Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 74, Ed. 1 Monday, February 6, 1961 Page: 1 of 6
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CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW
5c DAILY
10c SUNDAY
ESTABLISHED 1904
Full Leased Teletypesetter Wire Report of the Associated Press—World’s Greatest News Agency
6 PAGES
CLEBURNE, TEXAS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1961
Traffic Claims 12
Snow, Sleet, Rain Pelt
Down On Cleburne Area
23
No Ice On
Other Areas
Highways
tour sign and onto a burned-cut
■
of Princeton.
by a Negro woman at Mansfield,
and highways were not glazed
“to go to hell.”
ing about 25 miles per hour when
through Williams avenue bridge red at the Williams avenue bridge his auto struck the abutment.
railing, fell 16 feet and landed between Main and Buffalo streets
A 1961 police squad
the two Weatherford youths were Caddc and Henderson streets at
but posed no immediate threat to
side the vehicle 15 minutes before away.
Pearcy told Assistant Police east on Henderson street by Pa-
Communities from the Carolinas
Chief Trifles Birdwell, who arriv-
a
ference between life and death.”
17-inch cushion of snow saved the
Pat Floyd, 28, thus summed up occupants from serious injury.
blinded by lights of an auto
♦
All three received bruises.
his home at Summer Grove.
car.
today how he and two others sur-
“All our matches were wet,”
as he approached the bridge from
olished vehicle with only minor the west.
injuries.
The auto crossed an abutment,
plane crashed Friday.
The howling
creek.
an hour, was blamed for nearly
The 1956 Ford landed in several
not enter the car.
crude “help” appeal tramped in
Floyd said.
The temperature dropped to les at Joshua and on the Grand
four below zero Saturday night
ditions long after the storm roared
were suffering from various de-
Pat Patterson lifted the vehicle
—The William Faulkner Founda- officials held out hope that rea-
two Cleburne Negroes about the
The' 45-year-old Daniel is a na- about 16 inches.
stored today.
novel” published in 1960 will go
to New York City author John
shoulder bruise1. He was
Knowles for his
where he was taken in a Dillon
ens
ambulance.
on the left hand.
catch fire, called for a fire1 truck.
the author’s Nobel prize money as
ting out of the city hoped to be
nessman, and carried Terry J.
placed in city jail to sober up. Time-Life magazines.
segregated elementary school said
In Rhode Island, officials called
McCowan told police
B. J.
Soviets Still Mum
lem of overcrowded schools.
On Sputnik's Action
U.S. Passengers Of
MOSCOW (AP) — The Soviet He
suggested the Sputnik’s
The Johnson County Grand Jury Hampshire, Vermont and Maine
Santa Maria Delayed
escaped the full fury as the storm
was sworn in at 9 a. m. today,
appear as endorsements in paid
and unusual silence today
on
jaeed American passengers look rebels took over.
afternoon.
forward to returning to home soil
the new film
in
Foreman of the grand jury is
shall be inclined to believe that
a slight delay.
depart late Sunday for Lisbon
after the launching,” Lovel said.
the opinion poll
Her former captor, rebel Capt.
Moscow’s official silence was in
Japanese scientists said they
। direct contrast to previous sate- picked up signals being transmit-
ted today on frequencies normally
police for the time being,
ian
despite
1,050 miles northwest of Recife.
*
But a Real spokesman in Miami asylum.
Most of the Santa Maria’s Eu-
over.
Weather
Western experts speculated that
]
the new satellite or the Soviets
some
since the scheduled docking of the
success was assured.
LAFF-A-DAY
the Sputnik might be carrying
a
o!
is large enough to carry an astro-
paper L’Unita reported in a Mos-
cow dispatch that the Sputnik animals into space.
-^1
together at Fairfax. They found them-
in
service
Tracking Station, said, “there is
about the long Russian silence
on
the satellite’s progress.”
earth’s atmosphere.
। the job today.
i
EMs
Trio Saved From Icy Death
After Their Plane Crashes
Quiz Negroes
On Burglary
Grand Jury
Is Sworn In
Actor Helps In
Promotion Stint
and Lander, Wyo. It was piloted rural schools in that area closed,
by Buck Duane, 41, Lander busi- following 8.5 inches of snow at
way to Lisbon aboard the sister
ship Vera Cruz—this time accom-
moved out to sea.
The storm came
Britain’s leading satellite-track-
ing expert, Prof. Bernard Lovel,
Two Denver City men, Teddy
Wisenbaker, 25. and George Gard-
ner, 41, died early Sunday when
a car went out of control and
cy, 20, of Weatherford, and a com-
panion, Earl Barton, 20, of Wea-
therford, emerged from the dem-
Cantinflas co-starred in “Around
the Word in 80 Days” and re-
Pearcy’s only injuries were a
cut on the head, and right hand
soon
was
shire, and Yale University. The
former associate editor of Holiday
late Saturday night. Police said
autos driven by Gene Franklin
Medica, 79, held today for inves-
tigation in the pistol slaying of
forward to returning to home soil her berth in Recife taking on
today, but it seems there will be water, fuel and food. She is to
ROLL OUT
THE BARREL
Many of the 12 traffic deaths lington, between Dallas and Fort
were blamed on wet streets' and Worth. Three other girls were in-
dropped 30 feet into a creek bed
Saturday night. Killed were Clau-
dia Reeves, 16; Lou Goldner, 17;
and Kathy Fleming, 16, all of Ar-
weekend total to 15 persons. The
Associated Press' tabulation cov-
ered the period from 6 p.m. Fri-
tive of Dayton, Tex., and a 1938
graduate of Baylor University.
Traffic facilities continued to
pace the weekend violent death
toll in Texas although snow and
sleet kept most motorists at home.
at Easter and another party es-
pecially for crippled children.
CLEBURNE AND VICINITY -
Mostly cloudy, occasional light
a fire. We just walked around
Friday night trying to keep warm.
“When it got light enough to see
the lights and radio on Sunday
night. Nothing was missing.
Aged Husband
Slays Younger
Wife in Anger
Lives On Weekend
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS bridge, sailed 50 or 60 feet and
Scotia early Sunday.
Air, rail and bus schedules were
still a scramble Sunday night but
jured.
Remus Elliott, 50, of Dumas
Sunday.
The young driver was pinned in-
a wrecker lifted the auto and
freed him.
grees of frostbite in the hands and
feet.
Robert Lee, 30 miles northeast ci
that West Texas city, and 8 inches
at Mertzon, 25 miles to the west
Two youths, feared lost on the
North Bosque River, we're found
safe after they left the river and
found refuge in a ranch.
Temperatures in the snow zone
were low but not as bitter as some
earlier season readings. Lowes;
overnight figure reported was 15
at Amarillo, while highest mini
schools by next September all
Negroes who seek such admis-
sion.
arrive in Miami until 4:30 a.m.
Tuesday.
satellite.
A Soviet scientist, Prof. Yev-
view Highway Sunday, but the ca-
bles were quickly repaired.
Employes of Texas Power &
Light Co. and Johnson County El
ectric lines in the area.
Snow poured down on parts of
He served three terms in the
Texas House of Representatives
and is a former county attorney
of Liberty County.
His plantation-ranch near Lib-
erty has been rebuilt into a show-
pital to investigate a nurse’s re-
port that a drunk man was in a
storeroom Sunday.
They found the man, 52, wed-
mosa where the Bradleys operate
a flying service.
Clad in pajamas and a robe, the
body was lying on tar paper,
covered with tar paper and under
8 inches of soil. Three bullet
wounds were in her chest, neck
and shoulder.
“I just got mad and lost my
miles west of Denver City.
Foster Albert Wetzel, 37, of Sils-
recent burglary of Cleburne Poul-
try . & Egg Co., 610 South Mill
street.
The Negroes, 27 and 20, admit-
the wreckage and managed to
find my cigarette lighter.”
They used it to light oil from
‘the snow-covered area near Du-
mas.
(VPI) United Prees Telephoto Pictures
(CP) Central Prees Features
(KF) King Features
Youth Trapped When Auto
Plunges Into Creek Bed
benefit of crippled children. He is
also an ardent hunter and has just
(See DANIEL page 6)
in southeast Tuesday. Not quite
so cold in west and north Tuesday
afternoon. Low tonight 25 to 35.
High Tuesday 35 to 42.
TEMPERATURES
a large window of his service sta-
tion on North Granbury street
during the weekend.
Boerne on Friday night.
Salvador Cantu, 27, of Sebastian
was killed Saturday in a head-on
collision of his car and a truck
near Corpus Christi.
James Rudolf Swart, 21, of Fort
a wrecker driven by
Loeb, north of Beaumont. Casey
Beard, at whose home the shoot-
ing occurred, was released on
$2,500 bond.
The collision of a train and pick-
up truck Saturday night near Gar-
Gale force winds whipped the
snow into gigantic drifts, severed
utility lines and reduced travel to
a bare minimum.
272*8
a“sikag
was still closed to all but emer-
gency travel late Sunday.
The city’s two major airports,
Idlewild and La Guardia resumed
Friday. William D. Kelley Jr., 36, the weekend.
of Cumberland, Md., died when The storm which brought the
his single-engine craft smashed snow moved slowly over the state.
advertising. But the tourist bureau the first day of the February term
said he has agreed to let them of court.
The jurors are scheduled to con- of 16 consecutive days of sub-
Nobody was hurt in an accident 100 deaths,
inches of water, but the water did at Henderson and Walnut streets
They were trapped in the same ( West and North Central Texas
J- that saussa twc ether pri- Monday after as much as 12 inch-
vate planes to crash in the region1 es of snow and sleet fell during
LAST STOP FOR SOME — Workmen prepare to lift a
. when she was 18 and he was 57,
to “stay with me a little longer
because God will call me before
long.”
The body of Mrs. Tressa Roma
Bernal Medica was removed Sun-
Firemen stood by as Pearcy was
released from the auto. There was
no fire.
Pearcy told police he was driv-
en the heels
with ice, nor were they expected
to be tonight or tomorrow. The
snow fell intermittently all morn-
ing in Cleburne, sending the big-
gest flakes seen here in years
swirling in on an almost imper-
ceptible north breeze.
The damp weather, combined
with a temperature in the mid
30’s, made for extremely disagree-
able' conditions and the general
forecast called for more of the
same tomorrow, with the temper
ature rising from two to six de-
grees.
The snowfall failed to create
any type of traffic hazard in John-
son County. Police and Texas
Highway Department personnel
reported no ice on any of the
highways or bridges.
Maintenance crews are stand-
ing by, however, ready to spread
gravel on the highways if neces-
sary.
Southwestern Bell Telephone Co
maintenance workers' said mois-
ture caused minor damage to cab-
-a
bl
said the 802 flight was delayed
‘uv
haaa
Ei
. . when the appointment would be leased when
Police today were questioning made officially. m5950 "hen
{IA I I akurne NI Am’rAAN akNvI +LA •
7
a
on a
a pickup truck stalled Saturday
night in a snowdrift. His body was
car was
packed highways laced with ice.
One death was blamed on expos-
(Ss6TH. YEAR, NO. 74
were keeping
development a
The liner, restored last weekend cently starred i
jaded American passengers look to her Portuguese owners, lay at
area over
The weather in Cle-
burne today was just a-
bout as unpleasant as any
type of weather can be,
as huge snowflakes inter-
mingling with fine sleet
and freezing rain descend-
ed through an atmosphere
a few degrees above the
freezing mark.
The mixed precipitation follow-
ed a one-inch plus rainfall Satur-
day and mixed rain and snow Sun-
day. The mercury at no time fell
below the 30-degree mark and lit-
tle of the snow, except in sheltered
of snow on portions of Oklahoma,
Texas and Kansas and glazed , , . , . . -
nearby areas with freezing rain bringing almost instant death to three passengers. INEA
or sleet. I Telephoto) ______________ _______________
we searched
taining wall at Fort Worth.
Jacqueline Perry, 9, was killed
Saturday in Waco when a car driv-
en by her father, Fred Perry, and
another car collided at a street in-
tersection.
Geraldine Hayes, 41, Fort Worth
Negro woman, was killed in a two-
car collision south of Wichita
Falls Saturday. Five other per-
sons were injured in the head-on
crash.
Moreno, the Mexican actor known
as Cantinflas, is helping the Mexi-
can Tourist Bureau in a promo-
tion campaign planned for 1961.
Cantinflas has repeatedly re-
fused to let his name or picture
mission and fate of its massive
new Sputnik. Western tracking
buried the area under up
to 40 inches of snow.
Northeastern areas, stunned by
one of the worst storms in history,
struggled today to overcome the
devastation of a weekend storm
that buried the area under up to
40 inches of snow.
In the nation’s midsection, a
new storm headed northeastward
after dumping up to eight inches
a promise of political
on frequencies not used before.
“It may be, of course, that
suffered a
did this have to happen?”'
“no” vote on the ground that con-
struction would entrench segrega-
tion.
The school will have 367 pupils
who now attend four schools
which will be closed.
The legislature already has ap-
propriated funds to build the
school. The State Board of Edu-
cation was not equired to hold
—
[ a
i .
3
f SB
—
ggagagggg
storm, accom-
By PROC
Colorado. One wing was
A late model auto crashed The spectacular' accident occur-
The storm was expected to
move across the Midwest and into
Xn
A Soviet physicist, Prof.
Trailways bus back to the highway in Woodbury, Tenn. places, stuck. As a result, streets
The vehicle, bound from Knoxville to Nashville, skidded
on icy pavement and plunged down a 300-foot cliff,
a0,.
■I
into a gully about 20 miles north also bringing sleet and rain, and
Patrolmen Lonnie Grayson and of Brigham City, Utah, brewed a rare winter tornado. Ex
The third plane disappeared onposure took one life.
a flight between Rock Springs! San Angelo and a number of
Numerous towns and cties,
SI ember—Texas Press Association
Texas Daily Press League
Southern Newspaper Publishers
category than earlier Soviet Sput- completed and vast and beaut?
niks that took dogs and other ful lakes are a-forming rapidly
deep snow—reached them.
All were hospitalized here.
Western scientists especially
noted the Soviets seemed in no
9 L,856
gT"a
f T.
L9-23
Sam
&
■ I
the storm the worst in at least
57 years.
Among the hardest hit com-
munities was Cortland, N.Y.,
which measured 40 inches of
snow, the heaviest in the city’s
history. Boston had 14.4 inches
but the northern areas of New
MOSCOW (AP) — The Soviet He suggested the Sputnik s mum was 44 at Brownsville.
Union maintained an enigmatic radio may have broken down or Snow reached Eagle Pass on rhe
the the Soviets might be transmitting (Mexican border between Del Rio
Are Buried
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Northeastern areas,
stunned by one of the
worse storms in history,
struggled today to over-
come the devestation of
a weekend storm that
Sunday
3 p.m......34
6 p.m......34
9 p.m......34
12 p.m......34
urea wouay The plane crashed in severe ic-
New York City, its 6,000 miles ing conditions on a flight from ________-e__________
Denver toAlamosa in southwest- storm that caused two other
Negroes in Sussex County, Del-
aware’s southernmost county, vot- (
ed 441 to 19 in favor of construc-
tion of a $543,000 school which
must be segregated under state
, law, state officials reported.
About 40 per cent of the eligible
Negro voters were represented.
The NAACP had called for a
Thekla Duenneberg, 72, was
Medica said he had pleaded struck by an automobile and
with his wife, whom he married killed near her home north of
mosa, were rescued Sunday morn-
ng from the slopes of Mt. Blanca.
Bradley’s brother, Jack, a
capital.
Knowles, a native of West Vir- back on schedule after a day of .
ginia, attended Phillips Exeter operation without the semblance ged in a trash barrel. He was Turner, 28, a Denver writer for
Academy at Exeter. New Hamp- of a timetable. placed in city jail to sober up. Time-Life magazines.
The girl friend of the youths,
who lives about a block away Doty, 32, of 314 Shaw avenue and
from the accident, heard the'Jimmy Fagan, 16, of 810 West
crash and ran to the bridge. She Henderson street, collided. mostly in New Engand and New
York, were under emergency con-
■ • ■ ' — ' wr ■ -■
...................................".......... ’ .....-......1
The retired grocer told police (near Fort Worth. The sheriff’s of-
a triangle led to the shooting, that fice quoted the woman as' saying
| what with the heavy precipitatior
. . V. almost a constant proposition...
Fedynsky, said the Sputnik was AU the lights on the first floor o'
shot into an orbit that carried it the courthouse went out for a
helped Barton, passenger in the
auto, pull the right door open. AuHher (He*g
Pearcy’s right foot was pinned “9—*“ 5 5 --
between the dash and the acceler- Novel Honors
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (AP)
I he White House did not say ator and clutch. The foot was re-
operations Sunday night after
being closed since Friday, forcing Bill Glenn went to Memorial Hos-
203.1 miles from the earth at its brief time this morning, due to
Jodrell Bank highest point and 138.5 at its low- weather conditions, but
'; est. He said it woud circle the
sleeping equipment supplied by the
Army. Girls stayed in the school cafe-
teria. (NEA Telephoto)
Officers said an auto driven by son's third major storm that vir-
J. V. Haney of Waco, owner of tually paralyzed the
Cleburne Laundry, turned south the weekend.
knocked down 10 feet of bridge off Henderson street onto Caddo
-5-.
---
a." .ee
"w/an
a
am i P
magazine now is working
MEXICO CITY (AP) — Mario new novel.
a
upside down in Buffalo Creek here at 12:26 a. m., only minutes after heavily damaged in a collision at the middle Mississippi Valley,
Kentucky and Tennessee today
after it happened, that he Bill Glenn we're passengers in the tempting to restore order from
the havoc wrought by the sea-
" -
l
ure after the body of a Texas died in 15-degree weather when
"7
day to midnight Sunday.
A carload of Arlington High crashed into an embankment 7%
School students went through a de-
a screen on a window7, entered place and is the site of two big
his home and left after leaving parties he gives each year—one
progress were given. dents who now live in DALLAS
Prof. Klinov was quoted by are expecting a visit from the
Moscow radio as saying the satel- stork in late summer...Residents
hurry7 to answer speculation that lite was designed “to study the were wondering today when the
-ist ha - - - earth as a planet and to make a local area would get a break
man through space. The satellite study of its nearest environment, (any type in the weather.
including that of meteoritic dan-1 Two flood retarding dams just
gers,” and was in a different' east of CLEBURNE have beer
vived 38 hours in bitter cold on Floyd said, “so we couldn’t start
a snowy mountainside after their
“A Separate of streets nearly strangled with
almost a foot and a half of snow,
Floyd, his sister, Betty, 19, and
the pilot, Bill Bradley, 20, of Ala- Saturday morning
_ . _ Monroe Brown, 59, Fort Worth
his 40-year-old wife, sobbed: “Why Negro, was shot to death Sunday
ectric Cooperative said the wea-
Floyd is city manager at Ala- ther has caused no damage to el-
Foundation officials, who an-
nounced the selection today, said
Barton received only a small cut formal presentation of a bronze
■ h- - hand. plaque to Knowles is scheduled in
Police, fearing the auto would Charlottesville this spring.
tch fire, colled fer e fire true k. The Faulkner Foundation was
was unmanned. He said it wassnau ve iilinu I veneve ula
1 designed to study the earth and something went wrong shortly
its environment. after the launching,” Lovel said.
I »
2
8 —n-6 38- Ha388888888888888888888
i
naut—and perhaps two.
Italy’s Communist party news-
sider 17 felony cases and are not freezing temperatures but the
expected to adjourn before* this mercury was expected to climb
them to Fort Worth retailers.
Police said one of the Negroes
is employed at the poultry firm
and the other is a former em-
ploye.
Bobby Eaton, 701 South Caddc
street, told police burglars cut
trolman Lonnie Grayson. Police northward into New England con-
The driver, Charles Gary Pear- ed at the scene of the accident Sgt. Jasper Peugh and Patrolman tinned the massive task of at-
Bill Daniel
1
l(Guam's New
'Governor
WASHINGTON (AP) — Bill Dan-
iel, brother of Gov. Price Daniel
of Texas, Sunday was announced
as President Kennedy’s choice for
governor of Guam.
was quickly restored...Dist. Atty
certainly something rather odd earth every 89.8 minutes and yield GLYNDON HAGUE recovered
L., , - i U. J. iyaccuvval Ilu pouce A rodeo enthusiast, he has
they did so because of the prob- somebedy threw a rock through staged a number of them for the
ar At ntrorArAIXIMA/i coAAnic . . _ 3m.E
"F‘-
rain or snow this afternoon, end-
ing in west and north tonight and Santa Maria at Port Everglades,
for some reason and would not ropean passengers were on their
( RECIFE, Brazil (AP)—Most of Fla., a port of call that the luxury be used in government promotion,
the Santa Maria’s adventure- liner missed when Portuguese
new data on top layers of the from a flu attack and back on
organized Dec. 28 with some of cancellation of some 2,600 flights.
The four major railroads opera-
she “fired three times but he kept
younger man, and she told him coming toward me.”’
"",.3
1
i . . - . , . - CHRISTMAS...Now the pet, about
the schedule of cities to be passed from a fixed station and not an 1 11 weeks old, has strayed or bee?'
orbiting object. stolen and GRADY is heartbrok
-------------x-------------- The Soviet press continued toen...If you know about the little
a-a“ either something went wrong with give the Sputnik big propaganda dog a call to MI 5-8647, will make
-athe new catellite nr the Soviets treatment, reporting Soviet and; a little boy and a little dog happv
spectacular foreign reaction to the launching, again...FRANCES and BOB MOO
secret until its But no details of the satellite’s RE, former CLEBURNE resi-
■ - . - Worth was killed Saturday when
Medica s tidy little garden beside his car smashed into a stone re-
railing, before flipping into the street and struck the front of the panied by winds up to 75 miles
police car. £
selves snowed in, and bedded down
vg
l- .. . ________
r' 2.5) -Jam”--■
a- *.2 “m "12-
K u‘b.3go
5•-- e ehgs . ""0
""bdsnmam.ie gg
Monday
3 a.m......34
6 a.m. ..... 34
9 a.m......34
12 Noon .... 35
{2
Thirty-eight of the Americans with her old crew and old skipper.
Delware has been ordered by started out by plane Sunday night. Her former captor, rebel Capt.
a federal court to admit to white They were booked to board the Henrique Galvao, also stayed in
a federal court to admit to white Real Flight 802 for Miami at Recife. He is restricted by Brazi-
Belem,. an Amazon delta city 1 '
- gegagF-6882053599
2'. ’; ,V ®
\ ’ 5g-g
7mmend- u‘"i
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5 ,0642
out to sea off the tip of Nova Floyd and Bradley suffered deep and more snow fell,
face cuts and bruises. Miss Floyd *...... -
“We fed the fire with brush and
sprained ankle. All oil and tried to keep warm,’1’
Floyd said. “We’re awful lucky.”
stations picked up no trace of the there is some living thing on
THEY STAYED AFTER SCHOOL — Ap-
parently not minding it a bit, these junior
and senior high school band members
prepare to bed down in Fairfax, Va.,
High School gymnasium. About 300 boys
and girls appeared for a musical get-
• 2-, Ee z-u™. iS?* we •u F)
“I couldn’t signal! I was.
shaving." _
director of the
ALAMOSO, Colo. (AP)—A ciga- ern
rette lighter—“that made the dif- ripped off the light plane but
bp
board—not necessarily a man—
and the Russians are saying;
___________________________ .. The storm moving northeast- geny Leonodivich Klinov, hinted nothinguntil they get the satellite.
“Pepe.” He has become interna-w. A. Seals, retired deputy sher-ward out of the south central the seven-ton satellite whose safely back to earth, he said,
tionaliy known. iff. (See OTHER AREAS page 6) launching was announced Friday, if the silence continues, I
day from a shallow grave in
. Negroes Explain
Votes on School
DOVER, Del. (AP) - Negroes
who bucked the National Associa-
tion for the Advancement of Col-
ored People to vote for a new
tion award for a “notable first sonable service would be re-
“almost certainly" was un-
manned.
Panhandle cattleman was found in he set cut on foot for help after
’ A
। lite launchngs, when Soviet scien-
(tists routinely announced how used by Soviet satellites but said
| equipment was functioning and the signals seemed to be coming
his wife was in love with a
A practicing lawyer for 22 and a . .
ted taking several cases of chick- years, the six-foot-two Daniel has treated, at Memorial Hospital, Peace.”
from the plant and selling found plenty, of time for other ac-
— "• ' " tivities.
- sgo w 23088229
SANTA CLAUS brought little
GRADY BLACK, aged 2, of BUR
LESON a captivating little black
dog with a brown head for
“We just prayed all day Satur-
the snow. Within an hour a weasel day and tried to keep warm,”
—a tracked vehicle for going over — -
, sure no repetition of seizure at
sea. /
The Portuguese government
sent its “thanks and sincere ap-
preciation” for U.S. Air Force and
naval cooperation in getting the
Santa Mara away from Galvao
and his little band and for Wash-
ington’s attitude during the seiz-
ure.
Portugal also thanked Brazil,
which turned over the liner to her
regular captain Sunday, and1
praised newsmen for “enlighten-
ing world public opinion” on the
real meaning of the Santa Maria’s
seizure.
Galvao’s armed rebels took over
the ship Jan. 22 after killing a
ship’s officer and wounding three
other crewmen.
visiting with a girl friend a block 1:30 p. m. Sunday.
The squad car was being driven the beleaguered Northeast.
—ss
That will make it two full weeks panied by a heavy guard to en-
head,” Medica was quoted by
» Giglio said Medica admitted
firing the shots from a pistol.
He said the other man had been
paying attentions to his wife for
• two years. Medica bought the
pistol three months ago.
The shooting occurred early
Saturday in the couple’s bed-
room. The body, covered with
gunny sacks, lay in the back
yard where she fell, throughout
the day. After nightfall, Medica
said, he buried her in the garden.
.4 Then early Sunday he went to
68 an undertaker to buy a coffin.
““ Police were called. Medica re-
peated the story and led police
. to the garden grave.
searching pilot, spotted their the airplane engine.
Bias
cume e
☆ A ☆ ☆
and Laredo Monday, the first
snow in that area since Novem-
ber of 1957.
Most highways were open al-
(See HIGHWAYS page 3)
-
Maximum temperature 35 de-
grees in past 24 hours.
Minimum temperature 34 de-
grees in past 24 hours.
\ Maximum temperature 60 de-
* grees a year ago today.
Minimum temperature 32 de-
grees a year ago today.
SHREVEPORT (AP) -John land killed Jimmy Ray Howell, 17,
HE STICKS TO HIS POST — New York station house. The weekend storm para-
City Patrolman Mathew Lyons stands up lyzed the city. (NEA Telephoto)
to his knees in snow as he telephones his
NARROW ESCAPE FROM DEATH
t Two shooting deaths brought the found early Sunday.
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 74, Ed. 1 Monday, February 6, 1961, newspaper, February 6, 1961; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1542850/m1/1/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.