The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 225, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 22, 1953 Page: 1 of 6
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THE EVENING NEWS AND THE MORNING TELEGRAM CONSOLIDATED IN 1915. ABSORBED THE DAILY GAZETTE IN 1924.
VOL. 55.—NO. 225.
SULPHUR SPRINGS, TEXAS, TUESDAY, SEPT. 22. 1953.
fl PAGES — 5 CENTS MEMBEI ASSOCIATED PRESS
Sulphur Springs
Day Scheduled
At State Fair
East Texas Day at the Texas
State Fair in Dallas this year also
will be Sulphur Springs Ddy. on'
October 20. • •
Chamber of Commerce mana-
ger Gerald Stephens Tuesday for-
warded the request for designa-
tion of Sulphur Springs Day
through East Texas Chamber of
Commerce” channels.
A similar arrangement was
made last year to have the local
“day” '«K|he Fair coincide with
the regional celebration.
-The Sulphur Springs h i g h
^school band will appear on a spe-
cial program on October 20, and
band sweetheart Miss Jo Ann My-
lick will be presented with other
Queen' nominees during a Cotton
Uowl show.
Accident-Free
Awards Given
Local Drivers
Seven trufck drivers with the
Texas Highway Department in
Hopkins County have received safe
driving awards?.
Recognition came Saturday »f-
Rjgternoon at the annual summer
meeting of the Texas Public Em-
ployees Association, Paris chap-
ter, at Paris. “f
Awards for Occident free driv-
ing were made by L. D. Cabaniss,
Highway Department District en-
gineer at Paris.
Senator A. M. Aikin of. Paris
was the principal speaker.
A one year safety award wCnt
to Paul C. Wisdom. B. A. John-
son and E. E. Vanzant received
three year awards. Jess Stanley
won four year recognition and D.
P.,Bauman, a five year award, and
six year certificate* went to A. F.
Gilbreath and Raipli Waggoner.
Attending the chapter meeting
frorfi Hopkins County, along with
state employees in eight other
counties, were;
Glen Fry, Gerald Turner, G. L.
Stapleton, Albert Mikeska. E. F,
Sturgeon, Bobby SchrimSer, C. W.
Hogan, H. D.. Juneil, .William
Moore, T. A. Johnson, James
Groves,. W. F. Patterson, J. F.
Denham
loway, Ray Thurman, Paul Wis-
dom, ,J. D. Perkins, A. F. Gil-
breath, James H. Vadcn, B. C.
Dannel, Ralph Waggoner, W. C.
Woodard, Avon Scott, Raymond
Holcomb, H. E. Tatom, B. R. Mar-
tin, Arthur Davis and Bud Dixon.
Atlantic Gales
Slow Schedules
Of Giant Liners
f By A undated Pr$§»)
New York, Sept, 22 — Some
homebound American tourists are
facing delays on liners battling
.Atlantic gales up to 80 miles an
hour. ■
One of the liners, the lie de
France, interrupted its NeW York
bojund voyage to rescue 24 seamea
from the stricken Liberian freight-
er Greenville yesterday, Tourists
watched volunteers from the lin-
er’s crew man lifeboats to ferry
the Greenville men to safety. One
of the Greenville’s men was lost
in the rescue, and the body of
another was left aboard the sink-
ing ship. The He de France reports
she expects to arrive in New York
late Friday, a, day late.
The giant liner United States
due in Le Harve today, reported
one seaman with a broken leg and
many bruises among her 1,600
passengers.
The gale kept the Queen Eliza-
beth at anchor off the Isle of
Wight all night. But the ship fin-
ally docked during the morning
at Southampton after winds less
ened.
Inked States Scores Win
Over Russia in III Action
&
Texas Family
Believes Son
Crash Victim
(By Aaaociated Prt$g)
Palestine, Texas, Sept. 22—A
Palestine family is convinced their
34-year-old son died in the crash
of a B-29 hur ricane-hunting plane
JOYFUL MEN—POW returnee l.t, Bernard' W. Gating, Baytown,.
Texas, top, throws up his arms in joyful elation as he spots his
wife, Florence, on the dock at Ft. Mason, Calif., as USNS Gen.
A. W. Brewster arrived with 300 ex-POWs. Congressional* Medal
of Honor winner Lt. James Stone, Hot Springs, Ark., bottom, met
his beaming mother as he disembarked from ship. Lt. Stone led
his platoon in a "brave and hopeless last-ditch stand" until it waa
wiped out by overwhelming enemy force. (NEA Telephoto).
MIG Pilot Charges
Reds Violate Truce
J :
(By Anaoctaled Praat)
Seoul, Korea, Sept. 22 — The
North Korean pilot who flew a
Russian-made jet but of fomnru
Sabres, hut hud not shot one of turned prisoners have often said.
them down. •
lie said the ,Sabre , jets were
—............... - | much feared by the Communists,
nist territory has been Interview-! Hlul ht. ,ai(| flwt|v that the Sabre
ed at a news conference ip Seoul. was th(, auperjor of the MIG be-
SPIKES RUMORS
Tax Cuts on Schedule
(By Aaaociated Prtta)
Washington, Sept. 2_2.~.
Secre-
in the Atlantic, But Mr. and Mrs. | t„,y (,f the Treasury Humphrey
Oscar, Br oughton say their son^L^d today that a 10 per cent cut
Captain Guy M. Broughton, died ln individual incomes taxes will
doing what he(.Ukwl most—flying, tko place at the end of this year.
Captain Broughton Fi* among
seven crew members missing since
the converted bomber plunged in-
to the Atlantic off Georgia last
C. A. Tolson. Joe Hoi- Saturday
as scheduled.
Humphrey also told the Amer-
ican Bankers Association the ex-
cess profits tax will • expire on
schedule December 31st and ther e
His father, a railroad shop fore-; will he no request by the gov-
man in Palestine, says he is con-,! eminent for its renewal. The
vinced his. son is dead. The Texas j Secretary’s statement appeared to
flier’s wife died of lung cancer: end speculation, aroused by Presi-
Mrs. Moseley,
Native Citizen,
Succumbs Here
Final rites for Mrs. Lucy Lo-
rena Moseley, lifetime resident of
Hopkins. County, will be held at
3:00 Wednesday afternoon in the
Tapp Funeral Home Chapel.
Mrs. Moseley lived at 615 Hous-
ton in Sulphur Springs and mov-1 afternoon.
last year. Surviving besides the
parents in Palestine is a two-year-
old adopted son, Steve.
dent’s Boston speech last night,
that the scheduled tax reductions
might not take place.
ACTION RETROACTIVE
Pay Increase Voted
To Hopkins Jurors
The young man, he’s 22, doesn't,
know any English except "OK"
and "no” so the questions and ans-
wers had to go through an in-
terpreter.
First of all, he said flatly that
the enemy is violating the terms
of tile ar mistice by bringing both
jet and prppelelr-driven planes in-
to North Korea.
The armistice terms provide that
only replacements can In' made
Whisked Away .
(Hu Amoriated PrtMl
Seoul, Sept. 22—The Air
Force has whisked away the
MIG which a young North
Korean flew into South Korea.
The prize jet wsi dismantled
and put aboard a Globemaster,
which left for an undisclosed
destination.
during the per iod of the armistice.
The Reds had no GIGs in North
Korea during thp-fighting days—
all were safe in their out-of-bound
bases in Red China. So any jets
at all,which come to North Korean j oners,
fields arc in violation of the arm-
istice.
cause the American plane had sup-
erior' maneuverability and super-
ior gunsiglrts. '
The Korean said that Russian
pilots had flown against the" Amer-
ican Sabre pilots of the 5th yVir
Force, something which UN re*
l.iving 'conditions, he says, lire
very, very had in North Korea.
Even In war-torn South Korea, he
added, he can see how much bet-
ter the people are living.
What is going to happen to him?
He’s asked for political asylum
from the Americans, and it will
In* given him. An Air Force spokes-
man says this young man’s future
is up to him.
Allied PW Camp
In Korea Emptied
!
(By Aaaociated Praia)
f’nnmiinjom, Sept. 22 —1 Allied
war prisoner camps are empty
for the first time iir nearly three
years. The last shipments of
North Koreans and Chinese who
do not want to be repatriated have
been moved out. They’re' b«iug|
turned over to Indian custodial
forces in the neutral zone. All in j
all, the Allies will have handed j ff»» Atmchud Pr.iSil
over more than 22,000 such pris- \ Huntsville, Sept, 22
year-old convict from
And the Communists are about i oU™-v fc8‘*d
to turn over'to the lnd.an troops ^ I™*1 HunJ^ll# '*** lMt
I night anil <li.su ppm h?<1.
Convict Scales
Wall at Prison
In Huntsville
A 22-
Harris
Catholic Bishop
Sentenced as Spy
In Poland Trial
(By Aaaoeiahd Prana)
Warsaw, I’oland, Sept. 22 A
The pilot who escaped himself «"»•'« llmn *0prisoners, who, officials uv they believe
they s«y, refused repatriation jn » nson oiin a s say tmy ueircve
the Korean exchange. They've j th-» Cli"old Alexander,
broken down the total this way:
At least 20 Americans, one Briton
came from a North Korean air-
field. One near the North Korean
I capital of Pyongyang.-
. He savs he took off on what . , .. . u
... , , and more than 300 Koreans,
wus supposed to hr a routine train- * .
ing flight. He headed north for Relqetttnl prisoners from both
a time, but when- he wus out of **dea will be interviewed in eflotts
sight of the field he wheeled,a-
round.to the south, in a matter of
13 minutes he was over the Allied
field of Kimpo, near Seoul.
Apparently it is not true, as
early reports had it, that ho
to persuade them
theif- homeland.
to return
.Roman ( a hol.c Bishop arid three (.S(.olU.(1 lh(. fU,M by Allied pi-
pnests today were sentenced tOf|ots. flavs ht. (ll(i HW) Homc A|-
prr-on on charges of spying for Hc,, pla„(,s tftw he clo sed the
the United States. ' neutral zone, but that’s all. He
Bishop C zeslaw Kacmai ek of I Waggied his wings near the Seoul
*9.? ‘Jiy08'^ i airport, and said lie did this as a
| matter of course—-feeling that sig-
nal systems were about the same
French Cabinet
Split May Force
Laniel Ouster
might lie hiding near the prison,
waking for the search to die down.
Another convict from Harris
County, Jesy Mooi'c, started over
| the wail ♦itii Alexander, but drop-
nod hark inside when a guard
fired.
Alexander went over the pri-
b3l*> null. Ope guard failed to
see him. The one who fired at
him missed,
The two imui were housed in
thi’ prison psyehopathle ward,
j which adjoins the f'Mst wall, They
,'cut a baron their cell, crawled out
(Hu AitucmUA PrtuJ
New York, Sept. 22—The
United Stutes has proposed
that the Korean peace con-
lerence itaelt decide-Whether
it wants to invite neutral na-
tions to take part. Kussia's
delegate Vishinsky has re-
jected the idea, 'lhe United
stales, however, has won
the tirst contest in its efforts
to keep the UN general as-
sembly from re-opening de-
bate on tjhe makeup ox the
peaceconference.
The 15-nation steering
committee of” the UN general as-
sembly in New York, has refused
a Soviet proposal to list the ques-
tion as a separate item on the
agenda. Only Russia and Poland
voted in favor of the Soviet posi-
tion.
Russia is expected to seek re-
versal of the decision in, the as-
sembly itself, but appears likely to
fail. However, the question well
might be brought under a general
agenda item on the Korean prob-
lem.
The American proposal that the
communist and UN representatives
at the pailey make any decision
on inviting neutrals came as a sur-
prise.
The United States also offered
to Hend a representative to Hono-
lulu, Sun Francisco or Geneva,
Switzerland, to discuss with the
Chinese communists and the North
Koreans arrangement* for the
peace-conference. But Russia re-
jected this idea, too. It’s the first
time the Lnited States has Indi-
cated willingness to deal directly
wfth Red China on political and
diplomatic matters. Heretofore,
auch questions have been handled
through neutral Sweden,
The UN allies have proposed
Geneva, Honolulu or* San Francisco
as possible sites for the Korean
meeting.
Teachers' Pay
Increase Problem
Remains Unsolved
(slid reached a scaffolding which pay.
I Hu Am<i CZlrS PttMl
Austin, Sept. 22 — There’s Htiil
no solution to the problem of how
to give teachers in Texas more
the wiill several
the Reverend Jan Daielwicz 10
years; the Rev. Jozcf Dahrowskl,
nine Veal's and the Rev. Wldyslaw
Widiak six years.
All the defendants had pleaded
guilty.
The trials followed the pat-
ternTof many others in which the
| churchmen and others have receiv-
ed sentences behind the iron cur-
tain. The Vatican denounced the
Polish trial.
Salaries for petit and grand jur-
ors in Hopkins County were in-
creased to $5 per day in a Com-
missioners Court resolution pass-
ed in a special session Tuesday
ed here 24 years ago. She was
born at Shirley.
She died at 5:30 p. m. Monday
in Memorial Hospital.
The Revs. Joe Weldon Bailey
and Dai 6?d K(frgan tv'iTT offici’afeT
(Continued on Page Six)
Without Wing*
The edurt action was made re-
troactive to June and a-ffected the
entire August, term of Eighth Dis-
trict Court.
The $5 per day jury salary is !
The ’Jifaximum , limit under Texas ;
i statutes, County Judge Wayne
G^e said. .
The resolution also provided for
payment of petit jurors meals |
where juries are not permitted to
separate in felony cases.
Jet Crash
Kills Texan *■ MTLtl“ch
Dies Tuesday
At Home Here
Lawrence, Mats., Sept. 22J—
A Navy fighter pilot got. a weird
feeling today. Lieutenant Chart*
et Olmttead wh* »teWrng of f at
Lawrence, at 120 miles an hour
when he discovered the wings of
his carrier-type plane still were
folded up over the cockpit.
Olmstead kicked at the brake.
But the plane went off the run-
way, dropped into a gully
plowing through treei for 300
feet and broken in two. U was
starting to burn when Lieuten-
ant Olmstead jumped obt, un-
hurt.
Soldier Assessed
Death Sentence
(Bu Atrtociatfd Prr.an)
Stuttgart, Germany, Sept. 22-
(By Aatmrinhd Pt-aa)
Paris, Kept. 22 A
lit most qf the world’s airfields.
,1'Xt.enils -along .
fic t from the top.
FrenclU Officers say they don't know
,. , ... , . ., ' j what tool was used by the two in-
.............
outstanding for the enemy pilot !** And there were some pred.e-
who brought the first MIG, in 1 t'«ns m Pam that re,,,,er Joseph ;
combat Condition, out to the free ,? niT1 " u ?• 4th.
world; And this is what the pilot <'lll^,' "" the 1 l" ......... month - —r- .
Four cabinet minister*, all for J«*Jjg
A 26-member committee made
up of educators, legsalalors and
school hoard members worked on
the matter all day yesterday with-
out reaching a decision. The group
met in Austin, and both the gov-
has done. Bat -hi- .aid he didn’t
know anything about the reward >"'i members of General (Juules
offer. The reason he flew out, he lb’ Gaulle'', now dii -olved rally of
said, was that he wanted to get
away from Qpmifiunism. He’s lreen
hoping to cseipe, he sail), ever: Franee’s delegates
since he" signed up with the Red !
Air Force in 1950. ■!
He wants to come to the United
States and study. As for the
money, he certainly has fro
for;Jiurglur(■ and theft from Hur-lcrnor and the head <ff the Texa.
ri County, starting last March State Teacher, Association, Bob
’Proffer of Denton, were present,
j Proffer said he may name a six-
man sub-committee to direct fur-
. ! ther research on the teachers’ pay
question. /
X,
In Defense Test
(By Anonaltd Prraa)
Mercury Drops
To 51 Degrees
the French people, told l aurel they ypnfpp x|l|*
do not like the instructions given j -d— wOlva M--I
to a six-power \ ■
meeting opening in Rome today.)
The". RohMMUUuititig is drafting
plans' for sofne kind of European }
political federation-to oversee the) Champaign, 111., Kept. -2
trtpfSehuman coal-steel pool arrd the Civil Defense exercise at Chant-, Thp Su) hj„. s„rtng* art”* had
, . jertions wliatevi'r to taking it. j projected European defense com- j paign created more of a stir than : # ^ autumn Mon-
the L. S. Army in Stuttgart has: The pilot’cleared up tire matter munity and its six-nation Europe expected today. As part of th«|(. nj (](
diselpsed that an Indianapolis ser-|of what kind of MIG it wus he'd cart army. t(-«t, a U. S. airman taking the |t wun' a . 0f
Vcant, John Lee, has been sen-i flown out. It was the familiar Tlie Freiich cabinet dispute l"1'1 ”f a Ro sian flier surrender- ’ ttl(. fal| ,h#l iu 0Y_
trncpd to death. A court martial j M1M 5. • basically is over how much sove-|*‘d authorities. fn-ial entrance seven minutes af-
convicted Lee of the premedjtat-j He Was asked about n ligion. He j r(,il(ntv France should give up to However, a rumor got out ,that j ter 2 H Wednesday. Temper-
led murder of a fellow mert hall j said he'd been a Christian when f.(l j)0,jtiji!'* •>™8" ™ 8 Rufi8»'I attire* toppled to 51 degrees
sergeant, Stanley Wade of Iron- he was very young. 7 , _ . , (."be fijet that the flier was taken Mo|)(j ni){ht however and set
I Iso ooiinto tail nmro itvinof na lo 1 . . 8 *
uch bodies as the proposed politi
Had he been in combat? Yes, | cabunion and the projected Europ-i to the county jail gave impetus, to
is subject to re- he’d flown against the American, can army, - I the story,
by higher military author)* ~ ■ ! " ” ........“ ~
I ton, Ohio. '
The sentence
| view
! tics.
TO LABOR UNION
(By Anaociatcd Preaaf
Denison, S,cpt. 22.—One of the
tw;o Air Force officers killed in
the crash of a jet training plane
}n Utah last night was a Texan.
Officials at Utah's Hill Air. .. „ , . c .
Force Base identify him as Cap-! S"*1' old Su|Phur S')rm^ <a")cn
tain George P. Kelley of Houston, |
u 32-year-old veteran -of World
William iMcCoikie Leftwich, 82
War II and the Korean war. The
other was a second lieutenant
ter, died at 6:30 a. m. Tuesday
at his home on Oak Avenue. ,
Mr. Leftwich had lived here 40
years.*
Funeral services will be held at
Durkin Gives Views
On Break with Ike
(Hu AtmcitUd I’reu)
Louis, Sept. 22 — Former!
Durkin said Eisenhower agr eed!
_ , to the aintpdments, as proposed
| Secretary of Labor Martin Dur-,^ bc aellt tf( cAngrt.w jn „ eon.
kin told the Ar of L convention -
iference in New. York Cijy August
—which was on a routine train-
ing flight from Oregon.
Kellgy was the son of Mrs, Lou
A. Kelley of Houston. He lived
from California, Joseph B. King,;n.0() Wednesday nrtrning-in the j !n SL 'Xouia today that he l9th. But „urkin said that later,
Texas, home ireid for the plane ^ cemete ; ment with himcWI propqsais tpL. f0 al()np wjth the )() amend!
His body, will remain at the the Taft-Hartley lal>or lavi'Jllient8 !
I He »aid he reaiRnad as a matter of; ,,, . b
KmenmjwerXN,as never, answered
! of friendship for the president. urea ^ro^<,n 1
I *Mr. l!eftvvich'was'^born April I pHnc-ipJe, but ktOl retains feelings j
II 1U71 in Vernon Vhe non ftienoship for the president.
in Sherman with'his wife, Doris. 0f ’ James Addison and Laura A. . The 60-year-old 'chief of the pledge. The White House has ar-i
Rutherford Leftwich.' He was a »f L phimhcis union, a Demo-: for Vice President Nixon I
member of the Christian church jfrBt’ outlinefi his stor , of hr aj,ca|[ t0 j|„, AF;pf L conven-
and of the IOOF lodge.. 'Hon"in a'pewhbefore Sie A^of tion tomwrow.bringing a personal |
Kelley was a member of the per-
manent instructor staff at Per-
rin and had four enemy planes
to his credit. In Korea, he com-
pleted 106 pifftfions.
~A_
(Continued on
Pag* Six) : L convention.
1 message from the president.
WORLD SCENE—Two ex-Premiers and at least 12 others were jailed or placed in house arrest In
Cjat'io Sunday presumably as prelude to trial by super-legal "revolutionary tribunal” set up by
Pro*. Mobarhnrcd Naguib to di al with his enemies. Former Pi emu r Ibrahim Abd Haiti, center; was
arrested by military police and ex-l’remier Musta phn El Naho*. right, was placed under house ar-
ie»t.' .A man believed to bp. ousted Kui ian Secret Police Chief Lavrenti P. Beria,. left, has escaped
from >Soviet Union end i . ( king political asylum in ,the Unitid States in return for "telling all”,
an unidentified source in’Washington reported, (NEA Telephoto).
: u record low for the summer
| months. ^
I A 36 degree drop was record-
ed from the maximum temper-
; ature rcading’oif Monday. Weath-
i er Bureau Observer^ Ralph Hill
! *aid. The peak Monday waa 87
| degrees.
And, it looked like the cool
! front that provided an exit for
summer was going to stay argund
long enough' to usher in the new
season. Tempdraturcs had climb-
ed only four degree*, ta 5,) dc-
j greet), at 8 a. in. Tuesday.
[WEATHER
(By AaadruUfd Prr**)
j NORTH CKNTRAIr TKXA» jQ*
, iy fnir U n^ht mwl W»rim r
| Wc4tn«'A<tay. /
I WK**1 TKXA8 CUtor U) wirVly
”Ti”Tm7T wirmp? fn fcnT^rfi
•i him! ««»Gth platiik.
KA«T G'XAS i:Si.,r«h, fSir an4
mild i<.rttigkt *m\ Wsrtimtrtlay.
1 TCI
r»ii«i MsDiKfct Rtit) W.dm«<lik>
J HOttTH /CKNTRAI. TKX AS Ct«ir W
partly Modify tonight tncrea».i..
) ifiir « tdili'■** Miltl t«*mpiiratur«Nt.
rlVK-DAY FORK< AST
Tcrr.jn will ar»raki‘ ntar nvrnml
; Hup tuxt uivf <!*>* Thr nrrmai in
E.! 'r• unil tkt’ tiormai
M5 to 32 dtvrtif*/No imp* rtanl phanigti*
| in11 ar«; intliratgwl. I’n-tipitst-
| tti.<11 will W Hjrht in th* portion, w.
Icurriny *howtr* about THufs-
‘'4«y. Llttk or no piutipiMiUoo danwhorai
:;v>-
k
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Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 225, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 22, 1953, newspaper, September 22, 1953; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth828655/m1/1/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.