The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 83, No. 43, Ed. 1 Monday, February 20, 1961 Page: 1 of 6
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§v:,« i * I Sri PI Prl. • t PtB • i^PpiiS^PitaPj
‘ L# ».. £1
CALL 5-3141
Before 6 p. m. Week Day*
7:15 to 8;30 a. n. Sunday
tSJje Uatlif
THE EVENING NEWS aND THE MORNING TELEGRAM CONSOLIDATED IN 1915. ABSORBED THE DAILY GAZETTE IN 1924.
VOL. 83,—-NO. 43.
SULPHUR SPRINGS, TEXAS, MONDAY. FEB. 20, 1961.
6 PAGES — 6 CENTS
Weather Forecast
Cloudy
MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS
Heavy Snowfall
Covers Plains
Area of Texas
A major snowstorm engulfed much of West
I ex as Monday, while thundershowers, rain, drizzle
and fog prevailed over the rest of the Ntate. Wet!
(Iiillv weather returned to the Sulphur Springs area.
Heavy snow was reported over most of the South
I la ins and extended into the Guadalupe Pass section
of the Hie Bend country, 1
Kiwanis Club
Sets Benefit
Pancake Party
The Sulphur Springs Kiwanis
Club w ill hold its annual bene-j
fit pancake party all day
Wednesday at the Steak House
Cafe,
Proceeds will go to the or-
Ooly fair -kies in the state!
were at hi Paso, in the extreme,
western tip. j
Slow Clearing Seen
The U. S. Weather Bureau •
said the clearing process should
gradually extend eastward dur-i
lug the next 24 hours, ending!
the unsettled conditions,
Leyelland reported almost
P inches- of, new about noon.)
Morton and Guadalupe Pass 1
inches and Seminole more than;
3 inches. Heavy snow also fell!
at Lamesa, Semin o 1 e and |
Hobbs, N.M. Sleet and hail; . ... , ,, ,
,, , , , 1 gamzation s ’welfare fund,
were reported at some points -
Brief heavy rain and hail I ickets for the party are 75
showers hit Fort Worth this fents and lnrh,fle
, v , , u , bacon or sausage and milk or
m o i in n j£. Nacogdoches had ,.r rri . . . . ,
t . coffee. I hey may be obtained
Z.Z i inches of rain oveimirnt, . , .
„ ....., , .» , , .,r from any club member.
Serving will begin at 5 a. m.
. I ■ , | ■ , . ., and last until 8 n. m. Kiwan-
the hast fork ol the innitvi ,, x . *
D , m ‘ j tans will work in the restau-
H'ver and mi ( hamhers, Ilieh-1 ,jurinjf th(, rl dividing
land and . edar reeks was pre-| th(,h. talent into five shifta.
dieted by the Weather Bureau.
Hail Near City.
Ralph Hill, local weather ob-
server, reported rainfall in Sul-1
phvir Springs up to- 2 p.ni. as;
totaling .50 inch. The city’s
moisture record for February
i- now. 2.46 inches and that for
the year 5.35 inches.
Mr-. Robert Estes of the
P 1 • .i a u t Grove community
Cleveland 2.04 and Rusk 1.35.
Flooding of lowland' along
Criminal Cases
Delayed Again
In Local Court
Kennedy Proposes $5.7
Billion Education Aid
★
Floating School
Glascow, Scotland, Feb. 20
—A British shipping com-
pany has converted a ship
into a floating school, com-
plete with lecture rooms,
dormitories, and a swimming
pool.
The company will use it to
take school children on edu-
cational cruises.
Hearing of criminal cases in ttrv
north of Sulphur Springs said Eighth District Court: was post- \ pai.
huii covered the ground in that, poned again Monday due to the
area Sunday night. j absence of District Attorney
Temperatures remained in Cameron McKinney,
the lower 40’- here during the Diatrfct Judge L. L. Bow-
day follow mg an early morning man> jtI> „.ud McKinney had
iow leading O.f ..8 degrees, Sun-, been subpoenaed as a witness
da.r had a high temperature ofj )n federal court in par{s.
52 degrees and a morning low , . „ . ... ,
, i Judge Bow mart said he plans
" Hili reported the mid-day i a< ti,’n ?•" criminal docket
temperature MondaV as 42 de-i** *00n as l>os'slble'
grees, relative humidity as 100, •> udge Bowman authorized
per t ent and barometric pres-jpn® Adoption Monday and ap-
proved out-of-court settlements
in Several civil ca-es.
DUE HONORS—-Honorary Lone Star Farmer degrees will be
awarded to T. D. Harness (upper left), Gerald Prim
and Jim Andei-on (lower left), all of Sulphur Springs at
the Area VI convention in Texarkana Thursday. Kenneth
Hyde (lov rr right) will be recognized as the Area Star
Harness is a Hopkins County dairyman,' Prim is
vice president of Sulphur Springs State Bank and Anderson
is manager of. the Hopkins County Chamber of Commerce.
Hyde is a senior student, at Sulphur Springs High School.
MOD FUND BOOSTED—Weber Fouts, chairman of the Hop-
kins County March of Dimes campaign, is shown after ac-
cepting a check for $157.50 from Ray Edgette, president of
the Hopkins Connty bdwling organization. The cheek rep-
resented a percentage of funds collected in the tourney. *
(Staff Photo by Cody Greer).
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
sure as 30.U8 inches and fail-
Campaign Opens
For New Members
More Ahead
Temperature averaging 3 to
(i degrees below normal w erej
predicted for Northeast Texas
during the next five days by j
the Weather Bureau, A warm-1
mg. trend is. anticipated in the
middle of the week,with cool-!
er weather, again Friday or!
Saturday.
Precipitation is expected to ,\ government, communique
lie moderate to heavy, falling Venezuela says a small-scale
a- rain Monday night and military uprising was smashed
Tuesday and again' Thursday; ^ Caracas-t.ord a y. The report
Small-Scale
Revolt Smashed
In Venezuela
Caracas, Venezuela. Feb. 20
or Friday.
Former Head
Of Firm Held
aid the leader of the revolt,
Colonel -Jose Ramirez has been
! arrested. The government, said
the insurgents tried t*o seize
I the militaiy academy and a ra-
j dio station.
The r egi in e of President
A campaign aimed at obtain-t------------------------------—-— —
inis 100 new members for the m ( ~
.Cham be , of Commerce Was ^GOIUBIS bet
launched Monday morning by
the organization’s Membership
Committee at a kickoff break-
fast in the Flame Restaurant.
Randall Maddox and W. A.
Moore, captains of two eompet-j
ing six-man teams, were hosts
for the breakfast. Seventy-five adult leaders of
B. F. Ashcroft, chamber pres- j Hte SulpMir District are expet-l-
ident, reviewed s o m e of the attend a roundtable at
work being done by the organ-1 1 tonight at the American
ization. He particularly empha- !■Legion hall or, ( hureh Street,
size,, the chamber's activity in ! according to James Griffin.
t)u< agricultural field and said Tin meeting will be presided
every Grade A dairyman in the.! over by O t
Meet Tonight
At Legion Hall
Chamber Plans
Poster Contest
During March
All schools in Hopkins Coun-
ty are being invited to partici-
pate in the-Clean Up, Fix Up,
Paint Up Poster Contest being
sponsored by the Chamber of
Commerce' Civic Beautification
Committee during March.
Rules for the contest and
idea suggestions for use in post-
ers are being sent to all school
principals. Students will have
an open field for working out
their poster themes.
The posters will be djpplayed
in business house windows over
Sulphur Springs, Winning en- FIVE SEEK THREE POSTS
tries will be in the Chamber!
of Commerce window.
Deadline for submission of
the posters is March 10. Rib-
bons will be presented to the
first three entries in three di-
visions. One section will consist
of the first six grades -in the
ivarious schools, another the
j seventh through the ninth
grades and the third the
j tenth through the 12th grades.
I Judging will be completed and
: winning entries displayed by
! March 15,
! “We are encouraging stu-
| dents to participate in the post-
! er contest in order that they
may have a part in the Clean
Up campaign for the county,”
Mrs. Rich a r d Clement, com-
mittee chairman, said.
Municipal Election
Scheduled Tuesday
Washington, F e b. 20
(AP) — President Ken-
nedy proposed today a 5-
billion, 700-million dollar
aid to education program.
He said the program was
designed to set a new stand-
ard of excellence in education
available to all who are willing
and able to pursue it.
In a special message to con-
gress, the President called for:
— 3-year program of out-
right grants to the states for
use in building classrooms
and/or raising teachers’ sal-
aries. It would provide an av-
erage of $19.75 for each child
in average daily attendance in
public elemental y and second-
ary schools the first year, in-
creasing to an average of
$24.22 the 3rd year. Total cost:
2,3 billion dollars.
—A 5-year program of col-
lege scholarships, aver aging
$700 each with an additional
$250 to colleges and univer-
sities for each scholarship win-
ner enrolled. There would he
25.000 scholarships the first
year, 37,500 the 2nd, and
50.000 thereafter. Total cost:
577.5 million dollars.
—Continuatio of the 10-year-
old program Of long-term, low-
interest loans to colleges and
universities for dormitory con-
struction, at a rate of 250 mil
lion a yea rfor 5 years. Total
cost: $1.3 billion.
—Establishment of a similar
loan program for the construc-
tion of college classrooms, li-
braries. laboratories and other
academic facilities, at the rate
of 300 million a year for 5
(Continued on Page Six)
Chemist Tests
Water Samples
In Local Plant
An exceptionally quiet, gt-
| mosphere prevailed today over j
j Sulphur’Springs’ annual muni-.
! c-ipal election as preparations
j were completed for balloting
j on Tuesday. . j
j Voters will elect three city
\ commissioners from a field of
j five candidates.
Three present commissioners
Fewer Churches
Give Figures
On Attendance
The first in a series of,
weekly tests of -Sulphur Springs are blddin«‘ for fl>eir second
water were made' Saturday by S?°12*r terms' , The>’ iin Jee
In another field of activity' Leon Holbert of Wvlie, chief ” • '' oosiey, George Henry
for Clean Up Week, the com-1 chemist for the North Texas Ward and A- D- Jacobsen,
mittee is looking into numerous j Municipal Water District. Opposing them ate John
complaints received against Sul- Halbert i n»ovMimr thi-i Pa>'m‘ and Dr- N- Gafford.
Phur Springs streets being lit-1 J ,,£!*»' Voti^ Wll! conducted
tered with debris thrown front , ... 1 - .... from 8 a. m. to 7 p. m. in the
cars. Paper cups, hamburger J™ the ’“"‘f Ml1* I front end of the city fire sta-
wrappers, napkins and straws (?°™’ 'val,‘r •,lant 8UPar; ! tion
are being particularly men- ,n ent . j Phil A. Sartin is serving as j U«Wrv
tinned. - ’ j He checked the water mm-1 election judge. * al ary
“We-would like to see the | ptw taken from the clearwoll , ________
chlorine
Betancourt has been the target
Sioux City, Iowa, Feb. 201 of several revolutionary at-
(jfl -The former president of tempts from both right and
the Northern Biochemical Cor-: left-—since he took office early
poration, Harold Kistner, Jr., in 1951). V
was arrested today at Sioux The government said today’s
City. His arrest came in con- uprising was put downwithin x“ui‘ -p’ ,
ncction with a federal grand 3.0 mimit.es. And the communi- 0 , * , ' Is . 11 I
jury investigation of the com- quo said the situation in the ’ .T" ' '1,1 ,V ", |
• • “ ,ii, i kins ( ountv I armors Market,
■any. t ■ country is .back to normal. •. , .
' • j • Nantes of 95 prospects were I
distributed to campaign, work-!
ers. T h e man signing up the f
-----, ------- . —....—......... .. ... L Spencer of Cora-i. .
t.ounty should he a member of mree, the uistrict commissioner.! ‘‘’onagers “1 our town take , Du bacteria, alga,
the a'wrn-v | ; more pride and refrain from ; content and alkalinity.
A. if momplfch rMke'" M™' ««««l «->»*•» -■'!
ments helpful to agriculture, practical ideas to use during jS '
Ashcroft mentioned the cham-; tho March unit gatherings.
per4s role in bnnutntr the Car* T,
nation Company and North I I)(“r‘ nl0,hers’ aiders,
Texas I'rociucers Association ^mm.Weemtm, cubmasters as-
clairv plants here, the North- i s,Stallt !l',".u'r' a n d. £'*P>erer
east Texas Dairy Show, the j reprost|gtatlve,x arc invited to
‘attend.
Irish Protest
U. S. Missiles
Holbert'
j was that a little more chlorine
i might be added, City Manager
| Carl Richie said M o n d a y.
j Chlorine content at the elear-
j well is testing .1 part per mil-
! lion.
Holbert took two gallons of
Proxmire Asks
Anti-Trust Act
Amendment
Listed church attendance in
Sulphur Springs dropped Sun-
day as the number of churches
turning in reports for the
World Wide Church Attendance
Movement declined.
Congregations repo r t e d by
20 churches totaled 3,018, as
compared to 3,308 shown by 23
churches the preceding Sun-
day and 2,475 by a similar num-
ber on Feb. 5.
Attendance for the individual
churches follows: Assembly of
God 76, Church of ‘God 71,
B a p t i s t 86, DSWT
Street Baptist 144, First Bap-
tist 868, Temple Baptist 70,
Central Baptist 171, North Lib-
erty Baptist 59, St. James Cath-
(Continued on Page Six)
FOLLOWS INSTRUCTIONS
IJ,'ri, " J ' ' ' '
Brave Lad
From
--- . Belfast, Northern Ireland, ica| ana|v,j..
¥|T-p a rtt| |Fh ; Feh. 20 0B — Unrest against ! _ ^
W r I rl p.lc the basing of American Polaris- _ _
M Am,*. IAU5 [armed submarines in Scotland Pgj* jJajTIPflPQ
NORTH HAST T'HXAB
largest amount, of new dues ra;n ,:"‘1 Hiuwgerahtwuw^w I day.
,rt,Jsr . > UJ uut’ j aittrnw u to,night anti Tueatiay morn- j . ,
rments will bts awarded a hat htir Grattunl t‘h«ring and little warm* | ‘"6
iby
I year’s dues will be -sought from
new individual menibers paying
$12 annually.
eggu ,i > , spread to Northern Ireland to-
first demonstration
j payments will lie awarded a hat : tnv. Gr»4uai rU-ariny ami little warm- In the first demonstration
KPnPIIPII - y Marsllall's' Collection of a Z 1r'7ul r.5ooi*ht.the country has seen against
Well
•: ’ ,7'\ .............. tiif.' cuuntry nas seen airainst
to 45. High 1 uesday 48 to 58. J , . . . ,
NORTH CENTRAL TEXAS Partly plans to base IHU'lear SUDS 111
cloudy and little warmer Tucmlay: Low j the Clyde, about a dozen bail-
tonight 3d to 44, High Im/sday. 48 to' . , . ,
58. i ner-wayinjr Ulstermen march-
NORTH WV.ST TEXAS
In Collision
With Truck
anti-
Wright, Clovis Pinion, IS. F. ! «h«nK
Phoenix, Ariz., Feb, 20 (Ah-—I back, “Okay, Daddy, 1 will.”
Wells come deep in Arizona. I It whs a tough job. The pipe
And* little-boys come brave, es- j lining the.deep well is only 1(5
p.ecially one 7-year-old named I inches in diameter—too nar-
Harry Stage. He's alive and j row for a man to be lowered, ,
listed in fair condition at Phoe-1 A steel cable the men tried j Ashcroft and Jim Anderson,
nix Hospital because he kept j to send down curled, as twisted ........... ~~
his head'and his courage and . steel will, and couldn’t be push-j T {mini* Phat*rtOCk
listened to bis father, led down to Harry. JLiIlJUUI Ullui IJviJ
Hun y’s father, Edsel, a well! Rancher Faubion suddenly . . ,
driller by trade, was talking j remembered another ranch 7 f 11gQ AOflinSl
miles away and a block and *
tackle and off he dashed. He "T* T1 1
came back with something even' ^,0111* rcODlG
more useful —-11 ail the lariats | "
from the neighboring ranch.
•Tied together, they made a
Damage estimated at $250
Was caused to. a 1959 Ford
driven bj .Curtis. Junior Loyd,
Attending the meeting were )• n(>hihwsht Texas ck*r «*>| ed to the U.S. consulate in Bel-
tr , ... ' .. ptsrtly uloufjy hih! warmer 1 tjct)d<iy. t. .
Hoyt uideon, l>an Hornier, Kan- u>w u n-ght ri to 35. High T««wd«y !lasl-
dall Maddox Joe Pearson, I’aul i CKNTK ,KXAS Xuw(. I jt followed two big
Linington. Ben Dickerson, ile.y d.nsiy m ,.n?tiy rkmciy »ml .Him-1 4 Olaris rallies in
Thomas Johnston, . Jess Orr,
Joe Whitworth, Harrison n-r<.TTlsi's ““ " ! The Irish demonstrators) tbo-ton Chevrolet truck driven
Stubbs, W. A. Moore, Pete | SOtlTHEAST tfaas
County Buys
New Automobile
For Sheriff
A 1961 Plymouth was pur-
chased by the county commis-
sioners court Monday for use
by the sheriff’s department.
Maddox Motor Company sub-
case in which 29 electrical man- j initted the lowest of the three
ufacturers and 44 company exv | bids received on the new car,
ecutivt - pleaded guilty -or no The firm hopes to make deiiv-
c on test to a n t i-trust charkes. ery this week.
Washington, Feb. 20 t.f> —
, , ... , . Democratic S en a t o r William
water back to Wylie for chem- Proxmire of Wisconsin offer-
ed legislation today under
: which persons convicted of anti-
trust violations would be barred
from bolding corporate office
for one year.
Proxmire aid the ni#isure
w as prompted by j: h e recent
They were charged with price
fixing and hid rigging.
Proxmire’s bill would tie an
Sheriff Paul Jones specified
a light green color for the new
patrol vehicle which will suo-
i urn,, so* ntrrh'f 1 rt» a • Lontfbn and 11.6 Foscue- Stieet, Saturday amendment to the Sherman! coed a jt959 Ford. Sheriff’s of
mwthwist » tas uTbo | &,|^fowf d“r,‘^ | #tW>.oon m collision with a Anti;Trust Act. . I beers have a 1961 .Ford.
........ . -Ciooijy to j handed a letter ’to the U.S. con-1 bv i>. > o Shields 510 Main
partly dimly lucsdsy. No important | ene).aj I • 1 1 ■ onu i, , «•«<»
with rancher Webb Faubiqn at,
the F aubion p 1 a c e about 25
miles west of Phoenix. Harry,
playing around, climbed a plat-
form and jumped on a piece of
plywood covering thiTTop of an
irrigation well. Down went the
plywood and Harry, all 250
feet to the bottom of the deep
well
Kennedy Urges
Boost in Taxes
Street, at the intersection of
North Jackson Stu-et and
Weaver Drive.
Patrolman E. L. Byrd, who
investigated,' s a i d Loyd's car
struck the rear of the truck.
TWO PILOTS KILLED
j Washington, Feb. 20 -
Faur persons’ were arrested Pret,i<lent Kennedy has propos-
ssrzxii'ss.
•hcdulc i t’rs !ilv,i eml'lo-vcs- Thc 1'unds
the end.
That went down to Harry, who
doubt
that ;
higher fine sc I
nedy set forth his views on the
social security program in com-
munications to Vice President
Lyndon Johnson, the Senate's |
presiding officer, a n d H^u>c
Speaker Sam Rayburn. The tax
Sheriff's Force
Stages Seven
Liqupr Raids
Johnson’s Private
Airplane Crashes
j would be used to increase nun- ■ boost proposed would be in ad-
‘IL, v ''**••** *. , , *• . • ...... «uuiu lit’ um’u hi uni gcim Him* "vw.'t
tihoyr found out later that [called out, “Daddy, I can hold I n? ^ . , ,. 8,0 " ^ ® cts" j imum benefits, and to allow I tlittow
jh:V; was hurt pretty badly—job to it,while you pull mo up.” I 8,v£ drw,k,n,?’ , , ’ , . : men reaching age 62 to claim the sa
to a recent
was hurt pretty badly—j on to it,while you puli me up.”l°‘T' »•* ' I men reaching age 62 to claim 1 the same amount f—
both l<\gx and hih pelvis broken. ' But 'Kdset Stage told his son, i , v'° v *1 * ' m,,r< * "! >0': benefits rather than wait until ter pf one per cent — which
But hB was conscious and hBj no, to get* the loop over his [ »>k' llrank ln a ffj andi^1rc‘* [ age 65. , was prosposed to finance health uct^!
could yell: “Daddy, get me out j shoulders and under both arm-,
of here.” j pits, and the little boy did. Up
Kdsel Stage answered, “Don’t lie came......and .off he went to
worryr -mn, aji d don't he the hospital, just 45 minutes
Beared. We’ll get you out. Just after his fall. As rancher Fau-
push against the sides of the
pipe so you don’t sink.
bion put it:
“He’s the bravest and luek-
Thu litt le boy tang uut j ic,;t boy in Arizona,
less collision, another uith be-j yg proposal for liberaliz*: insurance for persons 65 years
Austin. Feb, 20 — Vice
President J o h ffs o n's private
plane waslounci wrecked today
in a pasture near his Texas
ranch. The. pilot and co-pilot—
the only/ ones aboard the plane
.... ‘ ,.. , , —were both dead,
t jAarirttJp. in : Shcriit > officeisagged. 1,>-Tj,p plane disappeared la-t
AT one ouais! uor.r,,'a’‘i'’ 0,1 < ! ^tilptinr ntght on a 65-mile flight from
ichich ; "Sprifigs homes SaturdkV aftgy-- u^tjt0 the Johnson, ranch •
UK 1 near John-on City. The N rash
★
Unveiled
>\)\ • 1 >, near .ipnnsoji n. ity. mtiv™
liy* Pip * c n * i 9 L evidence occurred, in rtiuged'coun^-ylin'T
rifrgl.„«ir * \ \ it / t'VV Vtf i CU. Ml
ing drunk In' “ " d,the ] ing’s'o'c iTl' security benefits, [of ['or' olderi*ThV"tax in-1 fout<,(Wakia »>ngljF half piht ba(J WVathm
fourth with drunk in a ; president Kennedy says they i crease would gro into effect) -,.Ahi^ly was
public plhce. | will meet’social needs and give Jan. 1, 1953. Under the plan, j “n attic Lift
One motorist was'picked up I economic recovery impetus by j retired-or disableti worker
located in , / Vice Presidium Johnsoii was
at his ranch and directed, an
Sheriff Paul. Jmies daacrib-, all-night search-for the plane.
were
an hour in a 30-mil^ zone on of nearly 5-mijbon persttns tn i benefits incicased from $33 a ' c.vracucc to support a bootleg ,TciignV1 and t Hailes tt lliiunis,
Mam Struct,. | the iowiut iucoiuc troupa. IxeU- * lmmtk.Ui 443» ‘ Itluu^c. , both m Au.lui,
Darjeelin;, India, Feb. 20
■ T—Two Australian* have
tofft one of the veils from
the mysterious east.
-< For decades, it was the
local belief in Darjeeling
that a certain cave extended
40 miles through the Hima-
laya* toXifeet,____ /-_j.
i i .v, ' ' w i I 11 1 v V. v/ v ,v I 11 li ' w, j ' v ' a oi' t* .. ax * I vv . I 1 ’ _ ■ ^ . . . (
on a charge of driving 45 miles ! boosting the purchasing power j would have, human minimum j < d the discovery as insufficient I The pilots were Harold > The Australians entred the
iioiii in a j0-milc zone, on nmtrlu n,mitiii,n n,•*■.,,11- in i bpnefitsi iHeriiii(ruin .* • eviffem c to sunpoit a boptlcc. , 1 i-.crtW' nnd t h,t
cave last week and found it
1 to be only 50 feat deep.
r*
n
- T/o ■
i... i
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Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 83, No. 43, Ed. 1 Monday, February 20, 1961, newspaper, February 20, 1961; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth829498/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.