Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 42, Ed. 1 Monday, November 17, 1958 Page: 1 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Johnson County and Cleburne Area Newspapers and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Johnson County Historical Collective.
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5c DAILY
10c SUNDAY
ESTABLISHED 1904
54TH. YEAR, NO. 42
8 P
CLEBURNE, TEXAS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1958
1 1
Lusty Wind Storm
Violent Weathe
ff
s
Moves Into Texa
garage on the Rio Vista highway building.
Twisters,
10 Perish In
•“m
s
United Press In’ternational
Ln
g.da
►
-
d
Cleburne Feels
Skies over Cleburne remained
hours and the freshness
noon
Two airmen from James Con-
ding to police..
Two Arrested On Russia Calls
hospital last week after treatment
For Bans On
There have been rumors for
Jr., Margaret Whiting and Deb-
had sent peace feelers to the
wrought only Nationalist denials.
go to the Mount Sinai Hospital’s
Nation's Economic OutlookBright
them.
$50 and costs and sentenced to
on $1,000 bonds.
(See WEATHER page 7)
Tension Eases On
Berlin Blockade
con-
tion todav of 1959 cars left on the
plants would be able to operate
office
ation long enough Sunday to hold
: 333333
E
one of
to?
Weather
LAFF-A-DAY
I Z
g
—/y-—
R
coin-toss calls which will
in-
%V
Chrysler Force
Returns to Jobs
Highway Crash
in South Texas
Airmen Injured
In Auto Crash
Fined, Sentenced
On Drunk Charge
grees a year ago today.
Minimum temperature 51 de-
grees a year ago today.
Chiang Kai-shek government but bie Reynolds. Proceeds of. the
n the past such reports have fashion industries club event will
The strike, first in the auto in-
lustry’s history by white collar
tract at meetings scheduled later
today before returning to work.
A company spokesman said full
production would be resumed im-
mediately, however, because the
Peace Entreaty
TAIPEI, Formosa (UPI)—Vice Nationalist officials approached
President Chen Cheng said today by the Reds, but he added: •
playoff sites...Local calle]
luck last season...What’s tj
'this year? ...Will the JA
L
g:
8s
play the bi district game H
will if be reeled off at Al
Jail Fugitives
Return to Cells
WICHITA FALLS (UPI) -Four
tired, grimy fugitives went back
Lindsey was given a blood test
at Memorial hospital.
nearby farm.
A posse of 35 or 40 men flushed
the men out of woods a half mile
from the farmhouse of A. C. Po-
kony, a few miles southeast of
Wichita Falls, after firing five
warning shots over their heads.
were blown away.
Winds up to 80 miles an hour
hit the northwest section of Fort
Worth. They damaged seven pri-
vate planes at Meacham Field and
tore the roof from a building.
Sheriff’s deputies at Fort Worth
said the wind threw a big utility
pole across the railroad tracks
and ripped up trees by their roots.
One fell across busy University
south of Cleburne.
The 30 x 60 tile building was
old car.
But his smiles faded when the
as, 19, of Big Foot, Tex., undei
10-year sentence for armed rob-
bery.
The searchers found a rifle, with
10 or 12 rounds of ammunition
in a knapsack at the camp.
Member—Texas Press Association
Texas Daily Press League
Southern Newspaper Publishers
PUBLISHED AFTERNOON
DAILY AND SUNDAY
MORNING-PHONE Ml 5-244
Sunday
3 p.m......78
6 p.m......78
9 p.m......76
12 p.m......75
Maximum temperature 78 de-
grees in past 24 hours.
Minimum temperature 58 de-
grees in past 24 hours.
Maximum temperature 78 de-
Monday
3 a.m......75
6 a.m......75
9 a.m......76
12 Noon .... 61
F 4
To Fete Star,
Ulcer Better
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)—Comedian
Lusty Weather
The turbulent weather in Wes'
Texas nipped the Cleburne area
Burglars Loot
County Stores
Burglars struck five times in
two Johnson County towns Satur-
day night apparently looking for
money, but getting little.
CLEBURNE AND VICINITY -
Cooler and possible showers.
TEMPERATURES
A TRADE'S
A TRADE ..,
DONCASTER, England (UPD-
Automobile salesman Ted John-
son was pleased when a customer
were seriously injured when their
automobile crashed into the abut-
ment of the Santa Fe overpass
on Highway 81 at Alvarado early
=0
by Billie Smith Ball of Hurst.
Wet Pavement
three days in jail when he plead-
?d guilty in District Court this
morning to driving drunk.
His driving privileges were su-
upended for six months.
for a parliament that can only
rubber stamp Communist Party
decisions. Voters were marched
to the polls, given a ballot and
told to drop it in the box. There
was no yes or no and every vote
meant a vote for the Red regime.
Persons who did not vote were
warned they would find them-
selves in trouble. The Commu-
nists were expected to announce
another 99 per cent victory.
—The East German Commu-
nists were disclosed to have re-
By PROC
auto.
The Sunday accidents were at
Henderson and Field streets, at
Main and Poindexter streets and
Main and Shaffer streets.
At Henderson and Field, Ear-
nest Eugene Sanders, Cleburne.
Route 1, drove from a private
drive and was hit by an auto
driven by Phee Roser Layland,
708 West Lone Star street,' accor-
1-18
. -
aA
was the cause of the accident at
Main and Poindexter streets, ac-
cording to police.
Police said M. E. Warren of
Fort Worth, applied his auto’s
and Shaffer streets was due to
wet pavement.
Erwin Kemp Plunkett of Keene
was traveling south on Shaffer
street across the intersection and
David Dean Wilson of Arlington
was unable to stop his auto due
to the wet pavement, according
to police.
some sin
told authorities he was glad they
had been found. he said he was
so tired he could hardly walk.
The men shinnied down a rope
made of braided sheets from the
third floor of the Wichita County
jail before dawn Friday.
The other men were Tommy
Gene Smith, Wichita Falls, 19-
year-old ex-Marine, under a five-
year sentence for the knife-point
robbery of a woman in Wichita
Falls; Russel J. Bramstedt, San
gage in
ities."
“From my 30 years experience
combating the Chinese Commu-
nists I have learned that alter-
nate use of force and negotiation
has been their consistent strat-
egy-”
The Communists, in announcing
a cease fire for the Quemoy area
last September, proposed that di-
rect negotiations be opened be-
ween Peiping and Taipei. The
Nationalist reply was an emphatic
no. The Nationalists’ position was
that the Communists could never
be trusted and that negotiation
was therefore useless.
was an old one which alrea
been discussed at other Ea
conferences.
Foster was said to have
that the Soviet plan also
outside the scope of the I
conference. He added he
make a fuller reply at a
meeting.
The Soviet proposal wa
rented by Soviet Deputy 1
Minister Vasili V. Kuznet
he sixth formal session
conference.
It followed reports that I
viets might be ready-to 1
move in the nuclear baJ
8
DON USRY, who was
American end while wear
Black & Gold of Cleburn
menument. His release ws an
Charged With Red China Makes
Drunk Driving
economy.
The report forecast total spend-
ng of $52,300,000,000 on construc-
tion of all kinds in 1959, the first
ime such spending has passed
the 50-billion-dollar mark.
Even allowing for price in-
creases, this would be a new high
n amount as well as in cost of
construction. The predicted figure
is 3 per cent over the previous
peak of 1955 in construction vol-
ume.
Residential building and high-
ways will account for four-fifths
of the rise over 1958, the survey
said. It predicted work will begin
next year on 1,200,000 new homes
and apartments compared with
1,170,000 estimfated for this year.
Koffsky made his predictions
- went to sleep. They were travel-
ing south and the auto struck the
right side of the overpass.
workers, who were expected to
be back on the job by Tuesday
at the latest.
All Chrysler production had
been halted by the strike, which
began last Tuesday, because the
production workers refused to
cross picket lines set up by the
office workers at most of the
company’s plants.
The three - year contract fol-
lowed the general lines of an ear-
lier pact reached by the company
and the union covering Chrysler’s
65,000 production workers.
It included the same three per
cent annual improvement factor,
transfer of $25 of the worker’s
cost - of - living allowance to his
base pay, separation pay plan
with payments coming from a
supplemental unemployment ben-
efits (SUB) fund, and increases
in pensions, hospitalization and
surgical benefits and SUB.
leased an American tourist, are hoping for
George S. Milroy, 29, of Ann Ar- ‘
Belts City's Edge
Five employes of the Cie-Tex a total loss. Damage was done]
Trucking Co. escaped death or to two trucks from the falling!
serious injury when a sudden! building. One truck was inside]
wind of gale proportions caved the building and the other park-
in the south wall of the company’s, ed along the south wall of thej
and JOHN REEVES, popu
seball men with a host o
BURNE friends, dining w
ROLD WEBB at THE AC]
last night...The group had
an inspection trip of the loq
during Sunday afternoon. I
The CLEBURNE-LA VE
trict 9-AAA grid finale I
played at LA VEGA’S ST]
in WACO’S BELLMEADH
Hon Friday night...Local gi
Mg
adt $
. 3
-e
Milton F. Sanders was
after a fashion this morning
bringing in a brisk shower and
dropping I he temperature from
an unseasonal high to 58 degrees
which stirred the muggy at-
mosphere was wercome.
3
"4
8 33323g8
3 Re
Sunday night the announced West-
ern determination to hold the
threatened city by force has
averted a new blockade. He said.
“I do not believe that we are
about to have a dramatic devel-
opment.”
—The East German Commu-
nists forgot about the Berlin situ-
meg
ion reached agreement on a new
contract covering the company’s
office workers and technicians.
Although 61,000 employes were
idled by the strike, only 53,000
production workers returned to
work when the picket lines were
lifted. The 8,000 white collar
At least 13 persons were re-
ported injured: eight in the Wichi-
ta Falls area and five at San An-
gelo. None was reported killed.
North and west of the wind-
storms, in the Panhandle and
South Plains, snow covered the
ground and forecasters predicted
our inches by night.
At least two other twisters were
eported around Lawton, Okla.,
across the border from North Cen-
ral Texas.
Damage at Gainesville, hit at
3:50 a.m. by vicious winds, was
estimated as high as half a mil-
lion dollars. There was a report
>f a small tornado in the down-
‘own area of Gainesville.
it, or the vicious winds, dam-
iged the Hurley Motor Co. and
inderby Butane Co ..buildings in
Jainesville. Many plate glass
to the Wichita County jail late
An automobile that didn’t stop Sunday after two days of freedom
spent in a woods hideout on a
might file felony charges against chief delegate William C.
told the Russians their p
• -J
Diego, Calif., 22, facing a burglary
fined charge; and John Merrick Thom-
bor, Mich., whom they had
threatened to try as a “spy” be-
cause he photographed a victory
DETROIT (UPI) — Chrysler workers waited to ratify the
Corp, employes resumed produc- ' ' ' ' - - -
Jerry Lewis, released from the this morning.
Morris T. Francis Jr., 22, and
nally Air Force Base at Waco Drive, delaying traffic.
Blinding sheets of rain fell in
9 snhrirh of HOUSTON?.
Nobody injured
in 5 Weekend
Accidents Here
Nobody was injured in five ac-
cidents investigated by police here
Saturday afternoon and Sunday.
One accident Saturday was at
Main and Country Club road.
Martin K. Smith, 412 West Wil-
son street, was driving south on
Main street and Mittic Lansford
Worthy, 504 West Earl street, was
driving north on Main street.
Police said Mrs. Worthy tried
to make a left turn and Smith’s
auto hit the right side of her auto.
Another minor accident Satur-
day was in the 200 block of North
Main street.
Failed to See Light
Wayne Copeland, 109 Boone
street, was driving south on Main
street as was Nancy Kay Sowell,
215 Woodard avenue.
Police said Copeland was look-
ing down and did not see Miss
parts of Fort Worth; some sec-
ions of the city got no rain.
A possible tornado damaged a
school and gymnasium, a cotton
gin and other small buildings at
Gunter, in Grayson county, be-
tween Dallas and Sherman.
Damage in the Wichita Falls
area was estimated at $15,000. At
'east two funnels were reported
sighted, although there was some
doubt as to whether the funnels
or straight, violent winds caused
the damage.
The wind turned over trailers on
the Iowa Park highway, the Sey-
mour highway and in a trailer
ark near Sheppard Air Force
Base, injuring at least eight per-
sons, none seriously.
Mrs. Lahoma Shores, 31, and
her four-year-old son Tommy,
were hurt when the wind over-
urned their trailer on the Sey-
mour highway. A family of five
was injured at San Angelo when
the wind turned over a trailer in
the darkness.
Heavy damage was reported in
he northwestern part of Burkbur-
Chen today did not identify the program of services to the needy.
AGRICULTURE LAGS~
0".0
Z A. '
"ah '
One of the fugitive, Clifford H.
Police said the accident at Main Rosser, 35, a convicted murderer
Jake L. Lindsey, 48, was in
county jail today after he was
charged Saturday night with driv-
ing drunk.
Lindsey was arrested on North
Main street. City officers went to
the city limits when they were no-
tified by Burleson officers the au-
to was coming this way.
Officers stopped the auto after
following it and seeing it weave.
also underway here. Id
sources said Russia has in
it will allow U.S. observ
Soviet territory to police a
West nuclear ban if it r
"7
Hdpibe*8cag_ 9-3893
brakes to avoid hitting an auto-
Two business houses were bur- mobile and slid into one driven
agreed to pay $1,190 for a 3-year- assembly lines when white collar
workers went on strike last week.
Morals Charges
County Atty. Glyndon Hague to-
day was preparing morals char-
ges against a 39-year-old man af-
ter the man was arrested with
two teen-age boys, Sunday.
A 28-year-old man was also ar-
rested and Dist. Atty. Jim Fer-
guson was investigating the cases
of both men. Ferguson said he
e-m
/ -
o "7
",8x88885I
adminission that the Communists
again were unsuccessful in trying
to force the U.S. government to JACKETS get by ALDIN
will plav the winner of this
negotiate with them on equal NEDERLAND and BEAU
terms. I FRENCH, in the quarterfi
strong as hurricanes lash- ;
ed a vast area of West
and North Central Texas
today, damaging homes, gt 04
Those planning to attend includ-
several weeks the Communists ed George Burns, Sammy Davis
| (
• )
9
i (
-t t
! 1
g- .... . across the highway and off the
Sowell stop at a red light. Hisshoulder of the road.
auto hit the rear of the Sowell
workers, ended Sunday night temporarily without the
when negotiators for the company
and the United Auto Workers Un-
J: 2000002 32932333 ,
888838
6h
—
It also included a modification
“We discovered a new way to of the area-wide seniority plan in
make the kies behave We eluded in the production’s wbrk
I spank them.* er‘s pact.
The 28-year-old man has a pre- .
vious conviction on a morals char-
ge-
Officers arrested the first man
in an automobile at Boone and
Anglin street and the second man 1
, . . , i
at his home.
A number of lewd pictures was
confiscated at the home of the
nett, in the Wichita Falls area.
The wall of an automobile retail- first man. Both men were free
U U
_ . ■ J
The truck and trailer inside the I
building was what kept the em- F"
ployes from being injured. The o
roof caved in and was held offi
the men by the large truck. . —.1
The sudden wind did not touch:
the downtown area, but skirted bni
the south side. Damage was done M
to a barn on Gleason street near I
the south city limits.
Other damage was done to I
buildings on the Country Club ■
road southwest of Cleburne.
9 ~ #e
-- #455
Staff Photo by JIM
FOUR INJURED—Delmar Gillaspie, 1201 Sabine st
is shown in his auto as he waited for an ambulance
morning after a two auto collision four miles wes
Cleburne on Highway 67. Floyd Gillaspie, 1201 8]
street, was also injured. Most seriously injured J
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Perkins, 201 South Price ste
Hamilton. A bucket of white paint in the Gillaspie I
can be seen strewn over the seat of the automobi
low and dense during the pre- vindows were destroyed Many
■ - -« .arports and small outbuildings
customer offered a horse, a cart
and three pigs as a deposit.
“I was surprised but allowed
$140 for the horse and cart.”
Johnson said. “I couldn’t take the
pigs, however. They smell too
much.”
It was a good trade. Johnson
sold the horse and cart soon
afterwards for a $14 profit.
s
§ J!
4 /
I
BjU l.; *
Staff Photo by JIM WEST
parked inside. Five men inside the building scurried
for cover under the truck and were uninjured. The wind
was sudden and brief, bringing in a stiff shower and
cooling weather.
in a statement prepared for the
36th annual agricultural outlook
conference. The conference brings
together agriculture extension
workers from every state, Hawaii
and Puerto Rico for a five-day
meeting to discuss the national
md international economic out-
took, longtime agricultural trends
and the immediate outlook for
agriculture.
Welcoming the extension work-
rs, Secretary of Agriculture Ezra
Taft Benson said economic infor-
mation in the agricultural field is
the brick and mortar of sound
agricultural policy.
“People cannot build the sound
programs they need if they lack
facts in this vital area,” Benson
said. “Public policy in agriculture
is the reflection of millions on in-
dividual opinions.”
.55
d27,z...
45 i ah, g
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g."A aTa " B
. 4.22
70 •
g
d,
207 f
y
schools and radio towers.
Damage may total more ,h.‘
than a million dollars.
SAN ANGUSTINE, Tex. (UPI)
—Five adults and five children
were killed and another person
critically injured early today when
a pickup truck swerved into the
path of a crowded old - model
sedan on a curve eight miles north
of this deep East Texas town.
All nine persons in the eight or
nine year old sedan were killed in
the head-on crash on U.S. High-
way 96, while the only survivor
of the accident was the passen-
ger in the pickup truck driven by
Charles Aaron McClelland, about
33.
Lon Garner, manager of Percy
Garner & Sons Funeral Home
here identified the occupants of
the sedan as Ralph Lee Reed,
about 26, his wife and baby
daughter; his mother-in-law, Mrs.
Johnnie Mae McCollister, about
32, and four McCollister children.
Another man, identified as
James Rayson, about 28, also was
in the sedan,'but his relation to
the others was not immediately
known.
Garner said the survivor, Mau-
rice McClelland, about 38 or 38,
had been moved to Charity Hos-
pital in Shreveport. He suffered a
small fracture and other undeter-
mined injuries.
Garner said all of the victjms
were Negroe, who lived at Cen-
ter, Texas, 28 miles north of San
Augustine. He said the McClel-
land’s truck was traveling north
toward Center at the time of the
crash.
The wreck was discovered by
passers - by about 1:15 a.m. and
it was estimated it had happened
about one-half hour earlier.
Communist China has sent peace
feelers to Nationalist officials but
that the Nationalists have ignored
them.
Chen, who is also premier,
made the statement to the official
Central News Agency in confirm-
ing Manila and Hong Kong re-
ports the Pciping government has
tried to open peace talks.
“Neither the Chinese govern-
ment nor any individuals in it
have paid any attention to this
kind of Communist trick,” Cohen
said.
“This is not the first time the
Chinese Communists have done
to,” Chen said. “During the last
few years they often have writ-
ten letters or directed radio
broadcasts to officials in the Chi-
ese government or sent emis-
saries to Hong Kong and other
places to spread rumors or to en-
Communist Party organ Pravda
raised new questions today about
the Western position in Berlin,
but tension and the fear of a new
blockade cased at least for the
time being.
None believed the crisis was
over, and another test of whether
the Communists will try to im-
pose a new blockade will come
when the U.S. Army tries today
or Tuesday to run a new road
convoy through to Berlin. The
Communists refused Friday to let
three U.S. Army trucks leave
Berlin.
The situation remained so seri-
ous that President Eisenhower
was meeting today in Washington
with David K. E. Bruce, U.S. am-
bassador to West Germany.
The situation is expected to be
clarified when Soviet Premier Ni-
kita Khrushchev issues a new
statement on Berlin sometime in
the near future. In the meantime
Pravda accused the West of turn-
ing Berlin into a “powder keg”
and denied the Western assertion
their occupation was based on the
defeat of Nazi Germany rather
than the Potsdam agreement.
Despite the steady stream of
Communist propaganda, these de-
velopments indicated an easing of
the situation:
—West Berlin Mayor Willy
William F. Roush, 22, were treat-
ed at Memorial hospital. They
were transferred this morning to
the hospital at Carswell Air Force
Base at Fort Worth.
Roush was listed as critically
injured.
Highway patrolman Paul Busby
said Francis, driver of the auto
ulture Department official said
today all segments of the nation’s
economy except agriculture can
expect significant growth in 1959.
Nathan M. Koffsky, chief of the
department’s farm income branch
.aid the total U.S. wage and sal-
ify income probably will increase
substantially next year “although
some part of the increase may be
'ffset by some drop in farmers’
ncome from farming.”
Department economists have
forecast a drop of 5 to 10 per cent
in farm income during 1959.
In another economic signpost,
■he Commerce and Labor depart-
ments predicted building in the
United States will increase next
year to a new all-time high. The
construction industry often is re-
Atomic Hops
GENEVA (UPI)—Russia
called for a ban on flid
atomic and hydrogen bo
over the territory of other
and the high seas.
Conference sources said
their one-ticket elections writing, in from WEST
where he is a starting i
rugged ARMY, to say I
the homefolks...BOBBY Bi
-mv- 3
beh J
i k a 0 "
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■
_
A DOG'S LIFE?—The wardrobe of a well- coat, leather winter coat, and a mink
dressed gentledog is demonstrated by coat (for which you can pay as much
Monsieur Boutique in his Cleveland, Ohio, as $1000 for the standard sized poodle -
hotel suite. First, there's the warm turtle- Boutique is a toy poodle). At left is a
neck sweater he's wearing. There are the luscious nylon bone impregnated with the
royal blue velvet lounging robe trimmed scent of ham. (NEA Telephoto)
j with mink cuffs and collar, a plaid rain-
-. --—T—g,- I
— - T
Plus Snow 1 _
' JS—8-.. u
• -
Tornadoes and winds as M 035
Ba ‘ dp
d‘•
.Wk _
• he’
Ed, 4
Nb
J i
05
,/
glarized at Godley and three at
Joshua.
At Godley, the Russell Turner
Service Station was entered and
approximately $25 taken from
the cash drawer. The back door
of the station was broken open.
An attempted entry was made
at the Reynolds Hardware Store
at Godley. Nothing was taken
from the store.
W. A. Kelly’s Store, Wares Var-
iety Store and Graves & Sons
Service Station and Grocery were
entered at Joshua.
An undetermined amount of
shoes and clothing was taken
from Kelly’s and a shaving kit
was taken from Ware’s Variety
Store.
Nothing was taken from Graves
& Sons, but the store was ran-
sacked.
A window was broken and the
’ inside latch unlocked on the front
door of all three of the Joshua
stores.
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Lona
WASHINGTON (UPI—An Agri- garded as a bellwether of the
BERLIN (UPI) — The Soviet Brandt said in a radio address similar permission from th
)‘
)j
ir "
g
.-( -don
other nefarious activ- for an ulcer, will be honored
Tuesday at a charity ball.
A A A A
AA
(UPI) United Press Telephoto Pictures
(CP) Central Press Features
Full Leased Teletypesetter Wire Report of the United Press International, — World's Greatest News Agency (KF) King Feature
COLLAPSED BUILDING — A burst of gale velocity
wind barreled into this garage of the Cie-Tex Trucking
Co. on Rio Vista highway this morning,. sending the
walls tumbling and the roof crashing down on a truck
---Q
Q 20
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 42, Ed. 1 Monday, November 17, 1958, newspaper, November 17, 1958; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1538229/m1/1/?q=waco+tornado: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.