The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 81, No. 267, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 27, 1959 Page: 1 of 20
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THJE EVENING NEWS AND THE MORNING TELEGRAM CONSOLIDATED IN ISIS. ABSORBED THE DAILY GAZETTE IN 1924.
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VOL. 81.—NO. 267.
SULPHUR SPRINGS, TEXAS, SUNDAY, SEPT. 27, 1953.
28 PAGES — 4 SECTIONS —5 CENTS MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS
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Eisenhower Discusses
Problems With Mr. K
Paving Operation Set
To Finish South Lane
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CHANGING SCENE—The huge Interstate 30 superhighway | in the foreground, from near the Rockdale road, west to a
bisecting Hopkins County is changing the appearance of the j point near the Mosley Corner grade separation. In the up-
country-side as construction programs progress. This aerial | per right hand corner is shown the Highway 19 interchange,
photograph shows a section of the Sulphur Springs bypass 1 (Staff Photo by Cody Greer).
Drug
Firms
Probed
Washington, Sept. 26 (A**-—A
Senate's anti-trust subcommit-
tee has subpoenaed financial
records of five large banks and
of 20 of the nation’s largest
drug manufacturers. An econ-
omist for t h e subcommittee,
John Blair, says the Senate
group wants the records be-
cause they show various fi-
nancial houses own an appre-
ciable share in two or more
competing drug firms.
Blair says Senator Estes
Kefauver of Tennessee—chair-
man of the monopoly subcom-
mittee—plans public hearings
on this later as part of an in-
vestigation into the high costs
of prescriptions. This investi-
gation start Nov.. 30th.
Blair said records of drug
company ownership had been
subpoenaed f r o m three large
New York City banks- Chase
Manhattan. Bankers Trust and
Morgan Guaranty Trust—and
that other large hanks involv-
ed will be identified later.
He said similar records of
ownership in drug firms also
are under subpoena from nu-
merous investment houses and
mutual funds in New York City
and Massachusetts. He added
these, too, would he made pub-
lic later.
★
Objects to Red
Denver, Sept. 26 l.f — A
doctor in Denver, Samuel
Golden, filed a suit for di-
vorce. He -told the judge he
got up one morning to find
his wife had poured red nsil
polish over his head while he
was sleeping.
RECORD BUDGET SOUGHT
Hopkins Cows
Show Results
Of Long Tests
The Dairy II e r d Improve-
ment Association’s 1958 sum-
mary was compared to the 1938
summary this week, and com-
parison points out that Hop-
Kins County is above the state
average increase in hutterfat
but below the state increase in
milk poundage produced.
The state average shows an
increase of 2.035 pounds of
milk and 11 pounds of hutter-
lat per c o w annually when
compared with the 1938 state
average.
Hookins County DHIA mem-
bers. over the same period of
time, show an increase of 878
(continued on page six)
Woman Draws
$40.50 Fine
Three persons were filed on
jn .lu-liee Court Saturday
morning.
A Sulphur Springs woman
pleaded guilty to a charge of
using abusive language a n d
was assessed a $40.50 fine by
Justice of the Peace Dewitt
Loyd.
A Dallas man and a Sulphur
Springs man both pleaded guil-
ty to charges of drunkenness
and each, was assessed a $22
fine.
All three persons were filed
on by members of the sheriff’s
department.
Band Students,
Parents Slate
Monday Meet
All beginner band students
and their parents are asked to
meet in the Sulphur Springs
High School auditorium for a
musical instrument display at
7 p.m. Monday, Walter Wil-
liams, hand director, announc-
ed Sunday.
Williams pointed out that
the beginner bund will consist
of from 65 to 70 sixth grade
students and 23 junior high
school students.
The meeting Monday night
is a result of a special music-
aptitude test in which 280 stu-
dents participated.
Those students showing mu-
sical talent, are the ones asked
to meet at the auditorium
Monday for the display.
Special arrangements have
been made with the educational
department of McKay Music
Company, Sulphur Springs, for
the display, and Williams will
be in hand to answer any ques-
tions and help the students and
their parents in seletcing in-
st ruments.
Kickoff Breakfast
To Open UF Drive
The 1959 Hopkins County' industrial employes.
United Fund campaign will be j Ritinger to Speak
launched at 7 a m. Moniiay with ; The Rev. Stone Risinger, pas-
a kickoff breakfast for two tor of the First Methodist
pace-setting sections. | Church, will he. the speaker for
They are the Advance Gifts j the kickoff breakfast. The two
I Division, headed bv H. C. Me- division chairman will outline
j Grede, and the Industrial I)i- campaign plans, and prospect
A paving operation that will
complete the south lane of the
ne\< Interstate 30 superhigh-
way from the Mosley corner
west of Sulphur Springs to
the start of the four-lane high-j
way east of Cumby will be ■
started this week by the Worth
Construction Company.
Work will begin at the
bridges west of Brashear and
proceed along the bypass route
north of that town. It. will
link directly the two complet-
ed sections of the south lane
now being used by traffic.
No paving has been done on
the north lane of the highway
in the Mosley corner-Cumby
underpass project section.
Glen Fry, senior resident en-
gineer here for the Texas High-
way Department, estimates the
Worth company has finished
vision, of which R. S. Plummer
is chairman.
The two groups, which ac-
count for a substantial share , f representing the Advance
of the UF total budget, will;
cards will be distributed among
the workers.
McGreiie said he expects from
55 to 60 persons at the break-
i begin their full solicitation fol-
lowing the morning meeting in j
Sellers Cafeteria.
Gifts Division. Each will be as-
signed seven prospect cards.
Declaring the success of the
I campaign will depend largely
O the r sections of the big j ()n worker attendance at the
(United Fund organization will j kickoff mectingr McGrcde urged
AUTt swinging into action a everyone in his divisibn to par-
week later.
A Record Budget
Confronting the workers in
the annual campaign is the task
of raising a record budget of
$29,900 to s u p p o r t the pr o-
grams of nine member agencies
through I960.
ti’cipate in the breakfast.
Plummer said he had called
all his Industrial Division team
captains and had been assured
of 100 per cent attendance.
Schedule I, Listed
J. W. Branscome, United
F u n d general chairman, said
Met!rede hopes to complete the campaign’s General Divis-
I the advanice gifts drive in a j ion is scheduled to t a k e the
Week. Plummer hpl scheduled [ field Oct. 5. It includes the
| a two weeks’ peri oft for his so- ' Government section under the
licitation of local industrial i leadership of O. C. Sewell, Jr.,
firms and their employe groups, j the School section under Dan
i The Industrial Division is | E. Bonner and the Independent
| entering its campaign with ad-1 section under Waire ( urrin.
vance subscriptions of $1,250 The County Division under
Top Officials
Discuss Crisis
Of Steel Strike
Washington, Sept. 26 W —
Top government officials con-
ferred today on the crisis caus-
ed by the break-off of negotia-
tions in the 74-day steel strike.
Labor Secretary Mitchell
r talked privately with Director
Joseph Finnegan of the Fed-
eral Mediation and Conciliation
Service.
They have made no comment
on the discussion. However, in-
dications mounted that they
may recommend that President
Eisenhower invoke the Taft-
Hartley law emergency provi-
sions.
This would start proceedings
that could lead ultimately to*
ending the strike by court order
for an 80-day injunction period.
Finnegan has been presiding
over New York negotiations
that have continued without
success since the s^tike start-
ed July 15 th.
| The striking steel workers
I union pulled out of the nego-
I tiations yesterday.
about 40 per cent of its pav-
ing requirements.
Work At Intersection
T. L. James, paving contract-
or for the Sulphur Springs by-
pass section of . Interstate 30,
is expected to start pouring
concrete this week to carry
the north lane slab through
the Mosley corner intersection.
Only about three days of
work will be required at this
point, including the paving of
entry ramps for the intersec-
tion. James has completed his
paving requirements at the east
end of the bypass to extend the
four iane highway through to
Rock Creek.
The College Street grade
separation is nearing*1 comple-
tion and is expected to be open-
ed to traffic Tft- about two
weeks.
The overpass has ben finish-
ed, and base material is now
being placed for the approach-
es.
Ahead on Loop 301
The concrete ttoor of the
overpass at Mosley corner is
being laid. The structure is es-
timate! as 40 per cent corn-
made by industrial companies
in response to preliminary mail
appeals.
The customary goal of one
I day’s pay will be sought from
Phil A. Sartin will go into ac-
tion a week later, followed by
the Negro Division under the
leadership of W. A. Carothers.
(Continued on Page Six)
WHO’S WHO IN SULPHUR SPRINGS SCHOOLS
Austin Elementary Lists
353 Pupils in 6 Grades
Twelve classes share 35.'! hie Jean Alexander, Jennie
I students in six grades at Austin j Louise Reddow, Nancy Rue
Elementary School, where Har-i Black, Kerry Bradford, George
vey H. Harrington is principal ' Chalupa, Emily Sue vCriyiford,
of the booming educational in- Mary Ruth Cranford, Tommy
! stitutiofi. Cross, Debra Dell Davis, Dan-
•‘We're off to a good start, iel Neal Edwards.
Everything is cunning fine,” Pamela Klemens, David Lee
! the popular principal reported Glenn, Billy Joe Hill, Jr., Dor-
| this week. . thy Ann Hill, Rebecca Leigh
Teachers at school in- Hodges, Barbara Ann Jones,
dude Mrs. Djxtfey -■ Allen and , Charles Hillary Limbaugh, Jim-
’ Mrs. Geraldine Shields, first j my. Luther Masters, Danny
Kgrade; Mrs. Sterling Beckham Gregg Miller, Kathryn Ladell
'and Mrs. Zoline Williamson, Owens, Linda Gail Panter.
I second grade; Mrs. 'Ben Dildy Sandra Gayle Perkins, Alice
and Mrs. L. C. Brwmley, third Pickett, Fred Michael Politick,
! grade; Mis. Charles Dawson Susan Ann Sellers, Willie Merle
and Mrs. Johnny Anglin, fourth Smith. Melinda Lou Starkey,
grade; Mrs. Bill Hargrave and John Otis Swatsell, Joel Dun
(Mrs. Bertha Faye Guthrie, fifth; Walls, George Ashcroft Wil-
i grade, and Harrington. Mis.1 liamson, Kathy Lynn Wright.
Kathryn James and E. L. First Grades Section B
Downs, sixth grade. Kathy Norris Bain, Michael
The first named teachers Ray Barnett, Melinda Boggs,
teach the A sections und the ! Gloria Elaine Cain, Vicki Renea
second the B groups. j Camper. Bobby Clem, Randy
Austin School serves the Oene Davis, Debra Joan Dixon,
southern section of S u I p h u r Jack Gafford, Deborah Ann
Springs. It is located on South! Gray, Monty Lee Harry.
Davis, Austin, Kyle and Bell- Mary Francis Hawk; Lou
view streets. Jane Huffstetler, Judy Ann
The pupils enrolled by grades Jackson, Robert Franklin Kim-
and sections include: brell, Roger Dale Kimbrell,
First Grade, Section A I John Wesley Lambert, Henry
Charles Michael Adair, Deb-i Laurel Loott, Timothy Clark
j McN’ish, Rondel Medders, Wan-
1 da M e d d e r s, Linda Joyce
Owens.
Oscar Dean Owens, Deeann
J Osborn, Melissa Payne, Brenda
Kay Phillips, Rebecca Jo Seals,
Robert Wayne Shelton, Jimmy
Earl Xbermpson, Brenda Diane
ai I Thermi
Torlfpkins, Tommy Leon Wood,
Cynthia Ann Wright.
Second Grade, Section A
Buck Booker, \V. A. C annon,
Jr., James Mark Edge, Gary
William Forney, James Gary
Jones, Bobby Montgomery, I’hi!
Sartin, Roger Sewell, Bobby
Weddle. Don Allen Worsham.
Frank Wright, Connie Jean
Brown, Jena Jean Foster,
Sue Nan Gober, Linda Gale
Hall, Sarah Harley, Sharilyn
Hill, Cynthia Johnson, Sharon-
Massingill, Linda Joyce Med-
ders, Elizabeth Phillips, Re-
becca Ragsdale, Ruth A n n
V erne r, Charlotte \ ititow,
Donna Price.
Second Grade, Section B
Frankie Anderson, Cathy
Andrus, Ray Banks, Gilda Qnn,
Sue Chapman, Peggy' Chalupa,
Leonard Courson, \Ponna Dee
Davis, B. C. Green,' Rickey
Grubbs, David Holder, JcMry
Jackson, Garry Jordan.
(Continued on Page Six)
Little Change
n Weather
xpecied Here
Little change in prevailing
weather conditions is forecast
for Sunday as far as the Sul-
phur Springs area is concerned.
Rain conditions which have
drenched some parts of Texas
were moving steadily eastward
Saturday, with downpours to
2.00 inches reported in Missis-
sippi.
Sulphur Springs has receiv-
ed only .26 inch of moisture
from the general wet spell. This
brings the city’s total for Sep-
tember to 1.10 inches and that
for the year to 31.43 inches.
Ralph Hill, local weather ob-
server, gauged .60 inch of rain
at his farm southwest of the
city. He reported heavy rain at
Brashear and west of Sulphur
Springs.
Saturday’s high temperature
here was near 90 degrees. The
early morning low was 73 de-
grees and Friday’s high 85.
Five Dairymen
Receive DHIA
Certificates
Five Hopkir.« County dairy-
men have received Dairy Herd
Improvement Association cer-
tificates of production for out-
standing cows.
'I he certificates are awarded
to all cows which produce 450
pounds or more of butterfat at
the completion of the cow’s lac-
tation period.
Nine Hopkins County cows
were awarded th)e certificates.
-- Four cows in the B. L. An-
derson & Sons herd were
awarded certificates. One cow
hutterfat produeti o n totaled
5 u; pounds and the remaining
three were 568, 542 anil 503
pounds.
Two cows in the J. \V. Ar-
iK Id herd weie awarded cer-
tificates. One cow’s production
totaled t)3b pound of butterfat
wlii’e the ,ecoru totaled 467
pounds.
D. A. Connally and Sons
had one cow which produced
579 pounds of butterfat, and
L. M. Braziel had o n e cow
which produced 465 pounds of
butterfat.
The certificates were pre-
sented by the Department of
Dairy Science of A&M College.
plete.
Delivery of crushed stone
base material for the new Loop
301 highway around the north-
west side of Sulphur Springs is
expected to begin in the near
future. The stone will come
from Kaufman County. Haul-
ing of sandy soil for the road
has been completed.
A new Hopkins County high-
way that is nearing the com-
pletion is the extension of F-M
270 north of Sulphur Bluff.
Base installation is a 1 m o s t
finished and application of the
asphalt sufacing is expected
to start this week.
Ceylon Installs
New Minister
After Death
Solomon Bandaranaike died of
bullet wounds suffered at the
hands of a fanatic assassin.
The new premier is former
Education Minister Wijayan-
anda Dahanayake, a 57-year-
old politician whose past poli-
cies have ranged the spectrum
from revolutionary red to con-
servative blue.
His most recent exploit was
to force the resignation of
Marxist ministers of food and
industries from the cabinet.
The 60-tyear-old Bandaran-
akie was on the eve of a state
visit to the United States when j
the assassin’s bullets cut him
down Only a few months ago i ,, , , ,
, , , • , , . , . . Go t t v s b u r g correspondents
he had termed America Asia s | L , / _ .......
best friend.
Doctors ope rated on the
wounded premier for
in an effort to save his life
Even though they did succeed
in removing the three bullets,
the frail champion of Asian
neutralism failed to survive.
On his deathbed, Bandaran-
aike forgave his killer, a pro-
fessed Buddhist medical monk.
A state of emergency has
clarified.
WEATHER
EAST AND SOUTH CENTRA!*
T K X A S Considerable . cIoudine»A
j through Sunday with widely scattered ■
I thundi ishc wers. No imiu rtant temper-
I aturt chanaea.
NORTH CENTRAL TEXAS Partly!
cloudy through Sunday.
NORTHWEST AND SOUTHWEST j
I Partly cloudy throuRh Sunday. Cooler j
most sections toniyrht.
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Drunk Driver
Fined $100
A Hopkins County man
pleaded guilty in County Court
Friday afternoon to charges of
driving while under the influ-
ence of intoxicants and was
fined and sentenced by Judge
W. B. Kitts.
The man was fined $100 and
court costs, which totaled
$135.30, was sentenced to
three days in county jail and
had his driver’s license sus-
pended for six months.
He was filed on earlier in
the w<eek by County Attorney
A i tie Stephens following a
| complaint by the sheriff de-
i part went.
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FUTURE FARMER SWEETHEARTS—These two pretty girls, Sharon St. Clair and Betty
Stubbs, h«a_fi?en chosen as sweethearts 0i he Sulphur Springs chapter of ^e future
Farmers of America. Sharon is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. lrl St- CU”’ ‘ uj£h
Springs, and Betty is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Allen Stubbs, Route 4. (.tuff Photo
by Cody.. Greer).
.
- I
i Gettysburg. Sept. 26
(AP) — President Eisen-
| bower and Soviet Premier
Khrushchev dis cussed
Berlin and German prob-
| lems and disarmament to-
I flay at the President's mountain
rXadge,,,&t, Camp David, Md.
White Boilse News Secretary
James Hagerty toid newsmen
the talks were, “Frank, inten-
sive, exploratory.”
He described the tone of the
meeting as good.
The two leaders also spent
more than two hours aione with
an interpreter in private con-
versation.
This talk presumably cover-
ed a large number of topics not
immediately made known to
their advisers.
In the course of the private
talks the two leaders left the
sun room of Aspen Lodge, visit-
ed the bowling alley in the
camp recreation center and
waiked about the grounds for
about a mile and a half.
Khrushchev had asked to see
a bowling alley. He and Eisen-
hower watched while a Navy
man, Yeoman 2nd Class John
Halferty of Fennimore, Wis.,
bowled a top-notch 218-point
game. Halferty’s scorecard was
signed by Eisenhower and
I Khrushchev who congratulated
Colombo, Ceylon, Sept. 26 him
_ Ceylon installed a new j w h a t particularly caught
prime minister today just a I Khrushchev’s interest, however,
few' hours after ( hief of State j vvas not So much the game as
it was the operation of the au-
tomatic pin-setting machine.
Eisenhower and Khrushchev
began their talks at breakfast
shortly after 8 a.m. About an
hour later they went into a big
meeting with their advisers
headed by Secretary of State
HertSr and Foreign Minister
Gromyko.
It was at this session that
Germany and the Berlin prob-
lem, were discussed and a start
made on the disarmament is-
sues.
Assistant Secretary of State
Andrew Bearding told a crowd-
ed roomful of reporters in the
headquarters:
“They definitely got quite
] deeply into the issues. This was
not a superficial discussion.
Bearding described the tone
of the taiks as both good and
encouraging.
Khi ushchev’s behavior during
the talks described as calm and
quiet with no display of tem-
j per at any point.
Hagerty said no “new pro-
, . ...... | jects” developed in the course
been proclaimed in Ceylon un- thp talks ah<Hlt Berlin and
til t h e situation is further
Germany. But he said the
Camp David meeting is not
aimed at producing a decision.
He gave every indication that
neithei side changed positions.
Associated Press diplomatic-
analyst John Hightower says
this meant, evidently, that
Khrushchev put directly to Ei-
senhower his argument that
Western occupation of Most
(continued on page six)
o
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Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 81, No. 267, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 27, 1959, newspaper, September 27, 1959; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth829993/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.