Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 22, Ed. 1 Monday, December 5, 1960 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
5c 9AlY
Full Leased Teletypesetter Wire Report of the Associated Press—World’s Greatest News Agency
• 56TH. YEAR, NO. 22
8 PAGES
CLEBURNE, TEXAS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 5, I960
Ns
— 1
U.S. Churchmen Favor
8 8 8 :: •8
Reunion For Protestants
Mexican Held
A
88,2888
8 "a
For Slaying
‘A
.. 33: . 33888
23333333333333333333333
Although not formally a part of
8323838888888888888888
888888888; 332 333
their program, the proposal gen-
erated keen interest among dele-
Church vs Castro
?
HAVANA (AP) — Relations be-
and Prime Minister Fidel Castro
program catholic."
Claims 21 Texans
against his revolution.
spiring”
industry interests to preach
ar
and Washington, D.C., SERS said.
There has been no official re-
tes of Santiago was detained bri-
kansas, Florida, Louisiana, North
incident.
was fatally injured Sunday when
near Natalia.
Edward R. Beckett, 24, of Pleas-
crash of his car into a bridge
which
plagued Latin America in recent
held a Mexican national for inves-
Lawton R. Gaylor, 59, of La-
the sheriff’s office at Glen Rose,
near his home.
Joyce Jackson, 23, Fort Worth
Tower, the Republican candi-
El Salvador, short-lived revolu-
ceive “careful and thoughtful
con-
sideration.”
Police said nobody was hurt
at Corpus Christi.
toSces Wife Killed
age 2 to 10 degrees below normal
expected
Cooler ■ air
was
already
planning unity
was
ne-
mally for the special election.
Wright of Fort Worth and State
about three weeks ago.
Antonio.
LEOPOLDVILLE,
day. A few showers extreme east
Castro and Communist influence
and along coast Monday night.
TON and CORPUS CHRISTI and
In Guatemala, a group of mili-
M
their fury
white's trapped in
on
troops.
Weather
Union supplying them through there.
Egypt and the Sudan, which bor-
Cleburne police arrested Mose-
ders the Congo on the north.
ley here Wednesday for investi-
Mostly cloudy this afternoon, to-
munist countries must rely
more
P3
Lumumba, dismissed by Presi-
countries and give greater free-
17, of Milwaukee, early Saturday
near Florence in Central Texas.
©
Police blamed an argument be-
12 p.m
63
as
.1 11 wen, "d, a -
। is. China will go along.
pretation.
of Grayson, Ky., with murder.
ing the army to mutiny during ment until the end of the year.
*
s
- e
Bingo-Drinking Party
Ends In Death For One
Negro Students
increasing in
southern States
Latin American
Furore Sample Of
What’s to Come
Science Building
For World’s Foir
Lumumba s Supporters
Clamp On Tough Regime
Tower Will
Make Up Mind
SHOP FOR GIFTS -
IN OUR AD PAGES
pushed eastward across the state.1
The front, which just before
attendants found him later.
Police Work,
Prompt, Final
10c SUNDAY
ESTABLISHED 1904
call it, Fidelismo—is the front,
anti-Yankeeism is the rallying
cry and communism often is the
Texas Friday night when a hunt-
ing rifle was fired by accident.
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The rash of demonstrations,
political strikes, uprisings and
Red China Approves
Soviet Union Policy
The diplomats think civil war Sunday took Mack Moseley, 48-
would have followed, with many year-old ex-convict from Shreve-
of the troops in Stanleyville sup- port, to Houston where he is want-
on
can
white
were
25 miles from thriving VICTOR-
IA...School is the only high school
in CALHOUN COUNTY...Stadium
is small, accomodations are ade-
ratified by the Communist summit
conference which ended last week.
In a goodbye speech at Lenin-
grad, before continuing his tour
of the Soviet Union, President Liu
Tower said his decision would
not be influenced by the announce-
ment of former U.S. Sen. William
A. Blakley that he will accept the
(Mowcow radio broadcast Liu’s
speech but this dispatch was de-
layed in passing through censors).
A Fort Worth gunfight ended in
death Saturday for Ben Finch Jr.,
Mrs. Mildred Fergus, .48, of Big.
Spring was injured fatally in an
auto-pickup truck crash north of
Big Spring. Two others were in-
SHOPPING G
DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS
one death.
The autopsy
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The violent death toll in Texas
Woman Injured
In Auto Crash
I
8338
ri
Stanleyville today.
Angered at the capture of the
888*8
Maximum temperature 73 de-
grees in past 24 hours.
Minimum temperature 63 de
grees in past 24 hours.
Information: It’s 315 long miles
from CLEBURNE to PORT LA-
states with complete segregation
extending from elementary grades
through college.
Pre-dawn temperatures ranged! the United States fair exhibit,
from 29 degrees at Dalhart to 70 .---------------
dom and happiness to mankind
than capitalist countries.
his northeastern stronghold as a
reprisal. Whites were barred from
entering or leaving Oriental Prov-
ince.
U. N. reports said numerous
they had not detained the arch-
bishop.
surrendered.
A rifle shot killed Mrs. Manie
Luman, 57, at her home in Tyler
Friday night. Sheriff Harlan Long
said the .22 caliber weapon dis-
charged accidentally in the hands
of her granddaughter, Geneva Lu-
man, 16.
Ervin Sembera, 18, of Cleburne
died Friday night when a car up-
set at a curve in a rural road 5
miles southwest of Cleburne. Five
others were injured.
his wife, Jacqueline, 27, was the
driver. She was killed.
21 lives. Traffic accidents as us-
ual were the largest single cause
of the violent deaths.
Eleven persons died in traffic
mishaps, four were shot to death,
three drowned and two were fa-
(UPI) United Presi Telephoto Picture!
(CP) Central Press Features
(KF) King Features
Negro, was stabbed to death while
working in the kitchen of the Tex-
as Christian University cafeteria.
Police held another Negro woman
for investigation.
Two men died Saturday when a
freight train hit their pickup truck
at Lufkin in Southeast Texas. The
victims were Emmitt A. Thomas.
42, of Dickinson and Darrell F.
Starling, 23, of Lufkin.
Mrs. Ethel Allan, 65, of Fort
Worth was fatally injured Satur-
day when a car struck her near
the City Hall in suburban Ben-
brook.
A car driven by Mrs. Beatrice
Cruz, 18, of San Benito overturned
into a ditch and killed her one-
month old son Severe near Los
Fresnos in the Lower Rio Grande
Valley Saturday. The mother and
another small son, Guadalupe, 2,
suffered minor injuries.
James E. Bryant of Wickett
drowned Saturday after his fish-
ing boat upset in the Rio Grande
Fort Worth police took the man
to the Tarrant County jail Sun-
day afternoon.
Bolivia.
Not all these things stem from
the same forces or causes, but
all are useful to the Castro-Com-
munist alliance in its effort to
keep the whole continent nervous
and off balance.
Rioting by Castro supporters
broke out in El Salvador late in
October, in advance of an army
coup which ousted President Jose
Maria Lemus. The final result is
yet to be assessed. There may be
considerable Castro influence in
the Central American nation, but
Five-Day Forecast
DALLAS (AP)—The U.S. Weath-
e
Member—Texas Presa Association
Texas Daily Presa League
Southern Newspaper Publishers
jured.
Joe Walter Soto, 23, of Somer-
Three men have annoi
near Crystal City.
AI
dent Joseph Kasavubu Sept. 5, es-
id
“great interest and appreciation”
for the plan.
Temperatures will average 4 to
A 7 degree's below normal.'- Coldest
• first half of week with warming
trend beginning Thursday or Fri-
day. Normal 58 to 68. Normal
"Weren't you eliminated in
the semifinals 2"
DALLAS (AP)-John G. Tower
said Sunday night he will make
an announcement this week as to
whether or not he will be a candi-
date in the special election for the
U.S. Senate seat of Lyndon B.
Johnson.
Johnson has not yet said when
he will resign his Senate seat to
become vice president but there
has been speculation he will not
do so until after Congress is or-
ganized in January.
rightful government had he got
away out of reach of Mobutu’s Ex-Convict Transferred
Cold Tuesday and Wednesday,
, slowly warming trend latter part
, of week. Normal high 49 north tc
maximums 25 to 35. No precipita-
tion.
The speech by Liu Shao Chi was
his way of saying that the man
Saturday and told to leave Cuba.
The 77-year-old archbishop was
. returning from a meeting of Cath-
olic prelates in Havana. The re-
ports said he replied firmly that
" he would stay in Cuba and take
the consequences.
Archbishop Perez Serantes, who
. once saved Castro from a Batista
firing squad but now is his most
* outspoken critic in Cuba, said by
telephone from Santiago: “I am
an old man and suffer from loss
. of memory. I do not recall any
wog ' * - • —‘N
60 south. Normal low 30 north to
40 south. Precipitation will aver-
age .25 to .50 of an inch northeast
• Texas. Little or no precipitation
* elsewhere.
South Central, Southeast and
Southwest Texas: Temperatures
will average 4 to 6 degrees below
normal. Normal minimum 38 to 48
interior and 48 to 55' along coast.
Normal maximum near 60 ex-
* treme northwest to near 72 ex-
treme southeast. Turning colder
(See LATIN AMERICAN page 3)
LAFF_A-DAY
was killed Sunday in the
gates.
“It is the opening of a very
significant move,” said the Rt.
Rev. Arthur C. Lichtenberger, of
New York, presiding bishop of
New York, presiding bishop of the
Episcopal Church.
“Out of this might come a plan
that would be acceptable to all
the people involved,” he added.
“It is a good approach. I hope it
will lead to a reunion of the
church.”
He, like otners, however, em-
phasized it will take time, and
careful examination.
tary officers tried to overthrow
President Miguel Ydigoras, but
the government said it captured
all but a handful of rebels.
In Nicaragua, troops loyal to
President Luis Somoza routed a
minimum 20 northwest to 37 south.
Little or no precipitation.
, North Central and Northeast
* Texas: Temperatures will aver-
J3o(s
By PROC
Jc
C 2
Kasai, Oriental and Leopoldville
provinces probably would have
backed Lumumba. Equator, Mo-
butu’s native province, and the
lower' Congo area of Kasavubu
would have been behind the pres-
ent pro-Western regime, probably
gaining support from President
Moise Tshombe's secessionist Ka-
tanga government.
Mobutu told newsmen he plans
to extend the life of his provis-
ional government of college grad-
uate commissioners until the Con-
go’s feuding politicians can agree
on a stable government.
When he installed the commis-
sioners on Sept. 14, he said they
would act as a caretaker' govern-
A GUY'S BEST FRIEND — "Lady" is just a mongrel, but
is also the winner of the Best Friend trophy at the San
Mateo (Calif.) Kennel Club show. The dog was picked
up as a stray pup and is the best friend of her master,
Eddie Gariano, 7, holding her award. (NEA Telephoto)
Weekend Violence
—83
netta, Ala., died in a car accident
in San Antonio Sunday.
Charles Andrew Schaeffer, 5, of
Harlingen, son of Mrs. Mary
Schaeffer, drowned Sunday in a
Coming as it did near the end
of the conference, after more
A Sunday bingo game
and drinking party ended
in death for a young Mexi-
can National in Somer-
vell County.
Jose Zamago, 20, who recently
swam the Rio Grande and arrived
in the United States, admitted
knifing Joe Walter Soto, 23 of
George’s Creek community, dur-
ing an argument at Zamago’s
brother’s heme three miles north
of Glen Rose before dawn Sun-
day.
MOSCOW (AP) - Communist
China’s president today put a
9
■ {
tions in Nicaragua and Guate-
mala, strike threats in Chile,
Brazil and other countries, an up-
rising in Argentina, rioting and
Test Superhighway
FLORENCE, Italy (AP)-More
than 20,000 motorists tested the
new 51-mile superhighway be-
ef Cleburne in which his brother,
Ervin, 18, was fatally injured
Friday night, was still in the hos-
pital today. He has head injuries
and was improving.
succeeded in reaching Stanleyville
he would have split the Conge in
such a way that a Korea-type war
would have followed with the
itary police under control of the
local government headed by An-
toine Gizenga, vice premier in
Lumumba’s defunct Cabinet and
a strong leftist.
Diplomats in Leopoldville were
__rebel force which the government
said had both Castroite and Com-
munist backing.
Such events led President Ei-
JFK'S COMMERCE SECRETARY—North Carolina Gov.
Luther Hodges, left, newly appointed Secretary of Com-
tmerce for the Kennedy adminstration, appears in Raleigh
with Harold Makepeace, his executive secretary. (NEA
Telephoto)
Muggy Weather
Prevailing Here
Muggy, dank weather prevailed noon maximums ranged from 53
in Cleburne today, although the degrees at Amarillo to 79 at
sun came out early. j Brownsville.
Very light rain showers damp- Rainfall totals for the 24 hours
ened the area last night, but there ending at 6 p.m. Sunday included
was no precipitation today. The Dalhart .39, Amarillo .22, Mineral
Temperature reading was 70 at Wells .27, Wichita Falls .20, Chil-
daybreak and a slow rise started!dress .03, Dallas .01, El Paso .06,
vhen the sun came out. Cooler Fort Worth .03, San Antsnio .03,
weather was promised for tonight and Waco .04.
Presbyterian, the Rev. Dr. Eu-
gene Carson Blake, of Philadel-
phia, shortly before the start of
the triennial General Assembly of
rhe National Council of Churches.
More than 3,000 representatives
of 33 Protestant and Orthodox
[denominations with 40 million
members joined Sunday night in
the stirring opening services.
ever offered in this
leson Sunday night.
She was taken to Memorial
Hospital in a Dillon ambulance
and remained there today.
faith in Soviet leadership.
“The great Soviet Union,” he
said, “has always been and is
today a powerful bastion of world
peace. The initiative of the Soviet
government and its proposals
aimed at easing international dis-
armament and peaceful co-exist-
ence between countries with dif-
fering social systems have the
sympathy and support of all
peace-loving nations and peoples.”
He said further that the recent
summit conference, “resulted in
a still further strengthening of the
cohesion of the entire Communist
movement and in a still further
. . NEW YORK (AP) — The New lowed them in another auto and
dawn lay on a line runninsfromYork World’s Fair of 1964-5 has stopped the truck five miles from
T " h x x Glen Rose. He then took them to
Charge Filed
Dist. Atty. Jim Ferguson filed
murder with malice charges a-
gainst Zamago in Peace I Justice
C. M. Tidwell’s court after' ques-
tioning the Mexican through an
interpreter.
The stabbing occurred at the
home of Genaro Castillo, Zama-
go’s brother, on the Charlie W.
Bridge's Ranch. Castillo is em-
ployed by Bridges as a laborer.
Soto and his uncle, Juan Soto,
arrived at the Castillo house a-
bout 12:30 p. m., Prosecutor Fer-
guson said. According to the Me-
xicans, they all drank liquor ex-
cept Juan. Four hours later, Soto
tried to get his uncle to leave in
an auto and a fight ensued. Za-
mago said he stabbed him sev-
eral times.
Ferguson said Soto was stabbed
under the heart and twice in the
chest.
“I jabbed several times and
missed some of the times and hit
some of the times,”' the prosecu-
tor quoted the Mexican as saying.
The others placed the wounded
man in the back seat of the auto
and left in a pick-up truck parked
nearby. Dist. Atty. Ferguson said
they told him they were taking
another Mexican present to a re-
lative’s home in Walnut Springs.
Makes Confession
Wylie Lilly, jukebox dealer of
Cleburne, owner of the truck fol-
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)—Lead-John Wesley Lord, of Boston, "is'embrace the Episcopal, United
ing churchmen today registered as shocking as it is Christian.” Presbyterian, Methodist and
a somewhat bedazzled but firmly “It overcomes with stark sim- United Church of Christ with other
favorable reaction to a proposal plicity many of the problems that denominations subsequently in-
• for a wide reunion among Ameri- have perplexed the separate com- vited to join.
can Protestants. munions over the years.” The provocative formula was
The plan, said Methodist Bishop The plan, at the outset, would offered Sunday by a top-ranking
mumba clamped a Communist- ,cI upaw sulu uy - . .
style dictatorship on the city cf had definite information that thethemi dozens of injured motor- lies hard by the GULF coastline
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)—The
umber of Negroes attending pub-
ic schools with white children in
Southern and border states has in-
creased more than 14,000 this year
over last, the Southern Education-
al Reporting Service (SERS) said
today.
The 195,625 Negroes attending
desegregated classes represent
6.3 per cent of the Negroes en-
rolled in the 17 states and Wash-
ington, D.C., SERS said.
The figure was contained in the
service’s semi-annual statistical
summary of developments arising
from the U.S. Supreme Court’s
1954 decision on school segrega-
tion.
SERS said the proportion of Ne-
groes attending bi-racial classes
in the region this year was about
the same as in the 1959-60 school
year. Total Negro enrollment was
reported at 3,020,727 and white,
10,165,246.
Most of the desegregated Ne-
groes, 194,849, live in Delaware,
Kentucky, Maryland, Missouri,
Oklahoma, Texas, West Virginia
night and Tuesday. Scattered
showers mostly east and south
portions. Gradually clearing west
portion Tuesday. No important
.. temperature changes except turn-
ing cooler Tuesday. Low tonight
45 northwest to 65 southeast. High
Tuesday 55 to 68.
TEMPERATURES
in Houston and Louisiana.
—----- e
country.
The plan is patterned on
the precedent-shattering establish-
ment of the United Church of
South India in 1947, uniting Pres-
byterians, Methodists, Episcopali-
ans and Congregationalists.
Dr. Blake proposed specifically
a merger of these four groups in
the United States. He included the
United Church of Christ, a pres-
ently evolving union of Congrega-
tionalists and the Evangelical and
Reformed Church.
Altogether, the combined body
would have more than 20 million
members. Other churches accept-
ing the principles, Dr. Blake said,
would also be invited to join, with
the ultimate aim of reuniting
“the whole of Christ’s church.”
The Rev. Dr. James E. Wag-
ner, of Philadelphia, and the Rev.
Dr. Fred Hoskins, of New York,
co-presidents of the newly created
United Church of Christ, voiced
advances were heavily dependent
on Soviet production.
“You manufacture for our coun-
try a great amount of intricate
equipment,” he said, “make
available to s a great amount of
designing documentation, send us
skilled specialists, train for our
country a great number of techni-
cal specialists.
“All this is part of the tremen-
dous assistance rendered by the
Soviet government and the Soviet
people to.our country’s social con-
struction.”
Khrushchev argued that war is
ha.tasa
strengthening of the solidarity be-
tween the Communist party of nuclear weapons and that Com-
China and the Communist party 1 ‘ "
of the Soviet Union, between the showing the world that they
■ ■ ’ / ■ 3
X g
1
; g"
3
g
dag
W,eP‘n
> ft
i0
_Ana
to JAMES HANNA, the land deal-
er, on his birthday tomorrow...In
1958, the CLEBURNE YELLOW
JACKETS, according to some
lines of thinking, lost the semi-
finals football game to KINGS-
rilfJ •"6 w
P • A -
■k i . <1^ • ; ;
t ‘ 282889:9
headed for Stanleyville.
Caught 500 miles east of Leo-
poldville by Congolese army com-
mander Col. Joseph Mobutu’s
troops, he has been brought back
to face trial on charges of incit-
senhower to order the U.S. Navy
CLEBURNE AND VICINITY — and Air Force to patrol the Guate-
who pays the piper calls the tune, about 15 miles south of Presidio.
In his speech, he made it abun-
Thomas L. Corley, 17, of Irving, .
was killed at a ranch home 8 convinced that if Lumumba had
today were at the most critical Manuel Cardinal Arteaga, assert- informal, non-ritualistic churches
level yet after the church angrily ed that the government’s revolu- into a body “both reformed and
denied Castro’s charge that tionary indoctrination ------- - ■
priests took bribes to preach preaches communism.
31, Fort Worth Negro. Police said
a man who fired the fatal shots deposed premier they let loose
Monday, Monday night and Tues- DAKAR, Senegal (AP) — Mon-
unced for- 'day. Continuing light rains were sieur Sponem, standing at a road-
predicted for Southeast Texas. side curve outside Dakar to take
s
r - g
8. ■ 3: ■ 388888 888 • • . 888 8
' * em. J
838 .*88888888 888
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was ordered at abutment
Houston where a man identified
Alton Sembera, 20, Route 1, Cie- . ,
burne, injured in an accident west swimming P00
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833888888
However, they expressed hope
that the plan would not be limited when an auto driven by Glenora
to the four bodies named even at Gene Sullivan, 18, of Keene, col-
People’s Republic of China and produce
the Soviet Union.” c-
tally stabbed. An autopsy was or-
dered to determine the cause of anton
general election by a
1,306.625 to 926,653.
The provincial governments of gation and learned he is wanted VILLE when school officials lost
• - ■ ' ' - ..... ■ — ' ■ the toss that put the game in
interim appointment and also be spread to the rest of the state
a candidate in the special election. - - - - - - • - - —
shooting of John M. Farris, 32, of
interpreted by Premier! In his speech Sunday, Liu said Humble, in Houston early Satur-
Khrushchev is the correct inter- in effect, well, that’s the way it day. They charged Gene C. Brown
—
,8
' 33888888888 8882
' 33888888 888
They are Blakley, U.S. Rep. Jim
or tomorrow. I
Light rains continued in thej
eastern part of Texas Monday as
a mild, weak Pacific cool front
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I
Soviet bloc and several Asian-af-ists were treated at hospitals ir about halfway between GALVES-
frican nations were planning to three cities, and more than 100
recognize a Lumumba administra- car ran out of 8as or over-
tion in Stanleyville as the Congo’s heated.
• efly by authorities in Camaguey action to the letter, which was
read in Catholic churches without
residents of Stanleyville . , ,
being mistreated by the mil- porting Lumumba and the Sovietled in connection with a burglary
.. . • _ T Tm 1 A ei IN I x y; . ~ +N-- fHmnrrn +AA,A
such thing happening to me.” - .
Camaguey military officials said pocket-sized revolutions
Mrs. J. B. (Agnes) McElroy, ville County, died of a stab wound
55, of Route 4 ,Cleburne, received received m a fight Sunday. Police
the Congo the chaotic days after indepen-tween Bologna and Florence Sun-
(AP)—Henchmen of Patrice Lu- dence. day. Police said there were so
Western diplomats said they many collisions no one counted VACA.. .Fishing-industrial center
, i . ... .0 +hom. clAyone AF iniire/ p-AA~_ 1:0c. W,,1 Lr, +10 GITT AAN g+1 1 AA
F-/o fl Of
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588447
*55
k among Catholics were persistent socks", accepted bribes from sug-spi
" but unconfirmed reports that
. Archbishop Enrique Perez Seran- against the revolution.
as George Williams, 32, ol Deca- The remainder, 776, reside in Ar-
over the weekend claimed at least tur, Ala., was found dying nearaa Tlida L.uilala ILuiL
a railroad yard. He had a number Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia,
of wounds on his body.
Three other occupants of the car caped from his guarded residence
- in Leopoldville a week ago and
—8 ••ML luuiiuay lUUiAt. 1 1 1 . 1,
Otherwise little or no precipitation may have been strong in revolts
..... which hit Guatemala and Nicara-
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a
ft®
Saturday, Wladyslaw Gomulka, were injured.
Pravda, the Soviet Communist chief ot the Polish party, said the
party newspaper, published a long Communist summit committee tween two strngers over atten-
editorial a week ago in which it had adopted the Khrushchev line tions of a barmaid for the fatal
stated that peaceful coexistence, in large measures. shooting of John M. Farris, 32, of
With the start of segregation in
G. C Murdock^ 74, of Devine New Orleans, SERS said, AJ
s• •g. • i
" I p
l 388 :
z 8 88888g
88
5 ’ I
shoulder and back injuries when .
her auto collided with another at ti8ation. .
the traffic light on Hy. 174 at Bur-
i nd i cat ed
Extreme Southwest Texas: gua in mid-November.
- - . bama, Georgia, Mississippi and
his car collided with a mail train South Carolina remained the only
An overturning car killed a Ft. . , , •,
than capitalist Hood recruit, Anthony Michalski, communists on Lumumba s side.
north of Fort Worth southwest- suggested that the U.S.
ward to Mineral Wells to San An- ment construct a $30-million per-
gelo and southward to the Riomanent science and education where Zamago confessed the slay-
Grande Valley, brought onlycenter at the Flushing Meadowling.
slightly cooler weather. Skies site Seto was dead when ambulance
were generally clear behind the Fair Robert Moses
front and cloudy to the east. I aid Sunday that a comprehen-
------------- ------ Rains were still falling earlysive plan for federal participa-
date, was defeated by Johnson for Monday at Beaumont, Lufkin, tion in the fair calls for construc-
the Senate post in the November Houston, Palacios and Longview, tion of the Franklin National Cen-
vote of Dallas and Fort Worth had light ter of Science and Education on a
rains during the night. seven-acre site which would house
South Texas...But nobody believes
this to be true in losing to toss
to PORT LAVACA officials...The
football guys want the trip and
they want the victory, it is hoped.
Several grid fans hereabouts
are wondering if there will be
any chartered buses to the game
at PORT LAVACA and one group
is wondering if a plane could not
be chartered for the trip...Time
is short, but any group which de
cides to promote either a chart-
ered bus or a chartered plane
trip can click...These people in
CLEBURNE will follow their foot-
ball team anywhere, this has
been proven conclusively during
| the last six seasons.
dantly clear by pointing out that
Shao chi made a confession of China’s industrial and technical
• I :r AL - -V wiv ivui E---3 iiaiiicu even at NCIIC •ULLLVdII, LO, UL iycciic, VUL
' V4°vneyusainnd viSent nrmtent the start, since their own merger lidedwith a car driven by Pres-
88 3388883 ■ 3 83388 J
8888 3888888. 88888 ■■ 33338 388
8: 8ig8 : 3 332889
g ? ■ ’ *s
388533333 -y 3:
3888858 88883888: 38 33 38
--------8232:28833333
A Harris County deputy sheriff quate for overnight . stands. . .
■ Many happy returns of the day
v . --g ______. ___ ton Blake Rettig, 44, of Route 4,
gotiations with the Disciples of, Cleburne, at Boone and Anglin
1 (See U.S. page 8) I streets Sunday night.
. er Bureau issued today this 5-day
forecast for Dec. 5-10: ,.- .. , . ... . I.pan.
, Northwest Texas: Temperatures directing force for.a steadily jin- They said they felt sure that
will average 2 to 10 degrees below creasing threat, to the established if the Episcopal and United Pres-
normal. Cold T u e s d ky and regimes of -atin America. byterian conventions next year
Wednesday slowly warming trend In the past six weeks Latin issue calls for such a union as
■ latter part of the week. Normal America has seen an. upheaval in proposed by Dr. Blake, it will re-
high 48 north to 58 south. Normal El Salvador, short-lived revolu- “o-.1 A-d I‛-L.E.,1 --
weeks can be viewed as just a
series of fairly mild curtain-
raisers for what is yet to come.
Castroism—or, as the Latins
A Family Needs Help
, A family needs help.
A mother of five writes to the Goodfellows her family will
have no gifts for Christmas unless the Goodfellows help. The
father has been out of work a long time.
Oldest child is a boy, 7. Ilie other children are 5, 3, 2
and a 2-month-old baby girl.
The woman asked for diapers and blankets for the baby
and clothing for the other children.
That isn’t too much to ask.
Make your contribution to the Goodfellow Fund at the
Times-Review office today so this family and many others will
have a happy Christmas this year.
first of period followed by warm- it has not yet seemed to be a
ing trend beginning about Th, g;-dominating factor in the junta
• nor a fe., 2,0.0 c... which has taken over.
II
— , Blowing dust and wind gusts up pictures of a car race, focused on ,
Wright of Fort Worth and State to 55 miles per hour swept por- a car as it flipped off the road stealing the auto at Fort Worth
Sen. Henry B. Gonzales of San tions of West Texas Sunday as and slammed into a tree. Sponem
Antonio._______________________ the front entered the state. After- rushed to the car and found that
stamp of approval on the peaceful than two weeks of debate, it
coexistence policy of the Soviet sounded as if the Soviets had' laid
Union as it apparently has been down the law as they saw it.
17,
p4
an 88
2M9
Police Sgt. Jasper Peugh made
a regular check on a suspicious-
looking automobile Sunday, learn-
ed it was stolen and promptly ar- l
rested the thief.
Sgt. Peugh savz the 1954 Ply-
mouth parked on the market
square with the motor running al
l a.m. He found a 23-year-old
man from San Saba asleep in-
side. The San Saba.man admitted
The letter also denied Castro’s! Episcopal Bishop James A.
,g. , 1 he letter a so denied Castros pik of California, called the
Adding to the increased tension charge that henchmen in cas-plan the "most sound and in-
no longer possible because of miles east of Centerville in East
Fight Is Critical
, _ J Dr. Blake, in a sermon at Grace
In an open letter to Castro read Episcopai Cathedral, detailed
tween the Roman Catholic Church Sunday in Santiagos cathedral, steps for combining creedal li-
nine Catholic bishops, including turgical churches with the
A • A %
Monday
3 a.m......63
6 a.m......64
9 a.m......65
12 Noon .... 73
H 'r' ' '
h ■I
3233388 : 388882632: 3582333 308888888889 888528888
Sunday
3 n.m......67
6 p.m......66
9 p.m......64
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 22, Ed. 1 Monday, December 5, 1960, newspaper, December 5, 1960; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1542785/m1/1/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.