Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 220, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 30, 1961 Page: 3 of 16
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Johnson County and Cleburne Area Newspapers and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Johnson County Historical Collective.
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3
V
$
. I
Y
/
ns are devote;
. JSS.
$
the Communist-bloc countries in dol-
not immune. Only 48 per cent c! rubles.
A
to testify before Congress, the Texas farmers and ranchers, with
1 STATE FARM
MUTUAL
east two major spy networks in
na-
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)
{
e
a
s
1
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been
San Antonio area last weekend.
t
Berry B. Taylor
-
■ i
1/2 Price Sale
Southwestern Life
a
Ladies1 & childrens'
10,000 to 12,000 people in Wash-
tains four directorates.
ington alone. It correlates, evalu-
GUSTAFSONS
ates
Summer Dresses
gathered by 12 or
more
crops were good, with some
rice
ments,
services with total personnel es-
Mi 5-2521
210 S MAIN
Sport Clothes
are in excellent condition.
to make restitution for the dam-
(No refunds, charges, or lay-aways)
Moisture was spotted in North
SUMMER CLEARANCE
The name of1 Lt. Gen. A. S.
\"
•f
Sap Sl
a
of Iran, Guatemala and Cuba.
7 N. Main
booth.
WASHINGTON (AP)—How Tex- ties. Most range and pasture lands
Pay-Day Sale
to write into farm bill a provision in good condition.
Church of Christ
Moisture in Central Texas is ad-
306 S. Walnut
Reg. 47.50
J
Reg. 39.95
FREE ALTERATIONS
i
$1.5042-$3
r
SPORT SFRTS
First Lasting Color Rinse
Beautiful Eyes—and Lips
8383
21
BETTER DRESSES ALL MARKED BELOW COST!
$
1
Basic Beauty Treatment
Famous Glamor Make-Up
MILLINERY
Drastic reductions in men's
Slacks, Sport Shirts, Shoes
DRESS SHS
And Sport Coats.
Helena Rubinstei
I
Y
Ed Gray
f MEN'S WEAR /
We Give
SE H
*
a
BUYINGA Car?
xmE,
SEEUSNOW!
V
RE
QUANTITIES ARE LIMITED. SIZES BROKEN.
BE HERE EARLY! DOORS OPEN AT 9 A.M.
each Sunday
10:30 a.m.
as congressmen voted last week:
On amendment, rejected 40-53,
$34.85
$29.95
When
Someone's
Counting
On You _
How Congressmen
From Texas Voted
pay telephone booths at Godley,
but the Judge withheld punish-
ment until full restitution is made
vision 9’s activities in the United
States—the death of Maj. Gen.
Coast area got back into their
fields cn a limited basis. Cotton
COLOR
LIFT
mature and prospects are gcod
Bollworms and weevils are a real
over 18,300 persons had been ar-
rested in eight years in connec-
the U.S.S.R.’s population is com-
prised of Great Russians. The na-
money...
Do YOUR FINANCING THIS
t ’
7 4
Boys Will Pay For
Phone Booth Damage
r
l
AVAZmSM
DIAL MI 5-2415
he Soviet Union, including 13 in
the United States.
condition. Flies and mosquitoes
are causing trouble.
Showers plagued farmers in
Check
State Farm's
BANK PLAN
before you buy
your next car.
I vhich specializes in murder, kid-
i aping and blackmail for Soviet
political purposes.
I Division 9 operates not only in
the decision-makers.
The 2nd Directorate is the ter-
rorist group and has no known
counterpart in the Western world.
The 3rd and 4th Directorates
are concerned with collection of
industrial and commerial infor-
Texans have SAVED 3125
and more on financing
and insurance.
Peanuts are making good prog-
ress; melons are moving to mar-
ket; pastures improved and live-
stock are doing good. Hay is be-
ing harvested.
Row crops made excellent
farmer cooperatives: For—Tower.
Against—Yarborough.
7
Walking Shorts
Val. to 6.95
Group 1
Val. to 6.95
$3.99
28 only
1
All Summer Hats M Price
$1$2.99
Bob Jordan
207% W. Henderson
MI 5-7021
boys short sleeve shirts. Val to 2.99
Perfect for Back-to-school,
$1.44«$2
You Can Count
On
Life Insurance
2nd Directorate.
I ports CIA agents have appeared There is a subsection of the 2nd
in public as advisers to govern- Directorate known as Division 9
oppe
Ml 5-2332
Casuals & Flats
Ladies. Broken sizes & odd lots.
Value to 4.98
First National Bank
in Cleburne
Member FDIC
A
i
J
l
Buy Color Lift®
Hair Rinse, the
first color rinse to
last through 5
shampoos! Won’t
rub off and color
stays true.
Free Silk-Sheen
Cream Shampoo
with special condi-
tioners.
value 1.88
SALE PO
Buy Silk-Tone*
Liquid Make-up
for all skins—ideal
for dry—it mois-
tribes as it beauti-
fies. New plastic
bottle.
Free Dew-Kissed
lipstick refill for
“Convertible” lip-
stick case.
value 2.75
SALE 175
ion apparently misjudged Congo-
'ese willingness to swap Western
OrandRasb
,giihne
Group II
Originally I I.95
$5.00
35 only
y
a
Group III
Originally 1 6.95
$7.00
30 only
s
1
MEN'S
STRAW HATS
Dress shapes Val. to 4.98
$1.50 & $2
Western Styles Val. to 8.95
$1.65$4.65
MEN'S
CURLEE SUITS
Blends of Dacron-Rayon & Wool
i •0003
\ Rae
y-.(
€=d
Washington and Moscow is any-
thing but reassuring for a diplo-
mat troubled by dreams of a holo-
caust.
1 The Cuban fiasco last April con-
are in good' condition; stock wa-
ter is plentiful and livestock are
side? Miscalculation in this case,
nlike Cuba or other fringe areas
of partial commitment, could be
disastrous.
The United States is a relative
ewcomer to large-scale peace-
time intelligence operations. The
CIA was founded in 1947 to help
C=---
/
SUMMER SUITS
Reg. 39.50 to 69.50
w 19.75,34.75
Korea. It apparently was' caught in. Publication of the text before
off base again by the U.S. land-' he Soviet Union had a chance to
ngs in Lebanon, in response to1 edit it virtually wrecked the Com-
Soviet meddling in the Middle' nunist party in the United States.
East. Last year, the Soviet Un-i The Soviet Union maintains at
The operations have been re-
Nightmare
policy decisions and prevent a
second Pearl Harbor. From very
small beginnings, the CIA is now
puungag".
A2
omem m uumsn I
FINAL!
The seend net is that, known
as the Glavnoye Razayedvatel-
neye—GRU—which specializes in
the collection of military intelli-
gence.
At the moment, the KGB, which
has headquarters in the Macho-
vaya district of Moscow, report
edly is headed by A. N. Shelepin,
a member of the Central Com
mittee of the Communist party
Premier Joseph Stalin.
For' five years Krivitsky re-
tributed spectacularly to a crisis ments' in
in credibility apparently casting Nam.
STRAW HATS
Reg. 3.95 to 9.95
NOW 1.97.. 4.47
variety. There even is some in-
lication the ease of the Red take-
All services conducted accord-
(
E
Ay
f; )
U
Ry //
Ee
Deep
Cleansart
\ /
I /
I ■
I w
Girls. Bone, while swivel strap.
Reg. 3.98
$177
KIN DEW
worst in many years. All crops
are making excellent growth with
some bollworms renorted. Con-
trols are being applied.
Heavy rains and hail destroyed
3,000 acres of cotton in Hall Coun-
y. Rains damaged crops in Mot-
’ey and Wilbarger counties. Mois-
ture was surplus in 10 counties
around Vernon and adequate in
11 others in the Rolling Plains
District. A limited acreage of sor-
ghum had been harvested. Screw-
of apparently well-founded re-
n decisions now being made is
he way each intelligence service
answers the crucial question:
have been other published re-
3 CIA agents have appeared
2 PC. DRESSES
Ladies dacron & cotton prints, Reg.
5.95, 34 only. Misses 10 to 20.
$2.99
Buy Deep Cleanser
Liquid Cream with
P e n e t r e l .*
Cleanses deep
down, removing
every bit of make-
up and soil. •TM
Free Skin Dew®
gives instant mois-
ture. French-for-
mulated lotion.
value 3.00
SALE
t
Just four of 21 exciting combinations.
Limited time only. Prices plus tax.
Buy Mascara.
Matie,® the first
and finest auto-
matic mascara,
velvets lashes with
lasting color. Wa-
terproof, refillable.
Free Dew-Kissed
lipstick refill for
“Convertible” lip.
stick case.
value 3.00
SALE 2™
Helena Rubinstein
Once-aYear Beauty Sale
SAVE UP TO 50% •
tion for the most part consists
lot’ 40 separate nationalities.
' Some of these nationalities—the
FKCCiEjEnE DAV \ ' Sunday, July 30, 1961-CLEBURNE, TEXAS TIMES-REVIEW-3 ,
Intelligence Breakdown Sets World Stumbling Into War
’ sence operations. I junta apparently caught U.S.;against Greece and Turkey if
5 This is the basic danger in the planners by surprise. । American support for these coun-
present East-West crisis over But the CIA has no monopoly! tries was made emphatic. It was
West Berlin. Each side desperate- on mistakes. Since the end of correct in predicting the United
ly needs an accurate assessment World War II the Soviet intelli- States could break the Berlin
of the other’s preparations and in- gence apparatus apparently failed blockade without war. Probably
tent. to detect the developing unrest in ts greatest coup was obtaining a
A look at the past’record of East Germany, Poland and Hun-ext of Premier Khrushchev’s fa-
A intelligence operations in both gary. It completely underesti- nous speech downgrading Jo-
“•...... - • j mated the U.S. reaction to the seph Stalin nearly two months be-
Communist invasion of South ore it was released by the Krem-
While these numbers
may agents and agitators, and the So- Iron Curtain. lars.
Even the Soviet Union itself is: Nobcdy, it seems, will accept
1
3 1
• r
t <
i -
1
Laos and South Viet, the Soviet Union but throughout tion with Soviet spy operations, sound impressive, thev represent viets make free use of them. , may be of special significance:
the world. Division 9 has left a Over the past 10 years, too, 48 only a tiny fraction of the num- The Communists, of course, do While 3
trail of murder for all to see. Soviet officials have been ex- bers engaged. not have a complete advantage, to the destruction of the Western
It is only rarely that these poli- pelled from non-Communist na- The five to six million Commu- The Western nations have poten- democracies, they finance all in
tical murders come to light fortions for espionage and subver- nists living outside the Iron Cur-tial agents among the millions of telligenen ivi cs side the
here are those in the Western sion. tain nations are all potential disillusioned living behind the Communist-bloc countries in dol-
s. —
— - J
t 30.
aka J
252 JI
Panyushkin, former1 ambassador
ports Since 1948 that CIA agents to the United States, is connected
is maturing rapidly and grain sor-
ghum prospects are good. Forage
production is heavy. The tomato
harvest is nearing completion.
In North Central Texas, hay
baling, poisoning insects and
plcwing stubble are major activi-
; HAIR
‘ RINSE
making anti-trust laws applicable
to federations or combinations of equate. Corn and sorghums are
every technically advanced
colonialism for the Communist tien.
. - and a member of the Foreign Af-
furnish raw material for foreign fairs Commission of the Supreme
rough. Not voting—Tower.
TIMES-REVIEW
CLASSIFIEDS PAY
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE COMPANY
Home Office: Bloomington, Illinois 59—155
to the telephone company. . _
The boys’ parents were ordered East Texas. Cattle and pasture:
around $1 billion annually, al- mation, inluding data on patents
though lower estimates have been and new manufacturing methods
print. There have been a number
general was found dead in a hotel crops growing well and ranges,
room here. There is still a mys- pastures and livestock in excellent
tery about the cause of death. condition, stepped up their out-
The list of murders laid at the door summer work during the
doorstep of Division 9 is long and week.
includes Czechoslovakia’s Jan' The overall situation was very
Masaryk and the assassination of favorable, but much depends n
Leon Trotsky in Mexico. how long the good weather will
The' details and operations oflast and permit farmers to keep
the Soviet espionage and intelli-insects under control and clean
gence systems are known all overup grassy and weedy fields, said
the Western world as a result of director John Hutchinson of the
the defections of Igor Gouzenkol Texas Agricultural Extensio.
a Soviet Embassy code clerk, in Service
Canada in 1946 and that of Vlad- For mest of the state the weath-
™r Petrov, a KGB member and turned warm and was near
hird secretary at the Soviet Em- normal for late July. In some
assy in Australia in 1956 areas scattered showers, heavy
There have been a host of other, rain and hail caused damage and
r ctions. gc . delayed outdoor work.
In 1960, then U.S. Secretary of
State Christian A. Herter estimat- Screwworms troubled stockmen
ad the number of Soviet agents and in some areas were reporter
at large in the world at about 300,- the worst in many years.
100. This figure includes between! The harvesting of cotton, corn
10,000 and 12.000 master agents and grain sorghum went on in
working outside the Soviet Union. South Texas. Ranges were excel-
Since World War II some 360 lent where rains fell. Livestock
convicted’ of espionage for, moving to market.
Heavy rains and flooding hit the
ONLY 12 PAIR
CLAM DIGGER PANTS
Broken sizes.
Boys 18 to men's 34 waist.
$1.00
Think FIRST . Think FIRST
National.
they kicked two windows out of resumed. Pastures are good and
improving and cattle are in good
age. County Juvenile Officer Noel
Wofford estimated damage at east Texas but generally ad'e-
more than $100. A Bell Telephone quate. Hay harvesting and plow-
Co. representative said the youths ing had been delayed in the wet-
slammed the receiver of a paytest areas but several counties
' " i so hard, the instrument need rain. Cotton is fruiting well
was beyond repair and a new tele- but insects are increasing. Corn
The 1st Directorate corresponds
and , distributes information roughly to the U.S. National Se-
. " depart- curity Council in that it directs
agencies and technical over-all operations and reports to
HOSPITAL SICK ROOM
DIABETIC AND BABY SUPPLIES
FREE DRIVE-IN PARKING
have actively sought to overthrow by the State Department’s direc-
l three foreign governments—those tory of Soviet officials to the telephone
! f l—z, Cuntomala and Cha. KGB. Some people believe Pan- - .
;The first two succeeded. There yushkin now heads the infamous phone had to be installed in the
blooming; cattle and calves are Communist-held territory.
t; and some calves and lambs In brief, the Soviet Union s in-
are being marketed. Screwworms telligence network is large and
are bad. ruthless, but there is no indica-
timated at somewhere between
20,000 and 30,000.
Appropriations are concealed in
the budgets of other departments.
The expenditure for foreign in-
formation work probably is
vealed by Soviet defectors and
duly documented in public hear-
---**- ings.
Hazards of this lack of infalli- First, and foremost, is the net-
bility on both sides are enormouswork operated by the Committee
y magnified by such attest of on State Security—KGB—in Mos-
.vill as Benin. In both Washing- cow which concerns itself with
.on and Moscow, the Key factor political intelligence.
N e=
OUR LAST MARK DOWNS HAVE BEEN TAKEN! THESE
ITEMS ARE PRICED TO MOVE QUICKLY—MOST ARE
MARKED BELOW COST! WE MUST HAVE ROOM FOR
FALL MERCHANDISE! !
weighed.
There is one thing about the
Soviet intelligence effort which
MEN'S
SWIM SUITS
Val. to 4.98 Knit & Boxer Styles
88c s $1.44
On motion, adopted 41-37, to kill threat to cotton in many areas
the Long, D-La., anti-trust farm Major activities now are applying
bill amendment: Against— Yarbo- insecticides and weed control.
Soviet.
The KGB, which was once
known as the notorious MVD,
huge bureaucracy employing CHEKA, OGPU and GUGB, con-
world who hold that to publicize
them contributes to their terror-
There is one known case of Di-All Is Rosy With
Walter Krivitsky, who defected ini _,
1936 to escape the great purge by E f E"
- ■ ~ F—AHSggeM4Ukranians, for example-have
■ \l 4 f f “ I •3 ) ■ 6 S I B i B 3 j strong nationalist undergrounds
mained in hiding, but on Feb. 10,| 'seeking to overthrow Soviet rule.
1941, just two days before he was COLLEGE STATION (AP) — growth and ranges and pastures! In Munich, Germany, alone
- ■ - - " ' th are above average in Central there are 110 Iron Curtain refugee
West Texas. Some cotton is organizations with contacts in
Two juvenile boys, from Cory-
ell and Tarrant Counties, admits was opening. Corn, sorghums and
ed Friday to Dist. Judge Penp ,
Jackson in 18th District Court harvesting. Hay making has been
llilljWjfi"J > IILUU
WU CHAMBERS M45
ing to
1 Cor. 14:31-35
vague shadow across current While currently taking its licks
t
i *
14 ONLY
Girls' Dresses
Broken sizes 4 to 14. Reg. as much
as 4.98. They won't last long.
$1.44
On May 13, 1960, th eGerman Moisture was adequate ever the
Federal Republic reported that South Central District. Boll weevil
----- ... damage was heavy in cotton.
SWIM WEAR
Reg. 3.95 to 4.95
NOW 1.97 0 2.47
How determined is' the other
Moisture conditions in far West tion . anywhere. that " possesses
Texas are good except in the far political.infallibility:, . I
west counties where ranges are „ Indeed, its record in judging
/ery dry. Recent rains in other Western reaction to a direct ch= |
ections have improved range con- ienge, is one which, should gie
itions. Screwworms are the the Kremlin pause from time to
time as the chances of war1 are
Livestock and ranges are in goo.'
condition but screwworms are a
problem.
Farmers in the upper Gulf
worms are a problem.
Moisture is adequate in all ex-
zept two counties in the South
Plains District. Cotton is making
excellent progress but hot, dry
weather is needed. Sorghum
corn, castor beans, soybeans and
sesame prospects are good.
Ranges and livestock are in ex-
cellent condition. The vegetable
harvest is continuing.
Moisture is adequate in the
Panhandle. The condition of
ranges and livestock was good.
ble into a war nobody wants be- 1950. Just two months ago the larry S. Truman that the Soviet
'cause of a breakdown in intelli- takeover by a Korean military Union would abandon a move
LADIES
SUN DRESSES
25 only. Broken sizes. Reg. 5.95
ver in Cuba surprised the
J.S.S.R.
I
,8)
GSilkShee l
|s^//
F : Helena %
1 Ruburstein} \
E "-ecocc” I
.usr )
individuals in 11 nations have are in good condition. Calves are
nAmv
f p) freports of the Central Intelligence and facing possible reorganiza-
S t\QGl C J Agency. There are older ex-lion as the result of a special
amples of miscalculation: a CIA study ordered by President Ken-
WASHINGTON (AP)—For men chief reported to Congress there nedy after the abortive Cuban
. . . , , . , , was no evidence of trouble in invasion, the CIA can cite many
|111 P aces a recurrent nig - Korea two days before North successes in its brief history,
mare is watching the world stum- Korean tanks rolled southward in It correctly advised President
1
1
2 PRICE
1
2 PRICE
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 220, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 30, 1961, newspaper, July 30, 1961; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1552788/m1/3/?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.