The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 225, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 22, 1955 Page: 2 of 14
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.
1 THE DAILY NEWS-TELEGRAM Thursday, Septett
day. So on thi* particular day, ha
mailed her a copy with *omething
cut out ol It.
She csugtlt the next train home.
safety drive
Pittahurirh lit—The Automobile
Club of Pittsburgh diatributed
10,000 safety strip* to motorist#
when schools resumed thi* fall.
The strip*, attached to rear bump-
era of car*, read: "School* Open—
drive carcfuly."
ter*. Mr*, Preston of Cumby, Mr*.
Marion Hamby, Lonir Beach,
Calif., Mrs. Carrie Butterfield,
Iteedly, Calif., and Mr*. Dana
Abar, Fort Worth; one son, Rob-
ert B. Lee, Shamrock; one broth-
er, Lewis Lee, Greensboro, Ky.;
one staler, Mrs, Lisaie Perkins,
l&tie, My.; 14 grandchildren and
12 groat-grandchildren.
Burial wash) Long cemetery
noon at the home of hi* daughter,
Mr*. Loi* Preston, in Cumby,
where he was visiting. He had
formerly lived In Cumby before
moving several year* ago. He wa*
a retired schoolteacher and farm-
er.
He was born November 4, lMt,
in Kenturky, the son of John and
Sophronia Lee. He was a member
of the Baptist church.
GOOD NEWS: FBI See. Crime Up.urge Checked
The* y»*v 1MI may rfww a km* overdue break in America's loaf upward crime trend, according
*., federal Bureau of Investigation. In it* semiannual bulletin for 1955, jest issued, the bu-
reau point* out that for the first tax month* of thi* year, estimated total of major crimes war
compared with for the eorreeponding six month* of 1984. The decrease was
only v.f of 1 per emit* but it is the first time Hr »ewen year* Mat there h*» not been an increase.
By Boyce Houee
Funeral services for Joseph
Newton Lee, 82, were held at
Cumby Baptist church at 3 KM)
o’clock Tuesday afternoon, with
the Rev. C. V. Roberta officiating.
Mr. Lee. whose home was in
Shamrock, died Monday after-
A man who thought k wa* time
for his wife to return from her
vacation bad been mailing her a
copy of the home town paper each
NVwwhaM- belew gfVe breakdown of crime data.
Survivor* include four daugh- south of Cumby.
mufti** wis -
taANSUUGMTtt-1
NEGLIGENT
mansuughtei
NOTICE
U. S. Green
Stamps
Will be given cm Ac-
counta only when pnid
in full on or before the
10th of the month!
«°WI«Y ) -IQ
aggravated_ss f
ASSAULT L
ROIIEtYj -1SJ
AGGRAVATED
ASSAULT
LARCENY
AUTO THEFT
TOTAL
Plus
Ymxr Added Saving-U. S. Green Stamps
CRIME decreased 1.4 per cent RURAL crime* showed almost
in cities in the first half of no change, but thy three hun-
1983. Biggest decrease was in dredths of one per cent de-
robberiee—15.3 per cent. Larg- create represent* an abrupt
e*t increase—10.4 per cent— hah in rural-area crime totals
was in rape. Estimate j»f city that, have been rising for many;
crime*—numbered at 711,119 years. Number of rural crimes 1
—covers about M per cent of I in first half of 1955 in estimat- ,
the urban population. 1 ed at 117.098.
TOTAL major ertmes tn- the
U. S. declined seven-tehths, of
one per cent in the first half of
as coaipared with the
same months' in 1954. Estimat-
ed crime totals reached i,-
128.360, a decline of 7.790
from the 1,130,140 total for
the same period of 1954.
GOLD MEDAL
DIAMOND TOMATOES
" 303 can
FLOUR
MRS. TUCKER'S
Shortening
STARS ON HORIZON
AMERICAN BEAUTY
MEAL
Hbv€ you evtr wondered howj Now for 99M brief news from
some stars got their first big Hollywood:
break? Well, many of them are As the first project under hta
discovered by chance. And one recently negotiated agreement
of the top Hollywood “discover- wjth MGM and Loew s Incorpora-
te" is a well-known agent named ted,1 Sol Siegel will produce a
Henry Wiltaon, According to him, j mu#k-al version of “The Philadel-
th« old method of discovering phia Story." The producer is ne-
many young actors and actresses gotiating with Cole Porter to
iaa't followed much anymore. .writ* the songs for the produc-
Wiliaon explains: “We used to tion and expects to sign three of
develop stars after finding them Hollywood’s top musical star*
behind soda fountains. That set-7 They'll take over the roles
dom happens any more. In recent portrayed by Katherine Hepburn,
years, about the only top star James Stewart and Cary Grant
developed with no previous ex- in the original film. “The Phiia-
perience is Rock Hudson.” jdelphia Story" was written by!
Ye*, he's a Willson client Be- the late Philip Barry. It was one
fore the agent discovered him, of Broadway's most successful'
Rock Hudson was a truck driver comedies, and the film, produced
named Roy Fitzgerald. by MGM, also wa* a big hit j
k illson first spotted Joan i on- Eddie Albert is preparing to ■
taine in a Hollywood tea room. mak* personal appearances in a.
and Robert k agner in a Bever- number of key eities throughout
DIAMOND—CREAM STYLE
CORN
Shedd’a Salad
DRESSING
Honey Boy—Chum
SALMON
Camp Fire—Potted
MEAT
Coastal Kitchen
SARDINES
Kim
DOG FOOD
Kimbell's
PORK & BEANS
Gold Coast Spiced Pickle
PEACHES
DEL MONTE—SOLID PACK
TUNA
LITTLE CHIEF
CATSUP
DEL MONTE — TOMATO
JUICE
BEAUTY MASK — These
glasses are designed to protect
the wearer not only from eye-
strain but from wrinkle*. On
display at tire 1955 Fair of In-
ventions in Nuernberg, Ger-
many. jhe glasses feature
No. 214
DEL MONTE — ORANGE
ed up Rory. Calhoun after meet-
ing him at an Atari Ladd party.
And the busy agent picked Marie
Witaon out of the cast of a Bev-
erly Hill* little theater.
Backstage at the Icecapade*.
Willson saw a young fellow nam-
ed Art Coltan, who wanted to be
an ice skater. Instead, he became
film star Tab Hunter.
Wiltaon also helped Lana Tur-
ner and Sheree North get their
atari* in films.
Popular Type*
A* a talent scout for David
Selzmck, Witaon wa* sent to a
Janet Gaynor radio broadcast' to
view a girl soprano. He was im- •
pressed with the singer, as well
a* a sailor named Robert Mose-
ley in t h e audience. Setenick
signed the eaflor, who became
Guy Madison, but he passed up
the girl, Suzanne Bruce. But Su-
zanne got a movie contract else-
where, and soared to stardom—
as Jane Powell!
Folk* are forever wanting to
kpow what Willson, as a talent
scout, looks for. His answer k:
“Popular types. Most film stars
are the kind of people that you
like to know. You’ll find that
most of them have won popular-
, . ' ■ visw *wi mv* • jwwv ihooi w\wi wv*n--
>ty contests or have been out-jlually fcJHiijrned ^ the
standing in some way. toss Webb here and there dur-
Becauae he ha* established a set - to. Dennis did as he
repihation for being able to pickj wa„ toW> ,nd Webb, the next
young hopefuls Wiltaon »* al-co k of ^ concentrated on
most snowed under with letters dir#ftilllf temm in he
from applicants. Last year alone. did t And these he
vice to nearly all of them is this: _
“Stay in your home town a n d ■
try to get experience. If you’re! Ninety per cent of the earth’*
good, Hollywood will discover | air is found below 10 miles above
you.” sea level.
JUICE
UPTON TEA
Ruth Roman plans ti> resume POCtOF AxlVlS6S
her work before the Hollywood,
cameras, after making a picture riftjjj. Pjofoc
abroad. The pretty brunette star UiCuII A IQlwa
recently returned from two!
months in England and Scot- Fort Worth, Sept. 22 id) — The
land, where she had a role in a .Texas Academy of General Prac-
film called “Joe Mac Beth." Coi-jtice has been told that the plate
urn but studios describes the mo- — not the food on it — is the
vie as a paraphrase of Shake- chief cause of food poisoning. An
speare in modern dress. Ruth Ro-jauthority on internal medicine-
man plays the counterpart of Dr. Vernon Knight^ of Nashville,
Shakespeare’s Lady MacBeth, op- ~
poxite actor Paul Douglas.
It took two day*—and several
rubdowns—for Jack Webb to re-
cover from a do** of hi* own
! medicine during the filming of
the Warner Brothers production
i “Pete Kelly’s Blue*." Webb, to
\ whom realism is the beginning
and end of every scene, insisted
KIMBELL’S—PIE
CHERRIES
| Lb. Package
Admiration
We Give
U. S. Green Stamps
1-Lb Package
$75 Bite
Homestead, Fla:, Sept. 22 IP
—When 6-year-old Clyde Cald-
well bit into n cookie, his teeth
struck something hard. It was
an engagement ring, valued at
$75. Clyde's mother, Mrs. Mil-
ton Caldwell, says she'll try to
trace the owner through the
maker of the cookies. If the
owner can't be found, she says
she’ll save it .for Clyde when
He grows up and starts going
with girls.
Diamond
NAPKINS
Northara—Kitchen
TOWELS .
Northern
TISSUE ...
HOME OF PURINA FEEDS'*
80-count
2 pkgs. 25c
150-count
...roll 17c
3 rolls 2Sc
’“•H'-il,!,,,,.
Package
Try a Want Ad for Result*
Your Choice of Yellow,
While or Devil’* Food.
/ a*miTtvmuo
'BUTTERMILK
Pratt’* Hickory Smoked Slab— (4 to 10 lb. Avg.)
DA AAAI Not Sliced
DAvUN By the Piece.........Lb.
GOOD PRINTING IS
“THE PAY OFF”
Armour’* Sliced
BACON ENDS
Good printing often
make* the difference be-
tween a catalog or fold-
er that pull* profitably
and one that doe*n*t .
Good printing—the kind
we do—will give your
literature that extra aale*
SAUSAGE
Freth Ham or Boston
ROAST
Choice Fed Beef—RU
ROAST
GRAPES
Idaho
RUSSETS
White
ONIONS
No. 1 Home Grown
YAMS -.....
Frozen Ocean Perch
FILLETS
GRAOt-A”
PASTEURIZED
h|iuawnHf"W" your
i a-b restater- Let a*
prove it with sample*
. , , sad qU‘it:. 1 i. (i- ’ , . .
Phone today.
Choice Swiss Round
STEAK
Fresh Sliced—HAM
STEAKS
Admiration
1954 LCVEL
r:
*
—1
t$4 uva 1
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Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 225, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 22, 1955, newspaper, September 22, 1955; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth827341/m1/2/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.