The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 80, No. 218, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 4, 1958 Page: 8 of 16
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Section 1 THE DAILY NEWS-TELEGRAM Thursdky, September 4, 1958.
4»
BUSINESS CARDS
Electrician*—
Electrical
Contractor*—
Repair*, etc.
LIGHT FUTURES
F*d* — Suppli**
Wiring and Repairing
i*
Livestock Market
Fort Worth. Sept. 14 UP—Cat-
tle 3,000; calves 1,100; other cat-
tle and calf offerings fully
steady; good and choice steers
and yearlings 23.00-25.50; fat
cows 17.50-21.00: c a n n e r s and
cutters 12.00-17.50; hulls 18.CO-
21 50; good and choice slaughter
calves 24 00 26.50; medium and
Milligan Electric
Main Street Phone 5-1547 lower grades 15.00-22.00.
Hogs 300; hogs steady to
If It’s Electrical
Call
CARTER’S
Electric Shop
Gilmer SC Phon* 6-4331
ELECTRIC MOTOR REWINDING
—Prompt Service—
Repairing and Rewinding
Any Size Electric Motor
Pickup and Delivery
Hogue Electric Shop
405 Old Jefferson Phone I-SM2
25
lower: good and choice hogs
20.25-21.00; sows 18.00-20 00.
Sheep 700; sheep and lambs
steady; good to choice fat lambs
21.00-22.00; feeder lambs 19.00-
20.00; goats 5.50-7.00.
Building
Contractor*—
Materia la, ate.
QUALITY READY MIX
CONCRETE
Puilding Block*, Culvert Pipa,
Septic Tanka, Well Curbing,
Sand, Gravel, Cement
bell concrete
PRODUCTS CO.
Ttl. * Cotton Belt Tr. Ph. W721
lumber
Chisago. Sept. 4 iP — Cattle
1,500; calves 100; slaughter steers
under 1.150 lbs. fairly active;
mostly steady; heavier steers
about steady with Wednesday's
close or 25 to 50 lower than the
general trade Wednesday: heifers
scarce; steady to 25 higher; cows
fuJly steady; other classes steady;
a load mixed choice and prime
1,300 lb. steers and a load com-
paiahle grade 953 lbs. 27.50; most
good and choice 900-1.425 lbs.
24.50-27.00; a few 1.500 lb. com-
mercial grade 22.50: some 863 lb.
choice and prime heifers 26.75;
good and choice heifers 24 00-
25.50; utility and standard 20.00-
23.50; a few good cows 23.00;
standard 21.00-22.00: utility and
commercial 18.00-21 00: canners
and cutters 14.50-18.50; utility
and commercial bulls 21.00-24.00;
good vealers 29 00-32.00; a few
choice 33.00: utility and stahaard
19.00-29.00; culls 12.00-18.OOj^g
load good 955 lb. feeding--steers
24.85; medium 900 lbs. 23.50: a
load 775 lb. good stock steers
25.50.
I ’’ ■
1
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- ' ■>: " ' ■>
*• ■' ,-V.-wW
m4
SLICK TURN—Debris fly through the air *s a 1958 Ford, driven by Eddie Pagan of Linwood,
Calif., crashes through the rail on first turn during the ninth annual southern 500-mile stock ear
iace in Darlington, S. C. Some 80,000 fans wat hed two other cars crash through the rail on the
slick first turn. Fireball Roberts of Daytona Beach, Fla., won the 500-mile grind. (NEA Tele-
photo).
cent confirmed ranging 15-16.
Confirmed sales for 24 hours end-
ing 11 a. m. Yesterday, Wednes-
day. Sept. 3, 228.000 total, 76 per
cent remaining undetermnied, 4
per cent at 15, 15 per cent at
15 4, 5 per cent at 16.
Arluaus Poultry
Offering generally adequate.
Some points well cleared and
slightly short of trade needs with
others fully ample.
Broilers and fryers 2 4-34
pounds 14-15 cents.
Closing Wall Street
Loan*—Plans Estimate*
F. H. A- Title 1 Loan*
Build Anything—Repair—Add A
Room — New Bath, Build Crude
A Barn—Hay Bam, Garage,
Up to $3,000.
West Building Supply
Kansas City, Sept. 4 iP—Cat-
tle 800: calves 50; 6 loads high
good and Choice under 1,200 lb.
fed steers bought to arrive at
25.75-26.25; otherwise little more
than a clean up affair, moderate-
ly active, mostly steady; high
choice fed steer yearlings 27.00;
mostly high good short fed steers
25.25; high good and choice
New Y'ork, Sept. 4 iP — The
New Y'ork stock market was mix-
ed at the close, leading issues
showed changes ranging 'in frac-
tions to around one point.
Volume was estimated at 3 mil-
lion shares. j
Prices of rd)>resentativ* issues
included American T e I e p h o ne
186 3-4 off 3-4. Santa Fe 24 3-8
up 1-8 and General Motors 43 5-8
off 3-8.
On the New Y'ork bond market,
papering—
painting—
TEXTONLNG—
fr*v Estimate*
Woodrow Wilton
-uol: 5-2644
5-4469
around 825 lb. fed heifers 25.25. corporates were lower, U. S. gov-
utility cows 17.00-18.50; good
and choice vealers 27.00-29.00.
Chicago Grain
Paper Hanging,
RWXtoning
EE ESTIMATE
PAUL STEPHENS
Phase 5-4177
Appliance*—
New A Used
s*ies
Chicago, Sept- 4 '-P—Wheat—
Sep. 1.86 S ; Dec. 1.924-4; Mar.
1.97.
Corn (oldI — Sep. 1.264-It;
Dec. 1.17 S - *4 : Mar. 1.21 4.
Corn tnewi — Dec. 1.184;
Mar. 1.224-4; May 1.24 4.
Oats — Sep. 61 4 ; Dec. 634 ;
Mar. 67 S.
Rye — Sep. 1.26; Dec. 128 4-
4 ; Mar. 1.30 4.
Soybeans —- Sep. 2.24 4-24;
Nov. 2.21 4-22; Jan. 2.254.
BWKv:.
ELECTROLUX
Vacuum Cleaners and Polishers,
Sales," Service and Supplies
Effective Moth Protection
and Rug Shampoo
GEO. H. FOX
1027 Church St
Furniture
UpboLtery—
Ref iniahing
I
McLARRY BROS.
MADE-RITE MATTRESS CO.
Jefferson and Jackson St*.
Phone 5-47 47
Expert Mattress Servie*
We Give “S * H” Stamp*
Poultry Market,
'A'ifttin, Sept. 4 t#—Texas broil-
ers. fryers as reported by the
-tate agriculture department.
South: Steady. Supplies ade-
quate. Demand fair to good. Trad-
ing normal. 2 4-34 lbs. 16.
Ea.t: About steady. Supplies
eminent* continued a gradual re-
covery.
New York cotton closed 30 to
85 cents a bale higher,
At Chicago, wheat was steady.
Corn and oats- were mostly lower.
In livestock, hog? were steady
to 25 cents lower; top $20.65.
Slaughter steers were 25 to 60
cents lower; top $27.50.
Ike Plans Busy
Day in Capital
On Saturday
Newport, R. I., Sept. 4 UP —
President Eisenhower pi* ft* ■
busy schedule for Saturday when
he interrupts his New England
vacation for a day-long return to
Washington.
Among other things the Presi-
dent will confer with Secretary
of Commerce Weeks and Secre-
continued fully adequate for the : of L>bor MitcheU on matters
1^* ..^srgaa/.;
hours ending 11 a. m. today, j Sute DuHes. This will be his 2nd
Thursday, Sept. 4. 833,000 total, conference in 48 hours with
SOCIAL SECURITY
L
employed people report their own
earnings, so he needed to submit
the entire return. All you need to
do is bring in last years withhold-
ing slip (W-2) which will show
i how much your earnings were
''land how much social security tax
_ . . . , , was paid- If you plan to retire
Q—1 have been paying social sh()rtly after the npw year you
Q’s and A’s
Three Mis$ing
Overnight Return
Oui of Woods
Bolton, Vt, Sept 4 UP — A
California professor and his teen-
age son arid daughter came out of
the Green Mountain woods to-
day ending an intensive search
fat thaaa.- -----------‘—-------._
Professor Clinton Newton How-
ard of the University of Califor-
nia at Los Angeles and his daugh-
ter, Rio, 15 years old, entered the
woods yesterday to search for
Clinton Nelson Howard, 13 years
old. They said they found the boy
— too late to make their way
out of the forest in daylight. Al-
though the father and daughter
were in street clothes — unequip-
ped for a night in the mountains
— t$ie three elected not to try to
find tfiir way out in the dark.
The boy, hiking 17 miles
through the Green Mountains, had
been delayed in keeping a rendez-
vous with his father, mother and
f&ter at Bolton yesterday. When
the professor and his daughter
failed to reappear, Mrs. Howard
reported the matter to the state
police and spent the rest of the
day and night at a police barracks
while police and air force heli-
copters searched Camel’s Hump
Mountain.
security tax for years. Now that may not have yaur withholding
! am 65 for ^nefiU, ?|lp ye, Don.t delay fi,jng for
why should I forfeit a ^eck or this reason alone, but you cati
checks if I earn over $1200 a speed up your claim if you do
year • . , , bring the withholding slip and
A—Social security benefits are um„ evjdence of your a(fe
intended to replace m part loss _
of income due to retirement in T*» tg* Iff*
old-age or due to death of a fam- Jf Ql I|10r ITllSS If J
ily breadwinner. If an individual
continues to work full time at
his previous earnings level, it is
presumed that there has been no
loss of earnings. However, the Salt Lake City, Sept 4 UP
Plans Wedding
Congress r e a 1 i z e d that there Miss United States of 1967 will
should be some minimum allow- be a December bride. Charlotte
able earnings, therefore, $1200 Sheffield of Salt Lake City will
a year was arrived at as a reason- marry Richard Maxfield, also of
able figure. Salt Lake City. They met while
Q—My wife, children and I students at the University of
cannot live as we are accustomed Utah. Miss Sheffield is teaching
on our social security benefits • high school dramatics and speech
plus the $1200 allowable earn- this year,
ings. Why can’t 1 earn any
amount and still get my pay?
mental
A—The social security retire- « . 1 J
ment plan was never intended to LIlIfiFS ACBQ6I11V
completely replace income earn- j M
ed before retirement. These bene- \ Wayne, Pa., Sept. 4 UP — Form-
Former King
Officers Attempt
To Solve Several
Old Burglaries
fits are an insurance against loss er King Simeon 2nd of Bulgaria
of income due to retirement, but became plebc Simeon Rylski to-
do not remove .the responsibility day. a( Wayne. That’s another
of providing for your family’s way 0f saying the 21-year-oid
lefic'—"
future. Yob and each beneficiary
are allowed to earn $1200 a year
without loss of any monthly bene-
fit payments. This combined with
your benefit checks should be
supplemented, whenever posible,
by investments, private insur-
ance, company pensions, sayings,
home ownership, etc.
Q—I will retire next month
and my wife and I plan to go on
nr
former king entered The Valley
Forge Military Academy to lead
the austere life of a cadet.
Accused Kidnaper
Nabbed by FBI
County law officers were busy
Thursday trying to clear up sev-
eral old burglaries in Sulphur
Springs following the arrest of an
18-year-old Dallas youth Wednes-
day night.
The youth was picked up and
held by Dallas officers after a
warrant was issued for his arrest
Monday bight following the ar-
rests of two of his partners here.
Sheriff Paul Jones said the
youth was an accessory to the
burglary of the Callie Anderson
Gulf Service Station Monday
night. The Dallas boy brought the
two Quinlan boys to Sulphur
Springs to pull some burglaries,
he said.
A warrant has been issued for
a fourth youth in connection with
recent burglaries. Jones said a Ft.
Worth boy is being sought for his
part in an earlier burglary of the
i Anderson station in which $30 in
cash and several automobile ac-
cessories were stolen.
Sheriff Paul Jones and Texas
Ranger Red Arnold were in Tyler
Wednesday to check suspects on
recent safe-cracking jobs in Sul-
phur Springs. Three men and a
woman were questioned, but no
evidence was reported.
Sulphur-Graphs..
WELDON BRANSCOME will be
in charge of a meeting of the In-
dustrial team of the Hopkins
County Chamber of Commerce at
2:30 p. m. Friday at the Cham-
ber of Commerce building.
WILDCAT GRID coaches will
taka to the highways Friday night
to scout future opponents.
Coaches Paul Jones and John By-
ers will drive to Clarksville to
scout the Commerce Tigers, while
Coaches Larry Hennessey and
Bobby Turner will take notes on
the Mount Vernon Tigers who
entertain the DeKalb club.
SEVERAL UNIFORMS belong-
ing to the Little League organiza-
tion are still out, officials report-
ed Thursday. Parents of players
have been asked to ascertain if
uniforms were returned. Uni-
forms may be turned in ,to the
Brice Insurance Agency on
Church Street, where they are to
be stored.
T. rfOYT PAGE of Dallas, an
engineer for the Fire Prevention
A Engineering Bureau of Texas,
was completing Thursday a two-
day check of the city’s fira fight-
ing equipment and it* water sup-
ply for anti-fire purpoeat. The
bureau carries out the service for
insurance companies.
, mi i ii 1 u \ 11 .m 111 . »
IlilSMlIll
SHOW STARTS Ii30
LAST SHOWING
TODAY T
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
I TMfc.
LAST
FAST j •
'guns -
r JOCXmUMMEY
k tour num
I UNMCKSTIL
c •—s.,v< COLOR
Hi-Vue Drive-In
TONIGHT and FRIDAY
DOUBLE FEATURE
A BACK to college dance is
being planned at the Sulphur
Springs Country Club Friday
night beginning at ten o'clock.
All young people of the city plan-
ning to attend college are in-
vited to attend and to contribute
to the entertainment fund.
CITY FIREMEN were called to
two small grass fires Thursday
morning. Damages were said to
be light. The first blaze was re->
ported at 8:55 on South League
Street and the second was at
11:35'in the 1200 block of Col-
lege Street.
STATE HIGHWAY Patrolman
Jesse Reed filed c o m p taints
against a man for allowing an un-
licensed person to operate a mo-
tor vehicle and against a woman
for passing in a no passing zone
in Justice Court Thursday.
^ia>
- « UNMbU ailMUOMt new
Plus
. love Slaves
/^mazons
awiui a su
Show Timo—7:30
Mrs. J. A. Dial
(Continuad from Pag* One)
THE NORTH Hopkins P-TA
will hold a meeting at the school
Friday night at 8 o’clock. Repre-
sentative Joe N. Chapman will be! Springs. One club, the Dial Study
the guest speaker. All parents are Club, was named in her honor.
and Mrs. William Anderson Smith.
She was born on Oct. 20, 1883.
She was a member of the First
Baptist Church.
She married Mr. Dial in 1907
in Sulphur Springs. He preceded
her in death.
Mrs. Dial was prominently iden-
tified with club work in SulphUr
Miami, FIs., Sept. 4 If) — FBI
What ema agents have arrested Jean Pierre
ahnHeaSfYhlffest' on change* of kidnapping
“? •sets' 'ti
1 ,1"’ ™ -;d
! Valdes and three other men ob-
X zx rstfsr A
Galveston, Sopt. 24 </f»—Cal-
vestoa’a nine public schools far
white pupils opened today with
an enrollment of 8,915.
Pf**'--’ And' strango as It Sony sauna,
that is the exact number enroll-
ed on tho first day of 1 ast
ysar’s enrollment.
79 per cent open market, 21 per
FLOOR SANDING A FINISHING
Also floor covering. See me or
Dulles, who flew to Newport to-
day from the' capital t® discuss
the Far Eastern situation vith
the Chief Executive.
Eisenhower’s main reason for
curd. It also helps to have some
ry of tprimf af yuuf agw and last yasptj,
earnings. If your wife is going’
to apply also, she should come
with you and bring her social se-
curity card (if she has one ), and
some proof of her age.
Q—My neighbor, who runs a
gas station, told me he had to
ready are under arrest.
Robbers Beal Up Js Interrupted
Houston Dentist
drop me a card for free estimate. fiyjn#r back to W'ashington is to
Second house on left south of (members of the American
j Association of Universities. He
also plans to act on the 18 bills
I remaining from the 85th Con-
gress. And he will say goodby to
Martin Springs Stole.
J. L. WILLIAMS
Star Route, Sulphur Springs
Typewriter
Sale* St Service
Insurance-—
Typewriter Sale* and Servie#
RENTALS AND REPAIRS
H. NUNN
Adding Machine Sale* A Servie*
Phon* 6-2616 206 Church St
CALL S-522S
•»;«: ur-
For Lower Coat Insurance ea
HOME—AUTO—BLS1KE88
Knox Sc Weddingtoo
210 Mala Street
.
- $Al F6 AND SERVICE
Typewriter*, Adding MachteM
Complete Stock* Office
Furniture and Supplies
Shelton Office
Equipment
--- Diait S-RU7
Tear Of flea Sapply
HeafeeaHau
Waafc and Gi
Polish and Wax
ft II
W. S. Spark* Son
CVU SERVICE STATION
«f —
PROFESSIONAL CMOS
M. C. BAILEY
ABSTRACTS
REAL ESTATE INSURANCE
Tho eldest abstract **4 real
estate firm in Hopkin* County.
Since 1911
Phone 6-S651 ,
Gold. Stiver and Color Stamping
Houston, Sept. 4 — A 65-
_ year-old Houston dentist told po-
bring his income tax return when jj<se tojay >,e was beaten by four
he applied for social security. I men who took over j300 from
am going to retire the end of hjtn )ast ni({ht j„ L* Porte, near
this year. Should 1 bring my re- Houston.
turn in? I work for one of the John Usener was treated at
Duplicated
Texan's Flight
Toward Rome
urged to be present. Visitors are
welcome.
SGT. BILLY Willianwon of the
Sulphur Springe Police Depart-
ment arrested a reckless driver on
Main Street early Thursday after-
noon. The former Sulphur Springs
resident paid a $15.50 fine in Cor-
poration Court. Local officer* al-
so picked up a Pittsburg Negro
woman Thursday afternoon to
hold for Camp County officers.
Anti-Trust Suit
Filed Against
Chemical Firms
<■ fix tt»
sold
Austin, Sept. 4 1* — Attorney
General Will Wilson filed today a
civil anti-trust suit accusing chem-
ical companies of conspiring to
Gabriel Hauge, who is retiring as
his economic aide to become an
executive of the Manufacturers
Trust Company in New York.
Eisenhower expect* to leave
his summer residence Saturday
morning by helicopter, weather
permitting, for Quonset Point and
leave immediately from there in
his private plane for the capital.
He is scheduled to start the re-
turn trip to Newport around 6
p.ttl.
chemical plants near here.
A—Your neighbor apparently
was in business for himself. Self-
a La Porte clinic for five cuts
about the head. The cuts required
40 stitches.
2 Austin Youths
Killed in Crash "
Near Marshall
Maeahail, Sept- 1UB—Two Aus-
tin youths were killed in a car-
truck accident between Marshall
and Henderson early today.
The highway patrol mid the car
hit a bridge abutment and then
flipped into the path af a heavy
motor transport.
Killed were 9-year-old Je**t
Garza and 18-year-old Ynet Gon-
goia Rayes of Auztin.
Injured are Robert Throhjom-
•on of Fort Smith, Ark., driver of
the truck, end $$-yiar-eM Angel
Corball* Marques of Chica**.
The injured war* taken t# a
Marshall hospital. The Fart Smith
man’s condition is described as
critiftl.
Marquez is reported to have
picked up the Austin bays,
were hitchhiking, a* Re left
< ago far Edinburg, Texas.
Rome, Sept.'4 UP—Flier George
Williams, attempting a world solo
flight in a Kerrville-made plane,
landed in Newfoiftidland last
night.
He took off from New York
and had intended flying non-stop
wi....................?
Trans World Airlines in Rome
said it received a message that
Williams landed at Torbay, New-
foundland. He had expected to
complete the 4,312-mile flight to
Rome'this afternoon..
TWA, which is handling com-
munications and other technical
matter* for the flier, said its mes-
sage gave no reason for the New-
foundland landing. The airline did
not know whether Williams plan-
ned to continue.
The 34-yegr-«ld former Navy
flier had set out in a 4-passenger
plane with only 2 hours sleep af-
ter being kept up by last-minute
details.
The plane he is flying is called
“Winga for Peace.” It waa built
by . Mooney Aircraft,- Infnrporat-
cd, of Kerrville.
Named in the suit filed this
morning in 126th District Court
at Austin were Diamond Alkali
Co., Dallas; Dixie Chemical Co.,
Houston; Frontier Chemical Co.,
Dallas; Thompson - Hayward
Chemical C o„ Dallas, Caska
Chemical Co., Houston; Schwartz
Co., El Paso, and Schwert Ine.4
Corpus Christ!.
The petition alleges that aince
1955 the seven companies have
sold at least 90 per cent of the
liquid chlorine in 150 pound cy-
linders that has been sold and
delivered to retail customers in
Texas.
She had been a member of the
board of directors of the Sulphur
Springs Public Library for many
years, and had been instrumental
in helping to get the building re-
paired and new volumes added in
recent years.
Survivors include a son, Dan
Dial of Dallas, three brothers,
Minter Smith, Ben A. Smith and
D. Lester Smith, all of Sulphur
Springs, and two grandchildren.
Pallbearers will be Ben Dildy,
Roger Cambron, Harold Miller,
Jimmy D. Spence, M. C. Bullock
and D. R. Bonner.
The body will lie in state at
T^ EwnerplHome until time for
service#.
Mrs. Barnes
(Continued from Page One)
Survivors include a daughter,
Mrs. Lois Hallmark of Sulphur
;t7&S2r“' ^ lies a**
brother, A. F. Johnson of Arling-
*1
ton.
Pallbearers will be Frank Tat-
um, Paul Penson, Lester Bohan-
non, Ferris Wyatt, Earl Payne,
Henry McCorkle and Callie An-
derson.
The body will lie in state at
the Tapp Funeral Horn* until tim*
for services.
Ike Warns China
(Continued from Page One)
Smooth-Working
Confidence Mas
Swindles Bank :
Waco, Sept. 4 IM—Peace offi-
cers credited a smooth confidence
man with swindling the Bellmead
National Ban* of Waco of $3,000.
Texas Ranger Captain Clint
Peoples Mid the man, operating
under two aliaaes, obtained the
money through a series of depos-
its and withdrawals just before
the bank closed for the Labor Day
week-end.
People said officers have learn-
ed a man fitting the same des-
cription has bilked banks at Baau-
mont, Jacksonville and Kilgore in
recent weeks.
Search Pressed
For Fisherman
In Gulf Waters
Galveston, Sept. 4 (31 — An
air-surface search is being con-
ducted off GaWazton fox one ftf
the Gulf coast’s top snapper fish-
ermen.
He is 34-year-old John Calvert
of Pensacola, Fla.
He is skipper of the *82-foot
fishing boat E. W. Fowler.
The Coast Guard report* Gal-
vert fell overboard hie craft laqt
night about 11 mile*"off Galves-
ton. The Gulf waa rough at the
Us*. " : —
The Navy sent up aearcli planes
while the Coast Guard have sur-
face craft out looking for the
missing fisherman._______ . i. '
Ha is a member of a Pensacola
family , of fishermen. Four of hia
brothers aba are snapper fisher-
men.
The location where Celvert dis-
appeared b in the same general
area where nine fishermen lost
their lives last year in Hurricane
“The President and I earnest-
ly hope that the Chinese Commun-
ist regime will not again, as in
the case of Korea, defy the baaie
principle upon which world order
depends, namely, that armed
forces.should not be used to
achieve territorial ambitions. Any
such naked use of force would
pose an issue far transcending
the offshore blends and even the
security of Taiwan (Formosa). It
would forecast a widespread use
^ «» th$_F« Ewt which
wounld endanger vltal free world -
positions and the security of the
United State*. Acquiescence
therein would threaten peace ev-
erywhere. We believe that the
civilized world community will -
. ---------let A- _ _
never condone over Mfttny con*
quest as a legitimate instrument
of policy.”
Forgers Draw
(Continued from Page One)
Audrey.
Try ■ Want Ad for
.drove W'ilbqyn Pritchett to
Hntsville Thursday morning where
the man will'serve a 3-year sen-
tence for driving while intoxicat-
ed. The man had earlier been sen-
tenced, but his parole was revok-
of a new DWI charge.
i ia te return a man to
County from the prison
rr to charges of cnttle
c in 1956.
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Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 80, No. 218, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 4, 1958, newspaper, September 4, 1958; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth827292/m1/8/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.