Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 72, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 23, 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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CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW
PUBLISHED AFTERNOON
DAILY AND SUNDAY
MORNING—PHONE Ml 5-2441
8 PASE:
CLEBURNE, TEXAS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1958
Can Ike Level Budget
Atlas Proves
Ty
Another Point
A
()
Without Tax Increase?!
-**.
-
1
Think So. ..
*
! . |
A
f-
%
Holy City
VENTURA, Calif. (UPI)—This
83333332222
3332233
g
9
338
Four Die; 150 Injured
ssss
& 8
+
832333333888
888: 33332233333388
In Butane Truck Blast
, : 8
s
33
commodating 500 persons, have
Sieved to have injured anyone, but
receipts.
at midnight, Jan. 1.
Capt. Williams said he had been I stopped four people running down
shall Jim Cousineau. And Terry
Plane Lost
In Alaska
windows all
town and de-
over
tures. But by 8 a.m., the fog had
ing by the small window at the
Christi 60.
Air Force officials at-Elmen-
dorf Air Force Base here declared Johnson of San Antonio, told the
Nation’s Strikes May Mean
Lean Yuletides For Many
Slim Chance For New
Minor Accident
Hike In Postal Rates
The damaged back door called
Highway 81 near Burleson after
carrier.
Scott was driving almost strike
Eisenhower announced Monday class rates approved this year
Weather
blood test.
Congress gave that proposal the Murray said he wants to see the
TEMPERATURES
2 P"$.
1 —
Jan-
of the United Glass and Ceramics
67
er.
A&M College.
Burglars Visit
Five Locations
Radio Shop
Looted Here
Monday night.
The Milky
5 DAILY
10c SUNDAY
ESTABLISHED 1904
when Gerald William Faver, 14,
of 308 Williams backed his 1950
President’s budget proposal first.
A member of the House Appro-
priations Committee, Rep. Gerald
Ford (R-Mich.), also expressed
doubt that Congress would go
A few shotgun shells and other
small articles were taken from
the Bill Brown Service Station &
Negotiators called a two-weck
holiday in bargaining talks last
Saturday without agreement and
spokesmen said no new negotia-
tions are slated before Jan. 6.
New York state, as of Dec. 20,
reported 33 work stoppages, with
18,200 persons idle, compared with
22 smaller strikes and 1,850 idle
at this time last year. The in-
creased number of idle was attrib-
uted to the airline strikes and a
cold shoulder earlier this year,
ut it did approve boosting the
rate for both local and out-of-
own letters from 3 to 4 cents.
The 4-cent rate went into effect
Texas today, disrupting plane
schedules and causing at least
one death on state highways.
At Dallas, Braniff International
Airways canceled three of its late
evening southbound flights and
SHOPPING
DAY TO
HRISTMAS
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (UPI)—
A C54 transport plane, carrying
883
32322238888
station, the only structure near the
blast.
CLEBURNE AND VICINITY —
,’Cloudy to partly cloudy and mild
today and Wednesday.
only cities in Texas reporting
freezing weather today. Both had
overnight readings of 32. Browns-
ville with 66 was the warmest
spot in the state.
ing or idled by the strike. Most
of the idle are in Miami, where
7,000 were employed.
Some 1,500 pilots walked out last
Friday midnight against American
people to the hospital.
“I drove down the highway and
persons and injuring more than
150 spectators watching firemen
fight the blaze.
Member—Texas Presa Association
Texas Daily Press League
Southern Newspaper Publishers
• An accident causing slight da-|said the fog cover would lift in
a mage occurred Monday afternoon most parts by mid-morning.
■
Tuesday
3 a.m......56
6 a.m......56
rted
Stair Photo by JIM WEST
Army for about two months. Left to right are Calvin
F. Kinman, David W. Henslee, John K. Jones, John W.
Finnell, Collins, Conrad, Alvin L. Hall, Donald E. Bullard
and William H. Damron.
firemen and spectators.
Blast Rocks Car
cars wheeling around all over the
place, jumping the center curb
t c "7
. —A
The DPS estimates that 95 will
die in traffic accidents, and the
rest will lose their lives in homi-
cides, suicides and non-traffic ac-
cidents.
The total last year during the
12-day Christmas-New Year’s pe-
riod was 203 lives, two less than
had been predicted.
Col. Homer Garrison Jr., head
of the DPS, announced Monday
that traffic enforcement will be
increased during the holidays with
additions to‘the patrol force from
the license and weight divisions,
and from the motor vehicle in-
spection divisions.
Gov. Price Daniel’s-traffic safe-
ty drive drew support from news-
paper, radio, television and out-
door advertising industries.
J. C. Smyth of Liberty, presi-
dent of the Texas Press Assn.,
said “no Texas newspaper will
leave anything undone that it can
do during the holidays to help in
this all-out campaign.”
The president of the Texas
Assn, of Broadcasters, Albert D.
•he plane missing when it failed
to arrive at Shemya in the Aleu-
tian Islands Monday afternoon. It
left here at 9:12 a.m., p.s.t., and
disappeared from radarscope 47
minutes later.
The plane, which had 15 hours
of fuel aboard when it took off,
was on a routine supply mission.
It was attached to the Shemya air
installation.
Police Capt. Zane Williams said
flames shot 150-200 feet in the air
and the explosion rocked his car
as he raced to the scene just in-
side the city limits of this west
Texas town.
Terry County Hospital said it
admitted 63 injured into its 40-bed
building, and treated and released
90 more.
Other victims were rushed to
Lubbock, 40 miles to the north-
east. Methodist Hospital at Lub-
bock estimated it had at least 15
injured, seven of whom were ad-
mitted.
Fire Marshall Killed
to the scene when the blast rocked pital and made three or four more
his car at a distance of half a'trips before I got sick from the
mile. (See BLAST page 8)
that his forthcoming budget will
call for postal rate increases. He
did not spell them out, but in-
ormed sources said he would re-
icw his request of last January
or a 5 cent stamp on out-of-town
etters.
owdij Jo/L
By PROC
Pilgrimage
Held In His Wife's Death To Be vast
NARD, the AP bureau chief and
former resident of CLEBURNE,
in town mingling with old friends.
Hats off to JACKETS LYNN
MORRISON and PAUL KNOTT,
who were selected on the DAL-
LAS TIMES-HERALD’S all-state
grid team, a happening predicted
on Highway 174 at Burleson was
broken into for the second time
in two weeks, but this time no-
thing was taken from the store.
A cigaret machine was broken
i
r
i
Mother Of 'Mommy's Boy'
Fog blanketed wide areas of and east sections of Texas tonight.
Amarillo and Dalhart were the
governor all broadcasters “stand
behind you in your efforts to re-
duce the traffic toll.”
A traffic safety message from
the governor is being carried on
more than 1,000 billboards pro-
vided by the Outdoor Advertising
Assn, of Texas, Ed St. John of
Austin, chairman of the associa-
tion’s safety education committee,
announced.
7 *
U J
JERUSALEM, Jordan (UPI)-
Officials predicted today the big-
gest influx of Christmas pilgrims
to the Holy City in ten years.
They estimated some 6,000 per-
sons would come to the ancient
city of Jerusalem for the current
Western Christmas and the Greek
and Armenian celebrations in Jan-
uary.
More than 4,000 persons were
expected from the neighboring
Arab countries, Europe, the Uni-
ted States and South America.
About 3,000 of them will cross
through the Mandelbaum Gate
from Israel, including foreign dip-
lomats, members of the Christian
9 a.m.
12 Noon
L i
B l
will creases next year
The airline said it would maintain
20,000 other employes over the hol-
idays but said all have been noti-
fied they will be placed on emer-
gency leave without pay Jan. 4 if
the strike continues.
No date has been set for re-
sumption of negotiations between
the airline and the Air Line Pilot
Association.
The AFL-CIO United Auto Work-
ers strike against International
Harvester, which began Nov. 13,
has idled 37,000 production work-
ers at Harvester plants in Illinois,
Kentucky, Indiana, Tennessee,
Ohio and California.
__
35302
'When you’re ready to con-
lary ... Nighttime burglars sent
L -
& W^w***^
F
’ A
12 billion. The President‘s"bal-
ance” next year at 77 billion dol-
’ars would mean an improvement
increases in second and third
sometime in
v".- 33338
s9
United Press International
Thousands of Americans faced a
lean Christmas today in the wake
of strikes. Nearly 100,000 office
and factory workers were idled.
Largest of the walkouts were
against Eastern and American
Airlines and International Harves-
ter.
Eastern Airlines, grounded by a
strike of machinists and flight en-
gineers. normally has a payroll of
16,000, but only about 1,600 still
[ ' 54TH. YEAR, NO. 72
[ - . --------------------------------------
800 miles above the Pacific and
made connections.
The engineer, Thomas G. Wol-
stencroft, talked to the satellite
from the Army Signal Corps in-
stallation at Ft. Monmouth, N.J.
His telephoned message was re-
layed to the Atlas satellite by a
radio transmitter, near Corona,
Calif.
The Army transmitter at Ft.
Sam Houston, Tex., then triggered
the satellite’s transmitter and all
four Army ground stations re-
ceived “near perfect” recordings
as the Atlas made its 54th pass
across the nation.
Later, on the satellite’s 55th or-
bit, the California station fed the
satellite seven teletype messages
at the same time. Ft. Sam Hous-
ton again triggered the Atlas’
transmitter and copied all of the
messages.
Deathwatch
in Violence
Set to Start
sb .
the new airport. The landing was made
without incident. The north-south runway
has been graded, but preparation of the
base for the new asphait runway has not
started. The new runway is 3,000 feet long
with 1.000 feet clearance at both ends.
The city and county will work together
on the construction of the base for the
asphalt runway.
V
11
York City newspapers.
An estimated 2,500 were on
strike against the newspapers,
causing 12,500 other newspaper
been booked up since September.
The Jordanian tourist department
; has made arrangements with
many private homes and hostels
to put up pilgrims.
Several convents and monaster-
ies in the old walled city have
turned their dormitories into hos-
tels for the visitors.
The city itself is in a festive
mood with shop windows decora-
ted with Christmas bunting. Many
stores are offering a cheerful dis-
play of toys, fir trees, Holy Land
articles of olive wood, and silver,
gold and mother of pearl crosses.
Israeli and Arab soldiers still
face each other across the bor-
der, but it has been two years
in Space Race
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Scien-
tists expressed conviction today
that their two-way radio contacts
demonstrated the reliability of a
communications relay station in
inter space.
As the four-ton'Air Force mis-
sile began its fifth day in orbit
around the globe, the Defense De-
partment said further tests of the
earth - to - space circuit were
planned.
On the basis of tests already
successfully conducted, the de-
partment said that “the reliabil-
ity of such transmissions when
the satellite is within range is be-!
coming apparent.”
Additional experiments with the
85-foot Atlas in the remaining 15
days of its life expectancy are
expected to pave the way for
launching even larger, more in-
strumented satellites.
Skeptical of Savings
One of the most influential
Operation Deathwatch at 12:01
a.m. Wednesday, expecting 180
persons to die violent deaths dur-
L
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Presi-
dent Eisenhower’s request for an-
other postal rate increase was
given little chance today of win-
ning approval from Congress.
As one House Post Office Com-
mittee source put it: “It took
Congress 26 years to go from a
3 to a 4 cent stamp on letters.
It’s not likely to go up another
penny within one year.”
amount to 550 million dollars an-
nually.
Rep. H.R. Gross (R-Iowa), a
high ranking member of the
said there was “no chance” of
Congress okaying a 5-cent stamp
next year.
“This is certainly not the time
to boost postage rates,” Gross
Dems Dont
. the slaying.She said she was be-
ing blackmailed and that Olga
• was killed to “spite” her.
Observers said her denial prob-
ably would be used as the basis of
her defense by veteran criminal
-- lawyer S. Ward Sullivan of Los
Angeles. The grand jury will be
* presented with the case Friday
’ and the district attorney said he
• would seek murder indictments
against Mrs. Duncan and the two
‘ men, both laborers with petty
’ criminal records.
“ Olga's body was uncovered
Sunday after Augustine Baldona-
do, 25, confessed he and Luis Mo-
ya, 22, killed her. Baldonado led
A. .
’ ;95, । The Pontiac had fender damage
1"35 The Chevrolet had a damaged
right front fender, headlight and
« Moya $6,000 to kill her daughter-
in-law, but they were paid only i
$360.
, Mrs. Duncan, who was said to
be extremely jealous of her son’s
affections, only last week admit-
ted she posed as Olga and ob-
tained an annulment of her son’s
brief marriage.
Police said Mrs. Duncan and
her son, Frank, 29, a prominent
Santa Barbara attorney, often en-
tered the courtroom together
’ , hand-in-hand and that Duncan was
considered a “mommy’s boy.”
Duncan ai d his bride separated
only two weeks after their mar-
‘ ‘riage June 20. He admitted that
his mother “hindered” the devel-
» opment of the marriage.
Duncan has not been seen since
* 'Olga’s body was uncovered, al-
though his mother’s attorney has
• . been in communication with him.
. “I am sure Frank will come to
- see me soon,” his mother said
from her jail cell Monday. She
V was being held on a charge aris-
ing out of her “annulment” plot
* until the grand jury convenes on
Friday.
stroyed the front part of a filling open, but it contained no money.
The burglars entered the build-
called from home and was racing'the road. I took them to the hos- Democrats in the field of federal
finance, Chairman Clarence Can-
strike of the Newspaper and Mail
were working. The rest were strik-Deliverers Union against New
AUSTIN (UPI) —The Depart- flash Monday night killing four
ment of Public Safety begins its
• ’wu o
l • • —
-
said. He noted that some of the Airlines, grounding that
"tha
si",
' I
ews section
non of the House Appropriations I
Committee, said he was skeptical I
of Eisenhower’s anticipated sav- I
ngs and found “no evidence that I
revenues will be up to what.he I
expects.” I
Chairman Harry F. Byrd of the
Senate Finance Committee, anoth-
er powerful Democratic figure, 1
was more laudatory than Cannon
of Eisenhower’s economy objec- I
five. But like other Democrats,
Byrd questioned whether there
would be enough revenue to make
a balanced budget possible.
Eisenhower said defense spend-
ing would push upward to a new
veacetime peak. Defense spending
this year is expected to run about
$40,800,000,000 and there have
been recent estimates that the
I960 military outlay might go up
well above 41 billion dollars.
'Child' Star
Gets Divorce
LOS ANGELES (UPI)- Actress
Elinor Donahue, 21, who plays the
teen-age daughter in the television
series “Father Knows Best,” was
awarded a divorce Monday from
her husband, Richard T. Smith, 27.
Miss Donahue charged that
Smith, a film soundman, drank to
excess in their home and ignored
er. The couple married May 5,
1956.
Theft of radio equipment valued
at $242.20 from Kit’s Radio Shop
on East Henderson was reported
to police yesterday. The theft oc-
curred between Saturday night
and Monday morning, according
to O. D. “Kit”' Montgomery, own-
er. The thief entered the shop by
prying open a back door and took
items including two soldering
guns, an electric drill and a
drill press.
HI !■
--e
3 2>
ev
-1223 PN-
Meanwhile, a weak cold front the theft to the owner’s attention
,, .. was moving southward over the when Montgomery opened for bu-
- Ford into a 1951 Oldsmobile dnv- Panhandle and South Plains. The • --3
■ — - I
FIRST LANDING AT NEW AIRPORT —
Heavy fog didn't halt the first landing
on the new municipal airport that is under
construction northwest of Cleburne. Here,
Gene Leach, left, Commander of the
Cleburne Civil Air Patrol squadron and
Jim West, squadron photo officer, check
the fog before taking off from the old
airport to make the initial landing on
i 5 HURT CRITICALLY
County Sheriff James Fulford, who
was peering into the truck when
it exploded, amazingly escaped
with non-serious burns.
The tremendous explosion, the
second in a series of two, blew out
T-
A
1 )
newsstand operators were un-
counted among the idle because
of their status as independent op-
erators.
Some 13,000 workers have been
on strike against Pittsburgh Plate
22-
' Monday
• 3 p.m......56
• 6 p.m......55
.9 p.m......55
1? p.m...... 55
: . At least 15 of the injured were
ing the . nine-day holiday ending believed in critical condition.
since a major incident has oc-
curred between the two forces,
and officials on both sides are re-
ported taking extra care to see
that the truce remains in effect.
the second, coming about 15 min-
utes later, erupted in the faces of and darting around trying to get of nine billion dollars in federal
rars
Burglars attempted to enter the
store by prying open the front
loor, but failed. They broke a
window on the cast side and ent-
ered the building. Small articles
of merchandise were scattered
over the store.
An undetermined amount of ci-
garcts and money were taken
Tom the Grandview Co-op Gin.
The checks were made out to the
company, but were not endorsed
The burglars gained entrance to
the building by taking out a win-
dow pane.
Only blank checks were taken
from the F. D. Pinion & Son Gin
it Grandview.
Pinion said all that was missing
rom his office was 12 of his print-
ed company checks.
Burglars entered the office by
prying open the front door.
Charged With
Drunk Driving
William D. Scott, 36, of Waco,
was charged with driving drunk
here Monday afternoon.
The charges were filed by Coun-
ty Atty. Glyndon Hague after a
complaint was signed by highway
patrolman Paul Busby.
Busby arrested Scott on U. S
of the heaviest fog to cloak this
,,, area in many years, hit five bu-
Among the dead was Fire Mar- siness houses in Johnson County
Burglars, working under cover front that is used for dispensing
food and drink to customers.
Way Malt Shop Grocery eight miles west of Cle-
burne on Highway 67.
ga’s mother-in-law, is accused of g
« master-minding the brutal slaying
of Olga.
: Mrs. Duncan denied the charge
made by a man who confessed
. I
ill
IMP g8
-2289988828888809882859
Many Areas Of State
United Press International Rain was forecast in the south
In a test Monday, an Army En- |
gineer on the East Coast placed
a long distance telephone call to |
the 17,000-mile an hour satellite I
BROWNSFIELD, Tex. (UPI)—A The fire started after the butane “When I got there people were
down because of the walkout, but Village Creek bridge.
Scott was given a
—888898
"0889
999
- 88
, . . . - Other minimums included Lub-
delayed two for morning depar- bock 36, El Paso 41, Laredo 57,
SSSS
T2kun
, A.n
1 0. * *
\c
nd ihFi-
E’ M-f4 n .■1
cleared in Dallas and plane flights
were back on regular schedules.
The dense fog was blamed for
the death of- Oliver Eugene Peck,
39, of Weatherford in a car-truck
collision on U.S. 80 two miles cast
of Weatherford early today. The
Highway Patrol said Peck’s car
crashed into the back of a stalled
truck.
The driver of the truck, not
immediately identified, suffered
minor injuries. Patrolmen said
fog cut visibility on the highway
at the time of the crash.
Fog and drizzle enveloped Cen-
tral and East Texas. Rain fell in
South Texas. The Weather Bureau
U-.: *
Houston 63, Dallas 55, and Corpus o Pe son todaz" frozen nbjeet
postal rate hike which
p
Glass Co. since October. Negotia-1 A A „.E_ [here some time back...The DAL-
lions have been in progress at; / AAXA A LAS NEWS will publish a .story
Columbus, Ohio, between com- /5,6m#Nk about CLEBURNE in its business
pany officials and representatives ,va -6
Workers Union under the d’rec-, ' ounty officers hopping this —
tion of federal mediator Hayward •2 #-gMA * ° ng, after break-ins were re
Montoney (A in many sections of the lcal
-
, " police to the slain woman’s shal-
« low grave in a construction area g [ E gm l
^Baldt^ ■ OQ enshroudS
Mrs. Duncan offered him and
get preview Monday nearly a 1
month before it was scheduled to I
j ",
i revenue to do the job in fiscal I
1 ,1960. I
The President, although he pro- l
t posed increased defense spending, I
i promised he would not ask for a I
I general tax hike. He said the bud- I
! get will call for higher postal I
| rates and gasoline taxes, however. I
| In a direct challenge to the I
| strong Democratic Congress to I
refrain from heavy new spending, I
Eisenhower issued the rare bud- |
BODY FOUND — The body of Olga Duncan, left, was
found near Ventura, Calif., after one of two accused
"killers for hire," Augustine Beldonado, broke down
under questioning and led officers to her grave. Mrs.
Elizabeth Duncan, right, mother-in-law of the slain wo-
man, assertedly offered Beldonado and another man
$3,000 to do away with her daughter-in-law after she
obtained a fraudulent annulment of the slain woman's
marriage to her son, attorney Frank Duncan. (NEA Tele-
photo )
k t
A ..
—
, ' I Jerusalem hotels-capable-of ac-
I____I ' .X/
t ,, . r- • ।-------------------- -------- —। siness Monday morning,
ren by Mrs. Billie Turner Farring- Weather Bureau said the cold air___
ton, 24, of Alvarado. ; would spread over the state today'
* Young Faver was backing east and tonight but no important WAe ♦ PevemAp
on Henderson allowing a car to drops in temperature were ex-"’- 1 ------
parallel park when his car struck pected. -A • g . m
'Mrs. Farrington’s auto. Both cars----------, ACCIGem’ CcuSe
• had bent bumper guards. LAFF-A-DAY
ast Aug. 1, as part of a package along with new postage rate in-
The first explosion was not be- blew out most of it. There were
MF"'
r --
3
addE.
0-0 < dos
ved,g
grill. Nobody was injured.
....57 cede defeat I’ll call the plumb- Taylor is a student at Texas
have not gone into effect yet.
Some of these start Jan. 1 and
the others at later dates.
Committee Chairman Tom Mur-
ray (D-Tenn.) said he was not
ready to comment on the pro-
posed postage hikes at this time.
Lovely LINDA PARKER flash- I
ing a new sparkler third finger |
left hand..Residents of HILL TER- I
RACE ADDITION held their an- I
nual neighborhood CHRISTMAS I
party at the JOHN REESE manse I
last night, exchanging gifts and |
dining on goodies...CLEBURNIT-
ES welcomed early morning sun
that broke through and dispelled
2
- Ie ■ 1 89
I
0
burning butane gas transport truck collided with a pickup truck running everywhere and hollering
truck exploded with a blinding on a four-lane highway on the for help. There were little spots neighborhood ol 68 billion dollars.
- southwest edge of Brownfield. of fire around but the explosion This will leave a deficit of about
HOME FOR CHRISTMAS — Maj. Carl L. Collins, U. S.
Army Reserve, center, and M-Sgt. Lewis R. Conrad, U.
S. Army local recuiter, are shown as they welcomed
seven young men home for the Christmas holidays. These
men were all recruited by Conrad and have been in the
COMMUNITY SHOCKED
*4,
((iT1—
WASHINGTON (UPI)
— Key congressional De-
mocrats today openly
questioned the ability of]
President Eisenhower to
balance the new federal]
budget at 77 billion dol-]
lars without a general tax
increase. |
The chairmen of the Senate fi-1
nance and House appropriations I
committees accepted Eisenhower’s I
announced gcal of ending moun-‘
tainous federa deficits as admir-
able. But they doubted that Uncle
Sam would take in enough extra
-
,re"
383
Wet pavement Monday was bla-
| med for another traffic accident
; here.
Mattie Orden Millan. 49, of 1n
W. Smith, was driving her 1958
i Pontiac north on Mill street Jam
les Lyndon Taylor. 22, of College
I Station, was driving a 1953 Chev-
rolet west on Henderson. Taylor’.1
auto collided with the other car
at the intersection.
• seaside town, settled by Francis-
can monks in the 18th Century,
was shaken from its Christmas
. serenity today by new develop-
g • ments in a murder case involving
a possessive mother’s jealousy of
her attractive daughter-in-law.
Police said Olga Duncan, 30,
y • seven months pregnant, was lured
it to her death by compassion. The
case has shocked this quiet com-
munity of 30,000 residents.
. Mrs.. Elizabeth Duncan, 54, 01-
go to Capitol Hill. I
End Temporary Programs I
“It will be a balanced budget," I
the President said. “Revenues and I
expenditures will be in the goner- I
al area of 77 billion dollars.” I
The Chief Executive said reduc- I
tions in total spending—expected I
to pass 80 billion dollars this I
year—would be accomplished in I
the new budget partly by ending
of temporary programs in agri- 1
culture, unemployment insurance
and housing. Savings in this cat-
egory were estimated at upwards
of $2,500,000,000.
What interested the Democrats
in heavy control of Congress, how-
ever, was the bright revenue pic-
ture painted by Eisenhower.
Revenue in the current fiscal
year is expected to be in the
Fmte, "*"6
6.- 1
nVe 4,
♦ \ ■/ .
d
"6i/
a " 105
A
A A A A
—
(UPI) United Press Telephoto Pictures
• (CP) Central Press Features
Full Leased Teletypesetter Wire Report of the United Press lnternational7 — World's Greatest News Agency (KF) Kinz Feature#
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 72, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 23, 1958, newspaper, December 23, 1958; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1538257/m1/1/?q=music: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.