2,
Mar. 1.19 1-2, May 1.22 3-8.
Oats—Sep. 61 1-4-60 1-2, Dec.
64 1-2-58, Mar. 67 1-4-1-8.
Rye — Sep. 1.31-31 3-4, Dec.
1.31 3-4-32, Mar. 1.33-33 1-2.
Soybeans — Sep. 2.18 3-4-21,
Nov. 2.18 5-S-3-4, Jan. 2.22 7-8-
3-4.
Poultry Market
Texas
PAUL STEPHENS
r^gae 6-4177
Appli**6** ’
Raw St
Sale* St Service
‘.V,v
ELECTROLUX
MM ArkflfYaa* Pov!t>*y $!
Vacuum Cleaner. and „Jf”*
Sale*, Service and Supplie*
Effective Moth Protection
and Rug Shampoo
^Furniture
Upholstery—
RefinUbing
geo. h. fox
1027 Church St.
McLARRY BROS.
MADE-RITE MATTRESS CO.
ffWMMg aad J»ck**n St*.
Phone 5-4747
Expert Matt res* Service
We Give “8 A H” Stamp* _
Typewriter
Sale* Sc Service
Typewriter Sale* and Service
RENTALS AND REPAIRS
J. H. NUNN
Adding M*chin* Sale* A Service
Phone 6-261* 206 Church St
SALES AND SERVICE
Typewriter*, Adding Machine*
Complete Stock* Office
Furniture and Supplia*
Shelton Office
Equipment
123 Main Dial; 6-3717
mand. Trading light t5o moderate.
2 1-2 to 3 1-4 lbs. 17-18 cents,
bulk 18.
East; Weak and unsettled. Un-
dertone slightly weaker. Conflict-
ing opinions among buyers and
sellers as to supply and demand.
Trading moderate to normal. Es-
timated volume and preliminary
prices early today, 2 1-2 to 3 1-4
lbs. 243,000 total; 69 1-2 per cent
undetermined, 12 1-2 per cent at
Y*. 2 1-2 per cent at 16 1-2, 15
1-2 per cent at 17. Volume and
confirmed sale« yesterday, 231,-
000 total; 58 per cent undeterm-
ined, 3 per cent at 16, 39 per cent
at 17.
PAINT-UP CONTINUES—The paint-up campaign continued in Sulphur Springs' today with Payne
Butane starting work on Gilmer Street. The awning is being repaired and the building front will be
painted in the suggested master color scheme. Looking in as the repair work started were Earl Payne,
Joe Gober and T. B. Blackburne.
ing issues were up from fractions
to more than one point. Volume
was estimated a t 3,700,000
shares.
Here is the close of a few rep-
resentative stocks:
A.T. and T., 189, up 2 5-8;
Santa Fe, 25 1-2, up 1-2, and U.S.
Steel, 79 3-8, up one.
On the bond market, U. S. gov-
ernment issues and corporate
bonds were both higher — the
corporates in brisk trading, the
government bonds in slower trad-
ing.
In Chicago, hogs were steady to
25 cents lower, top $21. And the
cattle supply was meager. There
were no slaughter steer sales.
In New York, cotton was high-
er.
Police Arrest
Unlicensed Motor
Austin, Sept. 19 W
broilers, fryers markets as re-
ported today by the state agricul-
ture department;
South: About steady to weak.
Underttone slightly weaker. Sup-
plies* adequate for the M«w de- Austin, Sept. 49 (3i — Police
Scooter Drivers
Offerings ample to excessive.
Farm prices for 2 1-2 to 3 1-2
pound fryers and broilers 15 to
17 cents.
Closing Wall Street
New York, Sept 19 (31—The
in Austin have cracked down on
the operation of motor scooters
by unlicensed teenagers.
For the second time in two
weeks, both the father and a
child were charged with violation
of the law involving the unli-
censed driver of a motorbike.
In both cases, the charges grew
out of accidents in which the
children motor operators were not
licensed. The fathers were
charged with permitting an un-
licensed minor to operate a motor
vehicle.
Harlingen Crash
Kills 4 People
Harlingen, Sept. 19 Uf — Four
persons were killed, three instant-
Funeral Services
For Mrs. Long
Held Friday
Mrs. Thelma Ray Long, 50, a
.enhower took off in a helicopter
for a flight to a private fishing
hole. He was wafted about 20
miles to a lake on an estate
where the President caught some
trout last week.
In Washing ton, Associated
Press correspondent Jack Bell re-
pot ts Republican congressional
Two Texas Pilots
Claim Record
Endurance Flight
Dallasj Sept. 19 Hi—Two Texas
pilots who claim * world endur-
ance record for light planes are
now hoping to stretch their mark
to 50 days aloft.
Pilots Jim Heth and Bill Burk-
hart said they eclipsed the old
record of 1,224 hours at 3:33 yes-
terday afternoon. The old record
was set by Woody Junegward and
Bob Woodhouse over Yuma, Ariz.
in 1949.
The two ex-servicemen were
(tack over the Dallas area as they
laid claim to the endurance mark
in the craft called the Old Scotch-
man. They hope to stay up until
Sunday when they plan to set
down at Houston. Their goal ia 1,-
200 hours.
Sulphur-Graphs..
S. C. LOVING has written from
Edgewood to remind eyeryone
that the annual homecoming at
Saltillo will be on Sunday, Oct.
12. Basket lungh will be served at
noon. A short program will begin
at 11a. m.
Exes Invited
To Meeting
former resident of Hopkins Coun- candidates have been notified
ty, died Wednesday at St. Paul’s Eisenhower won't be available to
Hospital in Dallas. She made her | stump for them until the .last
home at 1125 Burleson in Grand three weeks before election day.
Prairie.
Funeral services were held at 2
p. m. Friday at the Tapp Funeral
Home Chapel. The Rev. L. J.
Chastain of Grand Prairie was in
charge of the services. Burial was
in the Aiguire cemetery.
Mrs. Long was born on June 4,
1908, in Hopkins County. Her1
parents were Frank and Opal
Martin. She married Frank Long
in 1940. He preceded her in
death.
Survivors include a daughter,
Sharon Long of Grand Prairie,
California is one state where,
it is- said, Eisenhower is certain
to taikpaign.
Rebel Frogmen
Fail io Cripple
French Vessels
Toulon, France, Sept. 19 Iff*—
A French admiral has announced
her mother, and several aunts; that Algerian National Libcra-
and uncles. tion Front frogmen attempted to
Pallbearer* were Vaden Rich-! si"k two French warships early
ay, . Cliff Procter,. Clarence Rich-i to^ in Toulon harbor. .
ty, Skillman Vaden. Jack Hender-I admiral said the frogmen
Austin, Sept. 19 OR—Members
of the Austin ex-students organ-
ization of East Texas State Col-
lege at Commerce said today they
had been invited to send a repre-
sentative to. the October 24-25
meeting of the board of regens
of state teachers colleges. The re-
gents’ meeting will be in Com-
merce.
At a meeting in Austin Aug.
23rd a group of East Texas State
ex-students protested administra-
tion of the college and asked the
state senate investigating com-
mittee to investigate.
British Check
Racial Outbreak
London. Sept. 19 tD Five
white youths were jailed today in
London under an ancient law re-
vived by police to suppress Brit-
ain's recent outbreak of race riot-
ing.
The five received terms rang-
ing from 18 months to 2 year*.
They were sentenced for fight-
ing and making an affray—an of-
fense first listed on the record
hooks more than 300 years ago.
JIM ANDERSON, manager of
the Hopkins County Chamber of
Commerce, will be in Austin Fri-
day night and Saturday where he
will attend a meeting of the board
of directors of the Texas .Cham-
ber of Commerce Managers As-
sociation. Anderson is chairman
of attendance for the 1959 con-
vention.
THE FIRST issue of the year
of The Cat’s Tale, ardent Pli-
cation at Sulphur Springs High
School, came off the press today.
Co-editor* are Alan Payne and
Kathryn Coffey. Paula Branstet-
ter and Marilyn Strickland areco-
business managers.
MR. AND Mrs. Ernest Mack
Boyd of Ozona annouce the birth
of a daughter Friday. He is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Boyd
of Sulphur Springs and principal
of one of the Ozona school*.
WORD FROM Lubbock report*
that alternate Captain Mack
Pogue, the Sulphur Spring* speed-
ster at a halfback post for, the
Red Raiders of Texas Tech, may
be unable to play against the
Texas Aggies Saturday night in
the Cotton Bowl in Dallas due to
an ankle injury suffered in prac-
tice during the past week.
SIMM LUiimiv j*u.. ■ i hi . •
SHOW STARTS 1:30
TODAY and SATURDAY
■ n*r*f>
tiaaniE
mm
■ W—fa _
■ ncMNCouM* ——■Ewraansu
Hk-Vue Drive-In
TONIGHT and SATURDAY
DOUBLE FEATURE
M fcRfiMj Ink
MacMUfilAY-IfALOKEm
BOBBY TURNER, head basket-
ball coach and an assistant foot-
ball coach for" the Wildcats, will
be in Denton tonight to scout the
attack of the Gainesville Leop-
ards.
TEMPLE BAPTIST Church's
new officers and teachers have
been elected. They include Arnold
Grant, treasurer; Mrs. Arnold
Grant, clerk; Miss Pat Lyle, Sun-
day School secretary; R. D.
Tompkins. Sunday School super-
intendent; Truman Gullcdge,
Mta. Maud Mathews, Mrs. Law-
rence Northern, R. D. Tompkins,
Mia* Jo Bastrop and Mrs. Tommy
Jones, teachers. Speaker Sunday
.mncwi'MiM *
A UMVUSU NTEMUTIOMi. PICTUK
PLUS
AbboHmCosSrio
Major Airlines
Agree to Pad
The jury cleared eight other morning will be the Rev. J. C.
colored—of riotous Smithers in the absence of the
son.
Frances Withrow, Freeman j were intercepted while
men,—three
behavior in a racial disturbance
in London last week. The judge,
moving ; in passing sentence, said:
Parish and W. S. Long.
Tapp Funeral Home
charge of arrangements.
was
Father Assessed
Lite for Slaying
19-Year-Old Son
towards France's only battleship,'] “By your conduct'you have put
the Jean Bart—now a school ship the clock back for 300 years and
—and a destroyer. The admiral ] disgraced yourselves and your
said the daring underwater at-) families.”
tempt to cripple the two vessels,
Beaumont, Sept. 19 CP — A
criminal district court in Beau-
mont has found a Port Arthur
seaman, Roy Clifton Furrh, guil-
moored side by side in the port
of Toulon, occurred between mid-
night and 2 a. m.
Navy authorities later an,
nounced two men had been
rested.
2|&
7T
Governor Faubus
(Continued from Page One)
> Rock board of education to offer
nection with the slaying of his, tj,e c.jty’s school buildings to the
19-year-old son, Harry R o n a j private group after the referen-
Furrh. The shooting took place • (juir) ,\s authority for it to do so.
ly, in a grinding craah^ m at hfe imprisonment in the
lingen last night of a pickup truck ^ itenti
and an automobile.
A Marine Corps member, Ray
in February, 19§7.
The jury assessed his punish-
heavy at
the ticker tape fell behind. Lead
FLOOR SANDING A FINISHING
Also floor covering. See me or
drop me a card for free estimate.
Second house on left south of
Martin Spring* Store.
JLJL WILLIAMS
Star Route, Sulphur Spring*
crash on L.S. 83 just,south of the
Harlingen city limits.
Dead on arrival at the hospital
last night were Paul George Mus-
sier, 18; Blair Peter Scott, 22;
and Billy Jean Smith, 19, all of
Harlingen.
In fair condition this morning
were John Eugeng Burnett, 17*
of Harlingen, and Jesus Rodriguez
of San Benito, driver of the pick-
up truck.
Police Chief Bill Bagee of Har-
Insurance
Ay—cl—
CALL 5-5225
For Lower Co*t Insurance oa
HOME—AUTO—BUSINESS
Knox & Weddington
210 Main 8tre*t
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
-r*. i ‘
M. C. BAILEY
ABSTRACTS
REAL ESTATE INSURANCE
The oldett abstract and real
estate firm in Hopkins County.
Sine* Hit
Phon* 6-3661
Peiping Charges
US Penetrations
Tokyo, Sept. 19 (JV . ,
radio said five American warships > g^hool*.
he cited an Arkansas law of 1875.
Faubus said the U. S. govern-
ment can not require a state to
operate public schools, nor, he
said, can it tell a state govern-
ment how tax revenues should be
spptib Faubus asserted the fed*:
era! courts have said only that an
agency of the riate can not main-
tain segregated schools. He went
on to say that the ruling does not
Peiping i apply in any way to private
earch Resumes
For Student
intruded into China's territorial
waters today on five separate oc-
casions.
The Communist broadcast mon-
itored in Tokyo said the American
warships penetrated deep into the
areas near CJuemoy and Paichuan.
The radio quoted a spokesman
of the Communist foreign minis*
lingen said the accident occurred, : .
when the car driven by Mussler^ y,.Thjs fj , danfferoua develop-
attempted to pass another auto-
mobile and met Rodriguez' pickup
head on.
France Rejects
Algerian Move
■r Office Sapply
Heaffarlw*
- niiiwe
itt&hl
J,
studio
-aaujuu.. *ai
SPECIAL
Waab and Grease
Poliah and Wax
fi.Fi
W. S. Sparks & Son
GULF 3ERVIC* STATION , corB*r Norik Dari* (I Connolly
ligkway *7 — Texas Street |
Phone 6-9020 Dial 6-370*
Cahr sad Block aa* WM*
Gold, Silver and Color Stamping
Paris, Sept. 19 Ul—France haz
rejected the newly formed Alger-
ian government in exile and serv-
ed notice to all countries she
wouid consider recognition an un-
friendly gesture.
The French foreign office
charged that “a so-called govern-
ment whose method* are murder*
and terrorism’* cannot claim the
title of government. It called It
*Htr xrttfiriaf -organization.** ■
The foreign _pffice said there
ment in the increasingly grave
military provocations carried out
by the U. S. since the resumption
of the Chinese-American ambas-
sadorial talks.”
Ike Goes Fishing
In Raw Weather
Faubus said of the U. S. Su-
preme Court older:
“It may mean the destruction
of our school system, our educa
tion a I processes, and the risk of
disorder and violence and 4;°tild
result in the loss of life—pefwttps
yours.”
He added:
“This price I could not see you
pay without first offering you a
legal jilan whereby suck a ca-
tastrophe can be avoided, and
still provide the opportunity of
an education for our children.”
Faubus t ailed on the people not
to shrink from defiance of the
federal government because of it*
great power. He went-on to say:
“1 could well be that the right*
guaranteed to us by the constitu-
tion will be taken from us by the
use of billy clubs, pistol barrels
and bayonet points. But we do
not have to be parties to such
Wc can carry on the
struggle in the legal and political
arenas.”
provisional government being
-formed In peace time. France baa
always refused to call the military
operation* carried on in Algeria
a war. The term usually used by
French government official*
pactflratlaa.—__—........
Ship Endangered
On Azores Rocks
(31 — The 1,500-ton Portuguese
motor-ship Arnel ran aground on
the northern coast of Santa Maria
Newport, R. I-, Sept. 19 131—r
While President Eiaenhower was
away on a fishing trip today, hi* methods,
new* secretary brushed aside the
latest Washington rumor* about
Sherman Adam*: That Adam* ha*
resigned; that Adams is due BicfFlf't
Newport vacation headquarter* ff CllCl Uiall Iwl
today for- w hat is , called a *howr»-
down meeting.
The foreign orrice said tnere oown meeting.
H Wm wmism- in hyttorr of * Dwwb waa jil* teoiktOR
the weather was raw—when Eis-
Island. at dawn today with 133
passenger* and 23 crekmen
aboard. Santa Maria la m of
tka Aaoros. The motorship is on
the rocks about 250 yards from
the coast of the island and big
WBV*s bar life»avers from shore.
One lifeboat which was launched
immediately and eight
reported to have wash-
(Continued from Page One)
mriaCf
according (o'® schedule
Main hope for those aboard
lies In helicopters of the U. S.
Air Force from Lagen* airfield
and other aireraft
lished by the Corps of Engineers.
He said the negotiations over
water rights and cosjs are neces-
sarily tedious but must be com-
pleted before definite' plans for
the reservoir can be completed.
Howard Hick*, the other Sul-
phur Spring representative on
the water district board, also at-
tended Thursday’* session at
Cooper.
Meeting with the directors
were John D. McCall of Dallas,
attorney for the district, and Roy
Mathias of Shreveport, executive
vice president of the Red River
Valley Association.
Missoula, Mont., Sept. 19 I# —
More than 50 men have resumed
a search for Lawrence Prange,
20-year-old Montana State Uni-
versity wildlife\ technology stu-
dent, believed lost in the remote
canyons of Mission Range north
of Missoula.
Prange of Lake Villa, 111., has
been missing along the east side
of the snow-covered Missions
since Sept. 10th.
He went into the mountains to
study animal life. He had a sup-
ply of food, two rifles, and he
was accompanied by a German
shepherd dog. Friends say he is
familiar with mountain #raviffi5-—?■’
Airplanes used in the search
yesterday were to be used again
today. The rocky, timbered coun-
try where Prange is being hunted
is at least 8 miles from the near-
est road.
Thor Missile
Reaches England
Ely, England, Sept. 19 13)—The
first American-made Thor rocket
arrived at the Royal Air Force
launching station near Ely today.
The 65-foot ballistic missile,
flown to England about a week
ago, was transported on public
highways over the East Anglia
marshlands. It is the first of
about 60 to be used in Britain.
The intermediate range missile
is capable of delivering its nuc-
lear payload on a target 1,500
miles away. The order to fire can
only come on a joint decision by
U. S. and British governments.
The Royal Air Force is now in
possession of the rocket, but the
commanding general of the U. S.
7th Air Division, Major General
William Blanchard, eontrols the
nuclear warhead that would be
used with the missile in war.
PlayOkayed
' • . - . 1 >•' :
Stanford, C^L, Sept. It '
Stanford University mad* »»«■•
land available te professor* a*
borne sits*, aad demanded that
they gst school approval of
arcbitoctsral aad landscaping
plans.
Professor Robert Huggins
got a prompt okay of his plans,
including a list of plant* which
ho identified with their Latin
;V,Lv.w •
What the school okayed was
a border of poises ivy, opium
poppies ou the patio aad a
front yard of marijuana.
Try a Want Ad for Results.
pastor, the Rev. Harry Lewis.
AN EXCITED caller phoned
the Sulphur Springs Fire Depart-
ment during a heavy downpour
of rain about 1 :30 p. m. Friday
and reported a house burning on
Calvert Street, but she must have
had a lot of help from the rain
because she called back only
scant seconds later to report that
the fire was out.
STUDENT BUSES will .go to
the game tonight. The decision
was made at 2:30 p. in.
Veterans Fraud
Trial Continues
In Cuero Court
Cuero, Sept. 19 IP—'Testimony
that motley Horn a draft drawn
on the account of C. 0. Hagan
waa used to make payments to
the Veterans Lahti B$*rd Was
presented today at Hagan’s con-
spiracy trial at Cuero.
The president of the Farmers
State Bank at Cuero, Paul
Breeden, produced records show-
ing that Cletus P. Ernster drew
the draft for $11,435.00 from
Hagan's account in the First
State Bank of Yoakum in 1953.
Breeden said the draft was de*
posited in the Farmers State
Bank and 53 checks drawn on it.
He testified the checks were
written by Ernster and ranged
from $50 to $375.
The state contends the state
waa defrauded in veteran* land
deals through the operations of
the Alamo Development Company
which Ernster represented and
Hagan organized.
Washington, Sept. 19 (3)—Six
major airlines agreed today to ac-
cept recommendations of a presi-
dential emergency board for set-
tlement of a dispute with the ma-
chinists union..
At the same time the union said
the recommendations were not
satisfactory, but provided a basis
for further negotiations.
The presidential hoard recom-
mended a 9 per cent pay increase
for al>out 200,000 ground em-
ployes of the airlines. Most of the
proposed increase wouid be retro-
active.
The board’s recommendations
—which are not binding on either
the airlines or the union—propos-
ed wage boosts of 5 per cent ret-
roactive to last October 1st when
the union’s wage contract expir-
ed. another 2 per cent retroac-
tive to April 1st, and 2 per cent
effective Oct. 1st this year.
Personnel representatives of
Capital, Eastern, National, North-
east, Northwest and Trans World
Airlines signed the leter to Presi-
dent Eisenhower accepting the
recommendations. United settled
its dispute with the machinists
last spring on about the same
terms the presidential board rec-
ommended.
Four Escape
JaSTin Texas
■ ■ ( ■ ■
Brackettville, Sept. 19 (3* —
Four youth* held On burglary
charge* escaped jail last night at
Brackettville, in Southwest Tex-
as. State police reported one of
the youths was recaptured this
mining at Pel Rio,
Curtice Thinks
Pad Agreeable
Russians Claim
US Propaganda
Disseminates Lies
Moscow, Sept. 19 (3< — The
newspaper Trud said today in
Moscow that the U. S. govern-
ment Is disseminating lying prop-
aganda about the American way
of life through its Russian lang-
uage' magazine. Amertka. -Fifty
thousand copiea qf tha magaxine
are distributed monthly in the
Soviet Union.
New York, Sept. 19 I3<—Har-
low Curtice, former president of
General Motors Corporation, said
today in New York that the Ford
labor Settlement was quite satis-
factory but implied it w*a not a
pattern-better for C.M,
Curtice, a »mcmbcr of G.M.'a
finance committee and board of
director*, said G M. and the Unit-
ed Automobile Workers would
have to reach their own agree-
ment.
Cut tire sailed w ith his wife
aboard the liner United State*
for. * one-month inspection tour
of European plants. He reiter-
ated his last month's forecast
that a good year lies ahead for
the-auto iiidu-tiy.
Zachry Resigns
Oil Position
Dallas, Sept.- ] 9 (3*—The «xe.c-
utive vice‘president of American
Petrofina Company of Texas, D.
R. Zachry, Sr., has resigned.
Zachry, a native of Pittsburg,
Texas, said increasing demands
on his time made it neeeasary
that he devote-more time to hit
private busineas interests.
mm m
mm
- 'Ili ' g
BY TIK CAtTON
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Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 80, No. 231, Ed. 1 Friday, September 19, 1958, newspaper, September 19, 1958; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth827070/m1/6/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.