Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 66, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 24, 1960 Page: 4 of 14
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Truman Blasis
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M. Nixon and the GOP in
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es were
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is for PRINTING
By PHIL NEWSOM
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Hand-in-hand with talk of world par in the number of men under
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Admission:
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President Eisenhower also
60c
year avowed candidates for the presi-
dential nomination, dark horses of
varied hue, maybe even
Fl
Call the Cleburne Times^Review for prompt
service on:
Symington of Missouri and Lyn-
on the nuclear submarine, a float-
Truman said he can think of
ing submerged base for rockets
L
B-52 heavy jet bomber wings from almost impossible to detect and
to Alexander F. Jones, executive
aid-Journal. Jones had written
G7
Cleburne Times-Review
LAST TIMES TONIGHT
now operating in the Baltic.
B
minal pay, including dismissal pay present military force of 3,623,000
Commercial Printers
men by 1,200,000 “in the course of
and accrued vacation pay” to the
Ph. MI 5-2441
torial department.
Floor-Covering
e
could not settle for less than the
armed West powerless to defend
SALE
SCHEDULE OF SUNDAY SERVICES
CENTRAL CHURCH OF CHRIST:
GRANBURY ST. CHURCH OF CHRIST
§
(
9:45 a.m.
a.m.r 6:00 p.m
P.
S'
CHISHOLM TRAIL
3,
DRIVE-IN THEATRE
Highway 67, Alvarado
t
#
SUNDAY, JANUARY 24th
CHECK THE AD-VANTAGES OF
USING THE CLASSIFIED AD SECTION
modeling and not ready
S88s28qg
installed at this time,
*
7520
6
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CLEBURNE
FLOOR COVERING
DICKSONS
TIMES-REVIEW
DEPARTMENT
♦
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Ask for Zona
Cartoon: “3 Little Pups
A
No Indication World Peace Nixon Outlines
Is Just Around the Corner Settlement Of
January
February
• Letterheads
• Envelopes
• Billheads
• Books
Price Includes
Installation
BIBLE CLASSES 9:45 a.m., 6:00 p.m. BIBLE CLASSES .....
WORSHIP .. 10:45 a.m., 7:00 p.m. WORSHIP .. 10:45
Afternoon Paper
CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP)—The
Ted Has Last
Pain in Neck
Administration
As Demos Start
• Statement Forms
© Business Cards
• Receipt Books
• Invoices
CHRISTCHURCH, New Zealand .
(AP)—Jack Brabham, driving a
da
pe
w
pi
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House, Seguen, California Originals, Dec-
oresque Vinyl, Jerrazzo Vinyl.
th
m
we
of
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of
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general.
Gov. Robert B. Meyner of New
Jersey said Nixon is advising
America that result's are what
count rather than the way the ad-
ministration obtains them, and
that this is quackery.
Gov. G. Mennen Williams of
Michigan complained that “the
Armstrong
Embossed Inlaid Patterns include: Town
turned over to the election
Congress.
several more Democrats who are
“eminently qualified and desira-
ble as potential nominees.”' But
he left their identity dangling in
his prepared address and said
that he himself is not yet formal-
ly committed to anyone.
cratic party paraded its presiden-
tial hopefuls Saturday night and
officially lit the 1960 campaign
torch.
Party stalwarts from over the
it.
The
to Western demands that disarm-
ament must be accompanied by
adequate inspection.
ical fare at the dinner.
They included another governor
Edmund G. Brown of California
and U.S. Sens. John F. Kennedy
details of their armament plans
for 1960.
Neither indicated that settle-
Wednesday Only —"The Man Who Understood Wo-
men"
Adults ...
Child
Features:
WEST SIDE
I 11 N. Pandall
GRANBURY
1211 N. Granbury
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NOW SHOWING
. . through Tuesday
Bulls Throw
People At
Bull Session
CHCAGO (AP)_ There
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FOR MONSTER RALLIES—Looking somewhat like a prehistoric monster is Yale Univer-
sity’s new hockey rink and activities center in New Haven, Conn. The structure, designed
by Eero Saarinen, seats 5,000 for lectures, concerts and dances. Costing more than a million
dollars, the building was financed by gifts from alumni and friends.
f strength but they have never hes-
. itated to take advantage of weak-
i ness. Korea was a classic exam-
l pie.
And there has been no sign of
(and the Soviet Union about on a
was examined at Lahey Clinic by
I CEMASCOPFSMDMEIROCOLO2 3*
egeee
Chill Wills-Steve ROWAnD
James Gregory - Jacques AUBUCHON
NATO allies with new weapons.
The thinking behind the arma-
Nixon said that at a meeting in
his home two days before Christ-
mas he and Mitchell agreed they
would negotiate separately with
President Eisenhower disclosed
a military spending plan totalling
close to 41 billion dollars, slightly
more than last year. In the bud-
get were three more nuclear-
powered, Polaris - firing subma-
rines, final-stage development of
the 6,000-mile ICBM Minuteman,
and an increase in the number of
Buy now — while selections
are complete.
Many Other Patterns
reduced 50c sq. yd.
a 1,500-mile missile cornbat-ready
by this fall. A recent Swedish re-
port said that Russia has a 2,500-
throwing the people.
The bulls— two live four-legged
beasts not yet two months old—
were set loose by fraternity pledg-
Classilieds Pau-
a stalk-
Out of all this comes the obvi-
ous conclusion that, despite al!
talk of peace and world disarma-
ment, this remains- an uneasy
world in which potential antagon-
ists intend' to negotiate only from
positions of strength.
The West has good reason. For
with all Khrushchev’s talk of
peace, in the same breath he
i
E
Both are in the transition period
from conventional armament to
the new concept based on rock-
ROYAL AVENUE (Colored)
505 Royal
Nixon said that only after they
became convinced there was no
is taking a place of decreasing
importance.
National Basketball Assn.
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS.
Detroit 130, Philadelphia 110
National Hockey League
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS.
Chicago 2, New York 1 1
1
union received from the can and
aluminum industries. Steel com
2zgggx
EAST SIDE
405 Arbor Vitae
. The U S. expects to have the Nixon criticizing terms of the set.
first of 15 submarines armed' with tlement.
—
done.
After two days of negotiation
and “consultation with the Presi-
dent,” he said, they recommend-
ed a 41 cent an hour package
which both sides accepted. The
best they could do on work prac-
tices, he said, was get an agree-
ment to set up a study commis-
sion with a neutral chairman. The
settlement was reached Jan. 4.
gotiations.
“At the beginning of these ne-
gotiations, the possibilities of set-
tlement seemed hopeless,” Nixon
wrote.
He recalled the companies were
offering a 31 cent an hour wage-
benefit package and were asking
lor more leeway in fixing work
rules. He said President David J
McDonald of the United Steel-
we will be glad to hold
CENTRAL
Wardvilla and Robinson
4— Sunday, Jan. 24, 1960—CI EBURNE, TEXAS TIMES-REVIEW i
---- ————■—Cleveland Press
&
• )
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.eg
■WADS
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your selection until you
are ready.
"LAST TRAIN FROM GUNHILL" & "PARATROOP
COMMAND"
OV
X lo
si
ex
M
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M
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30, was declared in top
ve,d
82,cei H
yielding on the Communists’ part the disputing parties and this was
Reg. 3.99 yd. & 3.75 yd.
NOW ONLY
Francisco, Cincinnati and Colum-
bus Ohio.
In 1958, the United Press con
trolled by E. W. Scripps Co. —
which also has a large interest ii
Scripps-Howard Newspapers—con
solidated with International New:
Service to become United Prost
International.
In its modern form, the News
dates back 55 years to the days
when Tom L. Johnson was a
famed mayor of the city. But the
paper claimed descent from news-
paper ancestors founded in 1868.
There had been rumors of an
impending sale for months. But
the first word for many employe
was when Nathaniel R. Howard
editor since 1937, walked through
the paper-cluttered city room and
handed to the city desk a news
story and Graham’s statement
about the transaction.
Graham’s announcement said
Forest City would pay “all con-
tractural or otherwise agreed ter-
ard
E35828
23
11 to 14.
In Moscow, Soviet Premier Ni-
kita Khrushchev boasted of a
“formidable” new weapon of
“fantastic” strength.
He sugar-footed that announce-
ment with the further announce-
ment that Russia would reduce it
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2.74 sq. yd. A 2.50 sq. yd.
to have your linoleum
if you are building or re-
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+-
Pastor Will Run (
For Congress
j CONROE (AP)-Dr. Ray May-
field Jr. said Saturday that his
I friend, Dr. Bill Cooke, would re-
sign Sunday as pastor of the First
Baptist Church at Nacogdoches to
run for Congress.
Dr. Mayfield is pastor of the
Dr. Charles A. Fager. ,
Williams, who will be 42 next
es at the Sigma Nu house in sub- Aug.
urban Evanston.
Steel Strike
WASHINGTON (AP) - Vice
Presisent Richard M Nixon said
Saturday the steel settlement cost
the companies less than it would
have if the dispute had been
was a
approximately 800 employes of the one or two years.”
News. About 130 are in the edi- The reduction, - assuming it is
carried out, would place the U.S.
S T
n
er
th
. m
bull session Friday night in a fra-
ternity house at
33888
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—gm
EmeV
Cleveland Press, a Scripps-How-•
ard newspaper, announced Satur- -.
day purchase of its rival in the aa
afternoon field, the Cleveland
news. The paper was sold by the
iForst City Publishing Co., which
continues to publish the Plain
Dealer seven mornings a week.
The News issued its final
! editions Saturday. This leavse on-
ly two large daily newspapers in
this metropolitan marketing area
of about 1,7000,000 population.
The Press announced that it,
through Scripps-Howard, acquired
the name, title, good will and cir-
culation records of the News. No
price was announced.
Starting Monday, the Cleveland
If that had happened, Nixon
said, Congress might have provid- ing horse or two—provided orator-
ed in all major labor disputes for
some form of compulsory arbitra-
tion which the vice president said
" Press and News will be published.
. -aa-, from the Press’ new plant neai
President Harry S. Truman ac-
cused the Eisenhower administra-
tion of “neglect of crucial prob-
lems and issues” as the Demo-
WASHINGTON (AP) — Former University. But the-bulls were
of Massachusetts, Hubert H.
gnT5n
hl
g22
Rf 2
BOSTON (AP)—Ted Williams, a •
terror with a bat until last .sea-
son when he suffered his celebrat-
earth, the United States and So- asked for two billion dollars, an
viet Russia,, unveiled some of the up of 700 million, to arm the U.S.
Join us on a fabulous journey into an underground
universe where no one has ever gone before . .See
it • • • in aH ir‘s splendor ... in glorious color on the
giant wide screen!
THE MOST UNUSUAL ADVENTURE UNDER THE EARTHT
________ 2a
ment plans of the two nations has
just important similarities.
• a
s..5
egg
ment of world tensions was
around the corner.
! ed pain in the neck, Saturday was •
Northwestern pronounced in better physical con-A)
dilion than last September. ( I
The veteran Red Sox outfielder
Ms
ch
possibly the most fearsome weap- editor of the Syracuse, N.Y., Her-
on of all. ’ * * ‘
Communists respect panies estimated this settlement
at 52 cents an hour.
SAVE T’
9288333
8,43 :
D.n ■
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fe
threatens a separate treaty with . ,, . ,, —
East Germany which would cut off Workers -nion told him bluntly h
free West Berlin, and leave a dis-
. masters, the full fledged frater- Bucky Harris', Sox general man-
nation—some 2,500 of them—de- nity members, put one bull in the ager, concerning this year’s con-
scended on Washington for a big-' parlor, another on the third floor, tract.
name dinner to kick off the cam- A handful of upperclassmen, in---
paign and kick around President; the house at the time, were sue- Safe Ree-re in
Eisenhower, Vice President Rich- cessfully held at bay by the pledg-
J N NE-- -- thn Con es who then fled to nearby Madi- New Zealand Race
Wedneday Night Services at All Above Churches of Christ .. 7:30 p.m.
Ute,- ■ dt.
30015
■ I- 5
\ E. 5245
ernment wage and price fixing.
Nixon outlined the part he and Humphrey of Minnesota, Stuart
Heavy emphasis Is being placed Secretary of Labor James P. Symington of Missouri and Lyn-
Mitchell played in getting industry don B Johnson of Texas.
and the union to agree in a letter
ets and nuclear power. 1 . ______
The manned bomber and fighter would have led eventually to gov
peace goes the drive for newer! arms. The U.S. plans to have
and deadlier weapons. -2,488,000 men in uniform by mid
Within the last several days, the 1961, just about the present level.
two most powerful nations on
s
. chance for a settlement otherwise
ton nuclear - powered submarine did he and Mitchell enter the ne-
Printing for every pur-
pose is what we do to
perfection!
When it comes to printing, you
name it, we do it RIGHT and
at the RIGHT price. Call us for
prompt estimates. Phone Ml
5-2441.
were held at bay by the bulls
which romped through the house! Copper Climax, won the Lady
for nearly an hour before capture. Wigram trophy race today by av- (
. Today, the bulls were at Evans- eraging 90 miles an hour for the1 A
animal hospital. The pledg- 150 miles. He wiped out the 89.19058609
■— laughing it up in Madi- mile an hour record set a ycar^^M|^^,
son. And the upperclassmen were ago. Brabham took the lead at -4 tr
cleaning no the house, the start and hel it all the way. • tL
e_"
WEE
BIBLE CLASSES 9:15 a.m., 6:00 p.m. BIBLE CLASSES 9:45 a.m., 6:00 p.m.
WORSHIP .. 10:15 a.m., 7:00 p.m. WORSHIP . 10:45 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
EAST SIDE CHURCH OF CHRIST: WEST SIDE CHURCH OF CHRIST:
Hub Caps Stolen
II The First Church in Nacogdoches! Thieves continue to work In Cle-
[ is one of the larger Baptist!burne. Donald Anderson, of Rio
i churches in East Texas district, i Vista, left his automobile parked
The incumbent congressman ofjat Main and Brown streets and
the 7th Congressional District is returned to find the hub caps' had
| Rep. John Dowdy of Athens. I been stolen.
■
04
d '
Turn to the Want Ads in this newspaper
—now, read carefully. Look — there's
e bargain on a used car — and a swell
buy on a refrigerator — and a dandy
bike for Junior, and a terrific house for
sale! Maybe today you're not interested
— but you may be tomorrow or the day
after. That's why it's a gcod and thrifty
habit to read the Want Ads regularly.
It's a good idea too, to use them when
you have a service to offer, something
to sell, or a specific need in mind.
Want Ads can work for you—efficient-
ly and economically. Call Ml 5-2441
009
% M J
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Republicans' are afraid to be the'
first in anything” and said the
GOP just intends to “plod along in
its old, weary, tired way."
As might be expected' at one of
these partisan pow-wows, speaker
after speaker sounded a “we’re
going-to-win’ in November theme.!
The big question still is: with
whom?
Meyner, Williams' and five other
possibilities — avowed and un-
Starts Thursday—Sol Mineo in "GENE KRUPA
STORY"
1:55 4:20
6:45 9:10
"THEMIiaCLE\
OFTHEHIUS^
REASONK • LESLIE - GEPSON1
EMMecAn Acepciated Producers, Ine Pro duction E
MMMWS-MMa—D - Released by 2GLh Centery-Fax ’
—Plus--
Lakefront. The formal announce-
ment said it will “carry many of
the features previously published
in the Cleveland News.”
In the past two years Scripps
Howard has engaged in major
purchases or mergers in Sar
jpE
Erta
M
*25-122
Open 6:30
Adults 50c Child Free
shape1 except for a chronic pain "
The pledges, staging a tradi- in his spinal cord'.
tional revolt against their task-! Williams will meet Monday with ’
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• M-G-M PRESENT
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MpORANGER-ELEMING
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 66, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 24, 1960, newspaper, January 24, 1960; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1538281/m1/4/?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.