Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 205, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 12, 1961 Page: 1 of 8
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CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW
e
Sc DAILY
10c UUNDAY
ESTABUSHED 1904
n
Full Leased Teletypesetter Wire Report of the Associated Press-—World’s Greatest News Agency
56TH. YEAR, NO. 205
CLEBURNE, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1961
8 PAGES
New Agricultural Act
9
3
1 Midas Also
U.S. Scores
888,,% 8
388
8
Space First
Into Orbit
r - . 1
lost out. Existing marketing
or-
I
MacArthur Bids Sad
Fog Machine
}
83332
23:
Farewell To Philipp
and today.
2,
4
judgment that the support price
38833
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day and flew here for
an over- tan uniform, MacArthur told the
er used to kill insects.
night stop on his way home.
Filipinos they are “now a nation
15
Officials at the U.S. Air base of gladness and good will. You
an
882:32222223333333
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2a
He thanked them “for a wonder-
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6695,2232233308
President Carlos P. Garcia said:
AUSTIN (AP) - The Railroad
triggered
evision
cameras,
were
was a
companies for a 5 per cent in-
Garcia asked MacArthur to tell
passenger mation over Newfoundland, the
Everywhere Filipinos hailed him Americans: “We Filipinos always
enemy, but we never
an
The request asks that the gen-
eral increase' not apply to a list
in Wichita Falls, Houston, Ver-
| was not damaged.
which can sense heat from
The general turned around as he would put the firms at
a mis-
last look, and waved.
said.
See U. S. Page 8
More than an inch of rain fell
crossroads town of Magnet, near
night. Just across the border in
ashamedly. And many men wept
mated cotton farmers alone in
his visit. It had carried him from
million loss. Bay City proper had
simply drowned the cotton
on
tures, the weather fireworks' its too late to plant again.
Reynolds, 33, and his wife, 39,
Government In
"si
8385:38
2:3333
among rows of ruined crops’ in
Ssgs
Dark About How
a
333
88 388690
Chairman H. H. Coffield said
88338
e
from being under control,
he
change of venue.
where streams overflowed and
out crops.
auditing agency reported to Con-
Now that the summer days are
FACES CRIMINAL CHARGES
insects to greater destruction.
after immigration
officers
ar-
project to project purposes is not
Sheriff Denies Misconduct
said Comptroller General
Weather
Paul Harris,
are needed...
but
more
I don’t
there.
remember' sheriff.
even
Crawford said he had worked
LAFF-A-DAY
Victoria 2.06 and Galveston 1.39.
pearance.
He acknowledged freeing pri- money for their families.” He
Tuesday
Wednesday
I
9
The City Council studied traf- taking in a movie at the Esquire
or
and could pay the fine out by of gambling equipment operating
. 76 12 Noon .... 88
jail.
a
Crawford’s lawyer, Fred Eris- place, adding that he used his
J. C. Jiles, who has' about two
man, produced affidavits that 12
6MLxrFatres symehate
7-12
49
informed.
posed Amistad Dam on the Rio
wm 12
Grande near Del Rio.
a small income from oil royalties, take me.
I about some draper ies.
tion.
L
Hurricane-Searching
Satellite Is Orbited
Bus Companies
Seek Fare Hike
Former Chief
Is Arrested
City Traffic
Is Discussed
gations of misconduct in office going through the door,” Craw-
Tuesday and said that he knew ford said of his three-hour ap-
acres of land on the old Cleburne- news on plans to call them up to
Fort Worth road, asked that his bolster the nation’s defense...HA
Leyte, Cebu and Iloilo, wartime
battle sites he had made famous.
But he was elated and overjoyed
year
was
per-
fic problems in Cleburne, discus-
sing stop signs and traffic lights,
...JIM GOULDING, the telephone
man and sports disciple, watching
The wheat section also provides
exemption from marketing quotas
of up to 13% acres per farm.
Wearing his famous crushed
military cap and a freshly pressed
cy’s Wallops Island, Va., station.
The pictures showed cloud for-
Aged Man Kills
Boy, Wounds One
DALLAS (AP)— James Frank-
Ice Fund needs all the help finan
daily, it can get, so needy CLE
BURNE children can be supplier1
needed cool milk...Citizens and
groups are aware of the need and
small donations are coming i ■
. 86
. 86
. 81
...74
...73
...77
3 a.m.
6 a.m.
9 a.m.
las MacArthur bade a sad fare-
well to his beloved Philippines to-
alarm satellite
over Russia.
The orbit altitude
at
a
LONGVIEW (AP)-Sheriff No-
ble Crawford denied state alle-
17 At Denver
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Two airliner crashes — one at
Denver and the other in Africa—
jet plane took off.
The general was weary after
emergency feed grain program
enacted earlier this year with
minor modifications'.
leg.
Officers D. L. Pate and F. G.
Dam is Faring
WASHINGTON (AP) - Falcon
The present exemption is
acres.
The bill also would extend
that crop, sprouting the grain in
the field.
The Texas prison system farms
come cooler weather.
The 13.5 inch downpour was
Member—Texas Press- Association
Texas Daily Press League
Southern Newspaper Publishers
Street Baptist Church and WOV/
for contributions today...RUEVE!
KENNARD chatting with a cow
pie of friends at a downtown eat
erie.
Modish GRACE POWELL anc
daughter, PATTIE, of KOPPERL.
warrior, but one touched with sad-
ness.
3 p.m.
6 p.m.
9 p.m.
12 p.m.
(UP) United Press Telephoto Pctures
(OP) Central Press Feasures
(KF) King Features
“OK, Janice, that does it!!
The honeymoon is NOW
officially over.’*
sile's exhaust hundreds of miles
below. Goal of the serie's is to give
nearly instant warning of hostile
missile firings.
The second stage was boosted
(See MIDAS, page 3)
Testimony Set
In Death Trial
ALAMOGORDO, N.M. (AP) -
a
_____ _
Two Dead In
Forest Fire;
Hundreds Flee
MADERA, Calif. (AP)-A for-
est fire raging out of control near
JJovuJy Jos
By PROC
on certain trips originating
Leo Hearne, superintendent
of the street and sanitation de-
partment, today warned child-
ren about following too close-
CLEBURNE AND VICINITY —
Considerable cloudiness and scat-
tered showers' through Thursday.
High Thursday 82-90.
TEMPERATURES
property be annexed. The council ROLD BAILEY, the home suppl
--1---------- -----i- r xi-----x- -------x -h-t:------ith a customer
that saw his most memorable tri- to the sincerity and the magnitude
umphs after bitterest defeat. It of the Filipino peoples’ gratitude
main at the base until they left merciful providence cannot fail to
Thursday. There was no indica- protect this gem of the Far East.”
turned with his forces to begin
the liberation of Manila in 1945, to
-
A m ,"
. - - , - - . , , of a cool front that crept toward Plains,
the request sands' of useful cloud-cover photo- the state
A crowd of 1,000 stood silently
to bid their wartime hero a last
goodbye. Many women sobbed un-
Some told the officers “he was
a good kid.”
The officers found Johnson, in
his trailer reloading his .45 cali-
ber pistol which was fired three
times.
“I knew you police would get
said.
A second major fire that had
also consumed 25,000 acres was
reported being brought under con-
trol about 40 miles northwest of
the Madera County blaze.
. Joseph Campbell, “we can not
express an opinion as to whether
' the financial statements' present
fairly the financial position of the
United States section...”
The report said the Interior
Department in 1958 had asserted
that several years of operating
experience might be required to
form a firm basis for an agree-
ment between the various federal
agencies involved in the alloca-
tion process.
“Until such time as additional
8888 2 3
for farmers and other non-con-
troversial features of the origi-
nal administration bill.
But Secretary of Agriculture
Orville Freeman’s hopes of set-
ting up new machinery to deal
g -
""G
nee where it trapped and killed
a couple fleeing by car. They
were George Kipp and his wife,
Etta, both about 60, of Ahwahnee.
3333333
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Grande is planned in detail or
=.m-as.
around the globe.
It went into a nearly perfect
circular orbit with its most dis-
tant point from earth—the apogee
—450 miles out, its closest—peri-
gee—425 miles away. It is circling
the earth once every 100 minutes.
In Washington a spokesman for
the National Aeronautics and
Space Agency reported that the
Tiros III transmitted 35 pictures
of the earth’s cloud cover on its
first pass around the globe. The
pictures taken with wide-angle tel-
—
8*8
non and Amarillo. A 5 per cent
increase on these certain runs
With the rains would
BSsg 89
-mum
“Tg
!/5
( F-WA
Deputy Bill Edge as
ce Valley region.
Shaped like a huge drum with
two television cameras protrud-
ing from its base, Tiros III is
an improved version of two ex-
tremely successful Tiros satellites
orbited last year. The earlier
“The rains have been damag-
ing in some instances, mostly in
the coastal bend and coastal
plains regions where harvesting
of early matured cotton has been
delayed, reducing quality in some
instances”, White said.
prise — and a pleasant one. The
best the Air Force had hoped for
was about 500 miles. Previous
high for a U.S. satellite was about
300 miles.
High altitude benefits the ef-
fectiveness of Midas’ detection
system, the Air Force said, be-
cause it permits a larger scan-
ning area.
Midas III is circling the globe I
once every 2 hours and 40 min-
utes. The orbit is approximately
circular, just what was ordered.
The orbit was achieved by re-
starting the satellite’s engine over
Africa for a brief burst that in-
creased altitude and made the or-
bit more circular.
The satellite, after a series of j
disappointing delays, roared aloft
at 8:12 a.m. from this Navy space ;
base and into a polar orbit that
will carry it repeatedly over So- |
viet territory. |
The first pass over Russia will I
be the third, about 7 hours and
20 minutes after launch.
Midas III is pioneering a satel-
lite series aimed at giving nearly |
instant warning of hostile missile
firings. In its nose is an infrared I
eye which can sense heat from
the exhaust of a missile blasting
off hundreds of miles below. I
The second stage’s fueled
weight was not disclosed. Previ-
ous high weight was in a similar
vehicle in the Discoverer satellite
series. Previous high orbit was
about 300 miles for Midas IL
Midas III—weight 3,500 pounds
with fuel gone—is a 30-foot-long I
Ramon Montemayor, 45, of
Monterrey, was picked up Tues-
day while working as a cook in
a waterfront cafe.
-
k2
added that he never had tried
to hide this “or do anything
behind anybody’s back.”'
The sheriff denied any knowl-
of no gambling in Gregg County.
Judge A. R. Stout of Waxahachie
heard the case'.
Crawford testified in the state’s
civil suit to remove him from
office. He also faces criminal
88 Perish in
Air Crashes;
excessive rains may have cost
the convict farms $1 million,
mainly to cotton.
State Agriculture Commission-
er John White said in Austin that
the heavy rains in South Texas
and spread to the southeast.
near Tokyo said they expected the
general, 81, and his wife to re-
MISSING GIRL FOUND — Becky Joan
Roever, 12, missing since July 7. rests
in a hospital in Seaside, Oregon, as her
mother, Mrs. William Roever of Houston,
Tex., beams with joy. Becky was found
A pilot reported sighting a
start.
Flood waters from rain as
completely of the administra-
. tion’s new approach to farm
surplus problems', goes into a
final phase of approval before
the House Agriculture Committee
today.
The bill retains extensions' of
wheat and feed grain programs,
the food for peace program,
school milk, the national wool
act, liberalized loan procedures
shottornado funnel cloud early Tues-
day afternoon 15 miles east of
A giant Czechoslovak turboprop (for wheat) should be fixed
struck a power line' and exploded
today while coming in for a land-
a national average of $2
■■
An unidentified man and his quietly as" the giant U.S. Air Force
two grandsons were reported mis- ’ - -
sing. Robert Voss, assistant fire
al
nh
o 1
I 1
the murder trial of Roy Leon
Handy, 21, of Lamesa, Tex., after
a jury of nine men and three
women was picked Tuesday.
Defense' lawyer's, John Lawless
and George Zimmerman of Ala
mcgordo presented a motion for
a change of venue to U.S. Dis
trict Court. Dist. Judge Allan
Walker denied the motion citing
his refusal on the basis that case:
mentioned by the attorneys all
involved an Indian.
Handy is charged with the
murder of D. F. Leflar of E!
Paso Feb. 5. His body was found
on the Mescalero Apache Indian
reservation. It was this fact that
prevention officer for the State
Division of Forestry, said a
search was' on for them but they
were feared lost.
jammed a revolver aginst the
back of his head.
Reynolds pulled another revol-
ver, took the deputy’s gun and
ordered him to “drive.”’
The deputy drove and argued
that while Reynolds' might face
a long prison term for his past
offenses, he had not yet killed
a man. Reynolds gave in, un-
loaded the guns, gave them to
the deputy and threw the am mu-
Deputy Talks
Criminal Into
Giving Self Up
BEEVILLE, Tex. (AP) - An
escaped convict and his gun-
wielding wife were in jail today
* after a deputy sheriff talked
them into surrendering.
The couple, identified by
men are watching for furthe
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some South Texas areas, parti-
cularly along the coast.
The norther was expected to were taking a similar licking on
reach Texas during the afternoon the coastal plains. Prison System
the edge of Oakhurst, a commun-
ity of about 3,000.
Voss said reports reaching the
forestry division’s communica-
tions center in Fresno indicated
the town had been saved.
“But there’s no telling what will
a g
a
the week,”' he said. “I’ve done
with farm surplus headaches _______o _____________o
have been completely scuttled by ders for some crops are retained
The machine’ makes a hea-
vy fog and children often run
along in the fog behind the
machine.
“This is extremely danger-
ous,” he said.
to pass
U.S. Highway 41, the
are a bright light shining in a
cloudy, troubled world. I am sure
V_ —
magpsgse 8993wee ?
around route to Yosemite,
Madison clogged with autos of fle'eing
. 39 : :8888gsgaa
t ha
‘joug
CAPE CANAVERAL,
Fla. (AP) — A hurricane
hunting weather satellite
was fired into orbit to-
day to gather informa-
tion on the origin, devel-
opment and movement of
the monster tropical
storms.
A 92-foot Thor Delta rocket
carrying a 285-pound Tiros III
satellite roared aloft from Cape
Canaveral at 5:25 a.m. EST.
Nearly two hours later the Na-
tional Aeronautics and Space Ad-
ministration reported the three-
stage vehicle had successfully
pl a c e d the weather-eye in or-
bit about 400 miles above the
earth.
Officials reported the tracking
stations at Woomera, Australia;
San Nicholas, Calif., and Wallops
man, said a crowd of people
were at the scene when they
arrived and were mumbling.
of Dewey Hitchcock. He was
twice in the head.
sons.
Fire fighter's at Ahwahnee said
only 12 homes were left there. At
least 50 were destroyed.
Today the flames, which spread
over a five-mile front, swept to
bushel.”' The support this' year
is $1.79.
8
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38:23288888
, here for some time to come, the
. The wet weather also spurred TIMES-REVIEW’S Free Milk c
MacArthur made his way to the of 13 competitive fares that now
plane as the army band struck up apply
“Old Soldiers Never Die.” Crowds ;
They wept when he predicted that forget a friend.”
The blaze "by early today had because of his age he would never
“could not be called destructive”, , ,
except in the low lands and prompted the defense to seek the
1 — chanoe nt vpnnp
S ass .
a competi- space packages transmitted thou-
after landing at Miami early to-
day. The airline said its DC8, consumed some 25,000 acres of a8ain return.
carrying 99 passengers to Miami brush and timber. It destroyed the
from Boston and Philadelphia, community of Nipinnawassee,
sparing only a school and one of port as MacArthur stood solemnly to shake his’ hands, once more.
2
3
. Dam on the Rio Grande below
happen. is ire is a long, way Laredo has been operating since
from he1no I1nrlar An t~N I ’ he 1 •
prisoners on private property so
that they could “get a little Woodrow, who arrested the aged
60 homes.
Two miles south, it raced and saluted during
through the tiny town of Ahwah-
Freeman advised it that “under
kiied at least 88 persons Tuesday such a program it would be our
HOUSTON (AP) -A former gress.
Mexican police chief spent the
night in f ” .....
Texas to Georgia coax masses
of moist Gulf air inland. When 20,000 to 40,000 of the county’s .
the cool air hits the humid mix- 80,000 acres of cotton land, and Testimony was called' today in
lin Johnson, 77, was held today washed
after the pistol slaying of a boy,
_ Questioned by Dist. Atty. Ralph this all along rather than feed
constructed, it is impossible to Prince, Crawford said he didn’t them and take care of them in
rested him for working illegally fimn
in the U.S.
destinies for the six years after his sweetheart wife.
World War II.
The doughty old soldier arrived "I am sure that the emotion-
packed crowd that greeted you
by a fisherman at the bottom of a. 1000-
foot cliff overhanging the Pacific near
Seaside. She became lost while walking
with her parents along a trail in Ecola
Park. (NEA Telephoto)
. ,, - - , Island, Va., had received good
Y behindthesfosofthe spray- from the satellite on its' first pass
glorious' return for the aged and love for you and your be-
loved Jean.”
New Mexico, a tornado whirled Bay City,
over the ranch country 11 miles Assistant
s
It was a touching, moving fare-
well at Manila’s International Air- surged around him to touch him,
the Panhandle from Colorado, a
warm front stretching from East 6.12 inches of rain. The water
from Manila after a 10-day senti- 1
mental visit to the island country everywhere you went will attest
was a sur-
tion that any Japanese would call
on the man who controlled their ful reception to an old soldier and
power plant,” GAO said it was had a federal gambling license.
informed. * 4 He said he was in such a state of the 15 prisoners paying out
The reference was to the proof mental confusion that his mind fines' by the week had paid the ______ __________________ _________ _____________ ____ ____________________, — .
was a complete blank about his fines in full. The state claimed Crawford also said he received to let any of those rats out there acknowledged receipt of the peti- expert, chatting with
appearance before a grand jury. that most of the fines were paid a small income from oil royalties, take me.” tion. ~hout----d-norion
determine the firm generating know whether Town Lodge, .
capacity of Falcon Dam and cafe which he owns but leases,
YOKOTA AIR BASE, Japan at the tremendous reception after
(AP)—General of the Army Doug- an absence of 15 years.
held the Bee County official at
gunpoint during a 40-minute ride.
Edge said Reynolds is a fugi-
tive from Florida and that he
broke jail at San Angelo in
March while he was being held
s on an armed robbery charge. He
is also wanted in Wichita Falls.
Edge related that the couple,
staying at nearby Skidmore, were
being questioned for having extra
license plates in their car. As
he was driving them to meet
Sheriff Jack Robinson, Mrs.
Reynolds, in the back seat,
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Commission will hold a hearing by signals from the Space Agen-
July 25 on a request from 27 bus - - - -- - - -
crats. There is no hope of re-
surrecting these plans in the
committee this year.
Freeman’s approach called for
establishing farmer advisory
committees to work out programs
for each crop under his super-
vision. Congress could veto these
programs within 60 days, but
could not amend them. The final
step was' approval by farmer
referenda.
All of this came out of the
bill several weeks ago. Last at-
tempt by Chairman Harold Cool-
ey, D-N.C., to retain marketing
order authority for Freeman also
12, and the wounding of another.
Police quoted the man as say-
ing he shot the boys' “because
they had been following me
around making faces at me and
pestering me.”
Kenney Hitchcock, 12, was
killed at Smytty’s Trailer Court,
where he lives. He was the son
ITT ■ H 1
_ J
2880228888038 2088822988
ineS Hazard Cited
and a few minor commodities
were added. But broad authority
for national marketing orders in
any crop was' rejected.
The bill contains a wheat pro-
gram for the 1961-62 crop year.
It calls for a mandatory acreage
reduction of 10 per cent, and
incentives for those who reduce
voluntarily another 30 per cent.
A committee spokesman said
West Texas Wednesday, starting thunderstorms added to the out- . ,
a new round of rains in advance look for the Panhandle and South space scout with an infra-red eve
jury. The sheriff is under sus-
pension from his' office.
pt- f4—
lie --d
-amsh
8, 9580
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p. ae
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ssag ,8
ing at Casablanca, Morocco. All
' but one of the 72 persons aboard
• were reported killed. None was
believed to be an American. The
Soviet-built plane was en route
from Prague to West Africa and
had made a stop at Zurich, Swit-
zerland.
At least 17 persons were killed
Tuesday when a United Air Lines
DC8 jet crash-landed' and burst
into flames at Stapleton Airfield,
Denver. The plane, carrying 122
persons, veered suddenly off a
runway as it touched down. Fifty
passengers wre hospitalized and
* 56 persons, including the crew of
7, escaped serious injury. One
of those killed was a civil engineer
, whose survey truck on the air-
‘1 field’ was crushed by the jet as
• it swerved off the runway. _ _
A jet airliner load of 117 persons Yosemite National Park has killed
escaped injury when an Eastern at least two persons, burned out - . .
" Air Lines plane blew a tire and two towns and sent hundreds flee- as the liberator of their country, iorgive
- veered off a runway into grass ing for safety.
heavy as 13.5 inches tumbled to harvest when fields were dry
toward the sea, or stood soggily enough. Continued rain could ruin
soners from jail so they could
work cut their fines.
“Yes, I let some of the priso-
ners go if they worked for some-
M-d
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Thundershowers were forecast
’ Thunderstorms crackled in for every section of the state with
authorized storage on the Rio
charges of perjury before a grand)one who would vouch for them edge of Negro dice games
Edna, between Houston and
16, of Pleasant Corpus Christi. It didn’t touch
“I don’t remember going up after a grand jury indicted the Grove, was wounded in the right and dissipated without damage, daily but more are needed
Corpus Christi during Tuesday Thanx to Builder’s Class of Field
measured 3.62 inches of rain,
St. Lawrence and the St. Lawren- - . . . --L
Sharp Texas Cool Front
i I । ।
I n! II
F h ) J
J —
fc I
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. A
; north of Hobbs, apparently caus-farm agent Eddie Douglas esti-
“"8 an, ing no damage. mated cotton farmers alone in
> As the cool front edged toward that county had suffered a $4
1954, but the government doesn’t
know how it’s doing.
The General Accounting Office
(GAO) said Tuesday it needs
more reports on the cost and
sale of power there to Central
Power and Light Co.
“A firm allocation of construc-
tion costs to power had not been
made by June 30, 1960,” the
ER :223 30966233
I I
398 3928385585550 ' o
. nition out the car window.
Edge said abduction charges
will be filed.
-. . 5 “Because the allocation of con-
the Houston city jail struction costs of the Falcon Dam
g J
Grain s'orghum there and in
nearly all South Texas was ready
SHIPWRECK KILLS HUNDREDS — The
Portuguese troop ship "Save," pounded
by gale-force winds, burns off the coast
of Mozambique in Southeast Africa. The
ship ran aground near the mouth of the
Mahindi River. The crew managed to
free her, but water pouring through a
24
*aes4.
in the' - county.
He said he owned 21 Negro
rent houses', the Town Lodge, a
trailer court and a barbecue
erect in a driving tropical rain
, . ,. , J a final 17-gun went up the ramp, took one long, five disadvantage,
salvo in his honor. .... • . °
8
,29
Set For Final Approval
WASHINGTON (AP) — The a conservative coalition of Re-
Agricultural Act of 1961, stripped publicans and Southern Demo-
r
’ F‘
s) . ,'
trneA with hic fAreoc +A kAin L 38955583888
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• 82-1 it A
SOME ASSIGNMENT—A couple of New York ambu-
lance attendants enjoy the assignment of their lives as
they help Marilyn Monroe into her apartment after her
discharge from a hospital. Miss Monroe underwent sur-
gery for the removal of her gall bladder June 29. None
of her external assets was altered. (NEA Telephoto)
Thunderstorms Trigger
. 152wyyflbyl
crease in intrastate
rates?
A A A A
Maximum temperature 89 de-
• grees in past 24 hours.
Minimum temperature 73 de-
grees in past 24 hours.
Maximum temperature 102 de-
4 grees a year ago today.
Minimum temperature 78 de-
grees a year ago today.
while receiving a request for an-the All-Star game on televisio
nexation to the city in a short in a suburban barber shop...Lo
regular meeting Tuesday night, cal reservists and national guard
820 J
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POINT ARGUELLO,
Calif. (AP)—The United
States today fired — into
a record 1,850-mile-high
orbit — the first missile
☆ ☆ ☆ ☆
hole in her hull caused a short circuit
which started the fire. Of the estimated
565 passengers and crew aboard, author-
ities said 237 are dead or missing. About
40 are stranded on an isolated beach
about 30 miles from the port of Queli-
mane. (NEA Radiophoto)
at Amarillo in six hours to mid- reported by a farmer at the
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sheriff s pay to retire notes here,”’ the officers quoted him
against the propertie's and lived . . ,,, , T
on the rent they brought in.as saying, _ but 1 wasn’t going
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 205, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 12, 1961, newspaper, July 12, 1961; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1567657/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.