The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 84, No. 140, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 13, 1962 Page: 3 of 6
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Wednesday, June 13, 1062. THE DAILY NEWS-TELEGRAM
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-:«Personals-:-
« 1 '• ’» » » * « At ■ ..* MJ.'WJAi’Wrl/SW
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Logs-; Albert Bullock of Sacra-
don have returned from Rous- j mento, Cal., is expected to ni -
ton where they visited their | rive Thursday for a visit with
daughter and her husband, Mr. his mother, Mrs. ||. ('. Bullock
and Mrs. Jack Henderson. and other relatives.
Mrs. Nolan Cave was here! Jackie Jones, the son of Mr.
Sunday to return her mother,‘and Mrs. Marvin, Jones, Coop-
Mrs. Kate Hurley, to her home i or Highway, underwent a ton-
ufter several days visit with' silectomy Tuesday at the San-
Mrs. Cave and family in their ! itarioum of Paris in Paris. He
home near Abilene. was scheduled to he dismissed
—---- , to his home Wednesday.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Eric
Bagwell Wednesday were Mrs.
Harry Handy and Mrs, Ray-
man Gross of Sherman. Mrs.
Gross remained for a longer
visit with her sister and her
husband.
Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Kiker
and sons, Paul, and family of
Beaumont and R. C. Kiker and
family of Silsbee visited Mr.
and Mrs. Steve Burkhart for
i the week-end and attended the
i homecoming at Nelta Sunday.
STEVE CANYON
By Milton Cooilf
physical fitness is - AMD oqn t
IMPORTANT TO THE SECURITY \ FOK6ET JUNE
CF OUR COUNTRY/ THAT MEANS \ IS PAIR/ /MONTH
LOTS OF MILK AND DAIRY FOODS 1 « ALL OVER.
IN YOUR DLBTJ JA AMBRIPA,
Tom Waggoner of San An-
gelo visited friends and rel-
atives here Monday. He is the
brother of Mrs. Kate Hurley
and Emmett Waggoner of Sul-
phur Springs.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack DuPriest
and Sandra and Jackie and
Mr. and Mrs. Clovis Fox will
go to Camp Glover tonight to
visit David DuPriest and Mike
Fox, who are attending the
Boy Scout camp this week.
Mrs. D. B. Pearson had as
her guest last week-end, her
sister, Mrs. Bill Little of Hous-
ton. Mrs. Pearson accompanied
Mrs. Little home for a visit
this week.
Mrs, E. E. Hagy is due to
return Thursday from Marvell,
Ark., where she has been with
her sister, Mrs. Fisher Tatom,
who was injured in a recent
traffic accident. Mrs. Tatom
was able to be dismissed to
her home in Marvell Tuesday
from the hospital in Helena,
where she had been a patient.
Mr. and Mrs. 0. Chester of
Cheek visited in the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Burkhart
Monday.
K
nr
Ira Black and Bill Conner
were business visitors in Tex-
arkana Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Mc-
Grede and daughter, Joye have
returned from Austin where
they attended the Coca Cola
Bottlers Council meeting.
Virgil Lynch of Nacogdoches
is visiting his sister and her
husband, Dr. and Mrs. Wil-
liam Stirling.
Bascom Walker was a busi-
ness visitor i n Commerce
Wednesday.
Mrs. L. L. Paul and Mrs.
Eugene Brice were in Sher-
man Tuesday night to attend
I a stork shower honoring their
j daughter-in-law and daughter,
! Mrs. Jack Paul, the former
j Mary Brice.
Miss Mary Hatley is on two J
weeks vacation from Perry j
Brothers Store.
Mr. an^ Mrs. Kendrick Brice,
Sherman Brice, Mrs. Minnie
Jones, Mrs. Myrtle Huffer and
Mrs. Ed Brown and children
of Dallas ware here Tuesday
to attend the funeral of their
couain, Mrs. Louella Rawson.
Mrs. Irwin Poche and chil-
dren, Irwin, III, and Johnny,
of New Orleans are visiting
her mother, Mrs. Frank Chap-
man and her brother, Lynn
Chapman and family. Mr.
Poche, who accompanied his
family here, returned to their
home during the week-end.
Mrs. Clara Waits and her
nephew, Roger Hoffman, have
returned from several days’
vjsit jn Corpus Christi with her
sister and his aunt, Mrs. J. B.
Manning and Dr. Manning.
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Joslin
of Commerce and Melvin Jos-
li», Jr., Grand Saline, were
here Tuesday to attend the fu-
neral of their aunt, Mrs. Lou-
ella Rawson.
J. J. Ricks is reported to
be slowly improving at Memo-
rial Hospital where he has
been quite ill for some time.
Johnny Jones and Clark Har-
vey of Dallas were guests of
Janes' parents, Mr. and Mrs.
W. W. Jones, Jr., Tuesday
night.
BiU Brashear of Madison,
Wise,, will spend the week-end
here with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. f. C. Brashear.
(Hospital Visiting Hours)
3 to 4 and 7 to 8 p. m.
Admitted
Mrs. W. D. Bentley, Como,
surgery Wednesday.
Mrs. Jessie Cates, Emory,
medical.
Mrs. Ben Cotten, Como,
medical.
Mrs. Hershel Stephens, 1054
Church, medical.
Dismissed
R. M. Harper, Sulphur Bluff,
medical.
Mrs. J. F. Craver, 105 Park
Circle Drive, medical.
Florence Spigner, Pickton,
Route One, medical.
Mrs. G. A. Gideon, Oak
Avenue, medical.
Mrs. Grady Thurman, Route
Five, emergency.
W. E. Earwood, Route Two,
medical.
Miss Helen Stringer, 1121
Carter, fractured arm. .
Zimmie Bell, 1008 North
Davis, medical.
Charlip Martin, Sulphur
Bluff transferred to a Dallas
hospital.
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Food for Americans
Savory Fresh Snap Beans
Provide a Change of Pace
By Gaynor Maddox Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
Everybody eats snap beans. Between July and September,
when the supply of fresh beans is most plentiful, they appear on
most American dinners tables at least once a week.
However, to make their appearance more interesting ami
to provide a change of pace, try these two new recipes:
SAVORY FRESH SNAP BEANS (Yiald: 6 servings)
1 pound fresh snap beans; 1 clove garlic 1/4 teaspoon
ground ginger; 3 tablespoons butter or margarine; 3 small
onions, sliced; 1 1/2 teaspoons soy sauce; 3/4 cup chicken broth
or 3/4 cup hot water and 1 chicken bouillon cube; 3/4 teaspoon
salt or salt to taste; 1 cup cooked leftover ham or chicken strips
1/8 teaspoon ground black pepper.
Wash beans, remove tips, cut French style and set aside.
Chop garlic fine, mix with ground ginger and brown in 1 table-
spoon of the butter or margarine. Add onion slices, beans and
soy sauce. Mix well. Stir in chicken broth or chicken bouillon
cube dissolved in hot water. Cover and cook over gentle heat
until beans are crisp-tender. Add remaining ingredients. Toss
lightly. Serve at once.
SNAP BEANS WITH FRESH DILL (Yield: 6 serving.)
1 pound fresh snap beans; 1/2 teaspoon salt; 1-inch boiling
water in saucepan; 1 cup diced onion; 3 tablespoons butter or
uiargaine; 1/2 teaspoon salt; 1/8 teaspoon ground black pepper
2 tablespoons chopped fresh dill; 1 hard-cooked egg, sieved;
Fresh dill for garnish.
Wash beans, remove tips and cut into 1-inch pieces. Place
in a saucepan with next 2 ingredients. Bring to boiling point
and cook, uncovered, 3 to 5 minutes. Cover and cook 8 to 10
minutes or until beans are tender. In the meantime, saute onions
until transparent in butter or margarine. Drain beans and add
to onions. Add salt, black pepper and chopped dill. Toss lightly.
Top with sieved hard-cooked egg. Garnish with additional chop-
ped fresh dill.
Final Physical
Exams Taken
By Guardsmen
Mrs- D. A, Franc* will be
it) Dallas Thursday to bring
Mrs. Hubert Ray home from
Baylor Hospital, where she had
surgery the first of the week.
Mrs. Auburn Campbell, Mrs.
Eugene Chamberlain and
daughter, Nan, and Mrs. Pinky
Griffin will be at Camp Glo-
ver tonight to visit their sons,
Bid Campbell, Gene Cbamber-
laln and Eddie and Jimmy
Griffin, also with Mrs. Grif-
fin’s husband, who are at the
Boy Sgogt *amp tbie week.
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Mr. and Mrs. Joe B. McMa-
han have returned from Eu-
fala, Okla., where they visited
their daughter and her hus-
band, Mr. and do. Benny D.
Lundgren and their daughter,
Pam. They also went on a fish-
ing trip to Taleqpoulv OWa
Mr- and Mrs. gp Hargrave
are in Madison, Wise., visiting
her daughter and her husband,
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Brashear and
children.
Sen D. Wood and
V Karen and Ann, and
gren Chancellor and
..Gena and Warren, Jr.,
wilj bp at Camp Glover tonight
to visit their son and brother,
Ben Wood, and Dr. Wood, who
are attending the Boy Scout
House Approves
Water Project
Washington, June 13 (Jt —
A bill authorizing the 170 mil-
lion dollar Fryinrtpan-Arkan-
sas water project in Colorado
has been passed by the House.
It now goes to the Senate.
The once-controversial pro-
posal has been before congress
for ten years. But it never be-
fore reached the House floor
for action. Today it sailed
through by a voice vote in the
House — considered the main
legislative hurdle for the bill.
The Senate is expected to act
promptly on the measure.
The bill would authorize the
Reclamation Bureau to build
dams to impound Colorado tri-
butary waters west of the
Rpcfcies and d e li v e r them
through a tunnel to farms and
towns on the eastern slope.
Congress recently passed a
similar bill for projects in
New Mexico.
Redi Claim
(3 Defector
Seoul, Korea, June 13 UR—
The Korean Reds say an 18-
year-old G1 from Cleveland
has taken refuge in Commu-
nist North Korea. The Red ra-
dio claims that Private Larry
Abshire likes it on the Com-
munist side of the line. The
U. 8. Army says jt looks as
though Abshire'ts the first de-
fector to the Reds in Korea
since the end of the Korean
on each man in addition to
bringing the approximately 25
existing forms up to date.
Members of the division
when it was mobilized will re-
turn to Texas with their units.
The 4,000 reservists recalled
to active duty to bolster the
division's strength will be re-
leased here concurrently.
Army officials term the
mobilization of National Guard
and Reserve units the most ef-
ficient partial mobilization in
American history.
They have pointed out that
the deficiencies uncovered
here have been incorporated in
revisions of mibilization plans
and will benefit future mili-
Crews Probe
Crooked Wells
In East Texas
By Associated Press
Crews in the East Texas oil
field are to work today to com-
plete their 27t.h directional sur-
vey in the state’s investiga-
tion for crooked wells.
The crews—hired by the state
to hunt deviated, slanted or
curved wells—completed sur-
veys on the 24th well yester-
day and scheduled three more
for today.
The commission yesterday
extended its 15-day order pro-
hibiting plugging of wells in
the field. The new 30-day or-
der was issued at the request of
the attorney general's office to
keep operators from plugging
wells to prevent surveys from j
being run.
Assistant Attorney General
Houghton Brownlee said yes-
terday the first round of di-
rectional surveys will be com-
pleted by Saturday. Attorney
General Will Wilson had said
earlier he hoped to complete
the tests before the weekend.
Railroad Commission Chair-
man W. J. Murray said recent-
ly that the surveys were not
being completed as was as plan-
ned because of unfamiliarity
with some of the well hookups.
He said, “It’s like going into j
sopieone clue’s kitchen to bake I
a take. It may take us a little I
longer to find out just wherel
the salt and sugar and flour
are.”
Brownlee said that investiga-
tors are running into elabor-
ate devices to disguise illegal
operations in the field.
On one lease an investigator
found a maze of buried plas-
tic pipe connected to a buried
electric switch which turned
on and
from
on the surface was kicked.
The plastic pipe was used
instead of metal pipe, he said,
so that investigators could not
find it with mine detectors.
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AWARD WINNERS — David Rabun, left an! Doyle McKenzie, right, accept their awards
for a first place district finish in the Farm and Ranch Management Demonstration con-
test at Texas A&M College from Lin Warthan, center, awards committee chairman for
the Production Credit Association of Texas. Both boys attend Sulphur Springs Junior
High School and are members of the Dike 4-H Club.
'Flash' Price
List Expanded
New York, June 13 (Jl —
The New York Stock Exchange
acted today to speed the flow j
of price information when hea-!
vy trading forces a delay in j
routine reporting.
It expanded the list of secur- J
ities on which “flash” prices j
are given in such situations;
from 30 to 100.
nd started oil*flowing, A “Hush” price is a report!
dummy wells when a rock |on the latest Dade. Such quota-!
lions are fed onto the "stock;
exchange ticker tape at inter- j
vals when the tape falls five
minutes or more behind in
heavier turnover.
After they are transmitted,
the ticker then digs into the
backlog of jjnreported trades
where it left off. A spokes-
man explained:
“Some felt the 30 stock list
wasn’t enough. The new sys-
tem will prove a much more
Overtime Pav
Suit Filed
San Marcos, June 13 (Jl —
A former San Marcos deputy
file chief charged in district representative cross section of
court yesterday he had been ;Up.to.date prices.”
forced to work overtime with-j About 1 500 ^uritieg are
°"t overtime pay. Misted on the “big* board/9 Oa
He is Eddie Serur, whose May 29th the second heaviest
complaint was made in a civil volume day in history, the tape
suit filed in 151st District le]j behind by two hours and
Court against the city of San 23 minutes at one int late
Marcos and the city manager, jn tja,,
B. R. Fuller, j ___’_
Serur seeks $44fi.03 from
the city, claiming that amount ip;* fl ;|
is due for 313 hours of ovea-|^J|y vOlUlCH
time work. He also asks $2,000 ] £
exemplary damages against the Tm PnfltmVPaV
TO PREACH — The Rev.
Leslie W. Seymour, recently
appointed superintendent of
the Sulphur Springs district,
will preach at the 8:30 and
10:55 a. m. services at First
Methodist Church Sunday.
He was pastor of First
Church in Grand Prairie be-
fore moving to Sulphur
Springs.
Officers Corner
Wanted Man
Orange, June 13 CP — Offic-
• ers are believed to have a man
accused of attacking three
women located in a wooded
area in the Orange field area.
The man is reported armed
with a.plstopand a shotgun and
is considered dangerous.
Warnings were issued to
women in the area to stay off
j the streets and take the keys
from their automobiles.
The man being sought Is 24-
year-old, 6-foot-4, 209-pound
Roy Melancon. He is charged
1 with criminally assaulting a
woman in Port Arthur and two
others in Orange last night
Fort Polk, La. — Sulphur
.Springs members of the 49th
Armored Division, eyeing an
August release from active
duty, are now receiving final
physical examinations for sep-
aration.
The U. S. Army Hospital at
Fort Polk, tabbed for the
chore of performing out-pro-
cessing examinations on some
20,000 Reservists and Nation-
al Guardsmen here, conduct tary operations,
the checkups at a rate of 60
per hour. All examinations
will be completed by June 30.
Present plans call for the
49th, made up of some 10,000
Texans in 95 units from 74
Texas cities, to begin the trek
back to Texas Aug. 6-7. The
units are due for release at
midnight on Aug. 9.
Training for some 175 men
of Company D, 3rd Armored
Rifle Battalion, 144th Infan-
try, called to active duty last
fall at the height of the Ber-
lin crisis, is being conducted
as usual. Range firing, Army
training tests and an expected
Strategic Army Corps mobility
test fill the training schedule.
The mobility test will be
designed to check the deploy-
ment posture of the divisoin
which has been assigned to the
III STRAC Corps since Feb-
ruary. STRAC forces remain
in a constant state of readi-
ness for immediate deploy-
ment anywhere in the world
on a moment’s notice.
Major General Harley B.
West, the division commander,
has stated that a normal train-
ing schedule will be followed
until July 15, at which time
the men will concentrate on
the movement home.
A maze of administrative
work required for each indi-
vidual’s release — faces per-
sonnel sections. They are now
churning through multiple
forms of everything from re-
quests for shipment of house-
hold goods to the eyer-import-
ant individual service record.
m tfce to* AttRto arrives,
personnel officials will have
Olin Johnston
Wins Easily
Columbia, S. C., June 13 (Jl
—Veteran U. S. Senator Olin
Johnston of South Carolina
withstood a challenge from his
state’s youthful governor,
Ernest HoUings, and won re-
Doninition in yesterday’s
Democratic primary. He’s seek-
ing a fourth term.
The 40-year-old Hollings
had made an issue of his sup-
port of South Carolina’s right-
to-work law, which bars any
requirement of union mem-
bership as a condition of em-
ployment Johnston rolled up
substantial margins in tetxile
mill communities, where he
campaigned heavily and told
workers of his votes in behalf
of labor causes.
A former president of the
University of South Carolina,
Donald Rusell of Spartanburg,
rap away from Lieutenant
Governor Burnet Maybank and
three others to win the Demo-
cratic nomination for gover-
nor.
The Democratic nomination
usually means election in
South Carolina and the Repub-
licans haven’t even named a
candidate for governor. How-
ovar, Senator Johnston will bo
opposed in November Jby Wil-
liam Workman of Columbia, a
syndicated columnist. Ha al-
ready km launched the strong-
est campaign the GOP has put
in South Carolina sinca rneon-
initiated 23 separation forms str action days.
city manager. The suit was
filed for Serur by a state sena-
tor, Franklin Spears of San
Antonio.
District Judge J. Lee Dittert
set a preliminary hearing for
July 23rd.
The suit alleges that Fuller Cookingham.
Fort Worth, June 13 (J) —
UP! — City councilmen today
joined the controversy sur-
rounding the rumored retire-
ment of City Manager L. P.
forced Serur to work overtime
in excess of 72 hours per week,
with a view toward getting
Serur to resign.
He resigned as deputy fire
chief in early May, claiming his
action was “under duress.” He
said the filing of the suit was
“mostly a matter of principle."
Texan Killed
In Accident
Lame, New Mexico, June 13
UR—A 33-year-old Texan was
killed yesterday after his car
went out of control eight miles
south of Lame on US Highway
285.
He was A. L. Green of Sher-
man. He was alone in the car.
Battle Erupts
Inside Tlieater
Key West Fla., June 13 M—
A battle inside a Havana thea-
ter between pro-Castro and
antj-Castro Cubans caused the
closing of the movie during the
night. At least three shots were
fired during the mele and po-
lice made several arrests. It was
not determined whether anyone
was wounded. Most of the au-
dience fled to a nearby park.
In Abilene, Cookingham said
he won’t quit, nor-wilbhe fight
to retain his job. however, he
may have to battle if he wants
to continue past his retirement
date next October.
Under Fort Worth’s city
charter, Cookingham will have
to obtain a deferment from the
city council next October. He
reached normal retirement age
of 65 la.>*t year and was grant-
ed a one-year extension.
Mayor Pro Tem J. Frank
Keeton went on record as say-
ing he does not think Cooking-
ham’s tenure should be continu-
ed.
Councilwoman Mrs. M. M.
Me Knight said she “assumed
he (Cookingham) was going to
retire.”
Meanwhile, Councilman
George Thompson voiced his
support for Cookingham, de-
claring:
“I think he is an excellent
city manager ami 1 will urge
the council to renew his term
for another year."
Several councilmen along
with Mayor John Justin said
they had no comment on the
matter at this time.
rado River basin across the
Continental Divide into the
Chama River.
Paul Jones, chairman of the
Navajo tribal council, beamed
as the President handed him
one of the pens used in sign-
ing the bill.
Bomb Removed
From Island
Memphis, Tenn., June 13 HI
—The police emergency squad
has removed for checking an
antisubmarine bomb discover-
ed on the Memphis waterfront
last night just a few feet from
the anchorage of three barges
loaded with explosive cargo.
A tug captain — Clyde Robin-
son .— spotted the world war
two type depth-charge bomb,
called a hadge hog, about ten
feet from the Barges. It was
on a bank of mud island, op-
posite the heart of Memphis’
downtown district. Robinson
said: “If it had exploded, we
would have destroyed a large
part of Memphis.”
Victoria Man
Killed in Crash
Victoria, June 13 (Jt — A
young man was killed five
miles south of Victoria this
morning when his sports car
collided with a truck.
He was 22-year-old Jerry L.
Williams of Victoria.
The truck driver. Jess C.
Pryor of North Little Rock,
Ark., escaped injury. The
truck was owned by the L. H.
Grimes Company in North Lit-
tle Rock, a wholesale supplier
of seeds and plants. The U.
S. Highway 77 crash took
place about 8 a. m.
Bruce Stock
Trades Dropped
New York, June 13 Ut —
The American Stock Exchange
suspended trading in the stock
of the E. L. Bruce Company
whose president, Edward Gil-
bert, disclosed yesterday that
he’d withdrawn nearly two
million dollars from the com-
pany without authorization.
The exchange said the suspen-
sion will continue until furth-
er notice, pending develop-
ments.
Try a Want Ad for Results
Mi
Army to Keep
Bases Running
Fori Pplk, La., June 13 t*
—The Army says it plans to
keep Fort Polk and Fort Chaf-
fee, Arkansas open after the
Reservists and National
Guardsmen based there now go
home in August.
The bases—closed slnee 1959
—-were opened again last year
during the height of the Berlin
crisis.
Fourth Army headquarters in
San Antonio said Fori Polk will
become an Army training cen-
ter this month. The first
trainees are due in July and
eventually there may be as
many as *6,000 soldiers at the
Try a Want Ad for Results
Reclamation
Projects Set
Washington, June IS (Jt
President Kennedy signed to-
day n bill authorising the San
Juan and Navajo reclamation
projects ia New Mexico.
Standing behind the Presi-
dent as he used more than a
dozen pens to inscribe his sig-
nature were Secretary of In-
terior jStewart Idall and all
four New Mexico members of
Congress.
Senator Dennis Chaves left
Georgetown hospital to be on
hand. He has been under treat-
ment since suffering a flare-
up last Saturday of an old
throat ailment.
Under the legislation a 135
million dollar irrigation sys-
tem will ba built on the Navajo
Indian reservation. An 86 mil-
lion dollar project will b« con-
strueted to divert water from
the Sag Jnas River in the Cok>-
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Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 84, No. 140, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 13, 1962, newspaper, June 13, 1962; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth828796/m1/3/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.