Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 237, Ed. 1 Friday, July 18, 1958 Page: 1 of 8
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WEATHER FORECAST
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VOLUME 58 NO. 232 5c PER COPY
BROWNWOOD, TEXAS, FRIDAY, JULY 18, 1958
EIGHT PAGES TODAY
-- 1
Khrushchev Is Reported
Anglo-American Chiefs Map Out
I
\
r, a
e 9*
-
L -
RIVAL RESOLUTIONS
Front of American Embassy
from
The crowd outside the U.S. em-
Marine guards were on duty on
the embassy grounds, with fire bassy carried huge placards with
session of the assembly if its
"get out now"
ed.
The embassies were
ea
as-
Candidates Continue
Last-Minute Scurry
Police Chief
A. Middleton
L
T
Goldfine Gets Day Off
>
GRASS FIRES
anr
From Washington Probe
of
। of the stage, however, a House
The
WASHINGTON (UPI
ABSENTEE BALLOTS
involving Goldfine’s White involved.
case
A
Two hundred thirty-six absen-
ant Sherman Adams.
with the Middle East as an ex-
least temporarily
labor bosses were taking
state
the Middle East crisis.
IT
3
• $
¥ WEATHER ¥
denounced another gubernatorial
\
PUBLIC MEETING TONIGHT
said
. J
I
I
I
I
I
Announcement Is
Made from Cairo
Vote Likely Late
Today by Council
Politico! Posters Are
Reported Defaced Here
second set of investigators went
to work on a military contract
immediate withdrawal of U. S.
Marines from Lebanon and Brit-
Joe A. Irwin of Dallas, also a
candidate for governor, reported
spending $3,057 thus far, but no
pared for the onslaught and there
was no report of any injuries to
headed for Latakia, Syria, a port
120 miles north of Beirut. There
he could have boarded a Soviet
By HENRY SHAPIRO
United Press International
"be pleased" to have the Ameri-
can resolution go before "an as-
sembly." They added, “We think
ough of
paign r
BROWNWOOD AREA: Portly cloudy
ond worm through Saturday. Low tonight
near 75, high Saturday near 99.
t
Maximum temperature Thursday 98,
overnight low 75. Sunset today 7:44, sun-
rise 5 42.
being dormant 15 years
The White House said Adams
'■ -
By LARRY -COLLINS
tailed Press International
good resolution.
The careful use
the Howard Payne College divi-
sion of social sciences, will dis-
cuss the current Middle Eastern
situation on a 30-minute program
over KBWD at 7 tonight.
Dr. Harins will be interviewed
during the program by Dr. Guy
D. Newman, college president
throng estimated at 50,000 to 100 -
000 held a mass rally to denounce
Anglo - American Intervention in
the Middle East.
Some of the missiles hit the
embassy walls as high as Ambas-
sador Llewellyn Thompson’s ninth
floor office, indicating the Rus-
help from the embattled govern-
ments.
le events which hsve helped lead
to the situation will be discussed.
He added that one of his strong-
est courses at the college is on
the diplomatic history of the Unit-
ed States, which deals with the
contact of the U.S. with other na-
tions of the world from the time
of the Revolutionary War to the
present.
Havins to Discuss
Middle East Crisis
Dr. T. R Havins, chairman
shots.
The embassy telephoned the So-
viet Foreign Office and demanded
protection. Troops were sent to re-
inforce harried Moscow police.
SUU other demonstrations were
held Inafrontot the British em-
stock Exposition buildings on the terests.
Brady highway. Even as Goldfine left the center
By TOM NELSON
United Press International
July 26. election dy. may vote ab-
sentee until July 22. accotding to
J. H. Childs, county clerk.
But Hagerty denied a published
report that they had agreed not
to intervene in Iraq as long as
the nationalists do not interfere
with the flow of oil to the West.
Oil from Iraq is the blood of
British, French, and Italian indus-
try.
Reliable sources said after the
Dulles - Lloyd marathon 7%-hour
session Thursday the two govern-
ments had made no decision to
MOSCOW t UPI I — A mob of with the surging mob which wav- scene in front of the U.S. embas-
nearly 20.066 muscovites scream- ed banners and kept up a contin- sy. They tried to keep the demon-
ing "get ouf of Lebanon" burst uous chant of "Get Out of Leba- strators off the sidewalks and for
through police lines and hurled non." "Shame on America" and a short period they cleared the
AIMED AT SOMETHING—U. S. Marines ride tanks past docks as they orrive for
duty in Beirut, Lebanon. Rebel machinegunners appeared to have opened fire on a
U. S. Marine plane, but the rebels said they were aiming at something else. Rebel
chieftain Saeb Salem told 'newsmen the machinegunners were aiming at Government
House. (NEA Radiophoto)
answer questions about his busi-
ness activities, although it may I
friendly government by Arab na-
tionalists was not indicated.
the subcommittee that questioned
Goldfine. involves the 1957 refund
of $41,284 of a penalty that had
been assessed during World War
II against Raylaine Worsted. Inc.,
a New Hampshire firm, for fail-
ing to deliver cloth to the Army
HOMEFOLK—It was "old home night" at Chicago's
Midway Airport when pianist Von Cliburn arrived for
his concert. He was met by this sextet of "home folk,"
girls from the famous Kilgore Rongerettes who were in
Chicago for the Shriners' parade. Clockwise from left:
June Walters, DeLight Allen, Dolores Emmett, Suzy
Harrington, Rosie Jones, ond Jane Walters
(NEA Telephoto)
building were boarded up and sore." A big sign propped up
members of the staff were moved, against the embassy wril -said
someone appeared at the window
or on the balconies of the em-
bassy building.
Thompson reminded the delega-
tion that U.S. troops were sent M
Lebanon at the invitation of the
legitimate Lebanese government
and that the United States prompt-
ly informed the Unitea Nations
and called on the world organiza-
tion to take steps to handle the
new situation.
He acknowledged to his serious-
faced Soviet listeners tha t the
United States and Soviet Union
hold different views on the Leban-
ese situation and said the United
Nations was the proper place to
discuss the matter.
Eliminates early
mal order will not be issued for
several weeks, and 60 days more
are allowed for appeals by air-
lines who have opposed TTA’s
getting these routes. so It may be
November before we acutlly are
permitted to fly the four routes,"
he concluded.
other which had been waiiting off- diverted to the Syrian coast,
shore with the U.S. 6th Fleet, which lies between Lebanon and
mitted to leave or enter.
to liberate Iraq. Iraq fell Monday
to pro-Nasser revolutionary forces.
.-g.. --------- Meanwhile, he planned a tour candidate, W. Lee O Daniel, for
thundershow ers near the coast. of the Houston area, followed by his proposal to abolish the veter-
meeting of campaign managers ans land program.
The statement was released
that toppled Iraq’s pro - Western
government Monday, although
_______ this possibility was not ruled out paratroops
creation of a U. N. police force latprormants the main pur- radio announced that young King
pose of the meeting thus far was Hussein was ready to take action
to coordinate strategy in Jordan
ish paratroopers from Jordan.
The American resolution calls for
the Allied
urge Jordan’s King Hussein to
move against the rebel regime
In Wichita Falls, his opponent.
William A. Blakley, said “Our op-
position is in a tight now and
they know it. AU of a sudden
promises are coming from there
a mile a minute."
Blakley again accused Yarbor-
staff members. 1 Dozens of pollen, including
Three lines of police battled mounted officers, were on the
Moscow with Premier Nikita
Khrushchev on the worsening Mid-
dle East crisis. Baghdad Radio
investigation of Bernard Goldfine
took a breather today and a
said this morning a wave of de-
facing candidates’ posters in the
city has been reported to the
police department.
He added that such actions are
unlawful and persons found in
such an act may be charged with
maliciously defacing or destroy-
ing personal property.
Expert Russian Veto
Diplomats agreed the Soviet
resolution would fall short of the
required seven votes and that
Russia would eoast its 84th veto
against the American resolution.
The Russians were set to de-
mand an immediate emergency
the slogans, “Hands Off Leba-
non," "Long Live Peace," and
to take over
The HPC professor said this House friend, Presidential Assist-
morning his discussion will deal
gather again In front of the em-
bassy. and by this time they
numbered 2,300.
The British embassy area was
quieter. The crowd which demon-
strated outside the building left
"I have been in hourly com- over _ .. _
munication with my colleagues in the 460.000 union men and women
Washington," he said. "I will be of Texas."
........ A group of past state command-
Edward Hebert
when the
kept advised of all developments --------- ----
EAST and SOUTH CENTRAL and will be called upon when the ere of three, veterans
TEXAS—Partly cloudy and warm decisions are to be made." c=-2 — ——
through tomorrow with isolated
Texas? He was smearing
SUPPORT COMMISSIONERS
Brownwood Jaycees voted to
endorse a revised program for
county tax equalization, as set up
by the Commissioners’ Court, at
their noon meeting today. The
motion, made by David Camp III.
passed by an overwhelming ma-
jority, with only three dissenting
votes.
$10,250. "What did the Texas tiddhe-de-
Sen Ralph Yarborough said he winks champion think he was do-
was keeping an ear tuned to ing when he said in my native
Washington for developments in city (San Antonio) that outrof-
5"
■ • gd 3
2t5a
-
have figured. Goldfine was not
V
announced today.
The announcement was made
later by Cairo Radio, but there
referred inquiries about the re-
For Costa Rica Today
TEGUCIGALPA. Honduras
(UPI > — Dr. Milton S. Eisenhow-
er leaves by plane today for Costa
Rica, third stop on his good-will
study mission to Central America.
He and his team of financial
and economic experts met twice
with President Ramon Villeda
Morales and his aides during his
two-day stay in Honduras.
Eisenhower, president of Johns
Hopkins University, is making the
swing through the Central Ameri-
can republics as the personal rep-
resentative of his brother. Presi-
dent Eisenhower.
The Western Allies were con-
cerned about policing Jordan’s
large bloc of Palestinian Arab
refugees from whom came ele-
ments that almost overthrew Hus-
sein 'previously. -
The Iraq situation is considered
potentially the most dangerous as
far as war possibilities are con-
cerned. Any overt Western-backed
move to try to oust the Soviet-
recognized rebel regime might
tempt Egyptian. Syrian and even
Russian intervention in behalf of
the rebels.
ink bottles and stones at the U.S.
embassy today, smashing nearly
every window on the first floor.
In a nearby square another
American flags. They defaced the
American flag by writing “Ami
•Americans । Go Home" and then
hoisted it again. No one was in-
jured.
The gates of the U.S. embassy
were locked and nobody was per-
U. 8. sources said they would help Hussein thwart a reported
‘ plot to take over his government.
out-of-state cam-
from labor and
poses.
Major US. Sixth -Fleetrein-
forcements also arrived in Beirut
today.
The huge British airlift which
was flying Red Devil paratroops
into Amman, Jordan, continued
through the night, filling the air
above Beirut with the steady
drone of powerful motors. It was
believed Britain was moving 10,-1
000 troops into Jordan.
With the arrival of American
and British reinforcements in the
(Se. NASSER on Page 7)
Turkey.
Diplomats were impressed, how-
ever by the urgency of his swift
return from Moscow to Damascus.
He apparently wanted to direct
UAR counteraction from as near
to the scene as possible.
Damascus, capital of the UAR’s
"Syrian region." lies at the center
of a circle formed by Lebanon,
Turkey, Jordan. Iraq and Iran,
the nations most involved in the
present crisis.
Syria already has been reported
moving troops up to the Lebanese
frontier, and Damascus Radio
Nasser and Khrushchev held
their conferences at the moment
the United States was completing
the buildup of a powerful, self-
contained nuclear air striking
A public meeting to determine
if legal steps to halt county tax
property re-evaluation will be
taken is scheduled for 8 o’clock
The city fire department
IPrhursday, all
and Lebanon.
Trouble On AU Sides
The United States is still
worried about conditions in
Lebanon where President Eisen-
hower’s special trouble - shooter,
Robert Murphy, is working for a
government peace compromise.
Goldfine, whose gifts to Adams
plosive spot in international rela- and other officials have received
tions. Both historic and diplomat- ......
By BRUCE W. MUNN
United Press International
UNITED NATIONS (UPD—The
United Slates has served notice
on Cairo that if United Arab Re-
forces in Lebanon, the consequen-
ces will be "of dangerous propor-
tion.'*
U.A.R. Ambassador Omar Lout-
fl told the United Nations Security
Council a note to that effect had
been delivered by the United
States to the Foreign Office in
Cairo this morning.
The note said the landing of
American troops was designed to
uphold the independence of Leb-
anon and protect U.S. nationals.
House Subcommittee on Legisla-
tive Oversight dismissed h l m
Thursday after eight days of
testimony.
The subcommittee is expected
to issue a contemp citation
reply to Rusia' “get out” ulti-
matun. /
In Jordan, yhere 10.000 British
were landing on a
lock airlift, the official
Mpohsordhipartisthchursensnda Ike's Brother Leave
Chairman F.
military missions in Potsdam demonstrators were permitted to
They pulled down the British and
United Press International
W Lee O’Daniel launched a
campaign-windup helicopter tour
of South and southeast Texas to-
day in his race for governor.
d'Daniel left from the Austin
Municipal Airport in a helicopter
Loutnt sota the counch, adding that
it also expressed Washington's de-
sire to withdraw the forces as ,
soon as possible.
“It said that the U.A.R."must
understand that if U.S. troops are ,
attacked by troops of the U.A.R.
or under U.A.R. control, and if 1
the United States is convinced
they have instructions from the ’
U.A.R.. then the consequences will ,
be of dangerous proportion,” Lout-
fl said.
The fourth day's debate on the
Middle East crisis opened with a
reply by Lebanese Ambassador
Karim Azkoul to a number of mi-
nor points previously raised.
U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot 3
Lodge, replying to a question 1
raised Thursday night by Ambas- 1
sador Abdul Majid Abbass, who '
was appointed by Iraq’s late King 3
Feisal, said the United States was '
prepared to withdraw its troops ■
from Lebanon if this were re-
quested by the Beirut govern- l
ment. 1
It appeared certain that the
council would reject — probably 1
late today—rival American and
Soviet resolutions calling respec- l
lively for the creation of a U.N. ,
police force and for the immediate i
withdrawal of U.S. and British
troops from the Middle East.
Failure of the veto • strapped
11-member council to agree on
either resolution was likely to
send the crisis to the 82-member
General Assembly while leaving
American and British armed
forces on emergency duty in
Lebanon and Jordan.
The Soviet resolution demands
was no word from Moscow. jet airliner for Moscow.
The United States doubled its I informed sources said the Nas-
, Marine strength in Lebanon today
with the arrival of one battalion
from Camp Lejeune, N.C., and an-
hoses ready.
The windows of the embassy
we have the votes. We have a
fund to the Pentagon “as a
, matter of routiq
visory Committee for Urban Re-
newal.
The meeting Is especially for
home-owners and owners of bus-
inesses within the proposed Ur-
ban Renewal project area. This
area is bounded by the Santa Fe
Railway spur track. West Mayes
Street, Clark Street and an alley
behind Victoria Street.
This will be the third, in a se-
ries of meetings for persons with,
property in the Urban Renewal
proposed project area. In each
of the two previous meetings, res-
idents of the area have given
overwhelming support to the pro-
posed Urban Renewal planning
for better homes and a better
neighborhood.
All property owners and all
persons residing in the proposed
project area are invited to attend
the meeting. Any other resident
of the city Interested in the Urban
Renewal program also is invited.
A detailed discussion of the
proposed Urban Renewal pro-
gram will be given and all per-
sons present will be given an op-
portunity to ask any questions
concerning the program.
Urban Renewal
Meeting Slated
Here for Monday
An Urban Renewal meeting
will be held Monday night at 7:45
in the educational building of
ers and paratroops.
Meeting Startle* World
The Nasser-Khrushchev confer-
ence startled the world. Nasser
was last reported on Monday
when he hurried away from Yugo-
slavia after a two-week confer-
ence with President Tito.
Informed sources said Nasser
changed course and apparently
3 New Routes
Awarded By CAB
To Trans-Texas
The Civil Aeronautics Board in
Washington, D.C. has awarded
three new routes and extended
one present route for Trans-Tex-
as Airways, it was announced to-
day.
One of the three new routes is
from Houston to Memphis, Tenn.,
via Beaumont; Lake Charles,
Alexandria and Monroe, La.; El-
dorado. Pine Bluff and Little
Rock, Ark The only other new
route affecting Texas will be,
from Houston to Jackson. Miss.,
via Beaumont; Lake Charles and
Alexandria, La ; and Natchez.
Miss.
“Naturally we are gratified that
the CAB met the needs of this
booming area for new air ser-
vice.” John Eichner, TTA vice-
president, said today. “We fught
tow years for these routes and
are ready to start service imme- ,
diately. However, the CAB’s for-
me of smearing him."
donations Gonzalez said Daniel “charge*
Waco Atty George Nokes. can- that I smear him when I call him
-six absen- didate for lieutenant governor, a mediocre hypocrite. But, the
mo
hearings but sings pointed to pub-1 who will be out of their precints
lie hearings in a week or two.
Plans Against Anti-West Plots
By STEWART HENSLEY I Dulles went to his conference I presented a review of the Middle
WAS^NG^N tmprrpatiopanacmedtssgvpresidc ver By‛pesmortermg.s"whte*ousspns se
American d!p?omatie L , . rotary James C. Hagerty re i United Arab Republic of Syria
chiefs in a new round of confer- it was understood that the lead- P° Twining chair- and Egypt conferred Thursday in
ences mapped strategy today ers are focusingI their warned., e mannoftheJoint ChiefS’or’star
s..„ D s2nttmgcprgwssfa”togi wanesptdcin danks STiSS
• r c
military experts began their sec- asement °Russiamocting Dulles about the overthrow of Iraq s
ond day of talks. । At the Cabinet meeting Dunes
after a while and joined other
crowds converging for the mass
U.S. rally.
Monday Deadline for
Voting Box Transfer
All voters who have moved to
Brownwood, or from one voting
precinct to another since poll tax
payments were made or an ex-
emption certificate issued, should
take the receipt to the county tax
assessor-collector a office for
transfer. _ I
The receipt must be transfer-
red to the new voting box before
the persons may vote in the July
26 primary. Tax assessor-collec-
tor A. C. Newton reminded voters
that deadline for the transfer is
Monday, July 21.
Adams and other officials, includ- I
ing at least three congressmen NORTH CENTRAL TEXAS- » h
erpressed an interest in the care Partly cloudy and warm through at.waco.ane a sPee.m neinn +hroueh Go, Damial. eamneie.
in 1957 when it was revived after tomorrow Yarborough, in a television trough Gov. Daniels campaign
--- tomorrow speech from Houston Thursday headquarters
WEST TEXAS _ Partly cloudy night, stuck mainly to the issue O Daniel. in a radio spe
and warm through tomorrow with in the Middle East, denouncing that Daniel has “brought, _---
isolated afternoon and nighttime the administration’s foreign poll- the very brink of a destroying
i thunderstorms ———cy--------------— 4 cris.
"those who are fostering federal
Interference in our Texa
schools.”
To Hold Aleot
Gov. Price Daniel, meanwhile,
promised to keep his campaign
for re-election “on a high plane”
despite "the daily and nightly
name-calling and mudslinging
conducted by other candidates in
this race.”
One of his opponents, Sen. Henry
Gonzalez, did not take this quiet-
ly. "The Governor has smeared so
many Texas Democrats, the only
majority he has created is a ma-
jority of good Texas people he
has insulted and abused. Yet he
has the unblushing face to accuse
piloted by Dale Milford of Waco,
and scheduled visits at Rockdale.
Bryan, Conroe. Liberty and Beau-
, mont during the day.
The former Governor and U.S.
Senator will campaign by whir'y-
bird through next Friday, the eve
of the Democratic primary dec-,
tion.
Second-round campaign ex-
—~+-wered five alarmPrhursday, all pense accounts for'several candi-
grass fires I dates were received by the secre-
g At 11 18 am a fire was at I tary of state’s office in Austin.
Ave. D and Sixteenth St.; 2 25 State Sen. Henry Gonzalez of
p m 1406 Block on Main Blvd : San Antonio, a candidate for gov-
5:20 p.m. 3000 block on Hemp- reported total contributions
hin. 5’40 p m five miles out on thus far of $16,825 and expendi-
armed services subcommittee I the old Bangs road, about 50 tures o $12,493. with debts total-
moved in for a searching inquiry! acres of grass burned and 8:10 inE 51,215.. ____
into the controversial refund of p.m., Brady Ave. and Brady high-
an Army .etile contract in which way.
Adams’ name was reported to ---------------
against Goldfine for his refusal to on time.
- -tnne ahnuat hie hused. Sources on Capitol Hill said
is only 500 miles from Russia. 250 ________
miles from Damascus and 700 port planes. They were equipped
miles from Baghdad. It is equip- with jeeps for reconnaissance pur-
ped wUh nuclear bombers, fight-
"Aggressors Go Home" street, chasing the demonstrators
in East Berlin, mobs of shout- away. .
ing, stone-throwing Communists Police cars patrolled the cleared
marched on the U.S. and British area for a while. But later the
to the top moors. Thompson amdi "Shame on Amettan iDatnnr
well-pre- his staff continued working on racy."
routine embassy business at the Persons in the crowd whistled
crowd* outside swelled by the and shook their fists whenever
minute.
not come immediately.
The Boston millionaire departed
with a new charge of "smear"
against the subcommittee and a
complaint that its inquiry has
tonight in the Brown County Live- hurt his textile and other in-
assemuny ii as There were also troublesome
resolution to not I question* in Jordan where British
ma paratroops landed. Thursday to
More than 6,006 Marines now
were ashore.
Simultaneously. ft was an-
nounced that combat troops of the
U.S. Army’s 1st Airborne Battle
Group will fly in at dawn Satur-
day from the forward strike base
at Adana. Turkey.
The arrival of the reinforce-
ments constituted a massive US.
BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPD—Pres-
ident Gamal Abdel Nasser of the
BULLETIN
MOSCOW (CPU—The Soviet
Union announced tonight it
"will have to take the neces-
sary steps" to counter “un-
provoked azression" by Brit-
ain against Jordan. It again
demanded that the U.S. get out
of Lebanon.
sembly underlined the possibility
that Washington was willing to
wait until the regular assembly
convene* Sept. 16 rather than
help call together an emergency
assembly session with 24 hours
notice.
Sweden, In what was inter-
preted as a slap at the United
States, proposed that Secretary
General Dag Hammarskjold “sus-
pend” activities of the U. N.
fact - finding observer group in
Lebanon on the ground its work
was, made superfluous by the
arrival of the Marines.
Japan was working on a reso-
lution about which it maintained
an air of mystery.
Diplomats agreed one of the
more significant statements in
Thursday’s 4% hour debate came
from Ambassador Abdul Majid
Abbass. appointed Iraq’s ambas-
sador by the late King Feisal.
nearly as much publicity as the,
Yuletide works of Santa Claus. I
moved out of the spotlight — st
Moscow Mob Demonstrates in
Top U. S. officials still main-
tained they did not seriously fear
any actual Soviet intervention de-
spite Russia’s bitter verbal at-
tacks on the Western landings,
an despite Soviet troop maneu-
vers on the border of pro-Western
Iran.
The 81 a t • Department late
Thursday denounced Russia and
Nasser’s United Arab Republic
for a propaganda barrage seek-
ing to inflame the Arab world
against this country and its
Marines. Department spokesman
Lincoln White said radio trans-
mitters in Moscow, Cairo, and
Damascus, Syria, have begun "to
broadcast false stories of alleged
incidents between American Ma-
rine* and the Lebanese." He
said actually there had been no
incidents.
The new case, turned up by
Nasser Conference With
Thursday night ordered members
of the capital’s home guard ba-
talions to report for duty tonight.
Syrian "scouts," the reserve or-
ganization, also were alerted.
slans had used air guns - sling
many was flown here today from
force at Adana, Turkey. The base 1 the secret NATO airbase in Ada-
_ . • na, Turkey, in giant troop trans-
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Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 237, Ed. 1 Friday, July 18, 1958, newspaper, July 18, 1958; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1488413/m1/1/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Brownwood Public Library.