Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 208, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 16, 1961 Page: 1 of 16
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CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW
PUBLISHED AFTERNOON
DAILY AND SUNDAY
MORNING-PHONE 5-2441
Full Leased Teletypesetter Wire Report of the Associated Press—World’s Greatest News Agency
16 PAGES IN 2 SECTIONS
CLEBURNE, TEXAS, SUNDAY, JULY 16, 1961
o
-
p • —
East German
I
Crisis Worse
L 4
r
I
8888
l
1
d
1
+
FINISH RUGGED FIELD DUTY
Rides Niagara
Guardsmen Return Toln Rubber Ball
Dullish Civilian Life
His Work-A-Day Schedules
armistice and the many naively Day are just about complete,
send from four to eight boys each
to overcome shortages—including One of the busiest law enforce-
parole during the year and 11 ad-
men with other vital civilian oc-
is Neel Wofford, the county Ju-
flight of refugees.
were
proba-
munist pressure, are trying to get ies of juvenile officer, Wofford is
on
charge of illegal entry. The man,
tion this year. They were from
the total amount on probation.
German land was collectivized in county and represents the Salva-
46 adults on
county.
tor) who would check the quality
Cleburne’s Co. A, 1st Armored Ri-
Wofford handled 11 guardian-
fle Battalion-112th Armor, were of his unit’s work and his offi-
to Cleburne and area shoppers.
at Gatesville.
There were 16 children declared
dependent and neglected and pla-
of juvenile violations and he ap-
Booterie, the Ben Franklin Store
test time was seven hours.
cials and other citizens.
ing number of accidents'.
T urbulent Weather
& Thrifty
Department
Store,
uing program of training mem-
day.
levels.
Boils Up in Texas
and
and Used Furniture Store, Cleb- Brownsville.
South Plains.
Offers have been made for
severe
Cleburne soldiers were on the de-
damaging winds were issued for
day.
Cumbie’s Home Furnishings and
must report to the probation offi-
offensive attack.
an
A special
“It seems pretty definite to me
come
com-
a member of Sandahi’s subcom-
hart to 80 at Corpus Christi.
of the state, extended to 8 p.m.
“In my opinion that may be mittee who asked that his name
The forecasts called for con-
See TAX DEBATE Page 4
U.N. General Assembly
with scattered thunderstorms and
Gets Nuclear Ban Facts
are
solidly united
on
in West Berlin,
even at the risk of
an
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (AP) by the West to counter Moscow’s
I
Tonsorial artiste, BOOB KORK,
What will happen to the results
They came in advance of new
to debate the “critical situation”
evaluator will forward the test
At a time when Western offi-
caused by the deadlock with the U.S.-Soviet talks in Moscow next
score (not a single score, but se-
But in
started
negotiations
ment
up
The two Western powers ad-
A stumbling block has
again.
views
eral Dag Hammarskjold propos- clear test issue be merged with
of JIM REIN-
fore debate begins. “To be fair
into action as the Berlin crisis
HOLD’S death in WASHINGTON
At Hyannis Port, Mass., where
60 mile-an-hour winds and 1.25
sembly opening Sept. 19. This is
said.
Hurst,
the actual readiness of the unit to
should arise
this country or
in
to sabotage treaty negotiations
“We have made substantial pro- thhat have been going on in Ge-
Frank Hyde and Lt. Lewis Egan.
New Commander
baseball coach at Cleb-
fice employe from Fort Worth.
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP)-
of staff of the Air Training downtown...Veterans service offi
has not introduced a single posi-
cer, JOE TOWNES, chatting with
tive proposal in
ON VACATION
Doyle Spurlin, driver’s license tions.
The moves undertaken in Wash-
examiner, will be on vacation for
See DELAY Page 4
-
3332*
Delay Of U.S. Note May
Soften Warning Impact
2,000 Fined
In Traffic
Sc DAILY
10c CUNDAY
ESTABLISHED 1904
gress in eliminating areas of con-
flict but we are not ready to re-
Wofford says he thinks Johnson
County has a minimum amount
cupations — put them in a suit of talion S-3(the officer in charge
olive drab fatigues, stick a rifle of planning and training) drafted
present stand the only hope for
progress lays in placing the issue
once more before the United Na-
decided to leave because of party'
pressure to speed up work in fac-l
tories and on farms. Central par-
ty authorities are pressing all the
way down the line for more work
and a half of talks in Geneva and,
instead, since March 21 “has re-
the test and turned it over to Cur-
ry to run. He was given other
and clear some version of Dan-
iel’s bill for debate on Tuesday.
Foreman pointed out that the
delaying committee action until
Monday means that debate prob-
East, West Preparing
For Berlin Showdown
Lightning set two oil tanks afire
near Levelland as a thunderstorm
er’s Class of FIELD STREET
BAPTIST CHURCH and MRS. U.
R. OWENS for contributions to
Free Milk & Ice Fund...Many
CLEBURNITES were shocked to-
15 men.
The Cleburne unit, along with
95 other units of the 49th “Lone
Star” Division, returned home to-
abroad.
The two platoons which ran the
ex-
ac-
as-
training.
The citizen-soldiers of Capt. Ha-
rold W. Curry’s unit were under-
ped their mess kits on old logs
and rocks and stayed under the
trees . . . out of sight of enemy
aircraft. If it had been a real
combat operation, foxholes would
have been dug, but the National
Guard realizes fox hole digging is
one area in which extensive ex-
perience is not necessary.
Following chow, the order was
given to- mount up the armored
keeps a constant check on every
person on probation.
The Salvation Army has a camp
of several hundred acres about
eight miles south of Midlothian
and Johnson County is allowed to
Member—Texas Press Association
Texas Daily Press Leante
Southern Newspaper Publisheso
CLEBURNE AND VICINITY —
Partly cloudy, scattered thunder-
showers.
with the Soviet Union in Mos-
cow.”
U. S. Ambassador Francis T.
P. Plimpton and British Ambas-
in their hand . . . and watch ’em
go!
le
of ,
it.
o-
ni
Port Finance
Plan Studied
MEXICO CITY (AP) - The
treasury and marine ministries
are studying a British plan to fi-
nance a new port at Matamoros,
across the Rio Grande from
(UP) United Press Telephoto Poturee
(CP) Central Preas Feeturce
a Eig Featuses
>Streel Corner
* puipit •
By Browning Ware
. - Lunch was served tactically to fines
bers of the National Guard at all the men in the field. They prop-
I
T
ml
— 1
le .
s- •
ly
1. .
and 15,000 homeless when waters sub-
merged the town. Photo shows the down-
town section of Yungju with water at
rooftop level. (NEA Radiophoto)
_________ ___ ---g-______i given
him by county, city, school offi-
some official quarters here there
Saturday brought 1.06 inches to
Abilene. Mineral Wells, Wichita
ing that the assembly take up general disarmament talks,
to members we should give them the issue at the 16th General As- “ ‘ “
Sears, Roebuck and Company,
T. W. Scott and Sons and Roof’s
Drug Stores.
Also participating will be Pen-
ney’s, McKee Department Store,
McCullough and Cole, Lintz De-
partment Store, Levine’s, How-
ell’s Ladies Wear, Holliday and
Andersen Shoe Store, Gustafson’s
Department Store, Gray’s Men’s
Wear, Gerard Lumber Company,
Dickson’s, Marvin Cumbie’s New
Blossom, a small Lamar County
wn received 1.80 inches of rain
a couple of days to write amend-
consideration by the U. N. mem-
bership.
The United States, in addition,
the barber' pole and why it’s red
and white...Thanx to Homemak-
be
There were widespread reports venile Officer.
. Besides taking care of the dut-
F
- - of bills to be reported out by this the Soviet Union persists in its
His platoon is at a strength of subcommittee. " "
tage of the savings...TOMMY RO-
hello to a friend
draft. Then it was sent to NATO,
where seme of the smaller na-
tions were annoyed at what they
regarded as an effort to rush ap-
proval. Consequently, NATO con-
sideration required another week.
The new U.S. note on Berlin is
a reply to one which Khrushchev
handed President Kennedy at Vi-
enna on June 4. Grim in tone,
neva for nearly three years.
Both Western powers declared
FLOODS BURST DAMS — Flood waters
from torrential rains burst two dams in
South Korea, washed away many homes
and killed at least 128 persons. In Yung-
ju, Korea, 14 persons were reported dead
IS--
F..
er ,
is
That’s what happened last Tues- units to serve as his aggressor's—
day morning at North Fort Hood and told he would be followed by
where the officers and men of a Regular Army officer (evalua-
while they worked on a double- available until
fensive and learned how to fight barrel compromise proposal.
-. . to the Department of the Army,
lating an accord on basic issues It will be a part of the 49th Ar-
ntA A~+1/n ~ c WA . _ ....
a whole family packs up the state law that all children be-
and takes off. tween the ages of 7 and 16 must
Thunderstorms that raked the
Red River Valley dumped 1.50
inches on Paris in 40 minutes and
gave Texarkana a 24-hour total
of 2.17 inches.
in the Shopping Center, Roy Bar-
nes and Son Department Store,
K. Wolens, Tekell Furniture Store,
the Western position in an
ke • •""2
a customer the origin of
cer once
men, is
a note in Moscow ac-
Two juveniles were placed on
Capt. Curry was told his “alert”
had begun. From that point
develops.
One result of the obstacles en-
countered is that any initiative
by the Western powers becomes
extremely difficult to arrange.
By contrast, Soviet policy-making
processes are highly centralized,
the view of many Western diplo-
mats.
In the present case, the United
our bilateral talks
had better give up the idea of go- vice Unit and serves as investi-
ing back to individual farming. gator of needy families.
Dallas, Gainesville, Denton, Deni-
son, Sherman, Bonham, Green-
ville, Sulphur Springs, Commerce,
Paris, Mt. Pleasant and Texar-
kana.
a meeting here the other night.
mored Division’s overall camp
rating.
General purpose of the training,,
according to the test control of-
ficer, Capt. Clarence Gaddy from
ced in orphanages and individual preciates the cooperation
week ago, schools, checking attendance and homes for adoption. Wofford con
1 - ..... iight ducted 12 adoption investigations.
ads in the TIMES-REVIEW and
make a list of the items you need,
I then fare forth and take advan-
Pre-dawn lows in the state
according to Chamber of Commer-
ce Manager Vaughn Gray.
Gray added that 29 Cleburne
merchants will be participating in
this month’s sale which could be
one of the best yet.
Participating in this month’s
sale will be department stores, va-
riety stores, shoe stores, men’s
stores, drug stores, hardware, fa-
bric, furniture, lumber, ladies’
wear, and a savings and loan as-
sociation. A preview of some of
the items on sale indicates that
some real values will be featured
• "
□□
□□
-9
A
A
...He was a SANTA FE executive
at CHICAGO and made many
friends here during the JOHNSON
COUNTY CENTENNIAL celebra-
tion in 1954.
Gusty, cool winds, kicking up
frothy white caps, made fishing
poor at LAKE WHITNEY all last
week...CLEBURNE merchants are
set to offer scads of merchandise
urne Quality Fabric Shop, Cleb-
urne Hardware Company, Cleb-
at first, declined to give his
name, they said.
easier to escape in other ways , I, . A
as well. Now Berlin, still accessi- KEEPS ON THE GO
ble from East Germany, is al--------------------— ”
3SS Law Officer Cites
the Berlin escape hatch. Others
which could easily be interpreted
in Moscow as basic disunity.
Top U.S. officials say that ac-
tually the United States, Britain,
LAFF-A-DAY
‘56TH. YEAR, NO. 208
Plainview, Levelland, Lubbock,
ter than originally planned. The military showdown,
delay may soften the impact of
the warning on Soviet leaders.
P-
7°.L;mu Thursday at the earliest. House to bar nuclear weaoons tests
of the work) to his senior evalua- , I ., 11 , i , , 10 Dar nuclear weapons resis.
tor, who, in turn, will forward it rules provide that members be -- -- F-..------------ -----------o ----------
given a chance to study a copy dressed a note to Secretary-Gen- been Soviet insistence that the nu-
of printed bills for 24 hours be-
subcommittee re-
change, mounted on the rear of a
truck.
“It was a good test,” said Mas-
ter Sgt. Eugene Hinkle, the unit’s
first sergeant. He added, “From
the cooperation we received from
such people as the division engin-
, x38 . 882k 33
p-
Bargain Day
Plans Shaping
For Thursday
Plans for the Thursday Bargain
Take about 50 accountants, post Here’s the story the men of Cle-
office employes, truck drivers, burne will be telling for many
clerks, assembly line workers and weeks to come: Before summer
and a substitute proposal,”' said
, Remaining optimists of the
twentieth century had seen enough
of the supposed progress of man.
The disenchantment was com-
. plete. In less than two genera-
tions the promising optimism had
proved false deliverance. Such
cataclysmic shaking of the foun-
- dation of man’s confidence left
him with deep feelings of forebod-
ing. So recently, the individual
thought himself to be a king. Now
, he felt prodigal but seriously
doubted if there were a father to
whom he might return. There
mwere times in the previous cen-
■ tury when the disintegration of
. society was a major theme. To-
day, it is the disintegration of the
individual creature himself — of
1 man. Unless there can be a renais-
*sance of the meaning of man —
his identity as a creature depen-
dent upon God — the next cen-
tury offers only despair.
• Ford Hikes
Plant Wages
MEXICO CITY (AP)-The Ford
Motor Company has signed a new
. collective labor contract giving
its 800 assembly plant workers a
10 per cent wage increase.
Marco Antonio Ibarra, indus-
trial relations' manager, said this
would boost salaries from $3.20 to
$4.56 a week, and, with fringe
benefits, cost the company 17.7
. per cent more than it is now pay-
, ing-__
all the figures we need, we will impasse has been reached. They planatory memorandum that
urne High. Lt. Egan is a post of- know by late Monday what type made clear their opinion that if companied the request for
—home for the unit for two weeks. Sunday the men
from Cleburne's unit and 94 other National Guard units
of the 49th Armored Division returned to their armories
in 74 Texas cities.
two sections of the state Satur- neon in the Panhandle, partly
cloudy to cloudy elsewhere. After-
noon temperatures ranged from
82 at Lubbock to 97 at Laredo.
Fo’An J
Texas and extended to 10 p.m.
(CST). It included Fort Worth, little change in temperatures.
here has an-
ley County alone. Other cotton
verS ratings 3 on "various phases ably can not begin until next Soviet Union on a proposed treaty week on getting over-all disarma- popssere damaged northwest of
. . .. ... studying Daniel’s bill, said his delivered
80.into actioni ..an emersenc subcommittee worked until 12:30cusing the Soviet Union of trying ahead with
When 3 o’clock finally came, the.writing Gov. Price Daniel’s tax that the subcommittee will ceme
unit had put in a man-sized day recommendations (HB20) said it out with two bills—Daniel’s bill
and was ready to go back to its could not report to the full _____
pup tents and enjoy a beer or coke mittee until late Monday at least,
from the division’s mobile post ex-
—-—-g
Howdy 3ols
By PROC
Khrushchev’s note avowed Rus- day. The 10,000-man unit hails
from 74 Texas cities.
person the labor shortage helped by the ment officers in Johnson County year. These boys are given num- . „
uth..... * i- ■ - erous types of training, including ults were placed on probation.
religious training. Wofford deter- There were five probations revok-
mines the boys who will attend ed during the year, but they
and sees that they have transpor- not from the 11 placed
reported more than 2,000 fines checks' on trains that may be car-Sept. 1, 1957.
attack were imposed Friday on careless rying refugees. This is the peak As juvenile officer he makes re-
$60 millions loan payable in 15
urne Drug, Charles Men’s Shop, years.
3.
A group connected with Lon-
the Cleburne Savings & Loan As-don’s Rothschild Bank reportedly
sociation. has made the offer.
-
hoped that the world had been
made safe for democracy.
• A
The paralyzing depression of
1929 came too quickly. Coupled
with economic privation, a de-
' * pression of spirit gripped most of
• the world. In America long lines
of weary men seeking employ-
ment were no portrait of prog-
’ -ress. A collapse of banks, busi-
" nesses, and industries dragged
men in its wake. The vaunted au-
tonomy was in jeopardy. Even
the remarkable stopgap measur-
es of Franklin Roosevelt did not
heal all the wounds. Man had been
deeply shocked in his spirit.
☆
In the first war men had mar-
ched into battle with the confi-
dence that their conflict was a
war to end all wars. World War
II saw men trudging soberly to
an unpleasant task which had to
. be done. The optimism of man
had experience relapse. In Ger-
many a curious compound of lack
of faith and memory of defeat
- created a welcome for a new
• messian while Chamberlain bou-
ght time at the cost of small na-
tions. America hoped that a span
of ocean and a policy of isola-
’ tion would keep it from war.
However, with the bombing of
Pearl Hrabor, two oceans prov-
‘ ed inadequate to prevent the Un-
ited States from entering the con-
flict.
WASHINGTON (AP) — The France and West Germany
United States will give Russia a solidly united c
firm hands-off-Berlin notice early Western rights
next week, about three weeks la-
..2
*--6,
p—- ‘ - muz
Kgcdkt-“uqeqos
Base, the ATC headquarters at committeemen studying agency
needs for the coming year after
pcgs8
f
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Turbulent weather boiled up in----------
Texas again Saturday after driv- Falls, Brownwood, San Angelo,
ing hailstorms destroyed thou- Fort Worth, Wink, Paris, and
sands of acres of cotton on the Dallas had light rains during the
personnel carriers and wait for ers Saturday postponed the spe-
athe enemy. Tuesday was f
camp began on July 2, the Bat- Bronx. He was the fifth ream
- -..... - - in history to make the drop with-
farm affairs, warned them theydent of the Salvation Army Ser- venile officer. He handled 13 cases
...... .... • --- II-it —j ------- — i-uect-of juvenile delinquency, 12 boys ships during the year. There are
a... .. .___...___ and one girl, during the year. Six presently six boys from this coun-
Wofford has served as juvenile boys were committed to the state ty in the state school for boys
it no longer excites much suspi- any juvenile trouble which mi
An official report said 2,085 cion in an East German townarise in the schools. He enforces
values on the regular BARGAIN
An early morning thunderstorm DAY here Thursday...Read the
u. 21.:.. day as thundershower activity
Forecasts calling for scattered continued over the central par t of
thunderstorms, hail and the state.
Skies were clear Saturday after-
A: 1 J . •I auvcib IIUIIl west UJCIII
cials say allied unity is of vital Red-encircled West Berlin
importance, the difficulty which enied west bsruim
the Western powers had in agree-
ing on the wording of the
a week, he announced today. He ington, London and the United treated from agreements already i Randolph AFB
will be back on the job July 24. Nations constituted another step reched." nounced.
the last year Command, will be the new com- . _
mander of "Amarillo Air Force friends...Community Chest budget
sembly consideration of the issue. .
They charged the Soviet Union Brig. Gen. Dwight Montieth, chief GERS saying
with wind gusts to 50 miles an
hour dumped up to 2 inches of
rain on that area. Plainview had day at the news
M . .; 2252548
I *,
88, ea#" 9
Brownfield, Snyder, Abilene and
Colorado City in the western part ranged from 57 degrees at Dal-
• L• LII— F---o-IV-I VIAL- I . 1,
each month. Wofford dax ni8ht. . ... g
One forecast, which included
States, Britain and France took
a long' time to work out their problem are commanded by Lt.
r J
Estimates of cotton destroyed
ajor by violent Friday night hailstorms
ranged up to 3,000 acres in Hock- teuin8
child fails to attend school with-
A A g I A A * out the consent of the parent the
#qimE8 EBF I A/Fen MFeAF I A child is held responsible, but both
it VI l% Wil “eVIIHl UllllaC the child and parent can be held
5 responsible.
AUSTIN (AP)-House tax writ- Sandahl said new estimates on When an adult is placed on pro-
— -------- --------- — „r_- revenue being obtained from the bation, he or she is given a strict
the day cial session’s first tax debate state comptroller would not beset of orders. Breaking any of
ht • • - .........some time Mon- the orders is a violation of pro-
bation. Each person on probation
the spring of 1960. Gerhard tion Army and Johnson County 1961.
Grueneberg, a top Communist in Welfare agency. He is vice-presi-
auda e82a
ROUGH DAY for the men of Cleburne's Company A,
1st Armored Rifle Battalion, 144th Infantry, as they
plowed through the mud to a successful conclusion of
rifle and mortar platoon tests. The unit underwent the
intensive training program last week at North Fort Hood
. - . eer battalion who laid mine fields
preserving basic to the great work our own men
is concern about the delays and
note frustrations encountered in trans-
it officially kicked-off, the total sembly area, then to an
, They, are described as equally of the gruelling test? The Co. A
determined to protect their rights " *
of access from West Germany to
out of collective farms. All East the adult probation officer for the tation to and from the camp.
From June 1, 1960 to June 1,
, approximately 100 cases There are presently
were referred to Wofford as ju- probation in the COl
a campaign to check an increas- Since school closed a
. - , Rep. Charles Sandhal, Austin,
is to prove to the Army head of the special 5-man group
1191 reonnAcc ni +Ae nmr +A _ 1 Ie : ___ . • 1
a. 3885585898888888889888888858589551398888888888838888558888882838289885854288885825888850888
8362228503383889850 5239088808288982888988888888898
se-mlE
"-d-e-r-ce
(CST) ____
The other storm area was for tinued partly cloudy weather over
North Central and Northeast most of the state through Sunday
J c. President Kennedy is spending inches in 30 minutes,
ments and substitutes, Foreman tantamount to assuring full-scale the weekend, White House press
position, fully oriented the officers drivers here as authorities waged travel season in East Germany. gular visits to all the county
The test for Curry’s rifle and and men on what would happen
, . mortar platoons was part of the and actually reconnoitered the en-
Sprsen S, Furniture Store, Smart 49th Armored' Division’s contin- emy’s positions.
secretary Pierre Salinger said the tor
U. N. action was another ap- Fridav night to raise its three-
proach to the disarmament prob- day total to 5 inches.
lem, and that “we are still going
s
put out, we can say it was highly
East-West successful!”
out injury.
1. pp. . . 1. , . IIIUI VVUIU VVIUCSUI UQU IUUUILS
Canadian officials immediately that peasants, annoyed by Com-
took the man into custody on a
Frank Hyde and Lt. Lewis Egan, port," he said. “If we progress their willingness to continue the sador Sir Patrick Dean outlined
Hyde, whose rifle platoon has 36 the next day or two and we get talks in Geneva, even though an
were imposed during the when
’—---—attend school. A child or parents
•g E | p ■ may be brought into court for
T ax Debate ■ ostponec •schooL If thbsparbnd istnegttent
E / he or she is charged and if the
, o - ,
, teo,
e
a.m. Saturday.
There were other reports, still 1------------ ------- ,
unconfirmed, that Communist po- officer since Sept. 1, 1949, and school for boys at Gatesville.
MEXICO CITY (AP) — Police lice are stepping up their spot as adult probation officer since T. 13 -- --
☆
Once man was dominated by
his universe; later he cooperated
with it to accomplish his purpos-
es. Now, he determined his des-
tiny. He manipulated his future.
The key figure of the nineteenth
century, a century of progress,
“ was Darwin, who explored the
theories of evolution in the nat-
ural world. His successor', Spen-
cer, amplified his findings and ap-
plied them to the possibility of
inevitable progress. This was an
age of optimism. It is not sur-
prising to hear the boast of Heine:
“We are of age; we do not need
a father’s care.”'
☆
As imperceptible as the com-
ing of old age, disenchantment
came with the twentieth century.
Considerably more than the heir
to the Austrian throne was slain
in 1914. The exaggerated optim-
ism, based on the freedom and
. unlimited power of man, expired
in global conflict. Speaking of
the frivolous promises of the nine- 1
teenth century, Berdyaev said, 1
“the promises have not been ful-
filled. Man is tired to death.”
The war ended in surrender and
{ &0
“.A-e
MBA I
3— 1
J
s
3
6nal.xozYutasjmd.Im“-r--id________' __________1-15
“We wouldn’t have caught the
prowler if it hadn't been for
Rusty there. We woke up
when we heard his teeth
chattering.”
reflects a diversity of
NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (AP)-
A man in a 6-foot rubberized wa-
ter tight ball successfully rode
over the 161-foot Hors'eshoe Falls
today.
He was identified as Nathan
Boya, a Negro, about 30, of the
-:-,3
J a ’
Md-_"T PeE -
' ,,,2
L.c.2b-..-6
B“o.
g7 _2
82g gadeaafsg. - -8- "a 3
•S" ,
cer’s commands.
At 0800(8 a. m. Army time).
☆ ☆ ☆ ☆
--
too late,” said Rep. Wilson Fore-
man, Austin. “We need to get a
tax bill out of the House by the
middle of next week or there may
not be time left to get it through
both houses this session.”
The House Tax Committee met
Saturday expecting to act on the
committees recommendations
P--
- A- —
1 : -...... :"
-
What seer can see the subtlety
of change that marks the death
of an era and the birth of ano-
• ther? Since man moved out of
the Middle Ages he has followed
a path marked by his growing
A A autonomy. The individualism of
101 •8 the nineteenth century was
symptomatic of his increasing
freedom and creativity. With the
. . new burst of scientific discover-
, , ies and creations in the eight-
eenth and nineteenth centuries,
the circle of a closed world was
.1 - broken.
BERLIN (AP) — East
and West prepared Satur-
day for a showdown in di-
vided Berlin on just who
is permitted to come to
this isolated outpost of
the Western world.
From Red-ruled East Germany,
refugees were pouring in at a
record rate. There were 675 new
ones counted at Marienfelde
Camp by 11:30 Saturday morn-
ing, when the books—but not the
reception machinery — closed
down for the weekend. The com-
parable figure last Saturday was
only 477.
These counts are far from com-
plete. Experts say the average of
arrivals' over the past week has
been 1,200 a day. This is as many
as Berlin has ever handled, al-
though more people made it
across the Iron Curtain in the
crisis period of 1953. Then it was
0, .
E=
." going their intensive platoon test.
Taking part in the July Bargain It amounted to a hard day’s work through lunchtime, his men load-
Day Sale will be Bradbury s, The beginning before 6 a. m. After ed their vehicles, moved to an as-
—The United States and Britain propaganda offensive on mi
asked Saturday the U.N. Assembly East-West issues.
> Weather
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 208, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 16, 1961, newspaper, July 16, 1961; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1552776/m1/1/?q=%221961-07%22&rotate=90: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.