The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 1, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 1, 1956 Page: 6 of 12
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Hopkins County Area Newspapers and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Hopkins County Genealogical Society.
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Vi" ■’
Section ! THE DAILY NEWS-TELEGRAM
Sunday. January 1, 1956.
y''"
............ :
■\
Woman Charged
In Connection ......
With Slaying
Brpckville, Ontario, Doc. 31 OB
;^;A%""«ttra«tiv*.P4i,5i>fht«r of a
forthet mayor of Syracuse, N. Y.,
has boon charged with murder in
thjei kataL-shooting Of a fishing
guide in her island cottage.
He declared H W«A, won* ^latrdng to ^5 higher; coalers 2.00-1 • h/on'ari-atoned'In
.• believe that possession of poWer1-! J;O0'highet!:few sales stokers.and s,,'m 1 s . s...... - -
ffffdys Markets
Hope for Peaca
Moscow, Dec. SI —Soviet
■’•pSM-r*?#__s\ ......■■
Livestock Market
Chicago, Dec.
cattle 100, to til 10CD
compared week ago;
>1 Js—Sal
100 iestimat.
alabie
^estimated);
fed steers
■■■Wf
peva spirit enVI with it the hop«ij other weights 7*nd grades steady
for peace and a better future and | lt> 50 ioryer; heifers around
tftwofore .it. will, not be buried, i steady; ctjws 25-5'p higher;'bulk
,Premier Bulganin said today the unj( r j.200 !h grading loig prinje
people of the w orld want the Ctfc- • anil beloW st«i*dy to 25 higfier 'fail
a charge. of killing * 45-year-old
George Franklin (Tom) Knapp,
who acted as a guide for wealthy
United States tourists.
JL^ss'-aS
high prime 1300-1400 lb steers
22.50-23.00; most- good to low
ful W'eaponS“'euch as the H-bomb|fordyrs steady: two loads high-
■\w both.JEhkt and West .could beiPj- prime ilOO-Vl25 lb fed steers
lot* -jrir C#ht effective in. prevent- j 34.25,; few loads .prime 11QO-1300
ing another big war. j l!> steels 23*25-24.00; *>ulk choice
powers can be fruitful.
These and other statements were
made by Buiraftih in a series of ftygjtp steeis 15.50-18.50;
^iEilllEEHsS rvSSK? ™
Charles E. Shutt, head' of ^
Washington Bureau of the Te
. new* agency. The agency is affili
era weighing up to 1400 lb 21.50-
j 22.25; hulk choice heifets 19.00-
«te<i with Hears! MeBotOHe news ; 2I1.OO; good to low* choice *45.00-
gn’d fuiwiiiljes ci.wsrcd, film to.
ttJevjLioii stations.,
The text of the quest forts
answers, in* the. form of a
va* ’
-igU-XI
18.50; utility to high commercial
! cows 10.-5?>-13.00; most cannerS
and »r,d caters 8.50-I0.50;.i>ulk utility
New j #nj commenca! bulls 13.75-10.00;
.__________________ . jfflt )all sales good and thoiviL.veakrs
? pwporrtit ?;ts t y, the? ■ | .00 wrwt. cilfl t.rt
foreign ministry and broadcast-by ! men.j4j pialies #15.00-23,00; few
Moscow, radio.,'
t:
i Very light culls down
several loads medium
.1
Spectacular
10.00;
d good!'
700-950 lb feeding steers 14.75-
4 7.60; two loads good 400 lb stock
heifers calves 16.75.
(Continued from Tape Ona)
Newboro Lake, following a party-
attended by Knapp and two other
men. The victim was a widower
with a 12-year-old son. He was a
Mrs. Ricks,
without
bail for a preliminary hearing
January Gth. At that time, a date
for a formal healing is expected
to be set.
Mrs. Ricks is the daughter of
the late Mayor Charles Hanna of
Syracuse. She has vacationed an-
nually at the island cottage—38
miles north of Brockville. She op-
ytar and also extended further
it- steadily grow ing domain by j
the consolidation of another]
sm»H-.uj:al _ di.-trict. - i
It also w as a busy year for Sul- j
Air Force Base
Move Studied
phut Spr ings industry despite the New.- York.• 31 KB — Air
disruption of production at .tije,.Force Secretary Quarles is'quoted'
city'* largest plant.
Valves, by a strike. -
Red St a i FtytilszfJ
R o c k w el 1
as saying that Mitchel Air Force
Base may J^moved from the cen-
Itivision .ter of New York City's heavily*
completed a massive ~ expansion populated suburb of Nassau Coun-
and modernization program. The-
Longhorn Engineering Company,
manufacturers-of fertilizer plant
equipment, moved to its new
quartefs'tm League Street.
General Ttle-phoi
the Se-titInvest put
malic, dial exchange into service
in I> sember a- t-B'e 5ugit spot q
a -weeping, expat siup. of tele-
c-iikici in Sulphur
fibope fa
brings.
New Industries Started
Two row industrial facilities?
wore started , dunrig ' the year. ■
They were the Ike Clark dress ’
manufacturing plant, which is
scheduled to open* in".-January,
and the Sorth Texas Producers
Association milk plant, which is;
due to open this’ year.
Private building continued at a
highly active pace br other lines,
Vvith residetrUaJs^h-tr-jction iea<f-
: . e, Thi • I St.
James ( atholic Church was com-
pleted in ’December, aniF wiork is
progressing steadily on the nevv
Longino Clinic.
ty on- Lgng Island.
Residents in the area complain
they are endangered "By military
planes ~ With two jet fighter
crackups in the'past.few days.]
e Company ofj^ueilew is quoted as .telling a;
it*;new auto-; newspaper, the Garden City, Long j
Island, newspaper News day —;
f ' which telepohned him jn Tokyo — j
that the Air Force iV examining!
what substitute anangeemnt could
be made.
erated a lodge on Mud- Lake*? 40
mile* north of Kingston.,
Neighbors said she and Knapp
had been friends for 20 years.
Mrs. hides has been married’4
Ijiiies. At present she is married
to a member of a Ricks family of
New York, reputedly wealthy.
Her first marriage, to. Robert
Lee Taylor of Jamestown, N. Y.,
ended in divorce.
Her 2nd husband was the late
Edward O’Neil, a> former New
York, state policeman. He operat-,
ed a hotel in Memphis, N. Y.—a
Syracuse subPrk—at the time of
his death.
After O'Neil’s death
ried Frank Pearce, a
By LEO ANAVI
Washington, Dec. 31 ON—Holi-
day weeks seldom produce signifi-
cant events. * • —
_JThe call for a compromise on
atomic controls by Pope Pius the
12th has great importance, but, as
the Vatican emphasdre^gtfiw is a
job for political leaders. It would
pe a great'event indeed, thVjfcfeit-
est of all time, if they got togeth-
er jgnd agreed on'Toolproof meth-
ods to avoid an atomic conflict.
Meantime, the uneasy truce be-
tween east and west continues to
ho uneasy. There is no rosy glow
on the horixon, only in one~apot,
bn distant Malay*, did anything
happen that might cast a pleasant
shadow on the future.
It. happened at Baling. Malayan
Communist leader Chin Peng came
out of the jungle smiling, defeat-
ed and worn. He asked for tobac-
co, clo,thing and a. place in the sun
for the Malayan Communist' Par-
ty, He got ihe tobacco and the"
clothing, but rvo more. He ran
against T stone wall whenTio talk-
she mar-
former
ed to the chief minister of Malaya-
The 36-year-old Red /leader
came to Baling at the invitation
of the prime minister, who want-
ed to explain the terms-of an am-
nesty proposal made last Septem-
ber. Jhe Malayan official s&id
bluntly he was not offering to
negotiate a settlement, only offer-
ing amnesty to Communists who
wish to surrender.
The Reds launched a guerrilla
war in June, 1948. To protect the
peninsula rich in tin and rubber,
Britain declared a state of emer-
gency ami rushed new forces anil
raised an armybf police-end home
guards. The long struggle has
of *630,000 a
State Insurance
Examiners Named
Ip Court Action ‘
Austin, Dec. 31 (M — Another
defunct Texas insurance com-
pany is back in the news today
This time if** the General Amer-
ican Casualty Company of San
Antonio.
A suit for more than 6 million
dollar* was filed by the state yes-
terday against 4 state insurance
examiners and 45 officers of
the firm. The state iileges that
its own examiner* conspired with
the offieersjto defraud the pub-
lic. They say the defendants rep-
resented the firm as solvent when
it wasn’t. $—-
The company operated in Tex-
as, nine other states and Alaska
before it was- thrown into re.
Malaya Apparently Sulphur-Graphs.•.
Wins Against Reds
GOING TO Germany soon will
be Pvt. James A. Hale, son of Mr.
and Mrs. O. V. Hale, Sr., of Bra-
shear. James currently is spend-
ing a 30-day leave with his par-
ents.
I *»*»•»
Id^RlfNS PA RMERS Studying
the new type federal tax returns
required this year have been in-
vited to ask questions by Paul J.
Tiles, manager of the Paris So-
cial Security office. «A represen-
tative of the Paris office will be
in Sulphur Springs on Thursday,
Jan. 3, at the district courtroom,
beginning at 10 a. m.
AN UNEXPECTED reunion of
old friends took place here Fri-.
day afternoon as Mv. and Mrs.
Earl Knight of Tulsa and Mr. and
Mis. Fields Baldwin of Kansas
City arrived almost simultaneous-
ly for a visit with Mr. and Mrs.
F. W. Frailey. The Baldwins will
( be here for about a week. 'The
HEnights, who stopped Bere on a
trip home from Houston, left Fin-
day night All three families for-
mcrly were close friends in Ark-
Hageriy Scoffs
At Report Ike
To Quit Post
_J Key Wfst, Fla., Dec. 81-0»—
White House’News. Sec reta ry
James Hagerty scoffed today at
a published report that IPresident
Kiaet^ywcr • will resign to become
a television commentajtojr.
At a news eonfere
was told a TV coluin
Indianapolis Jimes had written
that a responsible source In New
‘Yorl^was predicting Eisenhower’s,
base for a TV network program
wofild be 'his GeUysbufg. I>a-»
farm. 1 ■ , I T'1 ■-.....
After listening to the report
Ilagertr- siiftpti'd and disclaimed
it. ‘ ..............-.....
^ce Hagerty
(list far the
LILLY THEATRES
Phone TU5-242I for
Program Information at
All Theatres
Mission
Sunday and Monday’
, SINCrlN* DAmCIn' SJAK^*
of those
^ CALICO DAYS U
ceiversKip last ye*r. 'The state
says money recovered in its suit
would be used to pay back the
creditors.
S t a t e insurance examiners
named in the suit are Larry W.
Blanc'hard and Robert Butler,
both Of Austin, William J. Noad
of Dallas and Lee L. Pfeffer-
korn of Caldwell County.
■ Charges have been made Jbat-
the insuiaswe Tgnipany gave
po-
Home of Nuns
Burns in Quebec
Nicolet, Quebec, Dec. 31 W1
A 7-hour blaze, believed by
lire to have been deliberately ^>t,
i destroyed the ancient, 5-story
mother house of the Grey Nuns
jin tire south shorJ Si U»i™v
Rivgr community of "Nicolst ’ ear-
j ly today. Damage was estimated ,
officially at *800,000. .1
Polled Chief Edouard Beaulac.j
1 who gave the damage estimate,,
said he expects to arrest at least j
\ one, maybe-two persons for ques- j
.... ,.r! tioning in connection with the
ARRIVING IN Sulphui Springs fjn>
mm
ansas City, Kas.
THE REVEREND and Mrs. D:
C. Jensen, Vickie Lee and Ron-
ald Lynn returned from a weeks
vacation In Missouri Friday. Mr.
Jensen is the pastor of Davis
Strct Baptist church here.
cost an'-equivalent
day, most of rt coming from the
pitefiCer foi the Philadelphia. Phi!^r1«^Vea*urv. At least 10,000; Attorney General John
7 ' ‘Sheppard has" suggested
Only in the pa^t year have the j
British-Malayan forces appeared ]
Satui day-fbt a visit were Dr. and
"Mrs. Robert Pitts. They are the
$135 to the Dallas man and that j aau^ R^bin^ifA’orih
the company alsq gave h.s wife ;DivU street Mrs. Pitts is -the.
former Martha RobTrisoh. Dr. nml-
Mrs. Pitts have just recently re-
, turned to the States from Fair- ;
j banks, Alaska, where they lived •
fbr .two years while hi1 was with,
! the U. S. Army. After their visit1
> ’ :yrt , .
jEANNE CRAIN GEORGE NADER
KITIY KALLEN BERIIAHR >
MAMIE VAN DOREN ■ KEIIH-ANOES
PAUL GILBERT. the Minwisumss
company als^ gave
a radio, all while tM Dallas man
was investigating the company.
They say Blanchard and Butler
were guests on a weekend deer
hunt at the ranch of a company
director.
The’ blaze started in the base-
ment urider an elevaterrThe,chief
said it Vas “incredible” tha^ a 5:28, 7:27.
should start there, ,
Feature Begins: 1 :30* 3:29,
Last Show 9:00.
British Towns
Oddly Named
HI-VUE
DRIVE-IN
the Nation«r';feague.! lives were lost,
lies -of
Pea:; e -died several years
ago.
criminal qharges may be brought ? offices,
in connection with another in-|
Ben )u.tt Dr.-and Mrs. Pitts will gq to;
that j Amarillo, where he plans t<> open
\
Young Farmers
(Continued”-Page One)
chairman, anq Ralph G. Fttnder-
. burk and Louis Chariton.
Publicity —j Goldsmith, chair? j membered
maTi, and’ Roger Charlton and G.
W. Gibbins.'. V • c
Auditing — Fra n c i s Pogue,
chairman, and L. D. Rhodes and
Auibert Stone,
Award—Elton Stewart, chair- ahead
man, and- Eugene Watson, and
ha? bven rise
Pleasantly Mild
(Continued from Page One)
However, two blue northers
; reached .icy tojgi r- into Ea-t-Tex-
a«. one of them coming -late in
.-March and wiping out Hopkins
I County's fruit -and nut crops.
] Coldest day of .the year cande
i,t? N- / ciiuv, Iiec. 16, when the
' mweury • piunge3 to a frigid 14
degree-.
I But the.norther' thal will he re-
by m-ort residents
Struck .«.< March 26,. with the
mercury .-kidding-to 21 cj.iv.March
27. The- one killed a!: green vege-
tation. '
Farmers of the county
t
;to have gotten the upped hlhd. It | ««*»«
investigation-
MRS. JGNA McCann left Sa*-
was a humbled Communist-chief
who talked to the Malayan auth-
orities. He sounded almost'"like a
man grasping for a straw. *
He .was told in no uncertain
terms that most of his Communist
followers would have to serve a
company
anty. ■ -
U.' S'. Tryst and Guar-
V ., -~ > -
Shepfwrd has sent letters
prosecuting attorneys in towns
where- the^fim’s 13 branch of-
fices
... ---------- ----- Ji\N.. ..
that of the collapse of the Waco u\ \v nigtA -by plane for Los
' " A^ te, Calif~ to visit her
j dauVAter, Mrs. E. C. ?Johns, Mr.
to John, and daughter, Gail.
t ) “
5NS.4 CHARLOTTE' Smith.
M4S
located. He said, “It! daughter of Mr. and Mrs. How-
jail sentence before they
d | Would app'ear that the persons
! be allowed in a free society ag)rip-
Then they would have tq'jjoid'1one
of the existing parties. The Ma-
layan authorities explained that
who sold, certified drafts — of
the company —- probably sold a
security in violation of the aot
and areTubject to criminal pros-
it associates communism with kill- j eeution.
3i, freqcenlfy , ,llrr-ntT ,nrlT,-T„|
veltmMr8n.be , b'b^inKuT— ''IBlWjfiiiliill-'
fteriptions and labor .helped pro* j!iab, and Fleiden atid >t ne,
vide. s.Veiai highly -worthwhile' • Kd^cationhl — Flipping, chair-
improvements ... • Ing 1 . .
A fine new Lnt.'e League'base- |.-un(j^
grow fair piodut-e. cr-ops,
and one of the. <ggest cotton
crops in recent, years.
- -EveiTrith g e'' r:'s tlldred, 1955
wa- it s’ do yea! and re-ident's are
looking forward to a -till better
Frankie Winfrev and
one in It*56.
The Yrfopjr Farmei? Voted to
lend. their aid in oiganizing ar.d
t airying otk-oo-fi tiie A'orthea-t
Texas Dairy Enow and the-North* i
eat Texas Livestock Show ir.
.■sulphur .Springs, *
They also pian to sp'-i..-vi-'-a.
Head-on Crash
ball paik w.as. built by this'sys-
tem, the-, ma.n runway and" taxi
strip at the municipal - airport
were paved, row :e..cm- equip-
ment was-.provided.'f»r the city-
fire department -and tie" uni-
forms. for the high Mhoob’'.band.
.......HcoptUl Air! Conditioned
I’dim.- .-ubimriptiofi* a!
.’ad.mak.&.flftwjMtv.thr badly r.eed-
rcd a.h cor.tijt W ing-ol BpiH
-Mt 1 ■ " . 'jZ '__- . . . a
1,, • ,' .K.:V-iovTSri efr- iwbw* fcfr thi^ ffpri^r must f roj-eevs poU'nttal iar
a:".' n ,f a • ,W 'Tar-, rye .-2uhnii.tted by April L 1956,
fur [ r*roduA'C
j ingsanfl acts of violepce and mur
I der.
; While no settlement- F- in sight
—Chir. Peng has gone back to'the
j jungle—it U ‘failIf' eviilvr.t that
■the guerrilla war in Malaya is on
j its last legs. The Communists «im- j
event; pjy_<.annot continue for very long.
They have lost the support of,
many of the -natives who once be-,'
friended them.
They lost, that support for two
reasons: their own edees*#*, and
. thes-jfm.-t that. Great Britain has !
^'^ffoted *eIf-gfaveenment to the r.a- ;
, tlve’?”"TWs will conic ibqut in
yeai or so. The Malayans already
He said he thought it would
aid SASmith'-ltft Dallas by plane
Saturday to spent the New Years
Eve holidays with her aunt, Mrs.
C. Y Mills and famity Iff the Val-I
ley. rib’ "'
IN JIT. Vernon Saturday to at-
-London -.P — The Biitish-gco
erhment published ..today a hook -
which reveals that its oitfcem live,
in such places as Gxeat .Sr.orning.
and Fondly Set.
The book is the 1,-377-page in-
dex of place names in England
aim Wales, p, mto.i by the station-
ery qffice for the first time .m ;
31 yeais. ..............
The fii*t "entry is the,town, of
Abbas a ri d Teinplqcomhe -one
place. -And that la -1 plare in the
volume—-65,000 names latet i-
Zodch. -
In between aic such piaees a-
liiggcry, Small D-dc,'“-:Hui.giy
Bentley, Spitew inter, Bix' B.rftid
and Bix Gibwei , A'ffqu«I»tM with
Sunday and Monday
coe.vw wuv»n ^
nMMk
F ■
be possible to proceed with grand, tend a tea given by Mist. Jimmie. Turners Puddle, %Mump*y Wiitp!
jury investigations without wait- ’Kate Terry, at her lovely home Square, Mouse Sweet. Little- bon-
ing for the completion of ,,var- \ “Terry Haven” were Mrs. S. Byrd- fort, Splatt ahd Spi.itt,
ious state audits now being made Longino, Mjri Stone Risinger, ,
X I - - - '
jihTLEIGH Ail
rtty GARROT y
(SnimaScOP^j
TtCHNICOtOR /
• a • a) event* in the check-
». • <>f - < hristianityd’v;
Dn .this day. tri
■Rio J a rtf'1 it i> w
f the Waco firm..
Omaha Claims
Biggest Market
For Livestocks.
Omaha, T — The Livestock
Foundjjyqfi of -Omaha claimed
M.is. Stnne Risinger,
Mrs. Charles" F. Ashcroft, Mrs. J.
I Frank Lewis, Mrs. Earl M. Jones
and Mrs: Hodge Sellers.
A RESIDENT' of Sulphur-
Springs has jye.en booked in city,
.court for running over a fire host*.
The alleged offense occurred Kn-
duy night wlrile firemeft-Were com-
bating :fl»m<‘X“,at the Eddie Wake-
field residence on Main.
.(Ir
day
1531. the city hf
as estabriahed.
1735, i’aul Re-
Aggie Student
Found Slain
Young Farmer of Year Award tv'j ton crop.
(Continued from Tage One)
conuitir.!.; dujir.g nio.-t- of the year
and Ft !; ed product a heavy cut*
Lrkci:
'a.-ri? :*r this area
a tr. „th< cuga nation
i - ii.pai y, ■ the c6n-
h -I’.-.,' seiiing ram-
t t) e ! ur •:
nu".»'gi- --:!.c for t!,»
e nctr-n *.-f .-.phe iiew .
0 ay and State High--
plan
lava heeome ar. independent rnnn-
hcr of tin- British Commdhwealth,
like India. Pakistan aqd Ceylon.
Thei~"ri/ar. historic lesson- to...
Irt? gle*me?j from all, Unsr- Events
id Malaya prove that communism
can c beaten iorri: if adequate,
measure- a:* taker. It* worth
noting that the natives did not
eollai :ate in Icayaest until they
were told abi^Bt^df-government.
The rioccedipgs at Baling may
not gel the attention they deserve,
tiavt* takWv-QviT ^onu* iv<»runtfc-n^~ , . , . A HOL S TON o ( h^ufi'tA
functio; ■ The plan r^bav Ma™a> - that Omaha,j«d achieved h(,K>..wjth -ohuining money with
and
$500 bond.
aJute a farmV.r’ undei
FftJpkuis County.
,f age w i.-^f 'attained
year*;
anped
Nuin-
TEfT-.jng Farmers ai-o have
ptedgui to help Future Farmers,jthe (!«-;-•
The Cooper Darn
• >>c■-pitting the h-t of* the
y aiy» top ten. di'.vcdopnierttV'O'.vere
:TOj ec t's -of pote
reaching consequences. OrrC" was
ti e a ilhOiization ^y "cdrigre-• of
in point of total receipts
livestock slaughter?"
Said the Foundation; “Omaha's
lead over runner-up Chicago in
total receipts will be near 388,
009. The 1955 total on <,attJe' J manjs^Yhe band currently .is _*p-
t)am and Resdrvoii on
->.p< rate '\v7tE~TTi? i tabli. nment' ih<’ north west edge *f ITopkins
wa
the-; ing of
g | :<*gian
< ai, help vvith the welfare of
entire county.
c
Judge Owens
*
-U*-. V 1 <TTT7p< t-
Two iong ui*
■ dt-d Mev- kevciop-
t. ;<!)!' \Stiff*/
riebrd out the civ-,
')< fro: 1. 'Tfi J
v. i re a cbihptphrii-
iv i city -planrr
• ip-prorram and a
T7«ited Fund t;-
r-'iinjmUoji to con-
1 ii tie! tO . ! V c. to!
.fi.'ad-rai-tng yam-
i
ri pgioj#
triads n- thi
w-Watci. • -nt:
| affect-
'i.g Hop, ;iir i
tHiiity. i&the*
i i bagJN jtr-ervoir, which
tContinued from I'age___pi.e,
for Sulphur Springs
aft or’a full century of • haphazard
;! Folhiffunlty deveiogmgnt.*—.y-
-j*—Other di^’elopments which fig-,
oi> r -.r. the pFeliminarv list pre-
paied-from a review 'of the year's
i*r.-w-spap<-r i -.suc.-, were the. open
the ctedit side of the,ledger these
days must qualify a-, a meaning-
ful «;vi r.tri......... ......
•nmi-sioner
Satuiua'y
British Increase
Uaymori Stewart ingjjiUw’o n<-w elementaly schools, |Q
: in eue
ixiCof
utility - I'iiie*
that w o r k m e
would start Monday the task” of freeze
moving fence.-; and
!■■ of three heavy spring
which did widespread dam-
age. to vegetation, the appoint-;
.' the course of proposed FM.-j ment .of a hew. Chamber j
of Com-
2385, which is'
Sulphur Spu
- m,i tiyr. w ith FM 71
to exdj-nd
g* northwest
near
—^Stewart estimated that this
phase «,f the operation should bcmTYldennial,
merce manager a- d the successful
organization of the county's first
Unite,i -Fund.
The ten top new
1954 were- the Sulphur Springs
t h <■ Great Drouth,
London, Dec. 31 'ifr. — Britain
i has announced that it will give
! Jordan at least 9 million, 380-
j thousand dollars in loans aticT
i grants during the coming finari-.
;'torierTor:ffr>1‘1 10 '^velop it- economy.-
That ri an in< rea^ OTjnore than 2
million dollars over itba^oid'
calves, hogs and shec-p at Omaha
will exceed 6,760.001), which fig-
ure is nearly a million larger
than the 1954 total.”
The report did not list Chi-
cago figures. - 7
In its year-end report the
Foundation said also that Omaha
livestock slaughter in 1955 is
far ahead of any other U. S. De-
partment of Agriculture desig-
nated area.-As of December 17th,
the report said, Omaha cattle
slaughter was over that of Chi-
cago by nearly 30 per cent, Oma-
ha hog slaughter was ahead toy"
25 per cent and sheep slaughter
out in front by some 150 per
cent.
The foundation report listed
1955 Omaha totals of 2,436,000
cattle and calves, 3,375,000 hogs'
and 952,000 sheep.
BILL PATTERSON, son of
Mrs. Verna Patterson, §04 Hous-
ton St, is a member of the V
' j Corps' 84th Army Band in Ger
’ man^^The band c
pearing on the Armed Force
Radio show in Germany.
Hempstead, Dec. 31 -2fw - A
youth believed to he t :rc-\
student from the Par ama < a- ai
zone at Te\a- A. nft.dV'f' i .l!«-gr
.has been found <ie»,| or, a ,-oun-
tiy joad about five mi.'*; D- •
the Kouth Ce.iilrai 1 i ,a4 t«.uf
Hempstead^
—-4ffi,tt‘ii ,-aiii the jfouth ka,i
been- s top in the back of t-ne beau.
lie waU tentatively identified a
20-year-old Jan David Brodei ok.
u senior business administration
,;Y
da> in 1804, Haiti be*
independent nation.
. <ia;. ift 131)1,i the com-
o, .f \ .• -taiia lu-, e.--
, 1' •• !'':
- dav in 1913. the pa new-'
ii.c- was -taI-! 1st:ril in
■ i‘. 81 lit, ■ .. ’
da;, is, 1946. Polish »tu-
t• i a ;n ’ e l in W ;ii saw
•*i -in an'; Net/.i d<;uon-
d»j. Ipridr Jhe joint
•' fhe Fnrted Nations'
eu n Wa' hington.
cun bhort'-a-rrman who threw a! Kl Centro, Cal, Dec. 31 M — | J-ife is likt' 11 Kueh step
fock"through his kitchen window. Y>”'gs rolling in dough solved the,'-1" olle up 01 ll<>wnF
case of the inissEnjf $2QO,0(K).
to Hi*'i f*N
i d I.« K
Fori
I in
Wat
vernent Diet
•.mtiiwe-t
authorization
.j*
tr't,e other.....|i>
UJt> .
f'ontcol
ict,, w’hieh
iurt of the
r -
ouwodefrwithin’ * week or
■ A contract'Tot* the , oirsl-l ucllon
of this rokd. has altiriafly; ljeo*
lAnv, bidder fo;' the project
J. McLiughiin of Bryan. He
pqsted* a bid -of. $251,715 for
grading, .structure
along the 9.5 miles of the' new (‘merce
Agricultui'a! Achievejjier.tj My*- ■ i
toy Auto Ciaril • Victim, Public -
< Announcements
Tin-, Daily Ne ws-Telegram is au-
"■ thfenzed ' ► jiuiouncc the, fallow-
ing for i li-i twin,"-'SOhjcrt to tjie
action of ihr-^ltcmOciatir i piima-
....................-...............;.................:......3?.........'J'--
For' Sheriff: '
MI LTt t'N-J—(71 LIT
A WALTER P. JOHNSON
. JL J. (Ray) MORGAN
.........J.. L tbwf HR Y( K • • ,
( H**-4*y« >■**♦>»» t ,
For frnnniiiioscr, Pr*c, 3i
LEX 1TTK
, JO*l«-ly.n I
JEJfSF L. WATERS
For C*»*«r Atlorooyi .
ARTIE STEPHENS
Free. )i
AMOX
inavi s. eoiu.se.
increased Briti.-h contribu.
lion ^ t'u> A'J'to ' 'a'h ' " um* - rur-[,c Ltion appears designed to strength-
£). rSi-TMessrs » w*.*.**? -v
1 Nnv First' Baplirt Church, Grand Uvw‘- U;' tount,tei-
Jury4; Probe of Teen-Age Burg-
Rockwell as the speaRef. .
“ Lubbock Students
Believe in Work
tw«, chuntiiei, relation-
ships which have been bothei e<
by rioting lavt week which
Baghdad
a in
Lkf!
NOTICE
We Will Be Open for Business Both
-l . ’ ....... ;r
*■ •
■ , i Sunday and Monriay, -
1 ^ i ” ■.
January Jrit and 2nd.
Sellers Cafeteria
204 Church Street
Dial i 5-335$
Part sponsored by
TO- M,i,h Foreign Off,,-
Lubbock, TeXu«, 08 — Banded
together under the name of Stu-
vdehf Enterprises, a greuip of stu-
ents at Texas Tech have put
orking - your - wgy - through-
refused to comment officially on
the collapse of the plans for Jord-
an to join the-^Baghdad Pact. But
diplomats in London'"'and Wash-
ington have said the British ac-
tion was taken against the advice
Of the’' U. S. State Department.
Eg.Vpt, Saudi Araftia arid Syria all
are opposed to th* Baghdad alii-
ance, which includes in .it* mem-
bership, besides Britain, Iraq,
Iran, Turkey and Pakistan. Rus-
sia, of courge, opposes the Bagh-
dad Pact, too. . •
-..............................¥-~.....
•• you dliwk and1 WaBt"t<qr--"
that’s your business.
If you drink and want to quit,
that’s our buxines*.
Meeting Mon. and Fri, 8 p. m.
8vei “WofforA’g Garage
ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS
Phone 6-4044
To hoiph owners, offices, hotels,
store* ahd -other! bhsiTTCsses .Jjury
offer eveiythiflg ffprS spotles*
window washing to expert carpet
cleaning. Satisfaction is guaran-
teed.
•‘We have trucks and the nec-
essary equipment and experience
hrfve',’’ say*
Chuck Puschnig-,- manager of the
organization.
Kate*- .are reduced for . work
that can be done after 6 p.m>-*af*
ter classes. They also go in for
early-morning chores, such as
1 * -| i^i *i inaaia* ifi si^fiiax , ...,.
< H url ink ilon iit.*7wn w iritivywn.
Organised several years ago and
widely used by buainess
fhe organization even has a mot-
fhe organization even ha* a mot-
to: “We7furnish everything but
---
- f '•
Shotgun Blast
Fired in Strike
Lima, Ohio, pec. 31 — Pol-’
ice, today .said a man Who re-
turned to work at the struck
Westing-house Electric Corpora-
tion plant in Lima fired a shot-
student from the ( anal Zone.
Police said a plastic bag bear-
ing the lettering “Aggie” wa
found near the body. A spokes-
man at A. & M. College said'the
murdered y o u t li ’ s description
matched, that of the A. and M.
student.
Dogs Solve Case
Of Missing Dough
Ten mi: ag-, luday, Inc fust
'ju-.r i treaty-uf .World War 2 wa*
-taiit-d tiy Britain, India and
Siam. It ended the state .of. war
proclaimed by Siam against Brit-
ain i.i 1312.
Five yeai* ago today. Commu-
nist force, ift Korea bfoke
fflroogh t!tc-right flunk, of the
-F S. 8th Army ’ northeast of
| Seoul.
! One year ago today,~ttie Senate-
Foreign Relut.un* t'ommRtec 1--
. sued a report .-aying (here wa*
j widespread |inpu!j%r antagdhiiOn
—j-toward the (’ommuni-t regime in
; Hungary.
■I* Thought for Today
R. Wv - Winks of____Lima told
police—It**—grabber h,H~ shotgun i, in non-negotiable
and fired at the retreating ftg- ’........'1 ,____ . . -
urc of a man after his kitchen
window was smashed last night.
The man fled.
The Westinghouse plant is one
of several struck October 17th .in
a wagw and length of contract ,______ ,,.
dispute with the "IHlernationaFc^Jt. fu
Union of ^Electrical Workers.
In -another rock-throning ease,
■leaded
rges of
Charles Wye'r, of Lidiay p
guilty today to three chary
malicio usri'e'strUilian-.-ef—PrfrI > • ‘ r*"
ty. He Was*»entenced to 30 days
in the workhqu.se for throwing
rocks through windows of three
homes occupied by Westinghouse
employes who returned to their
jobs. —
( while enroute from a hank in El
Centro tq Los Angeles, by air.1
No clues were* found immed-;
iately. Then a tracer was put on
other shipments on the plane. ]
The mystery was solved with the
envelope of
checks had fallen into a crate
containing dogs. n .
The pups ,chewed up the checks
Portuguese Say
Armed Group
Invades Goa
Dionne Family
Makes Peace
Callander, Ontario, Dec. 31 MPI
—Two of the Dionne quintuplets,
Cecile and Yvonne, took the train
back , to Montreal today" after
•pending Ism than one day wRh
their parents in Callandeir.
Lisbon, Portugal, Dec. 31 kR -f-
A Portuguese announcement says
an armijd group crossed the bor-
der of Goa from India and thrtov
and 'used the paper for bedding! hand grenades toto u crowd at-
' |iteraiiy rolling in dough.
ied them to yesterday’s family
houses, peace conference — Annette — is
k few days more. The
hq* skid that a jni*-
^ A:lf ‘ *’
■£?r.W h
£■ 7s pF
■
Today in History
i By Associated Press
Today is January first, the first
dey (if 1956. There are 365 day*
left In the year.
Highlight in History
On this day in 1863, Abraham
Lincoln signed th,e historic eman-
cipation proclamation. To the
grobp of nicn gathered around |is
desk, President Lincoln aaitltM
, *T! never,’in my life,' felt ivjire
certain that I. was doing rigtit,
than I db in signing this p^ner.”
The pioclamation said)
person* held n slave*
The thw4 odst«r wrho laticompan. '.RrltMll,, JUIX - ItMi* ..Jtt dttltgilktpil, ^jdMUt>indbifdii^.
part of a state, the people where-
of ihaD then lie in rebellion
against- the United fttetes, shall
be then, thenceforward;~ Ind. for-
rjotn-ffyer, free.
; lieen ; /
An Englh4imafl>r described the
J,mI», -1 II.. «nl -0».
tending a religious ceremony, "
The announcement says there
were ,no casualties, and . the ,as,
sailanty were foreed to retreat
ndian territory. Another
is.said to‘have-attacked a
pattol at Chanel. No cas-
ualties Are reported.
*ait And See
Chicago, Dec. 31 (fl — The
Army1* menu planners may
soon add a-steak course tp the
field soldier’s ration.
It’ll be a dehydrated steak
which, while frozen, resemblfes
a wooden log 5 feel in diame-
ter and 2 inches long.
The experts though say that
I
portions,^ wad cooked, it smell*
like steak — and more I
tig), tastes (Ike steak.
Alee, it can be coeked up
with we more equipment than
a messkit, some water,
*****1 -
* %■
mm
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Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 1, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 1, 1956, newspaper, January 1, 1956; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth829314/m1/6/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.