The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 81, No. 131, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 3, 1959 Page: 3 of 6
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Wsdawdty. 1958. TtQB. UULX KVKt-mJWWM
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-.•-Personals-.*-
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Mis* Nancy Connally of
Farraermliile, La., is visiting
her father, Mark Connally.
Mr. and Mrs. I. T. Harper
were in Austin the first of the
week to return their son, Bob,
for the summer vacation from
Texas University, where he has
been a student daring the past
year. Their other son, Bill, also
a student at the university,
will be employed with the high-
way department in Corsicaoa
this summer.
Carol Harrington, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Hank Harring-
ton, is confined to their home
at 1605 Irwin Lane, with the
mumps.
Miss Betty Pearson, who has
been teaching in Mt. Pleasant
during the past year ,is here to
spend the summer with her
mother, Mrs. B. H. Pearson.
Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Hoover
and son, David, and her par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Brown-
ing have returned from West
Texas and New Mexico where
they visited their brother and
son, Curtis. Browning and fam-
ily.
Mrs. Kenneth Gideon and
her uncle, Jack Maxwell, of
Dallas will be here Thursday
to bring Mrs. Gideon’s sons,
Kenny and Stan for a visit with
their grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Jess Stanley and Mr. and
Mrs. George Gideon.
Mrs. Leonard Clem and sons
are in Houston to visit her sis-
ter, Mrs. C. W. Bottoms.
Mrs. Ruth Turner of Winns-
boro spent Tuesday with Mrs.
Oscar Lee. Mrs. Turner will
leave for South America by
plane Thursday to visit her
daughter, Mrs. Bob McElroy
and family this summer.
Jerry and Bill Wingo, stu-
dents of Texas University,
have arrived here to spend the
summer with their parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Wingo.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Steele and
family were visitors in Tyler
Tuesday.
Miss Paula Leftwich is visit-
ing Mr. and Mrs. Bob Warren
in Hawkins.
Miss Pat Chezem has accept-
ed a position in the office of
Myrick Agency.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Gregory
and son, Chuck, of Corpus
Christi are visiting her mother,
Mrs. Manila Massey and her
brother, Mr. and Mrs. J. L.
Massey and family, also with
her father, Ford Massey.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack E. Steph-
ens and children, Scott and
Jan, of Dallas, are visiting her
mother, Mrs. B. H. Pearson.
Electric Rotisserie Cooks
Whole Barbecue by Itself
BV GAYNOR MADDOX, NEA Food and Market* Editor
The good smell of meat roasting in the open air promises
an outdoor feast. With an electric rotisserie set up on the patio,
family barbecues become as easy as they are fun — with no fire
to stoke, the spit turning itself, a thermostat controlling the de-
gree of heat. What’s more, an entire meal can be cooked at the
same time, potatoes browned by the drippings from the roast,
sliced squash sauteed the same way.
Lamb Barbecue
Have a small leg of lamb (6 or 7 pounds) trimmed for the
rotisserie spit by the butcher. Make a marinade by crushing to-
gether a pinch of oregano, several sprigs of parsley, a pinch of
losemary, a crushed garlic clove, paprika and salt. Use a mortar
and pestle, if you have one, to mash these into a paste, or mash
with the back of a wooden spoon. Slowly add 1-4 cup olive oil,
then an equal quantity of red wine. Brush mixture over meat,
let stand at room temperature an hour or longer. Insert lamb
on spit, fastening securely with prongs for good balance. Fol-
low manufacturer’s directions for spit-roasting on rotisserie,
allowing 30 minutes to pound or until meat thermometer regis-
ters 175 degrees F. Brush meat occasionally with marinating
sauce. During last hour, place potatoes in drip pan, turn several
times to brown thoroughly; place sliced uncooked zucchini
squash in pan during last half hour. Both squash and potatoes
should be drained on paper towel before serving to remove ex-
cess fat. Meat can be carved while still on rotisserie spit.
TOMORROW’S DINNER: Lamb barbecue, browned pota-
toes, zucchini squash, salad of cooked limas, lettuce and black
olives, buttered crusty bread, pineapple cake with lemon frost-
ing, coffee, tea, milk.
Accused Slayer
Of Three Faces
Court Action
McAllen, June 3 M—A 38-
year-old McAllen man—David
Guardiola—g oes on trial in
Edinburg today charged with
murder of three members of
his family.
The slayings occurred last
March 12 th.
Guardiola is charged with the.
fatal shooting of his sister, 36-
year-old Beatrice Sanchez, his
brother, 40-year-old Domingo
Guardiola, and his 20-year-old
nephew, Isaac Guardiola.
The shootings occurred while
the family was building a
house in McAllen in which
they planned to move upon its
completion.
Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Gra-
ham have returned to their
home in Ridgeway, Route One,
following a ten-day visit in
Baton Rouge, La., with their
son, Stanley Graham and fam-
ily, also attending the spring
festivity of Shriners in Baton
Rouge. Stanley Graham was a
member of the New Orleans
spring class.
Bill Thornton is here from
Georgetown, where he has been
attending Southwestern Uni-
versity. He will be associated
in business with his father,
Dozier Thornton in the Thorn-
ton Electric this summer.
Johnny Jones has arrived
from Austin, where he is a stu-
dent of Texas University, to
-spend the summer with his par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Billy Jones.
Mrs. Jack H. Byrd and
daughter, Emily Ann, have re-
turned to their home in Dallas
after a few days visit with her
mother, Mrs. W. M. Chandler
and her husband’s parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Jack Byrd.
Mrs. John Snow and Mrs. J.
I. Coppedge are in Ft. Worth
to attend the graduation of
their son-in-law and son, Ive
Lee Coppedge, from Texas
Christian University. He will
receive his B. A. degree in
geology with the graduating
class tonight.
Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Harrison
of Oklahoma City will be here
Thursday for a few days visit
with her mother, Mrs. Tom
Brice, who is confined to her
room by illness at her home on
Rogers Avenue.
Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Swin-
dell and daughter, Karen, re-
turned Tuesday night from
Hattiesburg, Miss., where they
visited their daughter and sis-
ter, Mrs. Bob Pickard, Mr.
Pickard and son, Dale. While
there they enjoyed fishing
trips to Pensacola, Fla., and
Mobile, Ala.
Hospital
News.. ♦
(Memorial Hospital Vi*itin|
hoar* 3 to 4 7 to 8 p. m.)
Admitted
R. L. Merrett, Dike, Route
One, medical.
Mrs. J. A. Warren, Como,
medical.
Mrs.' Morris Woodson, Route
Four, medical.
Mrs. Henry McGuire, 217
North Locust, medical.
Mrs. L. R. Morrison, Star
Route, medical.
Mrs. L. W. T a y 1 o r, Dike,
medical.
Roland Griggs, 816 North
Jackson, medical.
Ditmisaed
Frank Watkins, Route Five,
medical.
Mrs. Frank Brock, 1004 Col-
lege, medical.
Teresa and Janie Hooten,
Route One, tonsilectomies.
Mrs. L. L. Stewart, 301 Gil-
mer, medical.
Willie B. Harrison, Como,
medical.
Mrs. W. T. Ragsdale, Route
Five, medical.
Antonio Martinez, Sulphur
Bluff, medical.
Mrs. E. A. Burns, 208 Mor-
ris Drive, medical.
James L. Harper, 1509 South
Broadway, medical.
Snapper Reef
Project Set
Port Isabel, June 3 (Ml) —
Stacking of car bodies to be
used in construction of an ar-
tificial snapper reef off Port
Isabel has started. They will
be barged to the site later.
The bodies will first be
stacked and then tied in clumps
of. six with steel cables so they
won’t be scattered too much
when dumped on the floor of
the Gulf in about 60 feet of
water.
Just finished is a new reef
at Freeport and there’s a target
date of June 20 for completion
of the valley reef.
An experimental reef at
Port Aransas has been highly
successful and was recently
enlarged.
The valley reef has been a
prime objective of the Valley
Sportsmen Club.
in New York for contempt of
court.
Five Years ago — The UN
Security Council voted to look
into the possibility that the
Indo-China war might spread.
One Year Ago—Russia call-
ed for expansion of trade be-
tween the U. S. and the So-
viet Union to reach a volume
of several billion dollars an-
nually within a few years.
Monkey Baker
Reported Active
After Operation
Pensocola, Fla., June 3 Ml—
Space monkey Baker has sur-
vived an operation which prov-
ed fatal Monday to her fellow-
passenger Able.
Baker was reported active
and normal after removal of
2 of 4 electrodes from under
her skin at Pensacola. No ane-
sthetic was used on the squir-
rel monkey.
Abie’s heart collapsed Mon-
day while she was under anes-
thetic for a similar operation.
The Army said a preliminary
autopsy gave no indication the
death was attributable to the
effects of the history-making
space flight the two monkeys
took last week.
Dallas Woman
Shot lo Deaih
Dallas, June 3 Ml —A 28—
year-old Dallas man is in crit-
ical condition from two gun—
shot wounds received last nighte
in a shooting that left his wif®
dead. He is Valdez Hernamler_
His 22-y e a r-old wife, Julian
was killed shortly before mid-
night. A .32 caliber revolver
Was lying near the left hand o^
the husband. The shooting oc-
curred in an alley behind %
Dallas tavern.
Electric Shock
Kills Worker
Wichita Falls, June 3 (IM>-
-An electric company em-
ploye — 28-year-oid Johnny-
Brines of Wichita Falls—was
killed yesterday when he touch—
ed a high-voltage line. Brines
was working with a crew ate
Electra replacing a transform-
er knocked out by si storm.
FOUND—Dale Gottfredson embraces his 18-year-old daugh-
ter, Nancy, at the police station in Temple City, Cal. She
had been found by police about eight ‘hours after she was
kidnaped from her date’s car as they sat in a lonely lover’s
lane. Robert A. Smith has been booked on charges of
erimir.al assault, kidnaping, and assault with a deadly weap-
on. (NEA Telephoto).
Today’s Birthdays:
U. S. Senator Karl Mundt
of South Dakota is 59 years
old. Actress Paulette God-
dard is 48.
Thought for Today
Sharing a bit of friendli-
ness with others does not im-
poverish a man.
Properly Bill
Wins Approval
Formby Sees
Bigger Texas
Beaumont, June 3 (Mi) —
The former state highway com-
missioner who says he will run
for governor—Marshall Form-
by of Plainview—says, “there
is no reason why Texas should
not eventually take over first
place in the nation’s population
lists.”
Formby spoke yesterday in
Beaumont at the annual con-
vention of the South Texas
County Judges and Commis-
sioners.
Formby said the state needs
more 4-lane highways and more
Castro, Hoffa
Hit by Speaker
Washington, June 3 ((Ml) —
National Commander Preston
Moore of the American Legion
has pictured the Cuban situa-
tion under Fidel Castro and
the Teamster Union situation
under James Hoffa as two
messes.
In a prepared speech for the
FBI National Academy gradu-
ation in Washington, Moore
said Castro’s government is
riddled with Communists.
Moore called Hoffa “one of the
nation’s most expendable bur-
dens.
Austin, June 3 (Mi — The
House Revenue and Taxation
Committee in Austin finally
has approved the abandoned
property bill backed by Gover-
nor Price Daniel. But it’s a
badly battered version of the
measure which Daniel says the
big banks in the state have | farm-td-market roads.
been fighting. f _
Originally, the measure was
expected to raise 25 million
dollars to help erase the 66-
million - dollar state deficit.
Now some legislators say it
will raise no more than 3 mil-
lion dollars.
Sponsoring Rep resentative
P. F. Braden's
Sister Dies
Funeral services will be held
in Ardmore, Okla., Thursday
James Batts of Edinburg says | afternoon at 3 o’clock for Mrs.
he will try to put the bill back W. S. Brady, 90, sister of P. F.
in its original form on the Braden of Sulphur Springs
House floor. But the House j wh° d,ed at her home in Ard'! ^f £ 77.!,
Detroit Youth
Slays Father
Detroit, June 3 M) —William
Thomas, Jr., 15, shot his fath-
er to death and later told po-
lice: “He was mean and ugly.
He was on me all the time.”
Later the boy broke down
down when he learned the fath-
er had been working at two
jobs—day and night—to save
for the boy’s college educa-
tion.
Negro Singer
In Bad Shape
New York, June 3 ((Ml)
Mrs. B. F. Ashcroft and Mrs.
previously has defeated a sim-
ilar bill.
Today in History
more Tuesday night.
Survivors in addition to her
brother are four sons and a
daughter.
Mr. Braden and his daugh-
ters, Mrs. Verna Patterson and
Mrs. Mattie Vaden of Sulphur
Raytown Mel.., W.«. ISS/K
visited in Sulphur Springs
Wednesday.
Cadet Escapes
Burning Jet
Beeville, June 3 Ml—A naval
air cadet, at Chase Field, near
Beeville, had a narrow escape
this morning when his jet
trainer caught fire as he was
going in for a landing.
As flames spurted from the
jet and the plane began losing
power, the young flier guided
it across Highway 202 and
landed it in a field. He ran
from the burning plane, and
wasn’t hurt The plane was an
F9 F-8-B Cougar jet. He is
Naval Cadet Dayton A. Lewis
of Hiawatha, Kan.
Three Marriage
Licenses Issued
i
Th^ee marriage 1 ic e n s e a
were issued in Hopkins County
by the county derk’s office
during the past week.
A license was issued to Bud-
dy Ray Alien and MJss Betty
Janice Wyatt Friday.
W y n d e 11 Sisco and Miss
Lavyn Elaine Wright secured
a license Friday.
The third license was issued
to Thomas Davis Walters, Jr.,
and Miss Patsy Ruth Gillispie
Tuesday.
7
the proposed Woman’s Build-
ing at a meeting of the Sul-
phur Springs Kiwanis Club at
noon Wednesday.
Mrs. Ashcroft explained the
history of the Woman’s Forum
and pointed out the need for
the proposed building.
Mrs. Worsham showed the
architect’s drawing of the
building and explained what
the functions of the building
will be.
Billy Harry presided at the
meeting, Clovis Pinion led the
songs and Carl Brice offered
the invocation.
Clarence Chester of Fort
Worth was a guest at the meet-
ing.
It was announced that the
monthly directors meeting will
be held at Brice’s Insurance
office Friday night.
3rd, the 154th day of 1959.
There are 211 days left in the
year.
Masonic
Notice
Stated meeting of Sulphur
Springs lodge No. 221,
AF & AM, at 8 o’clock Thurs-
day night It is time for elec-
tion of officers. Members are
urged to be present Visiting
Brethren welcome.—James H.
Gilbert, WM; D. B. Hutchin-
son, sec.
An estimated 18,000 migrant
farm workers come to New Jer-
sey each year, mostly from
Puerto Rico.
Today’s Highlight in His-
tory :
On this day in 1942, the
three-day Battle of Midway
Island was touched off when
U. S. Navy patrol planes spot-
ted a vast Japanese armada
some 700 miles west of the is-
land and apparently headed
for Hawaii. At battle’s end,
American aerial and naval
components had sunk four Jap
aircraft carriers, two heavy
cruisers, two destroyers, dam-
aged many other enemy ves-
sels and destroyed 275 enemy
aircraft.
of Greenville, and a niece, Mrs.
O. B. Brice, will attend the fu-
neral.
day is reported in critical con-
dition in a New York hospital,
although doctors won’t disclose
the cause of her ailment. The
49-year-old singer has had sev-
eral brushes with the law over
narcotics and is an admitted
addict.
Pope Credited
With Assisi
In Change
Brussels, June 3 Ml—Sources
close to the Belgian govern-
ment and the throne said to-
day that Pope John sent an
envoy to Brussels last week-
end to discuss switching Prince
Albert’s wedding from the
Vatican to the Belgian capital.
The sources said the Pope took
this step after he failed to re-
ceive an answer to a letter he
dispatched to Brussels on May
2nd.
In the May 2nd letter the
pope was reported to have not
ed the opposition of many Bel-
gians to plan for a Vatican
wedding without a civil cere-
mony in Belgium. He reported-
ly said he thought the plans
should be changed.
Brussels newspapers are ap-
plauding the decision to hold
the wedding of Albert and an
Italian princess in Belgium.
On This Day-
In 1621, the Dutch West In-
dian Company was granted a
charter for the New Nether-
lands.
In 1808, President Jeffer-
son Davis of the Confederate
States of America was born
on a farm in Kentucky.
In 1899, death came to the
Austrian composer Johann
Strauss, Jr.
In 1918, air mail service
was inaugurated between New
York, Boston and Montreal.
In 1947, Britain disclosed a
plan to partition India into
Moslem and Hindu states.
Priest Takes
Life in Japan
Tokyo, June 3 (Ml) — A
Buddhist priest committeed
suicide in front of the prime
minister’s official residence in
Tokyo today in protest against
Japanese rearmament The
priest, from atom - bombed
Hiroshima, stabbed himself in
hara-kari fashion.
The ruling conservatives, by
the way, are asured control of
the upper house of the Japa-y
nese parliament in results of
yesterday’s elections.
Texas Laughs
By Boyce House
Ten Y'ears Ago — Three of
11 top U. S. Communists on
trial on conspiracy charge*
were jailed by a federal judge
Oklahoma Slows
Fast Weddings
Oklahoma City, June 3 Ml—
A bill cracking down on quickie
teen-age marriages was signed
into law yesterday by the Ok-
lahoma governor, J. Howard
Edmondson. The bill provides
that boys under 21 and girls
under 18 must be accompanied
by their parents when apply-
ing for a marriage license. The
bilk also requires a 3-day wait-
ing period for young couples
as well as blood tests for all
persons under 26 unless a
county ju^ge waives that speci-
fication. *
A prohibition era story:
“Too bad about Jones; he
died last night.”
“I knew he was in the hos-
pital but I didn't think it was
anything serious.”
“It wasn’t. He had a sprain-
ed back and the nurse rubbed
it with alcohol ar.d he broke
his neck trying to lick the al-
cohol off.”
College Given
$194,600 Gift
Jacksonville, June 3 Ml—Lon
Morris College has announced
receipt of a huge sum in en-
dowment funds. It is >194,600
in funds from the O. P. Hair-
grove Educational Trust Fund
of Houston. The Methodist
junior college earlier received
$90,000 from this fund.
/
Don Pittenger was named
best speaker and Glenn War-
den was named best critic in
the semi-monthly meeting of
the Sulphur Springs Toastmas-
ters Club Tuesday night.
G. L. Stapleton received hon-
orable mention for the best
table topic.
The new club has been offi-
cially approved and is listed in
the current issue of the Toast
masters magazine. Formal pre-
sentation of the charter is ex-
pected within the next six to
eight weeks.
M. C. Connoway acted as
topiemaster at the meeting,
Ewell Fox as toastmaster, and
Ira Moody as general evalua-
tor.
S p e a k e rs were Pittinger,
Stapleton, Thomas Payne, John
Willis, Alvin Verner, and B. J.
Stokes.
Individual critics were War-
den, Connoway, Joe William-
son, James McCown, Henry
Oppenheim, and Bill Jackson.
Jeff Ball, president, presid-
ed at the meeting. The club
now has a membership of 27.
Witness Tells
Of Shooting
Mauston, Wis., June 3 tA*V—
The mother of her best friend
took the stand today in the
Mauston murder trial of 17-
year-old Jane Dakin. The high
school girl is charged with the
slaying last December of her
parents. Mrs. Gunnar Johnson
said Jane reached her a few
minutes after the crime, and
calmly stated: “I just shot my
mother, and my father came
home so I had to shoot him
too.”
Hit Jackpot
Moicsw, June 3 Mi—Soviet
minor* Kit a jackpot in a
far autern mine. The Soviet
new* agency Tea* aaya they
found n nugget weighing 9
and three quarter* pound*.
Try i Want Ad For Result*
Final Witness
Called in Trial
Washington, June 3 I#—Gov-
ernment prosecutors today call-
«anm“FBI agent as their final
witness in the conspiracy trial
of Richard Mack and Thurman
Whiteside.
The agent, Milton Singman, 1
an accountant, was called to
summarise financial transac— [
tie ns figuring in the case. He j
*
brought with him half a dozen
charts tracing checks which
had been put in evidence ear-
lier.
Singma took the stand after
a long argument among oppos-
ing counsel over whether the
charts were admissable.
Mack, former member of the
Federal Communications Com-
mission, and Whiteside, a Mi-
ami attorney, are accused of
conspiring to swing a for-way
contest for a Miami TV chan-
nel 10 permit in favor of Pub-
lic Service Television Incorpor-
ate, a subsidiary of National
Airlines.
Model Admits
Her Handicap
Fort Lauderdale, Fla., Jun^s
3 Ml — Widowed model Mr»_
Yvonne Conklin denied reports*
she would become the eleventlm
bride of millionaire playboy-
Tommy Manville. Quipped Mrs_
Conklin:
“I’m too old for Tommy.”
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Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 81, No. 131, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 3, 1959, newspaper, June 3, 1959; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth828570/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.