Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 72, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 6, 1955 Page: 1 of 8
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1
Annual Brown County
YOUTH FAIR
Jan. 14-15-16
VOL. 55 NO. 72
BROWNWOOD, TEXAS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 6, 1955
EIGHT PAGES TODAY
16 hours
at
-
Gulf of M
arch
P
•.a
'' J
l
s
J
0
g
Talks on Fate of 11 GIs
.1
crisis caused by the imprisonment
E-
States has called “trumped up'
89f
Hint of Bull Market Probe
Stirs New Wave of Selling
59c
250
lit
39
appreciable time there has been
55C
on
s
ves
L
toria.
inch at Beaumont, .04
26, Abilene
Milland and San
TEXAS FORECAST
. A
it. Lowest 25 to 35
Thursday
r
bs.
*****
Sparkman
c
A
T
of
a
tee.
Increasing
£
g.
$
r
«
't
All 10 Crewmen of Sinking Fishing
Vessel Rescued by Luxury Liner
President Tells Congressmen Condition
U.S. Economy ‘Good and Getting Better,’
Urges Fast Action For New Classrooms
Thin Ice Fatal To
3 Little Sisters
HIGH-ALTITUDE RESEARCHERS LAUNCH
BALLOON PROJECT AT GOODFELLOW AFB
Chairman McCan of Texas
Farm Committee Resigns
FORT WORTH, Jan. « —UP—
Claude McCan, a Victoria rancher
naval Cmdr. John
Jr., at Minneapolis.
mada of planes and
missing crewmen.
NORTH CENTRAL TEXAS —
Generally fair and rather cold
I
The apparatus is designed for
studying the mysterious rays, but
its exact nature has not been made
known. Ranchers and cattlemet
were asked to rescue the equip-
at daybreak with
equipment. It will
hide of 90,000 to
Angelo 31. Wichita Falls 32. Fort
Worth 35. Dallas 36, Waco 38. Del
Rio 41. Lufkin 42. San Ant oniols,
Houston and Beaumont 49. Laredo
52 and Corpus Christi 54.
cloudiness and lowest 18 to 28 Pan:
handle and South Plains to around
40 in Del Rio-Eagle Pass area
Thursday night. Friday mostly
cloudy with occasional light rain
and alowly rising temaperature.
II
t LIGHT
f
~6
»Y
BRAMAN, Okla.. Jan. 6 -UP-
An Air Force B-47 Stratojet bom-
ber crashed and exploded near
here Thursday, with possibly these
airmen killed.
IN
URS.,
AT.
and in-
iar year
on con-'
Bring:
pt when
ffice for
k
improved drouth aid for farmers,
and an Increase in the minimum
wage from 75 to 90 cents an hour.
On the negative side, Mr. Eisen-
hower ' warned Congress against
Robert G. Shrauner of Harley
county will become acting chair-
man. \
McCan became chairman in Au-
gust. 1953. succeeding B. F. Vance,
who served under the Democratic
ari ministration
e.
"Unhesitating Co-operation’
The President emphasized Thurs-
dsy, however that bipartisanship
on defense and foreign policy is
E ‛h l
.).d
Hammarskjold was under orders
from the UN General Assembly,
however, to start the talks with
pointed questions o Chou on what
Red China intends to do about the
WEATHER FORECAST
BROWNWOOD AREA: Fair and cool
tonight Increasing cloudiness and cold
Friday, with occasional rain late Friday.
Low tonight near 35. '
Maximum Wednesday 67, low last
night 33. Sunset today 5:45, sunrise Fri-
day 7:39.
Thursday night. Friday increasing
cloudiness, followed by occasional
light rain.
SOUTH CENTRAL TEXAS —
Partly cloudy and cooler Thurs-
day night. Lowest 32 to 42 nterior
north porton Thursday night. Fri-
day mostly cloudy and cool with
occasional light rain. Moderate to
fresh northeasterly winds on coast,
becoming easterly Friday.
EAST TEXAS — Generally fair
and colder Thursday night. Lowest
28 to 32 north and 30 to 40 Interior
holiday cruise to this vacation is-
land. was routed off course when
it received word that the 282-ton
fishing vessel was breaking up
about 200 miles north - northeast
of here.
The survivors will be brought
here and are expected to arrive
sometime Friday.
Master Harry Thomassen of the
Student Prince messaged Bermuda
that there were no injured among
his crew. There was no immediate
word as to what extent they were
suffering from exposure.
The men abandoned their ship
late Wednesday and were tossed
into the sea from their capsizing
life boat shortly before the rescue
liner reached them. The Queen re-
ported the rescue completed at
9:15 a.m.
The Student Prince was out of
St. Johns, Newfoundland. All crew
members were listed as residents
of-Grand Bank and Lord’s Cove,
Newfoundland.
BRADY MAN TAKES OATH—win Wilsom, associate justice of the Mate supreme court. administers
oath of office to newly appointed Land Commissioner J. Eart Rudder of Brady in Austin Wednesday
as Texas Gov. Allan Shivers looks on. Rudder was appointed late Tuesday by Gov. Shivers to replace
Bascom Giles who resigned Jan. L—GNEA Telephoto)
and scattering flaming wreckage
over 10 acres. Remains of at least
one crew member were found.
LAKE CHARLES, La., Jan. 6--
UP—An Air Force filar said Thurs-
day there is a good chance of sur-
vival for four crewmen missing aft-
er an air collision of two B-47
Stratojet bombers over the Gulf of
Mexico.
An armada of planes and ships
began a search over the Gulf after
the huge planes, capable of drop- .
ping the hydrogen bomb behind the
Iron Curtain, collided off the Louis-
iana coast Wednesday night.
One of the planes limped to its
base here with two survivors after
one flier bailed out The other
plane crashed upon the water and
sank after remaining afloat for
two hours and 20 minutes.
last eight years all the way from
the equator to the North Pole.
it said it chose San Angelo Ite
the latest series of tests daze—o
it is "the geomagnetic latitude the
scientists wish to investigate.”
About 12 flights of thshuge bak-
toons will be launched before the
project is completed Jan. 30. tbs
Navy said.
by a giant ar-
ships for four
54 Polio Outbreak
3rd Worst in U. S.
WASHINGTON. Jan. 6—UP—The
nation suffered Its third worst polio
outbreak in 1954.
The Public Health Service said
Thursday that 38,734 cases were
reported in 1954. That compared
with 35.953 in 1953, but was well
below the 57,000 recorded in the
peak year of 1952. In 1949. second
worst year, 42,000 cases were re-
ported.
The service said last year's out-
break began about one week ear-
lier than in 1953, but did not reach
a peak until mid-September—ahout
four weeks later than in the pre-
vious year.
efore the 1strumegts
and parachute "to
co-operation" between the legisla-
tive and executive branches on an
“baric" problems.
"Let the general good be our
yardstick on every great issue...,”
he pleaded.
With the transition from war to a
peacetime economy "largely be-
hind us," be said “the economic
outlook is good.”
“Business activity now surges
with new strength. Production is
rising. Employment is high.”
He said that if the people act
wisely, within 10 years the annual
national output could rise from the
present 3360 billion to 3500 billion
“measured in dollars of stable
buying power.”
International Scene Heartening
Mr. Eisenhower also found the
international scene heartening, but
not without continuing overtones of
danger due to Russia. He was
encouraged by the fact that for an
While he regarded the present in-
secure peace as a “stalemate” in
the shadow of uneasiness caused
SAN ANGELO. Tex., Jan. «—UP
—Scientists began new studies of
cosmic rays—mysterious, high-en-
ergy nuclear particles from outer
space—at Goodfellow Air Force
Base Thursday.
A huge plastic balloon. measuring
90-feet in diameter, was launched
HAMILTON, Bermuda. Jan. 8 —
UP— The luxury liner Queen of
Bermuda rescued all 10 men of the
crew of the sinking fishing vessel
Student Prince Thursday in stormy
seas that piled up waves as high
as a three-story building.
The Coast Guard air station here
confirmed that the 10 men who
had taken to a life boat had been
plucked from the raging Atlantic
in seething gale winds that hit a
steady 45 miles an hour.
The Queen of Bermuda, on a gay
A
from the bottom of my heart for
the cordiality of your welcome.”
From time to time thereafter the
Republican chief executive was In-
terrupted more than a score of
times by applause as he read his
message. - - zw. -
The attitude of the Democrats
registered a substantial rise. Mo-
tors made small advances.
Then, shortly after noon, the new
decline began. With the ticker run-
ning five minutes late on a wave
of selling, losses ranged to 83 a
share or more in such issues as
Union Pacific. Douglas Aircraft.
United Aircraft and Standard Oil
(N.J.). Amerada Oil fell 96.75 aft-
er a drop of 310 at its low Wednes-
day.
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CONGRESS CONVENES—General view in the House of Representatives as Chaplain Bernard Bras-
kamp prayed the opening prayer for 84th Cengress Wednesday. Senate convened at same time in 1U
own chamber.— CNEA Telephoto).
, ■ ■ ■ ' ■ - ■ ■ ■
Dag, Chou Open Formal Young Stalin S
..,2
,2
The crash came just ’
after two B-47a collided
By BRUCE W. MUNN
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y., Jan.
g. —UP—UN Secretary General
Dag Hammarskjold and Red Chin-
ese Premier Chou En-Lai Thurs-
2”,,-,
, 2
- /la
Brownwood Bulletin
feet over the
prompting a in
11
« • l
charges.
Chou previously had laid the
foundation of his argument by
claiming in cables to Hammarsk-
jold several weeks ago that the
imprisonment of the fliers as spies
was an internal affair and none
of the United Nations’ business.
But Chou, in inviting Hammarsk-
jold to Peiping. had agreed to dis-
cuss “pertinent matters," thus
giving the secretary general an
opportunity to at least present the
fact as known to the United Na-
tions — that the Americans were
shot down in North Korea in uni-
form during the Korean war and
could not possibly be spies.
-Although Chinese communica-
tions media gave only terse ac-
counts of the meeting, it was made
known that Hammarskjold’s mis-
sion had got off to a good start.
Chou Wednesday played host to
Hammarskjold at a cocktail party
and Radio Peiping said the affair
was conducted in a “friendly at-
mosphere.”
Eisenhower Asks Co-operation b-47 stratojet
To Hold ‘Heartening Progress’ln Death Crash
that coat Russian police chief Lav-
renti P. Berta his life. Vasiliy, too.
may be dead.
Young Stalin's fate has been a
matter of lively speculation here
and in other free world capitals
ever since his last public appear-
snee on March 9, 1953, when he
was a pallbearer at his father’s
funeral.
Funeral pictures showed Vasil-
iy, then about 32. as part of a
double-line of Soviet big-wigs who
carried the dead dictator's casket.
He walked just a pace behind
Georgi Malenkov, who beaded one
line. Beria. who was shot before
the end of 1953, headed the other
line of coffin bearers.
American agencies were said to
have no confirmation of Vienna,
Austria, reports that young Stalin
had died recently in a Siberian
prison camp. These same reports
said that his sister, Svetlana, had
been banished from Moscow by
Malenkov and his new Red regime.
But experts would not be sur-
prised in the least if Stalin the
younger met with foul play soon
after his father's body was depos-
ited in Moscow’s Red Square.
Married and the father of two
children, Stalin was a lieutenant
general of aviation when his father
died on March 5, 1953.
that the
xt Monday
1 Mrs. Tef
apters ped
al and res
11 and ecd
• countries
Mrs. 1. 12
vas hoste“
tich follow
--------i
_
controlling the 84th Congress was
voiced by Senate Democratic lead-
er Lyndon B. Johnson (Tex.). Echo-
ing a promise made previously by
Rayburn, Johnson said:
"Reasonable Consideration
“The Presidents various recom-
mendations will receive reasonable
consideration by reasonable men
... the attitude of the Democratic
party will be in keeping wih his
call to subordinate partisanship,
pride, and prejudice to the nation's
welfare.” '
The only major surprise in his
6,400-word message was a request
for prompt federal action to re-
lieve an “unprecedented classroom
shortage” in the nation’s schools.
He promised to submit detailed
recommendations to Congress next
month.
Asks Improved Drouth Aid
Other legislative proposals, most
of which were disclosed previously,
included extension of the draft.
WEST TEXAS
by’Russia, he said the stalemate
offers free nations a vital oppor-
tunity "to strive in every honor-
able way for enduring peace.”
Pending the achievement of true
peace, Mr. Eisenhower said free
nations must guard against "the
catastrophe of a nuclear holo-
caust.” by maintaining enough
military power "to persuade the
Communists of the futility of seek-
ing their ends through aggression.”
Emphasizing that It was pre-
pared “under my personal direc-
tion.” Mr Eisenhower said the
new military budget will give
America the kind of “balanced”
2
. I
%
- }
I
By MERRIMAN SMITH . any attempt to scrap the flexible
WASHINGTON, Jan. 6—UP— 1 farm price support law enacted
someone deliberately poured about
five gallons of gasoline along the
south side of the building and set
it afire.
Hester said it appeared labor vi- '
olence mlgh be responsible for the !
attempts to damage the two com-
panies. But he said it was not im- 1
mediately clear what the reason
would be, since the union and the '
companies are discusring new con- 1
tracts now and the present ones 1
do not expire until February..
Officials of Lee Way said two i
employes were laid off two weeks
ago because of a drop in business 1
but they doubted they were re-
sponsible.
DAM CLARK ROAD
GETS NICER NAME
FORT WORTH, Jan. 8—UP— .
Tarrant county commissioners
agreed Thursday with 97 resi-
dents of the Eagle Mountain ,
Lake area that Dam Clark
Road doesn't sound very ele-
gant.
So they voted to change the
name of the road to Eagle
Mountain Circle, as requested
in a petition.
Civil Service Commission
Will Organize For Year
The Brownwood Civil Service
Commission will meet at 6 p.m.
today in City Hall to organize for
the coming year and to transact
other business.
Dr. Charles M. Hammonds was
appointed by the city council to
succeed L. P. Greer on the com-
mission. Other members are Lee
Lamkin and W. T. Harlow.
Mrs. Donna Bradshaw, Brown-
wood Civil Service director, will
meet with the commission.
not enough. Asserting that Ameri-
• ca’s security requires "more than
maintenme dr iheie military
strength and success in foreign af-
fairs," he called for "unhesitating
DEMOCRATS IN CONTROL—Senate Democrats who will control the 84th Congrest, reeteeta thet
party leaders. They are, left to right: Senators Earl C. Clemente (Ky). whip; Walter F. George (Ga),
Senate president-pro tem: Lyndon R. Johnson. (Tex), floor leader, and,Thomas C. Hemnine, co),
secretary of party coofeswae. (NEA Telephoto).
day formally opened talks on the__________
fate of 11 Amerieans jailed as of the fliers on what the
to 20 miles,
are releas
"good will and harmony” in a co-
operative program for peace and
prosperity.
The Democratic leadership re-
sponded with a pledge that the
President's recommendation “will
receive reasonable consideraion
by reasonable men.”
In a generally optimistic State of
the Union message, Mr. Eisenhow-
er said the U.S. economy is in
good shape and getting better. He
reported “heartening progress” to-
ward a durable peace ending the
current "world stalemate.”
Both Sides Applaud
Both Democratic and Republican
members of the 84th Congress, as-
sembled in joint session to hear
him outline his program for the
new year, applauded when the
President said:
"Let the general good be our
yardstick on every great issue of
our time.”
Mr. Eisenhower received a two-
minute standing ovation when he
appeared in the House chamber
to deliver his message. He was
cheered again when Speaker Sam-
Rayburn introduced him. And he
evoked a thunder ef happy ap-
plause. before starting his speech,
by felicitating Rayburn, just turned
73, on his birthday.
Moved by Reception
That set the tone for the occas-
ion. Apparently moved by the
friendliness of his reception, the
860
Temperature Drops Near
Freezing Mark in Area
One-above freezing tempera-
tures of 33 degrees were regist-
ered early this morning in Brown-
wood at the Municipal Airport
The mercury stood at a cool
42 degrees during the noon hour
today, according to Trans-Texas
Airways. Winds out of the north-
northwest were recorded at 20
miles per hour, with gusts up to
25 mph, on TTA instruments at
noon.
Fafe Remains
Major Mystery
WASHINGTON, Jan. 6—UP—
There is strong evidence Josef
are eager to return to rigid high
supports.
He also anticipated congression-
al criticism on another front by
budget which be will present later
announcing that the new military
this month represents his "person-
al” decision on what is needed for
national defense. Democrats al-
ready were taking pot-shots at
Defense Secretary Charles E. Wil-
son who announced recently that
the budget would call for fairly
sharp cuts in Army and Navy
manpower while putting increased
emphasis on air power and atomic
weapons. -
Holds Out Olive Branch
For the most part, however, Mr.
Eisenhower held out an olive
branch to the opposition party
which now controls the House and
Senate.
He said that with Congress under
the Democrats and the executive
under the Republicans, both par-
ties are “on trial before the, Amer-
ican people.” 4.
“In less perilous days of the
past, division of governmental re-
sponsibility among our great
NEW YORK, Jan. 6 —UP—A more than 81 and Republic Steel
suggestion that Congress invest!-......
Authorities at MeConnell Air
Force Base. Wichita, Kan., said
the B-47 which crashed a mile east
of here in a wheat field was based
there. McConnell is a B-47 crew
training center, snd usually three
or four men are aboard its train-
ing craft.
No parachutes were seen before
or after the plane plunged into the
ground, digging a 10-foot crater
President Eisenhower asked a cor- ’ last year. Farm state congressmen
dial and frequently cheering Dem-
parties has produced a paralyzing
indecision,” he said. “We must not
let this happen in our time. We
must avoid a paralysis of will for
peace and international security.”
Democratic leaders at the open-
ing of congress Wednesday prom-
ised to subordinate politics where
presidential-zecommendatioms were
United Stalin’s hard-drinking son, Vasilly,
ri uy” was swept up in the same purge
t
i
and banker, has resigned as chair- of , south portion Thursday night,
man of the Texas Agricultural Sta-, Friday increasing sloudiness. and
billzation and conservation commit- cool. Fresh northeasterly winds on
tee coast.
EAST DUBUQUE, IB., Jan. 6.
UP—Ice that covered a slough
cracked and three sisters—aged
six, five and three-"were drowned
in six feet of water.
The body of Janelda Florence
Eberlein was recovered Thursday.
The bodies of her older sister Bar-
bara Ann and her younger sister
Erma Linda were recovered
Wednesday night. A fourth sister,
Carol Jean, six months, survives.
Authorities believed all three
girls. daughters of Mr. and Mrs.
Rupert Eberlein. East Dubuque,
fell through the ice in the same
place.
The three sisters _ went to the
slough near their home to play
Wednesday after Barbara Ann
came home from school.
Fire Destroys Garage, Car
At Brownwood Residence
“’Fire destroyed a garage and
1941 Chevrolet at the J. M. Bow-
man residence, 1301 Cottage,
about 2:45 a.m. today, according
to Fire Chief Charles Alford.
The fire chief said the fire
evidently started inside the car
and spread to the garage. No
other damage was reported.
Dynamite Found
At Motor Lines
Freight Office
SAN ANTONIO, Jan. 6 —UP—
Someone tried to to dynomite the
Alamo Motor Lines office Thursday
a few hours after the Lee Way
Motor Lines office 15 blocks away
was set on fire.
Ten charred eight-Inch sticks of
dynamite were found on the porch
st the main office of Alamo Mo-
tor Lines. Detective Capt. Joe Hes-
ter said they failed to explode only
because the fuse bad been coiled
so tight it smothered itself.
“It was blown out the whole cor-
ner of the building," Hester said.
"The concussion would have killed
anyone standing along the ride-
walk nearby or at the bus stop on
the corner.
Hester said it was not the work
of juvenile vandals.
“The expert way the sticks of
dynamite were tied indicates he
knew what he was doing,” he said.
There were no workmen around
the porch of the office at the time
the dynamite was discovered. al-
though some were working on the
opposite side of the build ng.
“It might not have hurt them
but there would have been a tre-
mendous blast.” Hester said.
The fire at the Lee Way office
was discovered about 12:25 a.m.
by Lee Maddox and James Tam-
plin. who were working at the
Southern Pacific Motor Transport
Co. next door.
They brought it under control
with fire extinguishers until the
fire department arrived and dam-
age was estimated at 350 to 375.
Fire Marshal F. A. Dresch said
President saldam -
“I do most sincerely thank you cooooreed.
ment when it parachutes to earth
150 pounds of and send it to Goodfellow te to the
rise tovanaFtresearch firm at St. Paul
ioo,000-feet-18 The Office of Naval Research
---- said it had been conducting cos-
mic ray tests off and on for the
“spies” by Peiping.
The initial conference started a
Peiping with both Chou and Ham-
marskjold flanked by advisers and
interpreters.
Radio Peiping and the New
China News agency. In broadcasts
monitored in Tokyo, gave only
brief accounts of the meeting,
naming only those officials taking
part in the conference.
lower tariffs, higher postal rates.
postponement of new tax cuts until e-----s —. .0nu
next year at least, a big highway no major activ battlefield
building program, pay.raisesfo ewhi. he pogardca the preren
federal workers and servicemen,
DALHART’S 12 IS
STATE'S LOWEST
By UNITED PRESS
The temperature dropped to 12
degrees at Dalhart early Thursday
but forecasters said it should be a
little warmer in West Texas Thurs-
day night.
In the rest of the state, however,
temperatures will get a little cooler
Thursday night and won’t begin to
warm up until Friday.
Meteorologists said there was
little rain in the state Thursday
and none is expected before late
Friday in West Texas, snd that
not for sure.
Rainfall totals for the 24 hours
ending at 6:30 a.m. Thursday in-
cluded .32 inch at • Houston. .1*
inch at Galveston. .11 inch st Vic-
gate the recent bull market in
stocks brought a new gelling wave
into the market around noon Thurs-
day.
Stocks which in early trading had
rebounded smartly from Wednes-
day's sharp break began to fall
again after Sen. John J. Sparkman
(D-Ala.) proposed a congressional
inquiry to determine whether the
market is building up for a bust.
Stocks opened st generally low-
er prices but rallied when the mar-
ket successfully absorbed sales of
1,020,000 shares in the first hour.
That was the heaviest trading for
the first-hour period since Dec. 18.
1950. Quotations on the ticker tspe
rsn ss much as six minutes be-
hind the actual transactions on the
stock exchange floor.
Many leaders recovered early
losses of 81 or more s share.
Bethlehem Steel regained all of an
opening loss of 82 a share. Western
Union ran up to a net gain of
Edn to Make Visit
LONDON, Jan. 6—UP—The For-
eign Office announced Wednesday
that Foreign Secretary Anthony
Eden would visit various countries
in and out of the British common-
wealth on a diplomatic tour Inci-
dent to the Southeast Asian confer-
ence at Bangkok Feb. 23. No
details were disclosed.
earth.
The studies are being carried out
by cosmic ray physicists from
various institutions under sponsor-
ship of the Office of Naval Re-
search and the Atomic Energy
Commission.
The actual work to being done by
Wincen Research Inc. of South St.
Paul, Minn., under directon o
inch at Dallas, .03 inch st Fart
Worth snd .02 inch st Waco.
Most of the rain feU Wednesday,
but perhaps half of that in south-
east Texas fell during the night,
meteorologists said.
Lpw temperatures early Thurs-
day ranged upward from Dalhart's
12 degrees to 67 at Brownsville.
Other lows Included Amarillo 20,
El Paso 23, Lubbock 25. Presidio
armed forces it needs to insure a
“swift snd decisive" snswer to any
threat of Communist aggression.
Mr. Eisenhower said he will ask
congress later for legislation to ex-
tend the draft, now due to lapse
June 30. and to create a-compre-
(See CONGRESS on Page 7)
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Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 72, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 6, 1955, newspaper, January 6, 1955; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1492092/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Brownwood Public Library.