The Taylor Daily Press (Taylor, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 16, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 7, 1960 Page: 1 of 12
twelve pages : ill. ; page 23 x 16 in. Scanned from physical pages.View a full description of this newspaper.
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Pay Your Poll Tax
Big Election Year
Coming Up!
Wlje ®aplot $>atlp JJtej&i
Fair - Cold
Fair weather Thursday and Friday. Frosty again tonight.
Today’s Range: 29-55. Tomorrow’s Range: 33-60.
Yesterday’s High: 42. Rainfall: 0.
Tomorrow’s Sunrise: 7:29 a.m. Sunset: 5:47 p.m.
Moonrise Today: 1:30 p.m. Moonset Tomorrow: 2:51 a.m.
Lake Levels: Travis: 677.93. Buchanan: 1018.19.
U.S. Weather Bureau Forecast for
Taylor and Williamson County
Full Leased Wire Report of The Associated Press—World’s Greatest News Service
VOLUME 47, NUMBER 16
12 PAGES IN 2 PARTS
TAYLOR, TEXAS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 7, 1960
Associated Press
Price Five Cents
Nixon Will Be
Satisfactory
Conservative'
GOP Campaign
Chief Believes
4
WASHINGTON iff) — Sen. Bar-
ry Goldwater (R-Ariz.) said today
he thinks Vice President Richard
Nixon will prove himself a
patisfactory conservative” in
mpaigning.
Goldwater, who heads the Re-
publican Senatorial Campaign
Committee, disagreed with some
of his GOP senatorial colleagues
who say Nixon needs to identify
himself as something of a liberal
to win the presidency over a
Democratic nominee.
Sens. George D. Aiken (R-Vt.)
and Hugh Scott (R-Pa.) have
made such suggestions while de-
nying that Nixon is the choice of
the GOP ‘‘Old Guard.” Nixon had
no current opposition for the Re-
publican nomination.
‘‘I think the majority of the peo-
ple of the country want a conser-
vative for president,” Goldwater
said. ‘‘That is the impression I
get after having visited 43 states
in the last few months.
‘‘I believe Nixon will prove him-
self a satisfactory conservative
after he is able to cut loose from
the White House apron strings.
Now he is tied to the Eisenhower
administration policies but he will
be free to go on his own if he is
nominated.”
Sen. Styles Brdges (R-NH) said
in a separate interview he fears
Nixon’s chances to win in Novem-
ber may be damaged somewhat
if an inflationary spiral results
from wage increases granted in
the steel strike settlement engi-
neered by the vice president and
Secretary of Labor James P.
Mitchell.
^^There was no immediate public
I^Biction from the Nixon camp to
reports from Concord Wednesday
that the vice president’s name
will be entered Friday in the
March 8 New Hampshire presi-
dential primary.
The name of Sen. John F. Ken-
nedy (D-Mass.), an announced
candidate for the Demicratic
presidential nomination, is to be
entered on the Democratic ballot.
-0--
Second Frost
Forecast for
Taylor Area
Most Prosperous Year
Warmup Due
On Thursday
. i •• .. .
PLAYFUL MOOD—The six to eight inches of snow
that blanketed many areas of Oklahoma and stalled
hundreds of autos on icy highways, merely put this
bear in a playful mood at the Oklahoma City zoo.
—NEA Telephoto
TO LEAD SAFARI
PITTSBURGH (® — Arthur
Godfrey reportedly will lead a
safari to India next month.
Williamson Grand Jury
Returns 26 Indictments
GEORGETOWN — Twenty-six indictments, in-
cluding two for murder with malice, were returned by
the Williamson County grand jury Wednesday afternoon.
Names of the defendants in the murder cases were
withheld until official legal action is taken.
The grand jury no-billed Austin patrolman Leonard
Vandermast in the Dec. 28 accidental shooting of Wayne
Childress, 19, and also returned
VourWeight
Not Hopeless
If your figure is in the
“hopeless category,” you don’t
need to feel that way.
The Taylor Daily Press is
offering Josephine Lowman’s
Self - Improvement Marathon.
You can lose 20 pounds in
just eight weeks.
Don’t miss the Marathon
Sunday in The Press.
Key Witness Describes
Finch Shooting Events
LOS ANGELES (A5) — The state’s key witness, a
slim, 19-year-old Swedish housemaid, burst into tears
on the witness stand after describing ’Barbara Finch’s
violent last moments of life.
As Marie Anne Lindholm testified softily in broken
English, Dr. R. Bernard Finch leaned forward intently
at the counsel table, straining to hear every v/ord.
Near the handsome surgeon, his
Jury Service
Called Basis
ti)f Liberty
Jury service is an inconvenience
to everyone and a sacrifice to
most, but it is one of the funda-
mentals on which our liberty is
based.
District Judge D. B. Wood cit-
onetime receptionist and mistress,
Carole Tregoff, sat erect, her
brown eyes flashing from witness
to prosecutor and back.
Finch, 41, and Miss Tregoff, 23,
are charged with murdering his
36-year-old estranged wife so they
c‘uld marry and retain communi-
ty property valued by Mrs. Finch
at $750,000.
Miss Lindholm came to this
country in September. 1958, to
study English. A girl acquaint-
ance found her a job with the
Finches.
She told a six-man, six-woman
ed the high rate of employment jury and a packed courtroom on
as one of the main reasons citi-
zens don’t want to serve on juries.
A large block of our citizens, a-
bout 07 million, are employed in
the United States.
The Georgetown judge quoted
George Washington as saying that
an individual entering society must
give up a share of his liberty to
preserve the rest.
“The fight,” Judge Wood told
Taylor Kiwanians, “is between the
liberties we retain as individuals
and the rights we give up to the
government for the general wel-
fare of all. Jury service is right
in the middle.”
Judge Wood said he had never
heard of anyone who wanted to
give up our jury system, point-
ing out it is the only pure jury
l stem left in the world today.
He termed jury service as “the
testing place of citizenship.”
The judge of the 26th district
court emphasized that business is
no excuse for jury service. How-
ever, physicians, registered phar-
macists, regular members of fire
departments, and others are ex-
cused by law, the theory being
a no-bill on Charles Braun in
the Dec. 6 “window peeping”
shooting of James Hastings in
Georgetown. And, the Jury re-
duced to aggravated assault the
murder charge against -Clinton
Barnes of Granger in the Nov.
15 baseball bat beating of Clar-
ence Larkin in Granger. Larkin
died in a Temple hospital Nov.
25.
The District Clerk listed the
following indictments: two for
sodomy, four for theft of pro-
perty over $50; two murders with
malice, one robbery with fire-
arms, itwo assault to rob, two
DWI second offense, two assault
to murder, five for burglary,
one forgery and passing, two de-
frauding with worthless check,
two disposing of mortgaged pro-
perty, and one aggravated as-
sault.
Neil McAlpine of Taylor was
foreman of the Jury. Other
members were: A. M. Ahlgreen,
Leon G. Bohls, Roy Day of Tay-
lor; A. W. Hoyt, Paul Hindeland,
Hartwin Holmsltrom, Georgetown;
William Stokes Jr. of Bartlett,
Roy C. Knight of Jarrell, Leon
Carlson of Round Rock, Sidney
Browning of Granger and Mau-
rice Giddens of Leander.
The Taylor-Williamson County
area can expect another frost
Thursday morning followed by
slowly rising temperatures dur-
ing tlie day and Friday.
The (temperature dropped to a
29-degree reading, the lowest of
the new year, this morning under
clear skies. A heavy frost cov-
ered house tops, lawns, and auto-
mobile windshields.
Thursday morning’s low will
be 33 after today’s predicted
high of 55. Thursday’s maximum
will be 60.
The outlook for Texas was
mild weather Saturday but the
five-day forecast predicted cold-
er weather Sunday and Monday,
according to the Associated
Press.
Bright skies and rising tem-
peratures Thursday helped to
drive out of Texas the chill of
a mid-week blizzard!
There was Still snow in the Pan-
handle from Tuesday’s blizzard
that dumped up to 10 inches of
snow and sent temperatures
down below zero. But it was ex-
pected to melt rapidly in Thurs-
day’s predicted warmup.
Early Thursday skies were
clear over the state with the
exception at points along the
coast and the eastern border.
Pre-dawn temperatures ranged
from 16 degrees at Childress to
44 degrees at Brownsville. Amar-
illo had 20 degrees, Lubbock 25,
Dalhartt and Junction 27, Mineral
Weils 28, Wichita Falls 29, Tyler,
Austin, Wink and San Antonio 30.
College Station, Waco, Dallas
and Fort Worth 31, and Long-
view 32.
Predicted by President
Eisenhower Optimistic
About Better Relations
WASHINGTON (A3) — President Eisenhower pre-
dicted today that 1960 will be the most prosperous year
in America’s history. And he declared the world is
entering a vast new technological age which can “make
poverty and human misery obsolete.”
He also expressed guarded optimism about better
relations with the Soviet Union. “We must strive,” he
calamitous
THIRTY-FOUR DEAD—A National Airlines DC-6B, en route from New York
to Miami, crashed into a swamp near Wilmington, N.C., killing all 34 persons
aboard. Wreckage shown here is the cockpit section of the plane.
-NEA Telephoto
Three Children Fatally Best Schools
ANOMYMOUS GIFT
The Taylor Library Building
Fund today received an anomy-
mous gift of $50.
Beaten With Hammer
SAN ANTONIO (A5) — A mother returned home this
morning from taking an older daughter to work and
found her three other children fatally beaten with a
hammer.
The children sprawled on the living room floor.
One was dead when the mother found them and the
other two died shortly thereafter.
Police said the father, whom
LATE NEWS BRIEFS -
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
RED CHINA WAGING MASS PURGE
TOKYO — Red China is waging a mass purge of
“counter-revojutionaries and undesirable characters who
have wormed their way” into the Communist Party. An
Tzu-wen, onetime confidential secretary to Mao Tze-tung,
has confirmed widespread speculation that the 27,000 pea-
sant communes and party committees are being overhauled
from top to bottom.
Search Ends
For Professor
And His Wife
KENNEDY CREDITED IN STEEL SETTLEMENT
NEW YORK — David J. McDonald, head of the United
Steelworkers, today credited former ambassador Joseph
Kennedy with an important irole in settling the steel strike.
The older Kennedy, McDonald said, “did a great deal down
in Wall Street to bring about this settlement. He: talked
with the bankers (time and time again, and we were in
constant touch with one another.”
DIGESTIVE AILMENT CLOSES SCHOOL
RAVENA, N. Y. — A school closed today after a diges-
tive ailment struck about 20 per cent of this village’s 5,000
residents. A laboratory is seeking the cause of the illness.
Some victims have required hospital care. About 270 of the
1,800 pupils at the Ravena-Coeymans-Silkirk school were
reported ill.
they identified as * Frank Robin-
son, 66, fled the house when his
wife returned. Officers arrested
him without a fight soon there-
after on nearby railroad tracks.
David Robinson, 4, was dead
when police arrived. Amos, 10,
and Linda, 8, died in a hospital.
The screams of the mother
could be heard throughout the
neighborhood. But police would
not permit reporters to talk with
her immediately, and they pre-
vented newsmen from entering
-the house.
Mrs. Robinson told police that
(See THREE, Page 6)
Mitchell Believes
Rail Strike Off
Without U.S.
Aid Urged
direct examination Wednesday of
the hectic night of July 18 at the
Finches’ swank home in suburban
West Covina.
Tbs was her testimony:
She heard Mrs. Finch scream,
ran to the garage of the $65,000
Finch home, and saw the pretty,
tennis-loving socialite unconscious
on the garage floor.
Dr. P inch smashed Miss Lid-
holm’s head against the garage
wall, then brandished’a gun and
ordered her into the family car.
The doctor made Mrs. Finch —
who apparently had revived—get
into the car. Mrs. Finch fled. The
doctor pursued her.
The maid said she heard a shot
and a scream—“help!”—a mo-
ment later.
Mrs. Finch was found shot to
death on the lawn next door. Finch
and Miss Tregoff were found by
police the next day in Las Vegas,
Nev.
After the maid finished testify-
ing for the state, Grant B. Cooper;
Finch's attorney, cross-examined
Miss Lindholm. He asked about a
statement' she gave West Covina
BEAUMONT, Tex. ® —Dr.
and Mrs. Benham M. Ingersoll
arrived at the Jefferson Counity
Airport at 9:19 a. m. today,
abruptly ending a 13-hour search
for the couple who were report-
ed missing Wednesday night.
Dr. Ingersoll is mathmatics
professor at Lamar Tech College
in Beaumont.
Dr. Ingersoll said his three-
day delay in reporting back to
his post at the college was
caused by illness. He reported
he had a Stomach ailment while
on a holiday vacation on the Isle
of Pines, 30 miles south of Cuba.
Doctors advised him not ito fly
until he had recovered, he said.
He said he sent a cable to the
college informing them of the
delay but college officials said
the message did not arrive.
The professor was due back at
the college Monday morning.
Immigration authorities in Mi-
ami and the State Department
office in New Orleans were
called by college officials.
Dr. Ingersoll had been on the
(See SEARCH, Page 6)
TWO INDICTED IN STOCK FRAUD CASE
HOUSTON — A federal indictment on 17 charges of
fraud and conspiracy in handling sales of stock of Columbia
General Life Insurance Co. was brought against two men
Wednesday. Thomas E. Hand Jr. and Ed Eisenmann III were:
accused of selling $1,400,000 in common stock at a profit
of $443,000.
DETROIT ffl — The Detroit
News said in a front-page story
today that Labor Secretary Mit-
chell “is convinced a threatened
nationwide railroad strike has
been averted.”
The story said Mitchell’s op-
timism follows months of be-
hind-the-scenes work and “is
based on a promise by both rail-
way labor and management that
their fight over, ‘featherbedding’
will be referred to committees
for study and recommendation.”
The Washington story by J. F.
Ter Horst said -the secretary ob
tained this pledge after more
than 30 private meetings with
railway executives and leaders
of the railway brotherhoods.
Seven Die in Accidents
AUSTIN (/P) — Gov. Price Dan-
iel said today that Texas public
schools and colleges should be
made the best in the nation with-
out “intervention of the federal
government.”
The governor spoke at a gen-
eral session of the School Ad-
ministrators Advisory Conference
on Education. It is sponsored by
the Texas Education Agency.
Gov. Daniel paid high tribute
to the late Dr. L. A. Woods, to
whom this year’s conference is
dedicated.
Dr. Woods “foughit for adequate
salaries and better standards for
teachers, and for a program of
adult education for those not for-
tunate enough to complete their
schooling,” as state superintend-
ent of public instruction, the gov-
ernor said.
“Dr. Woods headed our school
program during the time when
many Texans did net realize how
essential it was for state and lo-
cal governments to give that ex-
tra push to public education so
necessary to high standards and
equal education opportunities
for all,” Daniel said.
Actually, it has only been
said, “to break the
cycle of frustrations and crises
which, if unchecked, could spiral
into nuclear disaster; the ultimate
insanity.”
In his annual State of the Un-
ion message to Congress, the
President personally told a joint
session of the House and Senate
the nation is armed with enor-
mous defensive military might
which must be meticulously main-
tained until t}he Soviet Union
agrees to effectively safeguard
disarmament.
Eisenhower predicted no nation
ever will risk general war against
the United States if this might is
maintained. He announced spec-
tacular new advances in precision
use of this country’s Atlas inter-
continental ballistic missile.
The President also rejected
criticism that the Soviet Union’s
development of superthrust rock-
et engines threatens America in
the military missile field. The U.
S. program in that field “does
not suffer from our present lack
of very large rocket engines,
which are so necessary in. distant
space exploration,” Eisenhower
said.
He added this country is press-
ing forward with development of
engines with tremendous thrust,
and said spending for space proj-
ects will be practically doubled—
to about a billion dollars a year.
In his lengthy address, carried
nationwide on television and ra-
dio, the President spoke of record
prosperity in 1960 and also called
for vigorous new efforts to check
inflation. .
He expressed gratification over
settlement earlier this week of the
marathon steel dispute, and said
both management and labor must
make every effort to increase
productivity and thus avoid price
increases.
To the newly convened Congress
sprinkled with presidential hope-
fuls, Eisenhower—noting he is be-
ginning his last year in office—
appealed for harmony in relations
between the White House and the
Democratic-controlled Congress.
“Every minute spent in irrele-
vant interbranch wrangling is pre-
cious time taken from the intel-
Police, Patrol
Investigate 3
Local Wrecks
Three accidents were investi-
gated by city police and local
highway patrolmen in the past
24 hours. There were no injuries.
City police investigated two,
including a hit and run.
The 1955 Ford owned by Ed-
ward Kubala of Taylor was hit
as it was parked in the 200
block of South Main. Police later
located a 1951 Buick owned by
a Taylorite parked on east Third
Street that had a damaged right
front fender. However, it has
not been verified that this was
the car involved in the accident.
Police are continuing ito ques-
tion the owner in the case. The
accident was reported at 10:25
p.m. Wednesday.
Earlier, at 7:08 p.m., police in-
vestigated an accident on Rio
Grande Street north of the
Rice’s Crossing road.
The 1958 Ford driven by Mary
Sorenson hit the parked 1951
(See POLICE, Page 6)
South American
Trip Confirmed
since the cold war developed that ligent initiation and adoption of
Picked as Candidates
WASHINGTON ® — Sen. Lyn-
don B. Johnson (D-Tex.) and Vice
Presiderit Richard M. Nixon were
picked as the presidential candi-
dates for their respective. parties
in an informal poll of congress-
Decreased Auto Property Loss
Reflects Speed Cut by Drivers
Speed on highways in the east
end of Williamson County has
been reduced, reflected in a
sharp drop in the economic loss
due ito accidents in the past year
although the number of acci-
dents is up, according Ito the
Highway Patrol.
Seven persons lost their lives
in five accidents on 'the highways
in this end of the county. And
another 34 people were injured
in the 89 reported motor vehicle
accidents, according to the re-
port released by Texas highway
patrolmen Norman Autrey and
Travis Thomas.
The
an
crease
over
89 accidents is
of six accidents
the previous year, but the eco-
nomic loss is down by $13,475,
proving speed, as an accident
factor, has been generally re^
duced by the public, (the patrol-
The economic loss this past speed smash ups which cause a
education has become of great
national concern. The pressures
are building up for a program of
general federal aid to education.
In fact, there are bills now pend-
ing in Congress which would give
Texas more money in federal
aid than the entire Hale-Aikin
program which outlined our needs
at the state and local levels.”
When Daniel announced for re-
election Tuesday, he made teach-
ers pay increases and other pub-
lic school and college improve-
ments the No. 1 plank in his plat-
form for a third term.
“Nothing is more important to
the. future of Texas than the edu-
cation of our young people,’
Daniel (told the conference.
“Nothing is more important to
the preservaiton of local control
and operation of public schools
than our own financing of public
education with Texas money.”
year came to $35,222, compared
to $48,695 in 1958.
These figures clearly show
there were more accidents of
the mere “fender bending” var-
iety, rather than the costly, high
Record Deposits
Reported by Banks
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Banks in almost all Texas cities
started 1960 with their deposits
at the highest mark in history.
There were a few cities at
which deposits were slightly down
from a year ago but in the ma-
jority of reporting cities sharp in-
creases were shown in statements
asked by the comptroller of cur-
rency and the State Banking De-
partment for condition of banks
(See PROSPEROUS, Page 6)
WASHINGTON ® — President
Eisenhower striving personally to
improve Free World understand-
ing, carries his “peace with free-
dom” campaign to four South
American nations late next month.
Warm receptions — perhaps e-
qualing those he received on his
December tour of Asia and Africa
— seemed assured for him in Bra-
zil, Argentina, Uruguay and Chile,
four ardent democracies.
Plans for the 10-diay trip, which
will begin Feb. 23, were announ-
ced Wednesday by the White
House. Mrs. Eisenhower, Secre-
tary of State Christian A. Herter
and the President’s brother, Mil-
ton S. Eisenhower, will be among
those making the trip in the Pres-
ident’s jet airliner.
World Jewish Congress
Demands Special Police
high loss and many times loss
of life or serious injury, the
patrol said.
The seven fatalities is a sharp
increase over the previous year
when only one person died in a
traffic accident on the highways
in this end of (the county. Three
of the fatalities resulted in one,
one-car accident.
County-wide, the fatality rate
was down, a (total of 14, compar-
ed to 17 in 1958. The west end
of (the county saw a drop from
16 to 7.
Local patrqlmen spent about
6,570 man hours patroling Ithe
highways in the local area dur-
ing ithe past year, with approxi-
mately one-third of these hours
spent at night.
According to patrolmen, the
most accidents occurred on the
stretch of State highway 95
Lost Dog Search
Ends Temporarily
DETROIT ffl — Judy Ferren
has given up her search for the
time being at least for her lost
dog Jinty.
Before leaving by train for St.
Thomas, Ont., Wednesday, the 17-
year-old English girl said she will
return here if any dogs turn up
fitting the description of Jinty.
The year-old female Alsatian
Shepherd escaped from a railroad
baggage car in Detroit Dec. 23
as Judy and her mother were tra-
veling from Southampton, Eng-
land, to St. Thomas.
Judy attracted international at-
tention by hitchhiking from St.
Thomas to Detroit to look for the
BONN, Germany (ff) — The
World Jewish Congress today de-
manded a special police force to
deal with anti-Semitism and re-
surgent Nazism in West Ger-
many.
The. Congress also called for
the banning of all organizations
even suspected of Nazi tenden-
cies and (the rooting out of ex-
Nazis from all sections of Ger-
man public life.
These were among the written
proposals submitted ito Foreign
Minister Henrich von Brentano
by Alexander Easterman, poli-
tical director of the World Jew-
ish Congress in an hour-long in
terview.
Easterman afterward told e
news conference he received e
very sympathetic reception from
Von Brenitano and gained the
impression the Bonn government
would act on some of the Con-
gress proposals.
Easterman said Von Brentano
agreed with him it would be “the
greatest folly”, to treat (the pres-
ent worldwide wave of anti-Sem-
itic incidents as merely the
work of a few irresponsible per-
sons.
Chancellor Konrad Adenauer’s
regime, dominated by his Chris-
tian Democrats, launched a dou-
ble-barreled campaign Wednes-
day night to stamp out anti-
Semitic demonstrations by swift
court action against hate-mon-
gers and by stiffer sentences.
and his cabinet called for speedy
enactment of a law to increase
the penalties for “stirring up ha-
tred against groups because of
their natural origin.” The maxi-
mum sentence now is three
months in jail; the bill to be
submitted (to the Bundestag will
selt that as the minimum.
A special cabinet meeting also
agreed unanimously “that cases
under investigation should be
brought to court as quickly as
possible and that the penalties
should correspond to the severity
of the misdeeds,” a communi-
que said.
Two Germans already have
been convicted of anti-Semitic
acts. Police say two others be-
ing held have admitted daubing
swastikas and anti-Jewish slo-
gans on the new synagogues in
Cologne on Christmas Eve, the
incident which launched the pres*
ent wave of anti-Semitic acts.
The smear campaign-swastikas
and slogans abusing Jews—kept
up sporadically in scattered sec-
tions of ithe world for the 15th
day. Police in all countries af-
fected kept up their hunt for
the paintbrush smearers and al-
so sought to determine whether
there was any undercover world
organization linking them.
A top commentator on Moscow
radio said Wednesday the anti-
Semitic outbursts in the United
States and Britain are about as
dangerous as a “slight cold to a
■
mmm
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The Taylor Daily Press (Taylor, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 16, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 7, 1960, newspaper, January 7, 1960; Taylor, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth800957/m1/1/?q=Lamar+University: accessed May 29, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Taylor Public Library.