The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 101, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 30, 1958 Page: 1 of 6
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THE EVENING NEWS AND THE MORNING TELEGRAM CONSOLIDATED IN 1915. ABSORBED THE DAILY GAZETTE IN 1924.
Weather Forecast
Showers
VOL. <50.—NO. 101.
High Crime
Rate Told
By Jones
SULPHUR SPRINGS, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 195S.
6 PAGES — 5 CENTS MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS
‘‘A crime is committed in
the United States every 20
minutes, every,two minutes
a car is stolen, and a human
life is taken by murder ev-
ery 4(i minutes,” Sheriff
Paul Junes told Kiwanians Wed-
nesday at their regular luncheon
meeting at the Towne House Res-
taurant. Sheriff Jones quoted
from the FBI report for 1 S>57 and
discussed crime irr general.
His statistical report showed
thievery, robberies, etc., cost the
nation during 1957 $479 billion.
Personal robberies amounted to
$12 million dollars, an increase of
8.2 per cent over the previous
year. '
He said , that auto thefts showed
a 26.2 per cent increase in 11(57
over the past five years. Figures
in this instancy we're $249 mil-
lion in 1957, $230 million of
which were recovered by law en-
forcement agencies.
Stili quoting from the FBI re-
port, Sheriff Jones said that 6,920
murders were committed in the
United States in 1957, a decrease
over previous years. Other crimes
rfhowed an increase of 9.2 per
cent.
There were 133,850 assault and
rape cases in, 1957, he said.
In suggesting a remedy for this! 1 ounty s
alarming state, Joni% told Kiwan-1 munities
ians that the nation should pre-
pare its yquth by implanting
DEMONSTRATOR — Police take a demonstrator into custody after he shouted: “Go away, Nixon,”
as Vice-President Richard Nixon arrived’ irt Montevideo,, Uluguay, Nixon, beginning a goodwill
tour of eight Latin American countries, was generally .well received, but a group of university stu-
dents booed him and passed out handbills denouncing Nixon as a representative of “the‘North Amer-
ican oppressors” of Latin America. (NKA Telephoto).
Judges Brave ijbain to Tour
Hopkins Rural Communities
Heavy Rains Drench County;
Area Alerted for Storms
Judging of throe of. i Hopkins! telephone, home garden arid m j
outstanding rural com- i chard pasture of oats, hull pen
was carried out (inland farrowing pen, shed on barn, I
schedule Wednesday despite the i installed pump on pool for stock,*
I handicaps of driving rain, and dug a pool, ordered fish to stock;
jjamd, built fence, 4-H hoy with I
■ thedr,,minds., the. .ideals.... of... clcauj. .“^ed jloxs n country roads. .......
Well-Fed
He said that crime could be Rural 'Neighborhood P rogressj Stop 5- Cemetery Chapel; fam-! Washington. Apr. 30 (ft —
wiped out by full-fledged'”£oop- C ontest tour was the most un- j j 1 ies interested helped remodel ' ",Pr*,«llt*,'v« A. L. Miller of-
eration of citizens. ! favorable that has prevailed in ; chapel new pews" new blinds.
“We cannot have a crime-free j recent years,
world, a crime-free United States The three district
or a crime-free 'Hopkins County| others making the i
without a change in attitude of
the general public toward crime."
Sheriff Jones closed by prais-
ing the people of the county for
cooperation with the law enforce-
ment officers and he commented
on the cooperation between the
city and county officers as being
of the best type. „
Harold Morris was chairman of
the program.
The club president, Kenneth
Nance presided at the meeting.
He called a meeting of the hoard
of directors for Friday night at
7 o’clock at the Brice Insurance
Company office. The invocation
was spoken by lloyt Gideon.
Interclub members from Paris
attending were Frank Weaver,
Hen Mooring, B. B. Iiauers and
Marshal Nichols. Huel Hammond
was a club guest.
Shopper Opinion
Survey Planned
By Civic Body
A detailed, survey of Hopkins
County shopper opinion will be
judges and
unds found
the going lough, and the wet
background offered no enhance-
ment for the many farm, home
and community improvements on
display.
Lunch At Brinker
After touring the Divide com-
munity Southwest of Sulphur
Springs during the morning, the
group stopped for lunch at the
Brinker community center while
built porch, painted building,
help keep up cemetery.
Stop 6 -Ed Bearden; pasture
sowed, part .to he grazed, part
turned under green, dairy barn
painted, corral built, new house,
home garden, landscaping.
BRINKER
Chairman, Joe Bradshaw; Vice
('hail man, Julian Humphrey; sec-
retary, Mrs. J,-,V. Hi ian ; treasur-
er. Mrs. George Kerr; increasing
and managing family income, Jes-
inspecting that neighborhood. The ■ ,„n Williams; improving health
visitors were scheduled to stint conditions and services, Carol Sue!
through Gat ford ( Impel at_ mid- ■ Rogers; improving the home and |
afternoon and to be dinner guests furm- Mrs. Joe Horne; encourag-
there Wednesday night. j ing social participation, Mis. Shii-
Judges are Mrs, Gladys Kolanii-; Jej, |;Han.
Stop 1—Community Center; ex-
terior and interior improvements.
Painting, varnishing, tdi-ctric wir-
ing, pump and pump arid" Well
bj^ the
Chamber
conducted soon
of Commerce.
The study is intended to pro-
vide information on which to de-
velop a program for expanding
retail business.
Opinions of shoppers in typical
county areas outside Sulphur
Springs will be sought in a round
of interviews based on a question-
naire. c
Details of the plan are being
worked out by the chamber of-
fice.
The survey was approved by
the organization's Mcroh ants
Committee at a meeting Monday.
The group also decided to main
lain the same store holiday ached
ule followed last year.
The six holidays designated are
New Year’s Dayv Independence
Day, Labor Day, All Veterans
Day, Thanksgiving Day and
Christmas.
er, district homo di nioiistration
agent, and John Suroyik, district
agricultural agent, both of • Mt.
Pleasant, and It. I). Hodges, Tex-
as A. & M. College agronomist.
Both Brinker ami G a f f o i d
Chapel are past state champions
in the Rural Neighborhood Prog- ,
ress Contest.
The official list of exhibits in
the three communities-follows: |
DIVIDE
Chairman, L. T. Scarborough;
vice Chairman, Jess Wood; see-i
rotary, Mrs. J e r e n e Anderson;
treasurer, Clarence Hatchett; iii-j
fen the theory that farm an-
imals and pets often are fed a
better balanced diet than child-
ren. The Nebraska Republican
told a Washington meeting
that rations for animals and
pets are scientifically prepared
and include vital food supple-
menta. Miller, who is a physi-
cian, added that a child too
frequently has his own way
when he calls for items that
throw his diet off balance.
Trains Ordered
To Reduce Speed
In Flood Areas
Tyler, Apr. 30 lift-—“Slow ord-
ers” h.av,e been gi\eii to trains
on the Cotton Belt line travelling
Court Overturns
License Law
For Bondsmen
'„ Au-'in, Apr. 30 - The state
Supreme Court in Austin held to-
day that the hail bond license law r
passed by the recent 55th legis- ,
latu i < was unconstitutional. I
The i iling.camg lip-a direct ap-
peal f oin a Dallas di.-tiict court |
of a suit filed against the sheriff!
of Dallas County, Bill Decker. A
Kalla- bail bondsman, Tom Smith, j
and a group of other bondsmen
had asked for an injunction;
against Decker. The sheiiff had
refused Pi release Howard Harold
Hlodget, indicted on a narcotics '
charge,, on a $1,500 appearance
bond. Decker said Smith and the
other bondsmen could not legally ;
post bond because they had not j
been licensed according to the new
state law. Smith and the bonds-
men admitted they were not li-
censed'hut contended the new law
i- unconstitutional. The state Su-
preme Court agreed today.
U.S.S.R
Severe Damage
Reported in Area
Near Nineola
creasing and managing family in
come, Clarence Hatchett; impryv.-
ing health conditions and services,
Mrs. Jess Wood; improving the
home and farm, Mrs. Lonnie Scar-
borough; incouraging social parti-
cipation,, A. E. Hammond.
Stop 1 — Community Center;
dresses made in s e m i-tailoring
workshops, quilts made at the cen-
ter, chairs refinished and upljol-! ter shed,
stery. j Stop 6
Stop 2—Norman Green; house,
old house Tor storage,, rat proof
house, lawn sodded, home garden
and orchard, flower beds, re-
modeled and papertd house by
’club women, installed telephone,
I house; piped water, kitchen eabl-i through the fl„„d-s w a m p e d
| Bet, double sink, hot water heat-' N,irlhett«t Texas region,
j er, curtains, 4-11 club, bookcase. [ \ Cotton Belt engineer, V. V.
Stop 2-Newt Owens; addition to | (;aston> who arl.ived in Tvler
| home and complete redecoration, \ abuut oVlock this morning from
,nU;...... an dextenor Dairy barn,, Twtarkaha run, said the rail-
| equipment - hulk milk tank ami
j fertilizer spreader..
Stop 3 Dewey Roger-, 4-H
| demonstration on Frozen Foods.
■Re-decoration of home interior.
Pasture fencing and clearing.
Stop 4- Julian Humphrey: land-
scaping, Recreational .equipment,
clearing pasture.
Stop 5—Deri ell Brian; home in-
terior redecorated, new living
room and bedroom furniture, new
kitchen app I i a n e e s, automatic
washing m a c h i n e, cleared 40
acres land, cleaned 10 acres bot-
tom land, leveled yard,, barn shqj-
Traffic Death
Toll Declines
In First Quarter
Chicago, Apr. 30 (ft—The Na-
tional Safety Council says the na
lion's traffic death toll for the
first quarter of 1958 was 7,730—
a decrease -of 6 per cent, compar-
ed to the 8,250 deaths for the
first 3 months of last year.
According to the council, the
total of 2,630 traffic deaths in
March was 9 per cent lower than
in March, 1957 and the lowest for
running water and new cabinet.
. Stop 3 -Ed Enixj dajry bain,
bulk tank cooler, 3 pools, elec-
tric fence, pasture rotation.
Stop 4—Guy Mays; television,
J. C. Hollingsworth;
new fi room air conditioned brick
home. Landscaping.
Stop 7—Claude Brian remod-
eling and redecorating home in-
terior, new bedroom and den fur-
niture n e w kitchen appliances,
yard and barn fence.
. - Stop 8—tJ p a. Bradshaw; sor-
ghum alnvum, house'"exterior and
j yard improvement,- barn shelter.
(Continued on Page Six)
Heroic Airman
Awarded Medal
x
Abilene, Apr. 30 —A Jieutcn- |
ant at the Dyess Air Forte base , m*a « •
near Abilene was presented the; IWfYntl ArriV0C
Distinguished Flying Cross in a j 81IAU1I AiiiVCd
ceremony at the ha.-t today. j
Lieutenant James Obenauf of
Graysiake, 111., received the hon-
or for flying a disabled bomber,
with onfc engine afire, back to
the base single-handed, thus sav-
ing the life of an injured fellow
crewman.
The commander of the Strate-
gic Air‘'Command, General Thom-
as S. Power, flew from his head-
quarters in Omaha to award the
In Buenos Aires
Bu-enps Airis, Apr. 30 i.V —a-
V’iee President*"Nixon and his wife
arrived in Buenos Aires jiy air
today to attend the inauguration
of Argentine President-elect Ar-
that month since 1955. It was the
5th straight month—and the 15th1 rneciwl to the pilot,
of the last 16—that traffic fatali-j The general pointed out that
ties totaled the same or less than j the name “Olienauf,’' translated
in the corresponding months of jin the German language, means
previous years. I “the tops are the best.”
j road bus issued orijcr*«jto go only
I Dl tn DO miles an hour in the
'flood 20110. He said overflowing
writer** <<n the Sahnie,., Cypi ess,
Little Cypress and Sulphur Hivers
have weakened approaches to all
railroad bridges ubmg. the liive.
Asked’ how the present flood
compares with those in the past,
the -veteran Cotton Belt railroad
engineer replied, “It's as had or
worse than any I’ve ever seen’’ ip
Northeast Texas.
Mrs. Stubbs, 84,
Dies Tuesday;
Riles Thursday
Mrs. Menervia Angelina Stubbs,
K4, a resident of the Liberty coni-
• mtinity for 53 years, dted at; the
; home of a {laughter, Mrs. T. <1.
I Haiper of Route Five, Sulphur
Springs, at L0:45 p, m, Tuesday.
The Rev. Homer Caldwell will,
officiate at 2 p. m. Thursday fu-
neral services at the Liberty Bap
tist Church. Burial will be in the
Liberty cemetery.
Mrs. Stubbs was a member of
the Methodist Church. She was
born in Mississippi. Her parents
were Mr. and Mrs. Ben Morgan.
She married Rulun Stubbs on
Nov. 30, 1889. Mi. Stubbs preced-
ed her in death several years ago.
Survivors include five sons,
(Continued on Page Six)
WEATHER
DALtAS-KORT WORTH Cloudy with
cccHtiunal th untie rate rni* today, touitfht
«nd 1hur»<iay. A little warmer Thursday.
Hiirh today in mid 80V; low tontifht in
turo Frondizi. The Nixons .....Jnd 70 WbMh
to the Argentine capital after a. KAST and south ckntrai. tt.xas
2-day visit to Montevideo, Cru-' UrM>r ckH,dy ,hrtH,,h Thur”’tos'
guay on the first leg of an lx-day
goodwill tour of eight Latin-j "'sTtirm^'uK
American countries. ! PovnuOi i.r-,t„y with nttrv'i .tu>wem
Nixon brought with him greet-j ayjrr" K\ vs1 'Mostly c-l. e.iy rhrouch
ings to the Argentines from I’res-1 Thue*,t,y- »iiti .. (hmui^rstorma
Mineola, Apr. 30 IT— Reports
of severe damage, business at a
standstill, b 1 o c k e d roads arid
steadily rising flood waters come
from the Mineola-Quitman-Giade*
water area of Northeast Texas.
., At Gladewater, the last meas-
urement showed the Sabine River
had reached 36.6 feet a rise of
6.1(1 feet in 12 hours. The city
sccietary at Gladewater, H. I.
McAfee, said that if the Sabine
reaches 40 feet—as predicted —
tiie swirling river waters will be
one half mile fjom the -downtown
section. No residences are located
along the river itself.
McAfee said the Texas, Gener-
al American and other oij com-
panies had abandoned dozens of
oil well rigs in the path of the
singing liver waters. He said the
idl companies moved out pumping
and electrical units, and capped
tiie holes.
Three miles west of Hawkin',
watei is running 3 feet deep over
I S. Highway 80."The main thor-
oughfare has been blocked since
midnight with residents of the
Fast Texas area fishing right in
the middle of the .highway.
Two miles south of Quitman, i
the I.ake Fork Creek has spread j
out several times its size, and is j
lapping at the bottom of a
crete bridge over U, S.
ATLANTIC
OCtAN
MUST FACE UP-—Russia .must face up to a proposal from Presi-
dent Eisenhower that an Aictic military inspection system be set
up. it would “reduce the mutual fears of surprise attack," the
President said. This system would include the C. S., Britain,
ijifwway ■ *iU).wa, *4 'anaatoi >8
erai.geography of the Arctic area. (NKA Telephoto). .*■'"
Texarkana Area
Levee Threatened
Detroit, Apr. 30 —Tn»ur-
iince salesman Henry Tygel hat
admitted in Detroit traffic
court that he made a bad guess.
Tygel, who liyes in suburban
Mount Clemens, said that he
had ignored 1Q9 Detroit .traffic
tickets because he thought he
could get away with it, since he
didn’t live in Detroit. He was
wrong—the fine wss $750.
Bomber Missing
With Three Men
69. The main north-south route is
j still open, but residents say it is
j expected to be closed tomorrow.
Mineoia is cut off from east-
west traffic on C.S. Highway 8d.
The president of the First Na-
jtionai Bank in Mineola, Hubert
Aaron, said business is practically
at a ’ standstill. He said farmers
l in the area tire suffering severe
! damages. Fertilizer on crop fields
j has been washed a Way, and
I young plants washed out. He said
1 there is extensive damage to mel-
ons, strawberries, tomatoes and
other vegetables. .......... 1 !
Pueblo, Coin., Apr. 30 IT—An
Aii Fotic B25 bomber which took
off from Pueblo yesterday for
Lowry Air Force base in Denver
is missing. Three men were
Highway j “board the plane which was last
Texarkana, Apr, 30 Ufl—In ex-
treme southwestern Arkansas, 20
miles east of Texarkana, Air
pone personnel, National Guards-
men and volunteers are working
in a desperate effort to prevent
a'icvVe break on McKinney Bayou.
The McKinney Bayou commis-
sioner for Miller County, Ark.,
Raymond Caswell, said that if the
levee breaks some 30,000 acres
of farm land would be flooded.
He ulso said at least 150 fami-
lies Would be forced to flee.
Governor Orvat Fauhus order-
ed National Guard-men from-both-
Texarkana and II o p e, Ark., to
help in the crisis. An emergency
message was radioed to Shreve-
port for 10.660 more sandbags to
help out in the flood crisis. Air-
men from the 703rd Air Control
and Warning Unit at Texarkana
also have been called out.
Bill io Curb
Court Powers
Wins Approval
heard from nine minutes uftcr
takeoff when it reached its as-
signed attitude .of 10,600 feet
about 15 miles north of Pueblo.
Search for the twh-eqgined j Washington. Apr. 30 UK — The
plane was abandoned yesterdiay Senate Judiciary Committee has
because of snow and rain in the a.pproved a bill to curb the power
area between Pueblo and Dernier. Lf'the Supreme Court in the sub-
But Air Force and Civil Air Pa- | verdve activities field. The com-
trol planes were ready to resume a niittee vote was 10 to-5.
thi' search today. - ' The measure now goes to the
Tiie alternate destination for Senate and if railed up for ac-
tin' bomber was Ellsworth Ait t ion appears certain to touch off
Force Base at Rapid City, S. D. j another hitter row. The bill has
CAP planes searched the moun- been the -subject of nearly 2
kain.- and badlands of southwest* j months of sharp controversy in
tm South .Dakota withoUt tupceas. -the, committee.
Heavy rain continued to
| pound Hop kins' ( 5>i, nt v for
the sixth consecutive 'day
(•Wednesday, and the l'. S.
We^it her.jfiureau warned of
"the possibility of still more
violent troubles, for this bad-
ly bogged down-area.
The i ounty war *q larclyVln the"
path of a severe rh mder-torm
and hail foi^casl i^sueci by the
\\Vather Bureau shortly before
noon for a hujrt*to section of North
,-Tvxas and extreme southern Ok*
| lahoma.
j The alert was posted for the
i period from 1 p. ru. to 7 p. m.
Lur^e size hail and surface
, winds in* gust.* up to 55 miles an
hour were predicted for the more
I violent storms in the area. No •
mentiojju-vvas made of torngdoes.
8 95 Inches of Rein
[ The. warning covered a region
in Texas hounded on the north by
the Red River and on the south by
a line running from Abilene to
Cleburne to Lonirview.. "
Steady rain which expanded in-
to almost torrential proportions
for brief intervals brought Sul-
phur Springs’ six-day moisture
total up to 8.95 inches.
Streets ran full of water in
many places during the peak rain
periods.
Ralph Hill, local weather ob-
server, ^reported moisture for the,
J ne total fur tht* 24-hour period ■
ending at 7:30 a. in. was 1.38
inches. The city's rainfall for
April was 11.88 inches and that
fui the year to-date 21.35 inches.
Reports of dark funnel like
clouds in tiie northeast part of
the city were traced to smoke
from the burning of waste oil at
the Rockwell Manufact uring
Company plant.
Chilly Temp*ratur,
The chilliest mid-day weather
in about a month accompanied to-
day's rains.
Hill reported the temperature
at noon, as 48 degrees, unehang-
(Continued on Page Six)
Schools Report
Good Attendance
Despile Weather
Attendance was reported good
at Sulphur Springs schools Wed-’-
nrsday afternoon despite contin-
,ous rain ami forecasts of turbu-
lent weather, according t« princi-
pals’ reports.
Lamar Elementary School, with
a large percentage "f students
from rural areas, whs hardest hit
(with 45 absentees. Austin School
[wns next with 3 1 absent, 23 were
'missing at Houston, and Travis
I was short only 21 children.
I Junior High Principal Dudley
Alien said approximately 35 stu-
j dents were absent at roll .call dur-
I ing the morning. Attendance was
! good at the High School with only
, lit students opt.
Eisenhower Says Business
Dip Appears to Flatten Out
Washington, Apr. 30 >0—Presi-
dent Eisenhower says the April
decline in unemployment cannot
he interpreted as meaning for sure
that the nations is on the high
mad to recoveiy from the reces-
sion.
Asked at his news confeienee
tins morning about 78,000 decline
with
ftcalteml shower* RnH thunderstorm*
mitifily in interior. No important temper-
ideat Eisenhower.
: nuiifily S« e*4th
-.(weird,.
I’luin* and Povim
is opposed to any basic comprom-
ise on his plan to reorganize tiie
Department of Defense. He told
his news conference that such a
compiomisc would mean a retreat
to a dangerous degree of military
ineffei tiveness. Tiie IT es I d e n t
said he is not rigid about the
in unemployment for the month i wording of any defense reorgan-
ended in mid-April, Eisenhower ' ization bill, hut added that it
said that when employment and would he all wrong to c-hange the
joblessness figures are adjusted i basic principles of the plan he
for seasonal factors, there still is sent to congress,
a good lut of unemployment. But i subject of the Pacific
he added that he believes there is
The President made it clear he j President added that a big hydro-
gen bomb can be produced having
only about 4 per cent fallout.
A reaction of sadness was ex- ,
pies.-ed by the President to tiie j
Soviet contention that the II. S. !
i- making propaganda in propos-
ing an Antic aerial inspection
piogiarn The President said the j
U. 8. advanced the proposal in ail )
seriousness and good faith He
noted that it stemmed from Sov- ;
let charges about American bomb-
ers flying over the Polar legionls
toward Russia'' fiontici,.
Mrs. J. C. Sellers
Dies Wednesday;
Rites Thursday
Mis. John C. Sellers, 78, a Kil-
gore resident, - died unexpectedly-
at 8 a m. -Wednesday at the homo
of a daughter. "Mrs. P. C. Wat-
son, at 611 Fast Jefferson, Sui-
"phnr Sffrings,
Mrs. Selleis had been visiting
10 day s when she died. She was
a number of the Missionary Bap-
tist Church of Kilgore.
Funeeal services will be held
at 3 p. m. Thu t-day at the'Cen-
tral Baptist Church of Sulphur
(Continued on Page Six)
Officers Recover
Abandoned Car
business
continuing evidence the
slump is flattening out.
In response "to 1 question about
the .^possibility of an anti-reces-
sion tax cut, the President said
this matter must have more study
and analysis before a decision is
v""" | made.
: nuclear tests, the President -aid
I the policy of his administration is
; to have cleaner bombs. He said
1 40 per cent of efforts in the forth-
coming tests will he devoted to-
ward eliminating fallout from
Sulphur Spring* Patrolmen
Fattiest Morton and Leon Dennis
made a quirk recovery, of a new
1958 Chevrolet stolen off the
Morrell Chevrolet Company lot on
Gilmer Strict Tuesday night.
The officers discovered » the
1 he I resident was asked a ques- . r|];im jown at the entrance tor the
his news conference per-
1960 presidential can-
tion at
taming to
delates. In a brief exchange, he
denied he is groo-piing a successor,
said the nomirtef will bv picked
l-y.the party and added that there
'mallei nuclear w e a p t*|ii s. Thej ale a lot of p.iidd men available.
lot at 2 :3<) a. m. Wednesday. Lesa»
than 45 minutes later, the offi-
cers found .the auto abandoned-In
frmit of a church on Putman
Street. Tiie Keys were'still in the
eat and no damage was reported
to tiie vehicle. •
I
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Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 101, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 30, 1958, newspaper, April 30, 1958; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth827235/m1/1/: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.